Screening one night only at the Charles, a new doc goes behind the scenes with Neil Feather
The end result is more than a portrait of the artist at work; it’s a document of the uniquely collaborative spirit for which Baltimore is, and should be, known.
Cliff Banquet pivots to film with a June 30 screening at the Charles
The one-night-only screening of Tyler Brunner's film features handmade chocolates and a specialty cocktail from Tapas Teatro.
The 13th annual Architecture and Design Film Festival returns to DC
"Design and filmmaking are both storytelling,” Bergman says. “When you design something, you're telling a story, [as much as] when you're making a film."
A new chapbook organized by Ann Quinn is both an anthology and a self-directed workshop for poets looking to expand their skills
Poetry Is Life, a new poetry workbook published this month by Baltimore’s Yellow Arrow Publishing, morphs a successful workshop into a handy, portable, and non-electronic format.
An interview with artist, writer, and professor Mark Alice Durant about small press Saint Lucy Books
Saint Lucy evolved from a blog covering photography and contemporary art into a small press that produces stylish, unique books exploring the liminal possibilities and hidden histories of photography.
MAP’s retrospective celebrates 30+ years of Baltimore’s underground performance art showcase
A discussion with Laure Drogoul about her show at Maryland Art Place and the 14 Karat Cabaret, an “Exquisite Corpse Manifest”
Trial in the Woods explores rationality, violence, and the ethics of punishment through Barber’s trademark humor and wordplay
BmoreArt interviewed Barber over email about addressing violence, the fraught usage of animals as metaphors, shapeshifting concepts of “justice” and “community,” and more.
'The Right Girls' follows young transgender women trying to cross the US border, but falls victim to many typical vérité pitfalls
Without trans persons behind the camera, the spectacle of The Right Girls offers few answers for those of us with a personal stake in the outcome of this journey.
A conversation with experimental writer and archivist Megan McShea
Proprietary technologies and planned obsolescence collide to make data harder to extract once a file format is no longer supported, leading to a growing concern about the impact of this current “digital dark age.”
An Interview with Filmmaker Karen Yasinsky
One Night Only, explores the visual languages of silent film stars and stand-up comedians.
"This work is about empathy. I wait; I go into meditative spaces and I will either have automatic writing or I'll have an image."
Potter provides a valuable resource which is adaptable for individuals and organizations alike in combating harassment and violence.