“quarantine diaries”
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'I Will Eat You Alive' at the Voxel, Mayor's Office seeks visual artists for funded projects, Center Stage cutbacks, graffiti artist RLong, Baltimore Old Time Music Fest, Port Discovery's 25th Anniversary Plan–and more from local and independent media sources.
While forward-thinking, Black Futures is simultaneously about Black pasts and Black presents.
How can we make working from home work for us as creatives? How do we keep making measurable steps towards our career goals in a time when it’s hard to focus?
Stay home, stay healthy, stay engaged in the arts.
What have we realized, or re-realized, or realized for the nth time in 2020?
Each of Towns’ quilts in this series is named after a different African-American spiritual song, the roots of which run deep in the Black church and in the Black southern art tradition as well.
There is a sense of hope in this illusion of free time.
In this weird and surreal time of social distancing and self-isolation, a stranger’s voice can feel like a warm invitation.
FOLLOWING is a series of profiles and interviews of the art world social media accounts that make us think, laugh, cry, love, or sometimes just “like.”
The series came from the artist's question: has anyone seen a black flower? No one could give her an answer, but she knew they existed.
The antidote to the greed and selfishness that got us all here is kindness and compassion. They say that begins at home. Lucky us.
Coronavirus updates from Baltimore Brew, Maryland Matters, Technical.ly Baltimore, Real News Network, Fishbowl, Baltimore Magazine, and a selection of relevant articles published by Baltimore-based journalists for a variety of publications
Musician and MDVLA executive director Adam G. Holofcener’s new album GEE-ZA-WHIZ begins with a deep breath and a deeper exhalation
Stay home, stay healthy, stay engaged in the arts.