Arizona State Art Museum - Video
Video of the Arizona Art Museum by Adrian Mahlstede and Joey Williams.
ASU Art Museum visit!
We did a Workshop and presented a Bag of Tricks for their staff! Check out this pinhole camera that is taking a 1000 year long-exposure photograph of the Tempe skyline!
Arizona State University Art Museum
The above URL is for the Arizona State University Art Museum
This is one of the most impressive entrances to an art museum that I have ever seen. It was very cool and comfortable in the Arizona desert.
Living in Metro Phoenix | Arizona State University
As an Arizona State University student, you’ll never run out of things to do in Phoenix, the fifth-largest city in the nation. Phoenix ranks as a top 10 places to live for new graduates, and the busy social scene and affordable lifestyle attracts students from all over the country.
With nearly 300 days of sunshine per year and an average temperature of 75 degrees, the weather is perfect for outdoor activities in the fall, winter and spring months. Choose from 60+ hiking trails to explore in the Valley of the Sun such as South Mountain Park or Camelback Mountain. If you’re looking to stay cool, try paddle boarding at Tempe Town Lake or head out to one of the big lakes on the outskirts of town. We don't get snow here in the valley, but just a short drive will get you to colder temperatures. Arizona truly is a unique place!
Phoenix has plenty to offer the creative types, with its murals, galleries, museums and First Friday Art Walk. You can taste world class cuisine, too. Downtown Phoenix, Old Town Scottsdale and Tempe’s Mill Avenue offer some of the most notable restaurants. Places like Pizzeria Bianco, named the best pizza in the nation. (Take that Chicago and New York!) Or Los Olivos, an outstanding Mexican restaurant that’s been around for decades.
Experience any of the big-time pro sports. The Arizona Cardinals, the Phoenix Suns, the Phoenix Mercury, the Arizona Diamondbacks and the Coyotes all call this place home. We definitely recommend watching ASU’s 25 Pac-12 teams (all ASU games are free for students, by the way).
Want to learn more about being a Sun Devil in Arizona?
Check out:
Plan a visit to campus:
See what else there is to do while you are here:
Music: In Future Bass by Oddvision
Arizona Historic State Capitol Video Tour
On our quest to see all 50 state capitol buildings, we toured the historic Arizona state capitol in downtown Phoenix. The building is no longer used by the legislature and instead is a museum. The actual working chambers for the House and Senate are next door. The Arizona state capitol building is far less impressive than other capitol buildings we've toured.
Congressman Grijalva & The “Spine” Corridor & AZ ArtBeat: ASU Art Museum Spring Season
Arizona Congressman Raul Grijalva discusses national issues such as immigration and global terrorism. The “Spine” is a section of the Interstate 17/Interstate 10 corridor that carries almost half the freeway traffic in the Phoenix area. Public input is being sought to make improvements to the Spine. The Arizona State University Art Museum’s Spring 2015 season kicks off this week.
Legacies of the Tribal Languages of Arizona: Gifts or Responsibilities with Ofelia Zepeda
The ASU Library Channel presents the tenth installment of The Simon Ortiz and Labriola Center Lecture on Indigenous Land, Culture, and Community with Legacies of the Tribal Languages of Arizona: Gifts or Responsibilities presented by Ofelia Zepeda
Ofelia Zepeda is a Regents' Professor of Linguistics at the University of Arizona and recipient of the MacArthur Fellowship for her work in American Indian language education, maintenance and recovery. She is a member of the Tohono O'odham Nation of southern Arizona, born and raised in Stanfield, Arizona. Zepeda's work in linguistics includes the first pedagogical grammar of the Tohono O'odham language, A Tohono O'odham Grammar, as well as other topics on the O'odham language, Native American language shift, language endangerment and documentation. In addition Zepeda is a poet with publications in both Tohono O'odham and English. She has three books of poetry, Ocean Power: Poems from the Desert, Jewed I-hoi/Earth Movements and Where Clouds are Formed. In 2009 she collaborated on a public arts project that included engraving of some of her poems on boulders north of the University of Arizona campus. Other public art includes work in Passages at South Mountain Community College Library in South Phoenix. Zepeda is currently the director of the American Indian Language Development Institute (AILDI), one of the longest running Indigenous language training institutes in the country. She is also the series editor of Sun Tracks, a book series publishing Native American writers at the University of Arizona Press.
