Your Guide to the Perfect Weekend: January 27–February 2, 2021
Catch two virtual film fests, a new exhibit inspired by Shangri La, and the Punahou Carnival like you’ve never experienced it before.
January 27, 2021
January 28 through February 3
Virtual film fests continue in 2021 with a special perk for Hawai‘i viewers, thanks to Honolulu Museum of Art’s Doris Duke Theatre being selected as a satellite screen for the Sundance Film Festival. Dozens of films will be presented online starting this Thursday (
check out the program here); many are already sold out so you might want to work backward from the ticket page, see what’s available and then read descriptions before getting your heart set on something you won’t be able to watch. Go to
ENAV monta exposición homenaje a maestro Jaime Colson almomento.net - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from almomento.net Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
$5 million gift to fund Lehigh University Art Galleries
The gift from Kenneth R. Woodcock 65 will preserve LUAGs teaching collection and enhance art education.
BETHLEHEM, PA
.- A $5 million gift made by arts philanthropist Kenneth R. Woodcock 65 will endow a directors fund for the Lehigh University Art Galleries. The Woodcock Directors Fund will ensure the protection and preservation of the universitys teaching collection and fulfill the full potential of LUAG as a driver for arts education and engagement for both students and the community.
The fund represents the largest gift ever given to LUAG and will be administered by Director William Crow. Woodcock shares Crows vision that art can be an interdisciplinary engine for teaching, learning, and research.
Dr Ben Danielson s exit at Odessa Brown Children s Clinic prompts call for investigation bizjournals.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bizjournals.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Screenshot from Dr. Charles Lee’s video
A cosmetic surgeon based in US has proven that “fox eyes” trend indeed, were inspired by Asian features. The beauty trend, which went viral earlier this year, uses makeup to create the illusion of almond-shaped eyes, supposedly mimicking those of a fox.
Ways to achieve the desired look include shaving off the eyebrows after the arch and redrawing them, and applying a heavy-handed cat eye with eyeliner. Celebrities such as Bella Hadid and Kendall Jenner popularized the trend, but it did not sit well among Asian communities who called out the trend as an act of cultural appropriation.