Eight Penn State Abington students celebrated the diverse culture that defines the Abington experience through an ensemble-based production titled “Spring ’17: The Diversity Project.”
“Rolling Blackouts: Dispatches from Turkey, Syria and Iraq” by Sarah Glidden has won the 2017 Lynd Ward Prize for Graphic Novel of the Year. Penn State University Libraries sponsors the juried award and its administrator, the Pennsylvania Center for the Book.
Penn State business graduate Chris Trinh is the literal man with a plan for his future, with a long-term goal to be a professional photographer for Getty Images, the international provider of stock images, or for his friends in the Trans-Siberian Orchestra rock band.
The surging popularity of a cappella groups including Pentatonix and Straight No Chaser benefits barbershop choruses. On March 5 the public is welcome to experience these dynamic layers of unaccompanied four-part harmonies when the Country Gentlemen Barbershop Chorus of Bucks County performs a free matinee concert at Penn State Abington.
Acclaimed curator Jordan Rockford spoke to the Penn State Abington community recently about "Where We Find Ourselves," the multi-artist exhibition he conceived that graces the Woodland Gallery through Feb. 26. According to Rockford, the exhibition is about exploring queer identity and how culture can influence it.
Artist Nichola Kinch explores connections between Ireland's Great Hunger in the mid-1800s and contemporary instances of oppression in the Penn State Abington art gallery.