Events
- CU Boulder NEXT is featuring two innovative members of the arts and sciences community next week
- One of Diane Conlin's goals is to encourage creative thinking among her students.
- CU Boulder’s 2016-17 theatre season continues with a heartwarming, hilarious production of “The Servant of Two Masters,” a classic Italian commedia dell’arte by 18th-century playwright Carlo Goldoni. Performances of the play, directed by CU Associate Professor Tamara Meneghini, take place Oct. 19-23 in CU’s Loft Theatre.
- This fall, CU Boulder brings street culture to the stage with [UN] W.R.A.P.: Women of the Cypher, a weekend-long performance event bringing together renowned female Hip-Hop scholars, artists and enthusiasts for a critical and creative exchange.
- Diverse political perspectives from two notable scholars and media professionals will be the theme of a lecture series presented this fall by the College of Media, Communication and Information (CMCI), the Center for Western Civilization, Thought and Policy, and BoulderTalks.
- Just in time for the United States presidential election, CU Boulder’s Department of Theatre & Dance gears up for a production of “44 Plays for 44 Presidents,” a funny and poignant whirlwind trip through American history.
- This fall, CU Boulder brings street culture to the stage with [UN] W.R.A.P.: Women of the Cypher, a weekend-long performance event bringing together renowned female Hip-Hop scholars, artists and enthusiasts for a critical and creative exchange.
- The Buffalo Bicycle Classic is a cycling fundraiser. Since 2003, more than $3 million in scholarships have been awarded to promising students in CU-Boulder’s College of Arts and Sciences.
- The Colorado Shakespeare Festival continues its season of myths, legends and fairy tales with the classic, fantasy-like Cymbeline. From battle scenes to mistaken identities to a magical love story, this timeless play still sweeps audiences of all ages off their feet more than 400 years after it was first staged.
- A group called CU Café (the group initially began meeting over coffee), offers a student-run seminar series that brings in minority scholars from other institutions to talk about their research and give their perspectives about succeeding in the academic environment. “It’s small, but it’s powerful,” one participant says.