ASU Sponsors:
American Indian Policy Institute
American Indian Studies Program
Department of English
Faculty of History in the School of Historical, Philosophical, and Religious Studies
Indian Legal Program in the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law
Labriola National American Indian Data Center
Women and Gender Studies in the School of Social Transformation
External Sponsor: The Heard Museum -
You Asked: What's the best thing about the Downtown Phoenix campus? | Arizona State University
Students at Arizona State University's Downtown Phoenix campus really do live in the heart of the city. Think you might want to catch a baseball game? It's literally down the street. You can walk to the Phoenix Art museum, and we definitely recommend going to a First Friday.
There are a bunch of great food places to check out, including some delicious food trucks.
Use this map to help you get around:
Arizona State University Barrett Red Carpet Event 2017 in Downtown Phoenix
ASU Barrett Red Carpet 2017 formal event at the Phoenix Art Museum in Downtown Phoenix
Art museum in Phoenix
A crazy cool floor in the ASU Art museum
DoubleTree by Hilton Phoenix- Tempe - Tempe (Arizona), USA - Review HD
DoubleTree by Hilton Phoenix- Tempe - Exclusive price! -
Located 4 miles from Arizona State University, this Tempe, Arizona hotel features a 24-hour airport shuttle service to Sky Harbor International Airport, just 4 miles away. An outdoor pool is featured.
Select rooms showcase a pool view or a sitting area at DoubleTree by Hilton Phoenix- Tempe. All rooms provide free Wi-Fi, a flat-screen cable TV, an iPod docking station and a private bathroom. Coffee-making facilities are also provided.
A poolside hot tub, lounge chairs and fitness center are available at Phoenix- Tempe DoubleTree by Hilton. After a busy day, guests can relax with a massage in the on-site Absolute Vitality Spa.
Milagros Restaurant is open for breakfast, lunch and dinner. For a vibrant happy hour and free hors d'oeuvres, guests can visit the hotel's Kachina Sports Lounge.
Arizona State University Art Museum is just 2 miles away. Phoenix Art Museum is just a 15-minute drive from DoubleTree by Hilton Phoenix- Tempe.
DoubleTree by Hilton Phoenix- Tempe in Tempe AZ
Reserve: . . .. .. ... . . . . . . . . . DoubleTree by Hilton Phoenix- Tempe 2100 South Priest Drive Tempe AZ 85282 Located 4 miles from Arizona State University, this Tempe, Arizona hotel features a 24-hour airport shuttle service to Sky Harbor International Airport, just 4 miles away. An outdoor pool is featured. Select rooms showcase a pool view or a sitting area at DoubleTree by Hilton Phoenix- Tempe. All rooms provide free Wi-Fi, a flat-screen cable TV, an iPod docking station and a private bathroom. Coffee-making facilities are also provided. A poolside hot tub, lounge chairs and fitness center are available at Phoenix- Tempe DoubleTree by Hilton. After a busy day, guests can relax with a massage in the on-site Absolute Vitality Spa. Milagros Restaurant is open for breakfast, lunch and dinner. For a vibrant happy hour and free hors d'oeuvres, guests can visit the hotel's Kachina Sports Lounge. Arizona State University Art Museum is just 2 miles away. Phoenix Art Museum is just a 15-minute drive from DoubleTree by Hilton Phoenix- Tempe.
Urbanization of Daily Life at Teotihuacan
Urbanization and Daily Life at Teotihuacan is the second session in a three-part lecture series with archaeologists, art historians, and curators who have worked extensively on the site and whose artifacts can be seen in Teotihuacan: City of Water, City of Fire.
David M. Carballo (Director of Archeology Program, Boston University) and Michael E. Smith (Professor of Anthropology, School of Human Evolution and Social Change at Arizona State University) will each present 30-minute lectures on their research and provide insight to the daily lives of those living at Teotihuacan.
--
Dr. Michael E. Smith, Ph.D., is Professor of Archaeology at Arizona State University and Director of the ASU Teotihuacan Research Laboratory in Mexico. A renowned expert on the Aztecs, Mesoamerican cultures, and ancient cities, Smith has published 13 books and over 150 scholarly articles and has directed several excavation projects in Mexico. His prize-winning book, At Home with the Aztecs: An Archaeologist Uncovers their Daily Life (2016), communicates the excitement of archaeology in Mexico for a broad audience. He is now writing, Urban Life in the Distant Past: Archaeology and Comparative Urbanism.
David Carballo is Associate Professor of Anthropology and Director of the Archaeology Program at Boston University. He has conducted fieldwork in Mexico, Belize, Honduras, Peru, and the US with research interests in issues such as urbanism, households, political organization, and religious traditions. Recent books include Urbanization and Religion in Ancient Central Mexico and Cooperation and Collective Action: Archaeological Perspectives. He is currently involved in two active research projects at Teotihuacan at Tlajinga in the city's periphery and at Plaza of the Columns in the city center.
