All Day

Black in Black on Black: Making the Invisible Visible in Western North Carolina

Center for Craft, John Cram Partner Gallery 67 Broadway Street, Asheville

Black in Black on Black: Making the Invisible Visible is an exhibition about the lives and contributions of Black/African American communities in Western North Carolina (WNC). Presenting works of art alongside oral histories and research data, Black in Black on Black is a visual conversation about an often invisible history of our region.

Owen Hall Re-Opening Faculty Exhibit

Owen Hall, S. Tucker Cooke Gallery

UNC Asheville’s renovated Owen Hall re-opened at the start of the fall 2021 semester with faculty exhibits from the Department of Art and Art History and Department of New Media.

EVANESCENT!: Leigh Svenson Art Exhibit

UNC Asheville's Ramsey Library presents EVANESCENT! featuring photography by Leigh Svenson. The collection of black and white photographs feature fleeting images captured during vacations at the Golden Isles of Georgia including images of driftwood cathedrals being taken by the sea and mercurial dune grass etchings and ebb tide carvings.

“Multicultural Memory: Remembering Across Jewish Cultures and Beyond” Panel Discussion – Part of Campus Week 2021, “Resistance, Recovery, Revival – Modern Jewish Life in Germany and Beyond”

Ramsey Library, first floor

Campus Week opens with the Western North Carolina Jewish Archives Panel on Multicultural Memory: Remembering Across Jewish Cultures and Beyond with Michael Figueroa, associate professor of ethnomusicology at UNC Chapel Hill and Danielle Christmas, assistant professor of English & comparative literature at UNC Chapel Hill.