Dance Co-Curricular Classes
Take advantage of our FREE drop-in classes in ballet, pilates, yoga, hip-hop, and more. Many classes open to all skill levels; no registration required. FREE and open to all Princeton students, faculty, and staff.
Take advantage of our FREE drop-in classes in ballet, pilates, yoga, hip-hop, and more. Many classes open to all skill levels; no registration required. FREE and open to all Princeton students, faculty, and staff.
Visual Arts senior Monique Legaspi presents an exhibition of new work. Lucas Gallery open daily at all hours. FREE; Open to University community.
From April 29-May 2, watch videos submitted by over 120 Princeton students and early-career researchers as part of Princeton Research Day. Vote for your favorite by May 2 @ 9 AM.
VIS senior Miles Wilson presents an exhibition of new work. Gallery open daily at all hours. FREE; Open to University community.
Students in Professor of Visual Arts Jeff Whetstone’s spring course, “The Visible Wild,” share work from a class that combines photography with environmental science. CoLab open 24/7. FREE; open to University community.
A musical theater cabaret conceived by senior Chloe Horner that focuses on reclaiming the elements of the college experience that students missed out on during the COVID-19 pandemic. Together, student performers and audiences will explore the themes of friendship, love and relationships, and mental health. Open to University community; free tickets required.
Juniors in the Program in Visual Arts present an exhibition of recent work. Hagan Gallery open 24/7. FREE; open to Princeton students, faculty + staff.
Drop-in for Career Advising Hours with Yee Ho, an Advisor in the Center for Career Development, to explore your interests and possible creative career paths. FREE; open to Princeton students.
The VIS program and Dept. of Art & Archaeology present a screening of the animation, documentary and narrative thesis films made by junior and senior students in the program. Refreshments will be served. Open to the public; Free tickets required.
The Program in Visual Arts presents short films by students in spring film and animation production classes. Refreshments served. FREE; open to University community.
Princeton Research Day is a celebration of the research, scholarly and creative work conducted by early-career researchers (undergraduates, graduate students, postdocs and other early-career non-faculty researchers) from across the campus in the arts and humanities, natural sciences, social sciences and engineering. Mainstage event on Maya 5 is free and open to public.
Gather and dream about making the theatre we want to see on our stages. We'll discuss making work from a place of joy, theatre making tips and tricks from the field, and the essential nature of collaboration, led by Roger Q Mason '08. Ice cream provided. FREE; open to all Princeton students.
In “Store as Art," students explore the role of art and the artist in relationship to commerce by opening and operating a retail establishment in downtown Princeton. Weekly Day Markets feature student-made products for sale; weekly late Friday Night Markets feature an "experience economy." Various other events planned. Hours of operation vary; economics of the store vary and may include cash, bartering, etc. FREE; open to public.
Drop-in for Career Advising Hours with Yee Ho, an Advisor in the Center for Career Development, to explore your interests and possible creative career paths. FREE; open to Princeton students.
Come discuss a groundbreaking study on the vital role of baroque theater in shaping modernist philosophy, literature, and performance. Hybrid event held at Labyrinth and livestream via Crowdcast.
2021-22 Hodder Fellow and Princeton alum Tanyaradzwa Tawengwa ’14 performs original music for mbira, voice, and piano inspired by her ancestral rite of passage into womanhood, followed by a moderated conversation with Marcus Zvinavashe, Nyasha Jeche, and Ulenni Okandlovu from CaliGraph and Skeyi and Strobo, two Zimbabwe-based multidisciplinary art collectives, who worked on imagery for her forthcoming album “MWEDZI.” Open to public. Free tickets required.
"Translating Myself and Others" is a collection of candid and disarmingly personal essays by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Jhumpa Lahiri, who reflects on her emerging identity as a translator as well as a writer in two languages. We invite you to a conversation between the author and her colleague at Princeton and fellow-translator, Sandra Bermann. FREE and open to public; join in person or via livestream.
In conjunction with the exhibition Body Matters / Martha Friedman, opening on May 20 at Art@Bainbridge, join the artist and three of her collaborators—theorist and faculty member Tina Campt; choreographer and dancer Silas Riener '06; and psychoanalyst Jamieson Webster—for a conversation about interdisciplinary thinking and a preview of the exhibition. FREE and open to public; Zoom registration required
A 2-day graduate conference in the field of Slavistics with participating graduate students from the USA and Europe. For Princeton students, faculty + staff only.
A 2-day graduate conference in the field of Slavistics with participating graduate students from the USA and Europe. For Princeton students, faculty + staff only.
In “Store as Art," students explore the role of art and the artist in relationship to commerce by opening and operating a retail establishment in downtown Princeton. Weekly Day Markets feature student-made products for sale; weekly late Friday Night Markets feature an "experience economy." Various other events planned. Hours of operation vary; economics of the store vary and may include cash, bartering, etc. FREE; open to public.
Join us for an introduction to the exhibition "Body Matters / Martha Friedman" with the artist and the exhibition's curator, Mitra Abbaspour. Friedman's multimedia sculptures draw on her studies of ancient Egyptian mummification, Greco-Roman portrait busts, and drawings of the brain structure and nerves by the early twentieth-century scientist Santiago Ramón y Cajal to explore the relationship between the mind and the body at various points throughout history. Open to public.
Body Matters presents two new series of sculptures by visual arts faculty member and multimedia sculptor Martha Friedman, curated by Mitra M. Abbaspour, Haskell Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at PUAM. "Body Matters" faculty panel on April 8 @ 2 PM; "On Collaboration" Panel Discussion on May 12 @ 5:30 PM; Meet artist Martha Friedman on May 19 @ 5 PM. FREE and open to public. Open Tues-Sun.
Connect with fellow alumni working in the arts, supporting the arts, and celebrating the arts at Princeton! FREE; for Princeton alumni only.
The Lewis Center for the Arts celebrates graduates of the Class of 2022 who earned certificates and degrees through the Programs in Creative Writing, Dance, Theater, Music Theater, and Visual Arts.
Join the Nassau Literary Review for its ninth annual literary festival, featuring Princeton alumni working in visual arts and the publishing industry including Stacy Testa ‘10, Iris Blasi ‘03, Meghan Duval ‘93 and PUAM director James Steward.
Join the Nassau Literary Review for its ninth annual literary festival, featuring Princeton alumni working in visual arts and the publishing industry including Stacy Testa ‘10, Iris Blasi ‘03, Meghan Duval ‘93 and PUAM director James Steward.
Join the Nassau Literary Review for its ninth annual literary festival, featuring Princeton alumni working in visual arts and the publishing industry including Stacy Testa ‘10, Iris Blasi ‘03, Meghan Duval ‘93 and PUAM director James Steward.
Princeton-based actors & Program in Theater guest artists Katharine Powell, Vivia Font, and Ben Steinfeld share an actor-led investigation of "Old Times," a 1971 masterpiece by one of the most influential playwrights of the 20th century. Free and open to the public; tickets required.
Princeton-based actors & Program in Theater guest artists Katharine Powell, Vivia Font, and Ben Steinfeld share an actor-led investigation of "Old Times," a 1971 masterpiece by one of the most influential playwrights of the 20th century. Free and open to the public; tickets required.