UB’s Creative Arts Initiative will present the boundary-defying voice-and-piano Hayley-Laufer Duo on May 18 in a concert performance that features the world premieres of compositions from five revolutionary contributors.
Indeterminacy Festival 2019 will explore eras of geologic time and ways in which gravitational and electromagnetic waves serve as communicators between past, present and future.
New degree and certificate programs are coming to the UB College of Arts and Sciences. UB’s Department of Jewish Thought will soon launch its master’s program; the Sociology department now has a bachelor’s degree in criminology; and an Advanced Certificate in Sustainability is offered through the Graduate Interdisciplinary Degree Program.
Peggy O’Brien, founding director of education at the Folger Shakespeare Library and an international expert on the teaching of Shakespeare, will present a workshop at UB on April 26 as part of the UB English department’s contribution to the campus-wide Discovery Week.
A new book by UB's Cecil Foster looks at the role that sleeping car porters, through their diligence and activism, played in helping to amend immigration policy and secure civil rights for a marginalized population.
POWER will include individual and collaborative works that blend contemporary and cultural dance styles with text, projection and voice to create a multi-media tapestry of visual theatre.
UB's School of Architecture and Planning is taking its story of place-based urban regeneration on the road with a screening of "See It Through Buffalo" in New York.
Though it’s easy to hear when a singer hits a bad note, what’s causing it is inaudible. The silent, preparatory muscle movements of the face and larynx that occur when singers run a song through their heads could be nudging them out of tune.
Molly Crabapple, an internationally acclaimed author, journalist and artist, will deliver the keynote address on March 8 to open this year’s installment of “Humanities to the Rescue” at UB.