College of Liberal Arts and Sciences

Music festival to spotlight 20th/21st-century piano compositions

Sixty grade school musicians from across Michigan, as well as Grand Valley faculty and students, will celebrate 20th- and 21st-Century piano music with a day of recitals during the 20th/21st-Century Piano Music Festival. The festival will include multiple 50-minute recitals on October 28 featuring solos performed by students ranging in grade level from first grade through high school. Grand Valley's award-winning New Music Ensemble will also perform during the festival.

Oct 26, 2017


CLAS alumni to visit campus for presentations and events

Alumni from 13 departments within the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will visit the Allendale Campus to share their post-graduation Laker Effects during multiple events and presentations October 26-27.

Oct 23, 2017


Alumnus president of Palau will visit campus

As president of the Pacific island nation of Palau, Tommy Remengesau is leading a government that is in the center of U.S.-China relations, climate change and outside threats to an ocean economy.

Oct 20, 2017


New Music Ensemble to release new CD, "Return"

Grand Valley's award-winning New Music Ensemble has released a new CD that was composed by three alumni of the program. The release of the ensemble's fourth commercial CD, "Return," will be celebrated on October 27 with a concert from 7:30-9 p.m. in Louis Armstrong Theatre. The album's three composers, Adam Cuthbért, '10, Matthew Finch, '15, and Daniel Rhodé, '12, will be in attendance, and Cuthbért will open the show with a special performance. An opportunity to meet the composers and the members of the New Music Ensemble w

Oct 19, 2017


Early assurance agreement signed with CMU College of Medicine

A new cooperative agreement will grant Grand Valley premedical students early assurance of admission to the Central Michigan University College of Medicine through the Early Assurance Program.

Oct 19, 2017


The extraordinary in the ordinary to be explored during Fall Arts Celebration poetry night

One of the wonders of poetry is the potential for the intricacies of ordinary life to be described in extraordinary ways. Patricia Clark, event coordinator and professor of writing, said this is exactly what audiences can expect to hear during this year's Fall Arts Celebration poetry night with acclaimed authors Jane Hirshfield and Dan Gerber. "An Evening of Poetry and Conversation with Jane Hirshfield and Dan Gerber" will take place October 26. The reading will be followed by a reception and book signing.

Oct 18, 2017


Art installation draws attention to violence against women

With direction from Mexican artist Elina Chauvet, the campus community is invited to join an art installation that denounces violence against women by placing a pair of red shoes with a message to honor a victim of violence or trafficking.

Oct 13, 2017


GVSU Opera Theatre to honor legacy of composer Kurt Weill during cabaret performances

The legacy of composer Kurt Weill can still be heard today by audiences in concert halls and theaters, and students will honor that legacy when GVSU Opera Theatre performs a selection of Weill's greatest hits. "A Kurt Weill Cabaret" will focus on the music of Weill (1900-1950), and the many lyricists who collaborated with him during his life and career. During the performances, taking place October 20- October 22, each of the 14 students in the ensemble will be featured in both solos and small group numbers.

Oct 13, 2017


GVSU students win multiple Grand Awards for "Sweeney Todd"

Multiple Grand Valley students received recognitions during the annual Grand Awards October 8 for their participation in the GVSU Opera Theatre production of "Sweeney Todd" in February. The cast, crew and production won awards in all six of the categories in which they received nominations. The annual Grand Awards celebrates Grand Rapids area college and community theater performers and performances.

Oct 10, 2017


Grand Valley community will bring Homer's "Iliad" to life during 24-hour event

Students, faculty and staff will perform one of the oldest poems in the western world, Homer's "Iliad," all within a 24-hour period during the HOMERathon. The sixth installation of the bi-annual event, themed "Game of Heroes," will begin Tuesday, October 10, at 4 p.m. when Provost Maria Cimitile reads the opening of the "Iliad" in Greek. All events will take place on the Allendale Campus, either in the Mary Idema Pew Library, Cook-DeWitt Center or near Zumberge Pond.

Oct 9, 2017