In 2021 the Washington University Libraries acquired the literary papers of Aaron Coleman. Coleman, a poet and translator, received his Master of Fine Arts...
Open Education Week raises awareness and highlights innovative open education successes worldwide every year. Open Education Week allows practitioners,...
In June 1972, Congress passed Title IX, prohibiting sex-based discrimination in any federal government-funded school or other educational programs. The 50...
"The Beauty in Enormous Bleakness: The Design Legacy of the Interned Generation of Japanese Americans" explores architecture’s relationship to issues of...
Chakaia Booker is renowned for her artistic practice that pushes the limits of abstraction through the use of her signature material—discarded rubber tires...
Libraries and archives are stewards to immense collections threatened by building leaks, pest infestations, and their own inherent vices.
The Inherent Vice...
Was your New Year's resolution to be more sustainable? Here's an easy way to stick to it!
WashU School of Medicine will be piloting a composting program at...
Shakespeare’s words have become so famous that there is a quote for just about every circumstance or occasion. Though many miniature books feature an entire...
"The Play’s the Thing" exhibition celebrates the 400-year anniversary of the first folio—the first time William Shakespeare’s collected works were printed....
Back by popular demand, this exhibit, in collaboration with the Academic Women's Network, features 22 women from the Washington University School of Medicine...
Organized by the American Federation of Arts and the Fisk University Galleries, African Modernism in America is the first major traveling exhibition to...
Join us in March for A New Resource for You: Reframing Aging Communications Best Practices presented by Joellen Leavelle of USAging and Katie York, PhD, of...