Chain exhibit creates new kind of landscape art
By Cheryl Ho | December 8, 2005The next time you take a bus on Campus Drive, look for a new art exhibit displayed not at the Nasher Museum of Art, but hanging from trees.
The next time you take a bus on Campus Drive, look for a new art exhibit displayed not at the Nasher Museum of Art, but hanging from trees.
Dust off your powdered wig, because the timeless grace and beauty of 19th-century Vienna is coming to the Durham Armory.
Many people are familiar with Albert Einstein as a physicist, but few know of his other passion in life: music.
Musical theater group Hoof 'n' Horn performed "Once Upon a Mattress" to a completely sold-out house Oct.
Take a step back into the 1930s, back to the beginning of the Great Depression. A little piece of history from downtown Richmond, Va.
In a dramatic fusion of prizewinning photographic and literary art, ten stories of raw humanity are on display at the Center for Documentary Studies.
Ever wanted to get a closer look or go behind the scenes of Nasher Museum of Art's planning and design? Next Tuesday, you can.
Dozens of shipping crates and pieces of half-unpacked artwork, still shrouded in heavy plastic, fill the sky-lit interior of the Nasher Museum.
The Nasher Museum of Art, like the old Duke University art museum, allows students to be involved not as volunteers or as visitors, but as security guards.
When Duke decided to revitalize the Gilbert-Addoms Down Under as entertainment space, it quickly realized it would take an insider to get the job done.