art
- An unusual honor for an unproven painter, the exhibit signals that Adelsberger is a talent to watch
- They say it ain't over until the fat lady sings, and the colorful life of the Havre de Grace Opera House is clearly far from over.
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- Walking through the air-conditioned Meeting House Gallery to see the exhibit "Picture Windows: The Painted Screens of Baltimore," you'll find yourself thinking about a distant era when un-air-conditioned houses baked in the summer sun.
- I wrote a while ago about Bel Air's success with its downtown, compared with the more dismal fate of small towns in the Midwest, especially.
- Anyone in the market for a body-hugging skirt and top adorned with oversized sequins made of aluminum soda cans? How about a frilly, strapless gown with tiers of latex medical gloves minus the fingertips?
- Exhibit of work by seven finalists for $25,000 Sondheim Artscape Prize provides multi-sensory experience.
- The folks from Benjamin Moore paints have done a wonderful job freshening up our Main Street.
- Patterson High School "Sails" installation is one of many sculptures and other pieces of art that have been integrated into school landscapes across Baltimore. As the city begins the $1.1 billion project of renovating or rebuilding more than 100 of its most dilapidated schools, officials are taking inventory of this trove and determining how — and whether — to preserve it.
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- Priscilla G. Teeter, a registered nurse who later became an administrator with the Carroll County Health Department, died May 30 of brain cancer at Carroll Lutheran Village in Westminster. She was 85.
- Artists are restoring "Extinct Gray Whales", a 5,200-square-foot mural on Russell Street painted by the artist Wyland in 1993.
- Visitors to the Columbia Festival of the Arts-related art exhibit "Things That Scare Me" may experience sleepless nights as a result. Shown jointly at the Columbia Art Center and Howard Community College, this show taps into a host of topics guaranteed to make you feel uneasy.
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- How to bring the cultural arts, fresh air and some sunshine into your summer.
- Stephen Powers, an artist hired by the Baltimore Office of Promotion & the Arts, recently painted the bright letters "FOREVER TOGETHER" and "I AM HERE BECAUSE IT'S HOME" on the 36 abandoned houses as a preview to a larger project he will be starting in the fall.
- The All Member Summer Show at the Artists' Gallery is likely to welcome a lot of visitors this weekend, because the gallery's American City Building address places it right next to the free Lakefest Celebration marking the start of the Columbia Festival of the Arts.
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