Healing with Art
Denise āDeeā Yookong Williams uses art to help LGBTQ youth and youth of color process their experiences around suicide.
Denise āDeeā Yookong Williams uses art to help LGBTQ youth and youth of color process their experiences around suicide.
Upon watching her brother grow up and struggle with cystic fibrosis, Rhianna Lee has dedicated her life to studying the disease.
Frank Leibfarth tests molecules to turn plastic waste into useful materials, diversifying options for recycling.
While studying small mammals in the Blue Ridge Mountains, juniors Marie Young and Cole Prezant discover a love for field work.
Two undergraduates search for salamanders in western North Carolina ā and find so much more.
Isabel Silva-Romero studies how ocean temperatures affect the food web on rocky reefs around the GalƔpagos Islands.
Darin Waters believes that through the study of history, we can find out where weāve been and glimpse where weāre going ā something he learned during his PhD project at Biltmore Estate.
In a collaboration between Arts Everywhere and the UNC Center for GalÔpagos Studies, five artists were tasked with creating sculptures of native GalÔpagan animals to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the GalÔpagos Science Center on San Cristóbal Island.
In each episode of the Mix(ed)tape Podcast, researchers Melissa Villodas and AndrƩs HincapiƩ speak to Black dancers, choreographers, musicians, and academics about the roots of various Afro-Latin rhythms, the role of dance and music in identity formation, and how racism manifests in the Afro-Latin dance scene.
For most of his life, Juan Ćlamo has used music to connect to and communicate with others. As a skilled marimba player, he uses his talent and passion to teach the next generation of musicians to do the same.