The Future is now
Craftsmanship was at the heart of an exciting panel debate into the past, present and future of design, presented by Northumbria University and Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums.
Craftsmanship was at the heart of an exciting panel debate into the past, present and future of design, presented by Northumbria University and Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums.
More than 70 students donned pink ponchos for a special performative walk from Northumbria University to Live Theatre to celebrate the strategic partnership between the two organisations.
Tyneside Cinema and Northumbria University are delighted to announce the new Graduate Artists in Residence, as part of a flourishing creative partnership between the two organisations.
Two Northumbria University filmmakers have been shortlisted by the Arts and Humanities Research Council for its Research in Film awards.
Julie Scanlon, Senior Lecturer in Twentieth to Twenty-First-Century Writing, reviews Anne Tyler's Man Booker Prize shortlisted book A Spool of Blue Thread for The Conversation.
Christine Borland, Professor of Art at Northumbria University, comments on The Turner Prize for The Conversation.
“This city is what it is because our citizens are what they are”, or so the philosopher Plato once said. But what does it mean to be a citizen? And how have Newcastle’s citizens shaped our city through the ages?
Northumbria University, Newcastle, has been recognised as one of Europe’s best providers of innovation and entrepreneurship teaching.
Northumbria University, Newcastle, is partnering with The Ellen MacArthur Foundation (EMF) to help deliver the second Disruptive Innovation Festival (DIF) between 2- 20 November 2015.
Striking artwork from the winner of prestigious Woon Foundation Art Prize 2014 will has gone on display at the Gallery North this month.
In the very first line of Legend, the new Kray twins film starring Tom Hardy (and Tom Hardy), we hear that everyone in the East End has a story about the Krays and that therefore separating the truth from the lies is rarely straightforward.
Two Northumbria University graduates have halted their European backpacking adventure and pitched up at a refugee camp in Budapest to help families who have fled war torn Syria.