Art’s Angle: Basically, The Bomb

The Tar Heels are off lifetime guidance for at the very least one particular additional 7 days.

Carolina followed up a discouraging loss at improved-than-expected Virginia Tech by battering middle big Ga Point out just before a fewer-than-capacity, still-enthusiastic group at Kenan Stadium in the home opener on an anx-totally free gorgeous night in Chapel Hill.

It was not a matter of whether or not the Heels would earn to even their record at 1-1, but how they would reply to listless, oversight-vulnerable offensive efficiency in Blacksburg. They did not glimpse terrific in the very first 50 %, main only 24-10, but blew the game open up by dominating the third quarter (21-) and the fourth with mainly reserves on the field.

Yes, Carolina received extra from its working match behind dandy dual-threat Sam Howell, who broke two prolonged jaunts for 22-lawn and 62-property touchdowns down the left boundary. Transfer

Kei Ito, Night Lights Denver and The Center for Fine Art Photography in Fort Collins project footage of nuclear bomb on the Daniels and Fisher Tower.

Tomorrow morning while most of Denver sleeps, light will strike the Daniels and Fisher Tower, memorializing the birth of the atom bomb.

Projected neon green light will wash over the tower, showing an explosion in reverse: a mushroom cloud contracting, and the bomb’s victims mannequins, houses, vehicles reconstructing, returning to their prior state and to a pre-nuclear world.

Frames from Aborning New Light by Kei Ito.

Kei Ito

The project, a video called Aborning New Light by Japan-born and Baltimore-based artist Kei Ito, is a reconstruction of archival government nuclear testing footage, edited to show the bomb testing in reverse. It’s a collaboration with Night Lights Denver, which projects large scale works of art downtown, and The Center for Fine Art Photography in Fort Collins.

“There’s this idea that art is for certain people and it’s in certain places, and I love art for everybody,” said Hamidah Glasgow, executive director and curator of The Center for