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@WEKU: Building Arts Communities, Part 2: Arts Districts
11 hours ago ago from Copious Notes
Anna Miskelly left, and Ruby Wiggs, shopped at Third Street Stuff and coffee shop in Lexington, Ky., on Wed, Jan., 30 2008. Photo by Pablo Alcala | Herald-Leader staff. The second part of Building Arts Communities, the series the Herald-Leader has partnered with WEKU-FM 88.9 to present, aired this morning with WEKU's Stu Johnson looking at developing arts districts. Stu visited the Limestone Street area of Lexington as well as Berea's ...
Related contentNew Art Gallery in Plymouth Township Challenges Conventional Wisdom
20 hours ago ago from thedetroiter.com
Search Search for: Go Home About Archives Subscribe Contact Cinema Film Reviews News For Actors News for Film Makers City Life City Tours Environment Features Food Fundraisers and Benefits Lectures/ Discussions Recreation Bicycle Culture Car Culture The detroiters Editorials Letter to the editor Literary Arts News for Writers Poetry Readings & Discussions Music and industrial Avant Garde Blues Classical Country Electronic ...
Related contentSpeaking of Seasons...
22 hours ago ago from Amanda Watson-Will
I thought I would talk a bit about my choice of imagery for the Book*Art*Object book. I considered a few different possibilities before deciding on the mix of a jacarandah tree and photos of my mother. For a number of years I've been wanting to get more in touch with the cycle of seasons. Living in a city, I feel the need to make an effort to be more aware of nature and my place within it. I find this awareness can be both soothing and ...
Related contentThe Appendix: Jerry Saltz Celebrates Women - ARTINFO.com
20 hours ago ago from ARTINFO - The premier site for news about art and culture around the world
LOG IN Art+Auction Modern Painters Culture+Travel MyArtinfo Art News Art Prices Art Market Artists Museums Art Calendar Gallery Guide Art Education Art Jobs HOME | NEWS APPENDIX The Appendix: Jerry Saltz Celebrates Women Published: December 15, 2009 © Patrick McMullan Company Critic Jerry Saltz and art patron Yvonne ...
Related contentTHE MUNIFICENCE OF ANN LEWIS
21 hours ago ago from Aboriginal Art News
“For better or worse, it is the strangest and most beautiful show of abstract paintings I have seen in a long time”. The Sydney Morning Herald's art critic, Terence Maloon was bemusedly describing his response to the first ever commercial showing of Aboriginal art on canvas in Sydney in January 1982 – all works from the then 10 year old Papunya Tula Artists collective. They were to be seen at Paddington's premier Gallery A in the context of ...
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