UTulsa Faculty Recital
Lorton Performance Center 550 South Gary Place, Tulsa, OK, United StatesUTulsa Faculty Recital featuring Maureen O’Boyle, violin, and Stuart Deaver, piano. Free and open to the public.
UTulsa Faculty Recital featuring Maureen O’Boyle, violin, and Stuart Deaver, piano. Free and open to the public.
On view through April 26, 2025. Since the beginning of time, we have looked to the skies with wonder, fear, hope, and curiosity as we try to imagine what could […]
UTulsa students join the UTulsa School of Music for 2025 music auditions. All UTulsa students are invited to audition. For audition registration and more information, please contact the following faculty […]
On view through April 26, 2025. Since the beginning of time, we have looked to the skies with wonder, fear, hope, and curiosity as we try to imagine what could […]
UTulsa faculty, staff, and students are invited to stop by the Kendall College of Arts & Sciences Dean’s Office, located on the first floor of Tyrrell Hall, for snacks and […]
THIS EVENT IS POSTPONED AND WILL BE RESCHEDULED. THE NEW DATE WILL BE ADDED TO THE CALENDAR ASAP. As part of UTulsa's NEH seminar, "Poetics of Place," the Department of […]
On view through April 26, 2025. Since the beginning of time, we have looked to the skies with wonder, fear, hope, and curiosity as we try to imagine what could […]
This talk is advances the idea that the humanities as a set of disciplines are often generated or inspired by remarkable altered states of consciousness and embodiment, which can sometimes […]
On view through April 26, 2025. Since the beginning of time, we have looked to the skies with wonder, fear, hope, and curiosity as we try to imagine what could […]
Join us in the Jackson Seminar Room at the Helmerich Center for American Research (HCAR) for our first WIP Seminar of the semester, featuring Dr. Kirsten Olds. Paper Title: "Harold […]
On view through April 26, 2025. Since the beginning of time, we have looked to the skies with wonder, fear, hope, and curiosity as we try to imagine what could […]
Norman Holmes Pearson might have looked like the tweedy Yale professor he was, but he was one of the most consequential figures in twentieth-century American literature; an architect of the […]