Back by popular demand, Cabaret will return to Cogs on 16 March as part of the Happy Mondays programme, bringing with it all the glitz, glamour and sparkle of a classic Cabaret club.
Dr Joanna Boehnert, Lecturer in Design and the Creative Industries, spoke last month at the Royal Academy of Engineering’s National Engineering Policy Centre plenary on socio-political intersections in design contributions to decarbonisation.
On 17 February, musicians are invited to take the stage for º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ’s Acoustic Night, organised by LU Arts singer-songwriter scholar, Aisha Aldris.
Cyrano de Bergerac kicks off a new season of National Theatre Live screenings at º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ.
As part of the Risk Related Radar project, composer and performer Helen Papaioannou will be hosting a music workshop on campus.
The Happy Mondays Comedy Club on 10 February is part of the Leicester Comedy Festival, giving staff, students and the local community a chance to see some fantastic stand up on their doorstep.
Three artists will showcase work inspired by the research carried out during their residencies at the University as part of a project by Radar and the Department of Materials.
New Year, new me… we’ve all heard the saying and usually scrawled at the top of our resolution list is the promise to exercise more.
Back by popular demand, evening creative writing classes for staff, students and the general public are being run this term.
Three hundred and seventy years ago, between 1645 and 1660, Parliamentarians completely outlawed Christmas.
The competition run by the University’s English department is accepting entries for a sequence of poems on any subject, up to 300 lines.
º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ hosted one of its most popular Fruit Routes Harvests to date, with guests of all ages in attendance.
Staff, students and members of the local community are invited to the University’s Christmas Choir Concert on Wednesday 4 December. Bring your voices, your friends and don’t forget a festive spirit too!
Radar has launched its latest project, Risk-Related: a year-long series of artist residencies, commissions, performances and events.
LU Arts and Flix Cinema screen the last National Theatre (NT) Live broadcast of the season, Present Laughter, on 28 November at the Cope Auditorium.
An event held earlier this week celebrated this year’s recipients of the LU Arts’ scholarships.
As part of the weekly Happy Mondays programme run in partnership with LSU, LU Arts puts on three different performance nights – Cabaret, Speech Bubble and Acoustic Night.
An academic from º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ is working in partnership with Charnwood Museum and Charnwood Borough Council to host an event about the history of Ladybird Books later this month.
º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ academics look at poetry that focuses on the theme of transport in a new episode of the ‘School of Poetry’ podcast.
º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ celebrated its new partnership with the Booker Prize Foundation by hosting a Big Booker Read event on campus on Wednesday (30 October), featuring the author of The Gathering, Anne Enright.
Goths are typically regarded as being on the fringes of society – members of a subculture which finds beauty in the darker elements of human experience.
A group of students and graduates from º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ have created a series of drawings for a mindfulness colouring book produced by LU Arts.
The National Theatre (NT) Live programme continues at º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ this month with a screening of Hansard on 7 November at the Cope Auditorium.
Artwork and documentation from a new Radar project exploring the human body as a site of knowledge production and retention will be exhibited later this week.
As part of º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ’s Big Booker Read scheme, Anne Enright, author of The Gathering will be delivering a talk on campus on 30 October.