Reading

The 23rd Great Halloween Lantern Parade & Festival: Photos

Previous Story
Article Image

2022 Sondheim Semi-Finalists at School 33 Art Center

Next Story
Article Image

The Internet Is Exploding: 10 Must-Read Articles [...]

On Saturday, October 22, 2022 the 23rd Great Halloween Lantern Parade & Festival was presented by Creative Alliance and The Friends of Patterson Park. The festival included a costume contest for kids and families, lantern making, performances, an arts & crafts market, an array of food and treats from local food trucks, and the glowing parade procession from Patterson Park to the Pulaski Monument after dark.

 

Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Creative Alliance
Related Stories
Baltimore-Based Groups Participate in a Global Theater Festival to Inspire Action

Coinciding with the U.N. Climate Change Conference, Baltimore-based Plays and Readings

A Monthly Reading Series Pairs Authors and Poets with Wine and Sake

Ashleigh Bryant Phillips and Joseph Grantham started Hidden Palace, a reading series for poetry and fiction, at Fadensonnen

Beautiful Photos from BmoreArt's Magazine Release Party for Issue 16 at Peabody Library

BmoreArt’s subscribers have impeccable style and show up dressed for an occasion!

Nicoletta Daríta de la Brown and the Tabb Center Public Humanities Fellowships

This fall, after working months in her studio, de la Brown is responding to what she uncovered in the archives with a public art installation in the George Peabody Library called Be(longing): Unveiling the Imprint of Black Women Hidden in Plain Sight.