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  • Faculty Feature: Meet Amanda Sweger, Associate Professor of Theatre The PLU Theatre & Dance Department is lucky to have Amanda Sweger as a faculty member. Amanda has taught at PLU since fall 2012. She focuses on lighting and scenic design and has a professional practice outside the classroom. Continue reading to get to know… April 9, 2020 FacultyTheatre

  • Faculty Feature: Meet Amanda Sweger, Associate Professor of Theatre The PLU Theatre & Dance Department is lucky to have Amanda Sweger as a faculty member. Amanda has taught at PLU since fall 2012. She focuses on lighting and scenic design and has a professional practice outside the classroom. Continue reading to get to know… April 9, 2020 FacultyTheatre

  • Faculty Feature: Meet Amanda Sweger, Associate Professor of Theatre The PLU Theatre & Dance Department is lucky to have Amanda Sweger as a faculty member. Amanda has taught at PLU since fall 2012. She focuses on lighting and scenic design and has a professional practice outside the classroom. Continue reading to get to know… April 9, 2020 FacultyTheatre

  • Kathleen Anderson Resident Assistant Professor of Theatre, Costume Designer Full Profile 253-535-7326 anderskw@plu.edu

  • Hannah Jeske ’16 Where are you working now? Shannon & Wilson, Inc., a geotechnical engineering design firm. I am the Marketing Assistant. What were you involved in while at PLU?  I was involved in MediaLab, theatre, swing club, and Intervarsity. What are some of the biggest challenges you’ve faced since graduation? The hardest challenges I have faced have been navigating through changing relationships, crises of loved ones, and keeping my head above the water of all that life has thrown at me

  • Taylor Cox Visiting Instructor of Art & Design Full Profile she/her/hers 253-535-7325 coxta@plu.edu

  • On Exhibit: Cardboard Containers sculptures by 3-D design students Posted by: Holly Senn / May 15, 2023 May 15, 2023 This exhibit of student work is based on an art class assignment in which students were given everyday objects and tasked with replicating and constructing forms using sheets and rolls of cardboard, self-adhesive paper tape, and hot glue. The project covered scale, mathematical reasoning, armatures, product design, logo and graphic design, and the aesthetics of commercialism. To

  • PLU alumna spreads joy as Spokanasaurus Rex Posted by: Kari Plog / July 20, 2017 Image: Sarah (Allen) Caprye ’01 is a busy mother of five, with a part-time job as a dinosaur. Here she’s pictured in the Spokanasaurus Rex costume on a paddle board. (Photo courtesy of Caprye) July 20, 2017 By Genny Boots '18PLU Marketing & CommunicationsTACOMA, WASH. (July 20, 2017)- Sarah (Allen) Caprye ’01 is a busy mother of five, with a part-time job as a dinosaur. You might know her by her alter-ego

  • dancers so that she can be entertained and be happy.” Ragoonanan fiddled with black bird feathers on a headband, then glued more pieces of feathers onto a modified headband lined with wires. He said it takes approximately 18 hours to make seven headpieces, and about three days to hand-stitch one costume. After staying home the entire week of Spring Break, Ragoonanan has reached his goal of completing all the costumes he needs for his dance, which will be showcased in the April 11-12 Dance Concert 2014

  • facemask carved from a singe piece of wood and decorated with life-like human hair that may suggest braiding, with darker tinted lips, and a carved lip plug or labret. The holes that can be observed along the edge of the mask would have been used to secure raffia or other materials to the mask as part of the costume to help conceal the wearer’s identity.Learn more about the Likomba Mask 2