Community

Piano Trio Performance, Faculty Recital Launch WT School of Music’s Concert Season

Body

CANYON — An internationally regarded cellist will join two West Texas A&M University musicians for a special concert Aug. 27.

Dr. Christoph Wagner, assistant professor of cello and head of strings at the University of New Mexico, will join WT’s Dr. Choong-ha Nam, professor of piano, and Dr. Rossitza Goza, Harrington lecturer in violin, for a piano trio concert. 

Photo: Drs. Rossitza Goza, from left, Choong-ha Nam and Christoph Wagner will perform as a piano trio in an Aug. 27 concert at West Texas A&M University.

Canadian’s historic Independence Day blends old tradition with new

Body

Panhandle-area residents preparing for the Fourth of July can expect plenty of local events, both new and old, this week in Canadian.    

Festivities—both before and after the Fourth on Friday—include fireworks displays, live music, rodeo, games, vendors, and the town’s annual turtle race and parade.

Bridge of Honor

The Citadelle invites public to help create a living mural this summer

Body

CANADIAN, TX—This summer, The Citadelle Art Museum is transforming its gallery into a hands-on, evolving art experience with the return of Tape Art. The exhibit, titled “Tape Art: USS Artemis: Attack of the Space Pirates,” invites visitors of all ages to pick up a roll of painter’s tape and become part of a story that’s unfolding right on the walls.

The Citadelle Tape Art Project: USS Artemis: Attack of the Space Pirates

Citadelle Art Museum invites students to tape-made spaceship

Body

The Citadelle Art Museum welcomed students into an out-of this-world experience Tuesday as Tape Artists Michael Townsend and Leah Smith prepared this summer’s exhibit and art camp. 

The tape-placing duo transformed the museum’s art gallery into a spaceship made entirely of blue and green tape, with one side of the ship in ruin due to space pirates.

Citadelle Art Museum's "Journey to Art-Er Space"

A WCTU BAZAAR PRIMER

Body

Reprinted from the December 3, 2009 issue of The Canadian Record 

THE FIRST BAZAAR, held in 1906, was a three-day affair that netted $225. It was the brainstorm of a group of determined pioneer women in turn of the century Canadian. Determined to battle the proliferation of saloons and the evils of alcohol in their community, they founded a local chapter of the Women’s Christian Temperance Union in 1902. 

The 2012 WCTU Bazaar Kitchen Crew
Subscribe to Community