News

DC Opera “In Series” Features UNC Charlotte Voice Professor

Categories: News Tags: Music

Dr. Brian Arreola, associate professor of voice, is completing a two-week run in the world premiere of Viva Verdi – The Promised End in Washington, D.C. It opened on September 8 and runs through September 23 at the Source Theater. Part of the In Series 2018-19 r(E)volution! season, Viva Verdi – The Promised End combines […]

Theatre Alum Named to Goodman Playwrights Unit

Categories: News Tags: Theatre

Theatre alumna Stacey Rose has been named to the Goodman Theatre’s Playwrights Unit in Chigago, one of four playwrights to be so honored. The Playwrights Unit, in partnership with Chicago Dramatists, meets bi-monthly to discuss their commissioned plays-in-progress with the Goodman’s artistic team. The residency culminates in a public staged reading of each new play […]

New Anthology Features Essay by SoA Associate Director

Categories: News Tags: Architecture

An essay co-authored by Dr. José Gamez, associate director of the School of Architecture, is included in a new architecture theory anthology, Introduction to Architecture: Global Disciplinary Knowledge, edited by Joseph Godlewski and published by Cognella. Dr. Gamez’s essay, “An Architecture of Change,” was written with Susan Rogers, a professor at the University of Houston, […]

Student’s Work Accepted into Tri-State Sculptors Member Show

Categories: News Tags: Art & Art History

A sculpture by senior art major Erin Nicholas has been chosen for exhibition in the members’ show at the 40th anniversary Tri-State Sculpture Conference, to be held October 25-28 in Greensboro, N.C. Erin’s sculpture, “Deliverance from Anxiety,” will be on view at the Center for Visual Artists gallery at the Greensboro Cultural Arts Center. Erin […]

Department of Dance Presents Faculty Dance Concert

Categories: News Tags: Dance

The Department of Dance will present a Faculty Dance Concert on September 28 and 29 in the Anne R. Belk Theater in Robinson Hall. The program features five works by faculty choreographers and includes faculty and guest performers. The choreographic styles, from classical Indian dance to circus arts and physical theater to varied contemporary dance […]

Faculty Work Included in New Mint Museum Exhibition

Categories: News Tags: Art & Art History

Works by art professors Andrew Leventis and Thomas Schmidt will be included in a new exhibition opening September 20 at the Mint Museum of Art uptown location. The show, Mainframe, is the Young Affiliates of the Mint’s Third Annual Juried Art Show. It explores the role of technology in society and how technology overstimulation has […]

Recent Dance Grad Joins Neville Dance Theatre

Categories: News Tags: Dance

Dance alumna Laura Dearman has recently joined Neville Dance Theatre in New York City after a September 1 audition. Founded in 2005 by Brenda R. Neville, the Manhattan-based company presents annual fall seasons in New York City, as well as curated and festival performances throughout the year. In November, the Neville Dance Theatre will perform […]

Professor Contributes to New Public Interest Design Book

Categories: News Tags: Architecture

Nadia Anderson, associate professor of architecture and urban design, has written the chapter, “Evaluating Student Learning: Engaging Experience to Create Agents of Change” (Ch. 25) in the new book, Public Interest Design Education Guidebook: Curricula, Strategies, and SEED Academic Case Studies (ed. Lisa Abendroth and Bryan Bell), published by Routledge Press. The second volume in […]

SoA Teams Win 1st and 3rd Prizes in Design Competition

Categories: News Tags: Architecture

Two teams from the School of Architecture have won top awards in the 2017-2018 Steel Design Student Competition hosted by the American Institute of Steel Construction (AISC) and the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture (ACSA). The competition recognizes exceptional projects in two categories, one addressing affordable housing and the other for open submissions, that […]

Urban Design Professor Named Niantic/Knight Fellow

Categories: News Tags: Architecture

Ming-Chun Lee, a professor in the School of Architecture’s Master of Urban Design program, has been named one of five inaugural fellows in the Niantic/Knight Fellows Program, a community engagement initiative by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation and Niantic, Inc., maker of the popular Pokémon GO game. The fellowship will support projects […]