Dartmouth students explored summer internships in the arts
From positions at film companies to marketing jobs, Dartmouth students found creative expression through summer internships.
From positions at film companies to marketing jobs, Dartmouth students found creative expression through summer internships.
The Telluride Film Festival, held annually over Labor Day weekend, has strong ties to Dartmouth’s film department.
To fulfill their art distributive requirement, some students forgo a paint brush in favor of atypical instruments.
With the Hopkins Center for the Arts under renovation until 2025, the Hood Museum of Art is seeking to engage more students through a combination of new and existing programs.
Mehra discussed his new record “The B Songs,” the music-making process with Day Drooler and a potential future album.
Charlotte Hampton ’26 reviews the Parish Players’ production of the Pulitzer Prize-winning play “Buried Child.”
Lee Issac Chung’s new disaster movie, “Twisters” — featuring Glen Powell and Daisy Edgar-Jones — is a suspenseful revival of its 1990s version.
The Upper Valley-based cartoonist and author released her debut graphic novel, “How It All Ends,” on Aug. 6.
On July 25, the Pedro Giraudo Quartet performed music fusing Argentine tango with jazz and classical tones on the Green.
From July 13 to Dec. 15, the Hood Museum of Art will host an interactive exhibition on immersive worlds, offering viewers a new form of art exposure.
The band, founded at Dartmouth in 2021, performed at Bones Gate fraternity on July 20.
A harmony of new student bands, songs and friendships have entered Dartmouth’s music scene this summer.
Two of The Dartmouth’s staffers recommend six summer reads — from “Água Viva” to “Mouth.”
Jake Blount and Mali Obomsawin ’18 played music from their upcoming release, “symbiont,” as part of the Hopkins Center for the Arts’s Free Summer Concert series.
Bread and Puppet, a local theater group in Grover, Vt., performed a politically complicated and contradictory puppet show.
The student exhibition by Colin Donnelly ’24 explores the work of various artists that embrace queer love and relationships.
Starring Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons, Yorgos Lanthimos’s film is a painful expression of the sacrifices driven by desire.
In his debut novel, Morgan Talty ’16 writes about identity, family and the earth.
The much anticipated third season of "Bridgerton" provides a less-than-satisfying continuation of the beloved series.
On June 28, Still North Books & Bar held a poetry reading featuring poets Kate Gibbel, Carlene Kucharczyk and Alexandria Hall.