To submit an event, email Special Events here.
The University will host a Town Hall Meeting on today, October 22, at 5 p.m., in Lee Hall for all students impacted by Hurricane Michael. Join us to find out about University and community resources as well as how we can support one another.
take place in the College of Pharmacy, Conference Room 320. Please contact Marlon S. Honeywell at (850) 599-8178 or marlon.honeywell@famu.edu for additional information.
Programs at (850) 599-3076 at least five (5) business days prior to the start of the event. If you are hearing or speech impaired, please contact the University by calling TDD via FRS 800-955-8771.
The search committee for the dean of the College of Education will not meet on Friday, October 26. The next committee meeting will be held on Monday, October 29, at 11 a.m., in the FAMU College of Pharmacy, Conference Room 320. Please contact Marlon S. Honeywell at (850) 599-8178 or marlon.honeywell@famu.edu for additional information.
If you require a reasonable accommodation to participate in this meeting pursuant to the Americans with Disabilities Amendment Act (ADAA), please contact the Office of Equal Opportunity Programs at (850) 599-3076 at least five (5) business days prior to the start of the event. If you are hearing or speech impaired, please contact the University by calling TDD via FRS 800-955-8771.
The search committee for the superintendent of the FAMU Developmental Research School will meet on Friday, October 26, from 10 a.m. – 1 p.m. The meeting will take place in the Samuel H. Coleman Library, Room A415. Please contact Faye Watkins at 599-3370 for additional information.
If you require a reasonable accommodation to participate in this meeting pursuant to the Americans with Disabilities Amendment Act (ADAA), please contact the Office of Equal Opportunity Programs at (850) 599-3076 at least five (5) business days prior to the start of the event. If you are hearing or speech impaired, please contact the University by calling TDD via FRS 800-955-8771.
The search committee for the superintendent of the FAMU Developmental Research School will meet on Tuesday, October 30, from 8 a.m. – 11 a.m. The meeting will take place in Samuel H. Coleman Library, Room A415. Please contact Faye Watkins at 599-3370 for additional information.
If you require a reasonable accommodation to participate in this meeting pursuant to the Americans with Disabilities Amendment Act (ADAA), please contact the Office of Equal Opportunity Programs at (850) 599-3076 at least five (5) business days prior to the start of the event. If you are hearing or speech impaired, please contact the University by calling TDD via FRS 800-955-8771.
Check out the latest exhibition, “Through the Lens: Identity, Representation and Self-Presentation”
“Through the Lens” brings together three photographers whose art addresses the complexities of identity. Race, sexual orientation, gender and nationality are just a handful of ways that we use to identify ourselves and others. This exhibition explores the nuances of those identities, including notions of representation and self-presentation. A “lens,” typically thought of as a camera component used to focus on a photographic subject, is also a metaphor for referring to our perspective of looking at the world, and subsequently how we relate to it. “Through the Lens” takes both the literal and metaphorical meaning of our featured artists’ current series to help us explore our own perceptions.
“Through the Lens” also highlights community leader Stephen K. Beasley, founder of the Capital Outlook newspaper and commercial photographer whose long-established photo studio impacted the Tallahassee community and beyond. The “Through the Lens” exhibition highlights Beasley’s photography in a segment entitled, “Portrait of a Photographer.” “Portrait of a Photographer” brings into focus the photographer’s personal family photographs, studio photography and his inspirations for documenting the political and social lives of the Black community in Tallahassee from the Civil Rights era until the 2000s.
To plan your visit, contact the Foster-Tanner Fine Arts Gallery at (850) 599-8755 or fostertannergallery@famu.edu. For more information about the gallery, check out our website at: www.famu.edu/index.cfm?fineartsprogram&ArtGallery.
Check out the latest exhibition, “Through the Lens: Identity, Representation and Self-Presentation”
“Through the Lens” brings together three photographers whose art addresses the complexities of identity. Race, sexual orientation, gender and nationality are just a handful of ways that we use to identify ourselves and others. This exhibition explores the nuances of those identities, including notions of representation and self-presentation. A “lens,” typically thought of as a camera component used to focus on a photographic subject, is also a metaphor for referring to our perspective of looking at the world, and subsequently how we relate to it. “Through the Lens” takes both the literal and metaphorical meaning of our featured artists’ current series to help us explore our own perceptions.
“Through the Lens” also highlights community leader Stephen K. Beasley, founder of the Capital Outlook newspaper and commercial photographer whose long-established photo studio impacted the Tallahassee community and beyond. The “Through the Lens” exhibition highlights Beasley’s photography in a segment entitled, “Portrait of a Photographer.” “Portrait of a Photographer” brings into focus the photographer’s personal family photographs, studio photography and his inspirations for documenting the political and social lives of the Black community in Tallahassee from the Civil Rights era until the 2000s.
To plan your visit, contact the Foster-Tanner Fine Arts Gallery at (850) 599-8755 or fostertannergallery@famu.edu. For more information about the gallery, check out our website at: www.famu.edu/index.cfm?fineartsprogram&ArtGallery.
Check out the latest exhibition, “Through the Lens: Identity, Representation and Self-Presentation”
“Through the Lens” brings together three photographers whose art addresses the complexities of identity. Race, sexual orientation, gender and nationality are just a handful of ways that we use to identify ourselves and others. This exhibition explores the nuances of those identities, including notions of representation and self-presentation. A “lens,” typically thought of as a camera component used to focus on a photographic subject, is also a metaphor for referring to our perspective of looking at the world, and subsequently how we relate to it. “Through the Lens” takes both the literal and metaphorical meaning of our featured artists’ current series to help us explore our own perceptions.
“Through the Lens” also highlights community leader Stephen K. Beasley, founder of the Capital Outlook newspaper and commercial photographer whose long-established photo studio impacted the Tallahassee community and beyond. The “Through the Lens” exhibition highlights Beasley’s photography in a segment entitled, “Portrait of a Photographer.” “Portrait of a Photographer” brings into focus the photographer’s personal family photographs, studio photography and his inspirations for documenting the political and social lives of the Black community in Tallahassee from the Civil Rights era until the 2000s.
To plan your visit, contact the Foster-Tanner Fine Arts Gallery at (850) 599-8755 or fostertannergallery@famu.edu. For more information about the gallery, check out our website at: www.famu.edu/index.cfm?fineartsprogram&ArtGallery.