For more information:
Facebook:
Instagram:
Arizona Centennial Pizza: An International Culinary Experiment Celebrating Arizona's 100th Birthday
ASU Art Museum International Visiting Artists Matteo Rubbi, Béatrice Bailet and Miguel Palma collaborated on a four-foot wide pizza in the shape of the State of Arizona to celebrate the State's 100th Anniversary. This experiment was to evaluate the potential for a larger project. Special thanks to the ASU School of Art Sculpture Department for fabrication of the pizza pan. Photography by Béatrice Bailet (Belgium). With Gregory Sale, Michael Tucker, Damian Johnson, Christine Tulk, Cindy Dach, Fausto Fernandez, Abbey Messmer, Braden Kay and Greg Esser.
Living in Phoenix | Things to do in Phoenix Arizona | Phoenix Downtown Real Estate
Tour of Pheonix AZ
In this video, a former New Yorker takes you on a tour of Phoenix, Arizona.
New videos every Monday, Tuesday & Thursday!
Help us reach 5,000 SUBSCRIBERS
(Get a free audio book just for trying.)
↓ USEFUL LINKS ↓
► RELOCATING TO AZ, LOOKING FOR A GREAT REALTOR?
Janet & Gabby (602) 376-0739
► MERCH
Winter Is Not Coming T-Shirt
Oh, and I wrote a book—
► MUSIC
► More from Sam:
Affiliate Disclosure - I NEVER recommend a product that I don’t personally use (and love) myself but just to be totally transparent, you should know that some of the links above ARE affiliate links and I DO make a small commission from any sales that are made. Thanks for your support!
------
Tags:
Pros and Cons of Arizona Wills and Arizona Trusts
Posted: Mon Dec 31, 2007 2:31 pm Post subject: Why did I move to Arizona
update living in arizona: pros & cons (8 months).
Update: living in arizona: pros & cons (8 months)
Pros and cons of living in arizona.
What it's like living in arizona.
Living in arizona + relocating?
Pros and cons of arizona ,living in arizona ,life in arizona ,life in az ,living in az ,pros and cons az ,pros and cons arizona ,living in arizona 2017 ,pros and cons phoenix az ,living in phoenix ,move to arizona ,moving to arizona ,pros and cons of each state ,best state to live in ,.
Moving to arizona pros and cons · pros and cons of living in arizona · living in arizona reviews · best places to live in arizona · living in tucson pros and cons · living in arizona 2017 · benefits of living in arizona.
Moving to arizona pros and cons · pros and cons of living in arizona · dangers of living in arizona · living in arizona reviews · best places to live in arizona · living in tucson pros and cons · living in arizona 2017.
If you are considering living in phoenix arizona this is the video you need to see.
Pros And Cons of Living in Arizona I thought this was fun.
What are the Pros and Cons of Living in Arizona.
Hey just want to know from you what are 5 Pros and Cons of living in Arizona.
Living in arizona + relocating?
My arizona experience so far.
Tour of Phoenix - street tour of phoenix, scottsdale, pv and foot tour of broadstone apartments.
Cost of Living in Phoenix Arizona We took a Segway tour of Phoenix Park Drunk History tour of Phoenix, Phoenix, Arizona
Register HERE today to accompany Jason Hartman and The Platinum Properties Team on the Foreclosure Bus Tour of Phoenix
This half-day city tour of Phoenix and Scottsdale showcases iconic locations set against the backdrop of the Sonoran Desert
A Walking Tour of Phoenix, Arizona (Look Up, America DETOURS of Arizona: Driving tour of Phoenix and old Scottsdale, 5
Street tour of phoenix, scottsdale, pv and foot tour of broadstone apartments.
And Kathryn de Ridder-Vignone in which 15 citizens participated in a three-part deliberative exercise, one of which was an all day walking tour of Phoenix.
A Walking Tour Of Phoenix Arizona Look Up America download ebooks pdf is brought to you by insightfortcollins that give to you no cost.
A Walking Tour Of Phoenix Arizona Look Up America pdf free download is give to you by aviewfromthebackroads that give to you no cost.
Take a walking tour of Phoenix: IMG_0628 Alley art IMG_0633 2nd largest art piece in Phoenix IMG_0707.
Some friends and I took the Historial Walking tour of Phoenix this week, and we all just loved it.
If searched for the ebook A Walking Tour of Phoenix, Arizona (Look Up, America.
Book=B009ZL3UN4Read A Walking Tour of Phoenix, Arizona (Look Up, America.
A Walking Tour of Phoenix, Arizona (Look Up, America.
