UF President Fuchs narrates portion of 60th annual holiday concert
Will Kesling waved his baton, and the orchestra played as the choir sang Sunday night.
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Will Kesling waved his baton, and the orchestra played as the choir sang Sunday night.
History and art combine in a recent campaign by the Smathers Libraries to restore one of UF’s largest wall murals.
Gainesville entrepreneurs may don their cowboy boots to pitch their startup ideas.
When I came to UF two years ago, I had no plans of continuing with art because my parents made it seem like it was something that should be left behind in my childhood years.
As a 3-D printer whirred behind her Thursday, Erin Winick spoke about the way she combines art and science.
Marshell Petrik, a 21-year-old UF mechanical engineering senior, shows off his $500 handcrafted pen at the Harn Museum's Art in Engineering event Oct. 8, 2015. The pen, made from real watch parts, took Petrik 40 hours to craft. He said he has been making pens from a variety of materials for six years.
Sara Hoffen, an 18-year-old UF industrial and systems engineering freshman, plays her flute at the Harn’s Contemporary gallery on Oct. 8, 2015. Hoffen played multiple Disney-themed arrangements and said she has been playing the flute for eight years.
UF engineering students will show off their creative side.
When Samuel P. Harn Museum of Art partygoers walked through its doors, they were greeted by giant colorful candles and silver balloons with tinsel strings.
Benny White, 6, throws a die to determine which color he will use on a foam sculpture on Sept. 27, 2015, at the Harn. Attendees rolled three dice to dictate the shape they would paint, what color to use and what letter to put it on. Benny rolled the color blue, the letter “A” and a squiggle shape.
Guitarist Welson Tremura plays Latin-American music in the contemporary art section at the Harn. He and five other musicians played live music throughout the museum's halls and galleries during the celebration on Sept. 25, 2015.
Ashley LeBlanc, 23-year-old Harn choreographer-in-residence, performs a dance based on the artwork exhibited at the Harn’s 25th anniversary on Sept. 25, 2015. LeBlanc danced throughout the day, both solo and with the UF Improv Dance Ensemble.
Marta Wayne (left), 49, and her daughter Norma Wayne, 9, draw on foam letters at the Samuel P. Harn Museum of Art’s 25th anniversary public celebration on Sept. 27, 2015. Visitors drew on the letters throughout the day. The concept was based on the sculpture “Zandvoort” by Frank Stella.
The Harn Museum of Art is not much older than most of UF’s students.
A woman stares into a camera lens as her white turtleneck blouse and long, dark skirt pop out from the neighboring construction site.
Stephanie Norman (right), a 27-year-old UF ecological restoration student, practices her salsa moves with Maria Guijarro, a postdoctorate associate at the Orthopedics Rehabilitation Center, at the Harn Museum Sept. 10, 2015. “I really enjoyed learning how to dance salsa as well as the other performances taking place tonight,” Norman said.
The movie,“En Nombre de la Hija,” directed by Ecuadorian filmmaker Tania Hermida, plays in the Harn’s auditorium on Thursday for the 11th Gainesville Latino Film Festival . The drama film follows the life of a young girl who tries to learn from the mistakes of past generations for a better tomorrow.
Whether you enjoy learning through films, discussions, musical performances or art exhibits, there is something for everyone to learn about Latino culture at Gainesville’s September film festival.
About 20 people huddled outside Maude’s Classic Cafe watching “Casablanca” on a large screen projector at 9 p.m. Tuesday. Cloth napkins were draped over the streetlights to set the mood.
UF is orange and blue and a whole lot of green.