UNCG’s Maud Gatewood at her Peak
One of North Carolina’s most significant 20th century painters came from UNCG. Maud Gatewood ’54’s work now graces an exhibit at Blowing Rock.
One of North Carolina’s most significant 20th century painters came from UNCG. Maud Gatewood ’54’s work now graces an exhibit at Blowing Rock.
As Dominick Amendum ’01 raises UNCG’s musical theatre program to new heights, he’s also defying gravity as the production music supervisor of the blockbuster film adaptation of “Wicked.”
Students learning sign language at UNCG are getting some stage experience. They’ve teamed up with a local community theatre to perform specially choreographed shows so that the deaf and hard of hearing can enjoy the show as easily as the hearing audience.
UNCG studio art major Destiny Turner has taken advantage of opportunities to study abroad and connect with local art organizations, which ultimately led to her first public art installation in a renovated local park.
UNCG seniors Jasmine Doctor and Sa’mya Muhammad talk animation, ambition, and international inspiration with the next prospective class of students.
Famed artist and collector Carol Cole Levin shares her love of art with students of the present and the future, gifting the Weatherspoon Art Museum a new collection of nearly 300 works and funding the Cole Levin Center for Art and Human Understanding.
UNCG alumnus Sidney Outlaw ’04 will take the stage in the title role of Mozart’s “Don Giovanni” this week. Learn how professor and mentor Levone Tobin-Scott prepared him for this part.
The four alumni have been inducted into the College of Fellows of the American Theatre. They all led successful careers in higher education and in the theatre profession, but one of the most important things to them is the friendships they formed.
New York Times’s Critic’s Pick SW!NG OUT, led by acclaimed choreographer Caleb Teicher, will deliver toe-tapping tunes to UNCG. This special celebration of swing dance, with live music by the Eyal Vilner Big Band, is part of the University Concert and Lecture Series.
The North Carolina Folk Festival’s 10th anniversary drew 110,000 visitors and generated $25 million of economic impact for our community and UNCG was a proud supporter, in more ways than just corporate funding.