A Walking Tour of Phoenix, Arizona.
This half-day city tour of Phoenix and Scottsdale showcases iconic locations set against the backdrop of the Sonoran Desert.
3 hour fully narrated city tour of Phoenix (may include Scottsdale and Tempe/ASU).
I had a wonderful city tour of Phoenix/Scottsdale filled with great details.
Their city tour of Phoenix and Scottsdale also includes the Heard Museum.
We did the half day City Tour of Phoenix and Scottsdale.
Activities planned: City Tour of Phoenix and Museums.
Uptown central phoenix, az driving tour: living in phoenix, arizona.
Today's location: uptown central phoenix arizona!
Harry styles live on tour phoenix vlog.
City tour phoenix arizona.
Things to do in phoenix | travel guide video production.
Welcome to phoenix arizona!
Harry styles live on tour phoenix vlog. phoenix az downtown real estate
scottsdale arizona
ASU brings graduate art programs to downtown Phoenix
Full story: In January, two of 10 master's degree programs in Arizona State University's School of Art -- painting and drawing -- moved from Tempe to a converted warehouse a few blocks south of Chase Field. Programs in sculpture, fibers and intermedia are following suit.
ASU Art Museum's exhibit showcases work based on historic political ads | Cronkite News
The unbiased presentation of political art puts voters in the right frame of mind, according to ASU art director Gordon. (Video by Joey Carrera/Cronkite News) READ MORE:
Teotihuacan: City of Water, City of Fire | Phoenix Art Museum
Teotihuacan was the first, largest, and most influential metropolis on the American continent. In its heyday between 100 BCE and 650 CE, the city encompassed an area of 20 square kilometers with a population of more than 150,000. Both the inhabitants of Teotihuacan, its original name, and why the city was abandoned around 650 CE are still unknown. When the Aztecs, coming from the north in the first half of the 14th century, discovered its abandoned ruins on the Mexican Central Plateau, they named it Teotihuacan, the place where gods were born, and used it as the setting for their own creation myth.
Teotihuacan: City of Water, City of Fire is a major traveling exhibition organized by the de Young Museum in San Francisco in collaboration with the National Institute of Anthropology and History of Mexico. With more than 200 outstanding objects from the National Museum of Anthropology in Mexico City, Teotihuacan: City of Water, City of Fire will provide a comprehensive insight into the art, everyday life, and religion of Teotihuacan, and its influence on other regions of Mexico. The exhibition will explore the archaeological history of the city through sculptures, friezes and murals; domestic objects including vessels and figures, stone carvings, masks, statues of gods and representations of animals; and extraordinary objects crafted out of precious materials including jade, obsidian, greenstone, and onyx.
Over the course of the exhibition, Phoenix Art Museum will partner with Arizona State University and its world-class archaeology faculty to create community-wide, all-ages programs to enhance visitors’ experience of these World Heritage archaeological treasures, on view for the first time in the state of Arizona.
Teotihuacan: City of Water, City of Fire is organized by the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, in collaboration with the Secretaría de Cultura through the Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia de México. This exhibition has been made possible in part by a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities: Exploring the human endeavor. Any views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this exhibition do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
The Phoenix premiere of Teotihuacan: City of Water, City of Fire is made possible through the generosity of The Diane & Bruce Halle Foundation, supported by BlueCross BlueShield of Arizona and JP Morgan Chase & Co., with additional support from The Selz Foundation, Inc., SRP, Jane and Mal Jozoff, and the Tony & Milena Astorga Foundation.
VLOG: Scottsdale, Arizona | gotcathy
July 22-27, 2018 - Scottsdale, Arizona
(10 miles outside of Phoenix, Arizona)
Sunday - SMOCA (Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art), golf cart tour around Old Town, Desert Botanical Garden, The Mission
Monday - Olive and Ivy, Scottsdale Waterfront, Scottsdale Fashion Square mall
Tuesday - Bourbon and Bones Steakhouse, Sugar Bowl, some bar downtown
Wednesday - Brat Haus, Cartel Coffee Lab
Rest of the days were mostly spent studying, unfortunately, but I really enjoyed what I was able to see.
MUSIC »
Handsome Ghost by Steps
Ephemeral Tape by Dream Easy Collective
So Alive by Gill Bondy
Wanna Know Why by PYC
Street Art - Phoenix Art - Downtown Phoenix Arizona
The Artistic side of Phoenix is very vibrant and growing fast, attracting new developments and lots of new restaurants and bars. Also, art galleries are everywhere along Roosevelt Row, where you can see the spirit and culture of downtown Phoenix.