Melanie Yazzie, professor of art and art history

CU prof’s art, curated by alum, exhibited in Big Apple

Sept. 9, 2015

When the International Print Center New York opens its 2015-16 season this month, the work of three CU-Boulder artists will be well represented. Professor Melanie Yazzie’s art will be shown in Weaving Past into Present: Experiments in Contemporary Native American Printmaking, an exhibition organized by Sarah Diver, a 2013 graduate of the ˛ĘĂń±¦µä.

Interest in Nordic countries, whose flags fly here, has been rising, and so has interest in studying them. CU-Boulder has devoted more resources to meet the demand. Photo: iStockphoto.

CU-Boulder becomes a source for all things Norse

Sept. 9, 2015

To address the increased interest in Nordic studies, a visiting assistant professorship has been added to the program’s faculty, thanks to a co-sponsorship of $180,000 from the Danish Ministry of Education.nordic

CU-Boulder Artist-in-residence Lorenzo “Rennie” Harris and dancers prepare for the debut of “Exodus,” which opened to rave reviews in New York this summer. Photo by Michael Sakamoto.

Hip-hop artist-in-residence helps dancers find true beat

Sept. 8, 2015

When she came to the ˛ĘĂń±¦µä to study dance, Millie Heckler began taking hip-hop dance classes from artist-in-residence and acclaimed hip-hop dancer and choreographer Lorenzo “Rennie” Harris—and her world was transformed.

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