Guilford County Fifth-Grader’s Short Story To Become Opera

A local fifth-grade author is about to see her short story turned into an opera by UNCG Opera students!

Read more….

https://www.wfdd.org/story/guilford-county-fifth-graders-short-story-become-opera

Jennifer Reis Gives Artrepreneurship Workshop at CVA

Jennifer Reis, Assistant Professor of Arts Administration will be a giving a four part workshop series at Center for Visual Artists on how to implement entrepreneurial thinking into your art practice.

 

The Lawn Sign Project Photo

What is freedom?

Students in Leah Sobsey’s photography class in the School of Art have been participating in an ongoing art installation — The Lawn Sign Project , which explores the concept of freedom through a variety of viewpoints.  The Lawn Sign Project made stops this fall in Greensboro and in Brooklyn, NY.  In each location, students invited community members to respond to two prompts: “when is a time you felt free?” and “when is a time you felt your freedom taken away?”  After being interviewed, participants were photographed.  Students printed the words and pictures on black and white lawn signs and installed them in public spaces – at Greensboro Project Space, UNCG’s downtown art space, and at Elliott University Center on the UNCG campus, as well as in Prospect Park in Brooklyn.

The Lawn Sign Project, made possible through a UNCG Diversity Grant, is in collaboration with the Community Arts Collaborative, the UNCG School of Art, and in association with For Freedoms, a non-partisan nationwide initiative that uses art to deepen public discussions on civic issues and core values for people who want to be more engaged in public life.

The project stems from For Freedom’s re-imagining of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Four Freedoms: Freedom of Speech, Freedom of Worship, Freedom from Want, and Freedom from Fear.

The Lawn Sign Project travels to Raleigh in the spring for installation at the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Garden.

 

 

lawn sign projectthe lawn sign project

 

film portrait

Mobile Tintype Studio

Leah Sobsey (Assistant Professor of Photographer) and collaborator Tim Telkamp are interviewed about their mobile tintype studio in which they explore the intersections of community and portraiture.

Read more…
https://www.thephoblographer.com/2018/10/23/leah-sobsey-and-tim-telkamp-on-creating-tintype-community-portraits/

people in art gallery

off-campus contemporary art center Greensboro Project Space

The News and Records highlights the community engaged activities of the School of Art’s off-campus contemporary art center Greensboro Project Space.

Read more…
https://www.greensboro.com/life/nonprofit-greensboro-project-space-helps-people-interact-through-the-arts/article_9579423d-d08e-5533-9233-bf6c238b12a0.html