Ticket giveaway: Indiana Artisan Marketplace
Get a free look at this first-ever event at the Indiana State Fairgrounds.
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Get a free look at this first-ever event at the Indiana State Fairgrounds.
Artist William Lamson transformed a former communications tower for a new work featured in the Indianapolis Museum of Art’s entryway April 8-Aug. 28. Details here.
“Celtic Women: Songs from the Heart” comes to the Murat Theatre April 9. Details here.
Installation artist Theaster Gates and The Black Monks of Mississippi perform “And the Whole Yard Said Amen” at the Indianapolis Museum of Art’s Tobias Theatre April 8. Details here.
The Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra performs Tchaikovsky’s “Symphony No. 3,” April 7-9. Details here.
Storyteller Beth Horner performs “Love, Lost, Found and Fumbled” at the Indiana History Center’s Basile Theatre. Details here.
Indianapolis City Ballet offers an April 10 master class at Curtain Call Studio for Performing Arts with Brooke Desnoes, founder and artistic director of the American Academy of Dance in Paris. Details here.
Gregory Hancock Dance Theatre revives three pieces under the banner “Saints and Sinners,” April 8-9 at Pike Performing Arts Center. Details here.
April 13-17
Clowes Hall
What I’ll be hoping for when I see “Rock of Ages” for the first time isn’t a musical for the ages. And not a resonant dramatic experience.
What I’m hoping to find in this collection of hair-band hits strung together with the barest semblance of plot and character is some hint of the joy of being 15 and clueless. And while I’m in no hurry to ever again hear “We Built This City,” at least I can do it in the company of former American Idler Constantine Maroulis, who re-creates the part he launched on Broadway. Details here.
April 9
Clowes Hall
The world-renowned company comes to Clowes Hall for the first time. On tap: four pieces from the repertoire, “In the Night,” “Tarentella,” “Round of Angels” and “Age of Innocence.” Derek Reid, Butler University assistant professor of dance, leads a pre-show discussion. Details here.
April 8-16
IU Musical Arts Center
Indiana University Opera closes out its season with a ground-breaker: The world premiere of a full-length opera by Pulitzer-Prize-winner Bernard Rands and libretto by poet and Yale Review Editor J.D. McClatchy. Guest artists David Adam Moore and Christopher Burchett alternate in the lead role.
When the subject is Vincent VanGogh, though, you know the visuals are important as well, which means a design that incorporates hundreds of images to take patrons into the mind of the troubled genius. I don’t want to talk you out of seeing it live, but if you absolutely can’t get to Bloomington—or if you want to see it live on Friday and compare it with the Saturday performance, check out the live stream of either or both of the first two performances here. Details on the production here.
All publicly traded companies have to allow advisory votes about top executives compensation every two or three under the Dodd-Frank financial reform passed by Congress last year.
Five companies are set to have their tax breaks terminated or continued as the city attempts to update the state of the benefits that date to the previous administration.
The Indianapolis university originally hoped to open state’s second medical school in fall 2012, but that time line proved too aggressive.
Tuesday night's NCAA women's basketball championship game at Conseco Fieldhouse in downtown Indianapolis was a near-sellout, but it was the smallest crowd to see the title game since 1997.
Indiana University will receive donations totaling $10.7 million from the estate of late philanthropist Ruth Lilly, the university announced Wednesday morning.
A Marion County judge is set on Wednesday to weigh whether Republican Indiana Secretary of State Charlie White is legally qualified to serve in the office to which he was elected in November.
An Indiana legislator trying to find a compromise on a plan that Gov. Mitch Daniels originally pushed to help stem the state's prison costs seems to still have work ahead.
Reality TV star/would-be presidential candidate chosen for Indy honor.
Former Indiana businessman Timothy Durham, 48, who is accused in a $200 million fraud scheme, is scheduled to appear in federal court in Indianapolis on Wednesday at 2:30 p.m.
John Swinehart, a former executive of Bruce Gunstra Builders Inc. who was involved in the Monon on Main project in Carmel, is seeking Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection. He lists liabilities of $8.3 million.
U.S. District Judge Sarah Evans Barker sentenced 61-year-old Michael R. Milem of Carmel, 44-year-old Mark R. Snow of Brazil and Joseph T. Biggio, 51, of Illinois after accepting their guilty pleas for violating the Federal Clean Water Act.
An Indianapolis judge on Tuesday dismissed a lawsuit that accused 78 county prosecutors of breaking the law by not turning over assets seized from criminals to a state school fund.
Indiana's casinos would be allowed to hold card tournaments at hotels or other sites on their properties under a proposal that has cleared the state Legislature.
The fate of a proposed statewide smoking ban in the state Legislature is uncertain, with anti-smoking advocates keeping up their push for restrictions that are tougher than some lawmakers think can win approval.