he Department of Physics and Astronomy invites all to a colloquium featuring Holger Müller, Department of Physics, University of California Berkeley.
College of Arts and Sciences
November 2018
Dr. Tom Curry is currently on the faculty at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Additionally, he is the tubist in the Wisconsin Brass Quintet, a faculty ensemble-in-residence at the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Music, and has performed with the Joffrey Ballet, the Chicago Philharmonic, the Madison Symphony Orchestra, the Green Bay Symphony Orchestra, the Ars Viva Symphony, and many other orchestras.
The WSU Jazz Band Two, under the direction of graduate student Branson Bell, will perform works by Mike Steinel, Roger Holmes, Lennie Niehaus and more.
This Fall’s Student Chamber Music concert is now combined with the Brass Chamber Music Concert and will begin at 4:10pm in Bryan Hall Theatre
Please join us on Friday, November 2 for our next Anthropology Colloquium, featuring Dr. Nancy Turner of the University of Victoria.
WSU Art Club Hosts “Support the Arts Silent Art Auction”. Food, music, performance and art giveaways! Find some original artwork for your home or office and support WSU Art Club’s community events and workshops.
WSU’s Vocal Extravaganza has been a Dad’s Weekend tradition for 33 years and each year is an exciting program designed to entertain! Don’t miss an opportunity to experience performances by the 5 top choral groups in the School of Music showcased in this event: Concert Choir, Madrigal Singers, Opera Workshop, Treble Choir and Tenor/Bass Choir. Tickets for this family friendly event will be available at the door, beginning at 7pm.
Join us on Dad’s Weekend for a smashing good time at the 14th Annual Pumpkin Drop. Sponsored by the Physics and Astronomy Club, this pre-game, gravity-bound extravaganza celebrates the fun side of science by dropping pumpkins of all shapes and sizes from the highest point in Pullman:
This concert has been cancelled.
This event is currently canceled with no rescheduled performance date.
WSU celebrates its 26TH annual jazz festival with internationally acclaimed drummer, Gary Hobbs. Hobbs will perform with the WSU Jazz Big Band during a free, public concert at noon.
Drummer Gary Hobbs will join WSU Jazz Band I in presenting a concert of exciting and contemporary big band music at noon on Nov. 7 in Bryan Hall Theatre as part of the 26th annual WSU Jazz Festival.
The Department of Physics and Astronomy invites all to a colloquium featuring Dr. William Unruh, University of British Columbia. Dr. Unruh will present his talk, “”Analog Gravity, and the measurement of Hawking Radiation.”
Palouse Performance Showcase, Shana Moulton Performance and Artist Talk
The WSU Symphony Orchestra presents Antonin Dvorak’s Symphony No. 8 and Maestro Jon Harris-Clippinger of the Salem Youth Symphony Orchestra leading our musicians in Richard Wagner’s “Prelude to the Die Meistersingers”.
16 High School Orchestras from across the state of Washington will perform on our Pullman campus. Maestro Jon Harris-Clippinger of the Salem Youth Symphony Orchestra will serve as lead clinician.
This concert is open to the public and without charge.
The Washington State University Flute Studio will perform an Icelandic hymn by Thorkell Sigurbjörnsson, Little Red Monkey by Jack Jordan, Kaleidoscope for flute choir and boomwhackers by Ann Cameron Pearce, Ewazen’s Harmony in Blue and Gold, and Tchesnokov’s Tableaux féeriques on this concert.
The Department of Physics and Astronomy invites all to a colloquium featuring Dr. Gerald Miller, Department of Physics, University of Washington. Dr. Miller will present their talk, “Proton Radius Puzzle – Why We All Should Care”
Meet for refreshments before the lecture at 3:45 – 4:10 p.m. in the foyer…
WSU Department of Fine Arts presents a juried exhibition exploring ideas about the body. While authority over the human body has long been determined by gender and class, in today’s highly globalized and pluralistic contemporary art world, artists view the body as a malleable site of meaning and power, not as an archetype but as a performative instrument, a vessel to be filled and surface upon which the artist or viewer may project her own fears, desires and dreams.
Celebrating the operatic output of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, the WSU Opera Workshop program will be presenting Magnificent Mozart with scenes from two of his most famous comic operas, Le Nozze di Figaro and Cosi fan tutte.
This concert is open to the public and without charge.
This concert is open to the public and without charge.
The Gene and Linda Voiland School of Chemical Engineering and Bioengineering, in cooperation with the WSU Department of Chemistry and CIRC, is hosting a seminar presented by Dr. William Schneider, H. Clifford and Evelyn A. Brosey Professor of Engineering, Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Notre Dame.
This concert is open to the public and without charge.
Paleopathology continues to rely on skeletons as its primary source of data. Unfortunately, skeletons are not representative of past living populations because archaeologists can only directly study those individuals who died at a given age.
The WSU Symphonic Band and Symphonic Wind Ensemble presents their last concert of the semester: Glowing Songs and Dances. They will be performing new works for concert band along with standards of the repertoire. Joining Conductors Troy Bennefield and Danh Pham will be Angelina Gomez, who will lead the Symphonic…
Come stop by the Fine Arts building to do some holiday shopping and support your local Fine Arts students! Handmade ceramic mugs, bowls, plates, magnets, jewelry, sculpture & more!
The Department of Physics and Astronomy invites you to the Undergraduate Thesis Poster Session to be held in Honors Hall.
The Jazz Forum provides an opportunity for students, faculty, and guest artists to perform for the public in an informal setting.
Come stop by the Fine Arts building to do some holiday shopping and support your local Fine Arts students! Handmade ceramic mugs, bowls, plates, magnets, jewelry, sculpture & more!
This recital is sponsored in part by Mu Phi Epsilon, Mu Beta Chapter.
This concert is open to the public and without charge.