In December 1831, French caricaturist Honoré Daumier was persecuted for producing “Gargantua,” a satirical lithograph he made mocking corruption and profligacy in the government of King Louis-Philippe I.
The lithograph depicts the king as Gargantua,...
Yale’s Institute of Sacred Music, in collaboration with the South Asian Studies Council at Yale, will present a free lecture demonstration of North Indian vocal music by Aastha Goswami on Friday, Sept. 28 from noon to 1 p.m. at Miller Hall at 406 Prospect...
Jean-Michel Frodon, film critic and journalist, will speak at Yale at three events on Oct. 4, 5, and 6 as a Poynter Fellow in Journalism:
For the first event, titled “The Auteur with a Camera: The Image in Recent Art Cinema,” Frodon will discuss film...
If it weren’t for the fact that one weekend of this year’s City-Wide Open Studios (CWOS) is taking place on Yale’s West Campus, Yale staff member Andrea Miller might not be making new art.
Miller spent much of her adult life working full-time as a fiber...
Xyza Cruz Bacani, a Filipina street and documentary photographer, will discuss “Documentary Works in the Digital Era” on Friday, Oct. 12 as a Poynter Fellow in Journalism.
As part of its 100th-year celebration, the Yale Concert Band will open its season with a concert featuring a duo of pieces from 1918 and will play a piece in honor of Leonard Bernstein, who shared a birthday with the band (also 1918).
Marion Belanger ’90 M.F.A. and Martha Lewis ’93 M.F.A. had traveled in the same New Haven art circles for years, but it wasn’t until both applied to create an installation for the New Haven Agricultural Experiment Station that the two decided to join...