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(08/01/18 1:11am)
This past week my family took a trip to Hilton Head Island. On our way out we decided to stroll through historic Old Town Bluffton — just for lunch and to see if there was anything cool to do in the town. As we were walking down Calhoun Street, we realized there were multiple art galleries on each block.
(07/23/18 10:35pm)
Fall semester is just around the corner, but that doesn't mean Cola doesn't have any cool events to offer. There's almost a full month left to enjoy our summer before classes and studying start back up! Here's some events going on for the rest of the summer if you chose to stay around the famously hot city:
(07/18/18 1:14am)
"You feel like summertime
(07/04/18 1:22am)
A white guy named Huey Calhoun stumbles into a black nightclub on Beale Street in Memphis, Tennessee in the '50s. His arrival to the club causes a bit of a stir.
(06/20/18 2:32am)
In 2013, Hugo Kitano won the Southeastern Piano Festival after just graduating high school. Alessandra Kasman was the runner-up. Five years later the pair is returning to Columbia to perform in an alumni showcase Wednesday, June 20 at 4:30 p.m.
(06/06/18 3:18am)
'Solo: A Star Wars Story' is the movie every Star Wars fan felt a tad bit uneasy about upon its announcement. Who could fill Harrison Ford's shoes as the iconic character? However, Alden Ehrenreich succeeded in portraying the daring and head-over-heels-in-love young Han Solo.
(04/26/18 12:51am)
Vinyl lovers will flood the Columbia Museum of Art on April 29 for the 11th Annual Greater Columbia Record Fair from noon to 5 p.m. The record fair will host vendors to sell, trade or display all sorts of records — from cheap records, costing a dollar, to rare and priceless vinyls. The fair will also feature food and drinks from The War Mouth, The Whig and The Belgium Waffle truck.
(04/19/18 12:52am)
We read about Voltaire in our European history classes, but very rarely do we see the 18th century plays by the French Enlightenment writer performed in 21st century America.
(04/16/18 12:19am)
Thomas is a quiet, awkward teenager who works at the hardware store. Amelia is an eccentric, confident teenager shopping at the hardware store. You can see where this is going.
(04/14/18 10:39pm)
Columbia music lovers walked down the stairs of the Tapps Art Center for a night of Indie Grits music and were greeted with an abundance of sound. The death metal bass of Bathe could be heard from the Space Hall to their left while the quirky folk harmonicas brought by Paleface were heard in the Fountain Room to their right. Just a block down Main at the Main Street Public House, blue,girl was performing distinctive and passionate tunes.
(04/11/18 12:31pm)
The art of the tattoo: paying someone to stab you quickly and repeatedly with a needle to produce a permanent design on your skin. I've personally undergone this cruel and unusual punishment twice in effort to create art that will quite literally stay with me forever.
(04/05/18 1:14am)
Marimbas, cowbells, keyboards and even a sheet of metal are a few of the instruments to be showcased in Thursday night's performance by USC's Percussion Ensemble and Percussion Players. The concert will be presented at 7:30 p.m. in School of Music 206 where students will put on an "eclectic" performance, according to Scott Herring, percussion professor who has directed the Percussion Ensemble for multiple years atUSC.
(03/29/18 4:32pm)
In the midst of USC's Fashion Week, student designers came together to show their work — themed "Fashion of the Past" — to their peers and to a panel of judges.
(03/08/18 3:09am)
Columbia is a "famously hot" city filled with trains, palmetto trees, Southern tradition and most importantly, the Gamecocks. When people think of Soda City, however, the words "arts and culture" don't typically come to mind.
(03/05/18 7:19pm)
Ah, the Oscars. The one Sunday a year where we spend our evening rooting for the four movies that we've actually seen. It seems that something ridiculous happens each year at the Academy Awards, so even if you're not the expert film critic — it's definitely still worth the watch.
(02/22/18 3:54am)
Elaine Miller started dancing when she was four, fell in love with it and never quit. She was a classical ballet "bun-head" in high school, dancing at the pre-professional company Charlotte City Ballet Company and training mostly in classical ballet. At USC, she found a good balance between ballet and contemporary through her dance major. And now she is a fourth-year dance and economics student about to finish her last contemporary showcase with the dance program.
(02/19/18 3:40am)
The movie the world has been waiting for is finally here: "Black Panther." South Carolina native Chadwick Boseman portrays Marvel's iconic superhero who's newest to the big screen. First seen in "Captain America: Civil War" in 2016, the Black Panther gets his solo story — with the incredible background of his African kingdom, Wakanda.
(02/12/18 11:23pm)
Coinciding with Valentine's Day weekend, Trustus Theatre is performing its LOVE IS LOVE IS LOVE CABARET — a musical exploration of love and the many forms it may take.
(02/01/18 2:32am)
Longstreet Theatre will be home to lying, hysteria and deceit this week as USC's theatre department prepares for its main stage production of "The Crucible." Undergraduate students as well as guest actors — alumni from the university — will perform the show from Feb. 2 through Feb. 10 under the direction of Robert Richmond.
(01/17/18 5:00am)
Art surrounds us every day through theater, ballet, visual art, music and so much more. Submersion in this culture of art has positive effects, especially if children are exposed to it at a young age. Cities should ensure that their arts and culture scene is accessible to the public — with particular emphasis on those who may be underexposed, like children and people with special needs — in order to foster a more creatively productive community.