News

News

  • December 6, 2021
    The Young Alumni Commissioning Project, a grant program for recent graduates, announced the fourth round of requests for proposals from interested alumni. The funds granted to recipients will fund new original works of art in a variety of mediums.
  • December 3, 2021
    Prolific, Black female choreographer Camille A. Brown tackles these profound but straightforward questions through vibrant, intensely athletic, story-infused social dance that has brought the pint-sized phenom tremendous acclaim and catapulted her to fame.
  • December 3, 2021
    Check off your holiday shopping list with these unique Hylton Center gift options for the person who has everything.
  • December 3, 2021
    Some of you may remember the old David-Letterman-reads-his-mail skit with the theme song “Letters! Oh, we get letters! We get stacks and stacks of letters! Letters!” Yes, that kind of thing is taking up increasingly precious real estate in my brain, so I feel the need to get some use out of it.
  • December 3, 2021
    Bringing us goodwill and cheer this holiday season are Hylton Center Arts Partners the Manassas Symphony Orchestra, Prince William Little Theatre, Manassas Chorale, and the Manassas Ballet Theatre.
  • December 3, 2021
  • November 30, 2021
    Mason School Of Art Alumnus Jeremy Kunkel's Work Featured In 'The Washington Post.'
  • November 22, 2021
    Conjuring Presence is an exhibition of visual art and poetry featuring George Mason University students, faculty, and alumni at the Fenwick Gallery in Fenwick Library on the Fairfax Campus.
  • November 11, 2021
    Mason’s School of Dance students are excited to be back performing before a live audience as they present “Fall: New Dances" on Nov. 12–13 at the Hylton Performing Arts Center on Mason’s SciTech Campus.
  • November 8, 2021
    Carroll Sockwell (1943-1992) was a prominent figure in the Washington, DC art scene in the 1970’s. Often using the simplest of tools–pencil, charcoal, and pastel; Sockwell was an internationally acknowledged master of non-representational abstraction and belongs to the last generation of American Abstract Expressionists, with such influences as Paul Cezanne, Piet Mondrian, Paul Klee, Mark Rothko, Willem de Kooning, Joan Mitchell, and Cy Twombly.
  • November 4, 2021
    Sine qua non The literal translation of that morsel of Latin is “without which not.” An inelegant phrase at best, gibberish at worst. But the real meaning is beautiful: something essential, something necessary, something without which something else would not exist.