artists
- Disparate styles on display in exhibit
-
- Former Frederick dressmaker Esther Krinitz created 36 tapestries that tell the story of her escape from the Holocaust.
- The Towson Arts Collective show "Things that Glow in the Dark" provides 16 local artists' interpretations of the subtle and not-so-subtle contrast between light and darkness.
- Gallery opens Oct. 5 with exhibition of photos by UMBC graduates
- Catonsville resident to showcase art at Atwater's bakery
- The four very different artists in The Meeting House Gallery exhibit "Eclectic" live up to that title, but they can be divided into two basic groups: two of them are abstract artists and two of them are representational artists.
- There was no sign of forced entrance, but few other details were mentioned in the document
-
-
- Painting bought for $7 from a W. Va. flea market appears to have been stolen in 1951
- The two two-artist exhibit at the Bernice Kish Gallery at Slayton House is a study in contrasts. Maxine Taylor's vigorously abstract paintings only incorporate the occasional representational reference, whereas Richard Paul Weiblinger's color photographs of nature are sharply in focus
- The Abell community held its annual street fair Sept. 23, noon to 5 p.m., to promote urban living
- The former Ravens owner and his wife were major donors to local arts groups
- Bel Air resident Julie Ter Borg was chosen to have her pieces included in gift bags handed out at the Primetime Emmys Celebrity Gift Lounge
-
-
- Putting back in place the murals that have been recognized as important works in their artistic category would be a fitting way to link the old Maryland House with the new, just as the paintings themselves link the Interstate America, with its more rustic beginnings.
- Margery K. "Margie" Pozefsky, a potter and kidney transplant survivor who with her husband endowed a professorship of kidney transplant surgery at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, died Friday of lung cancer at her Rockland home. She was 71.
- The Maryland House on I-95 may be known more for its fast food and bevy of bathrooms than for fine artwork, but a historic mural portraying Maryland history has actually adorned the travel plaza since the 1960s.
- Collective of artists using light projector to recap movement.
-
- New regulations let Owings Mills couple program unmanned aerial vehicle to shoot photos
- The painterly colors are as bright as a tropical sun in some of the artwork in the "Contemporary Latin American Art Exhibition" at the Columbia Art Center. Although the subject matter in all four artists tends to be puzzling, it's easy to enjoy their otherwise baffling imagery
-
-
- Walters Arts Museum launches 'Off the Wall,' citywide outdoor exhibit of reproductions
- "Paysage Bords de Seine," dating from about 1879, is expected to fetch between $75,000 and $100,000 at auction Sept. 29
-
-
-
- Avenue Antiques gets even bigger, sprawling into the old, historic Ideal Theatre next door on The Avenue in Hampden. The store holds its grand opening Friday afternoon and unveils new artwork the Walters Art Museum installed on an exterior wall of Avenue Antiques.
- WJZ anchorman Vic Carter's spacious Howard County home is filled with more than 300 original paintings, small sculptures and figurines by mostly black artists.
-
- Annual September event in Catonsville attracts more than 25,000 visitors
-
-
- Annapolis hopes to resurrect its arts district with 20 fiberglass chicken sculptures.
- Watercolor classes began at center last September.
- The $28 million project to reconstruct Charles Street starts Sept. 5, when a detour goes into affect. The project will last two years and is expected to have a major impact on motorists, businesses and institutions including Johns Hopkins University's Homewood campus and the Baltimore Museum of Art.
- Sixto Rodriguez's two albums sank without a trace in the U.S. He never knew that in South Africa, he was a superstar.
-
-
- John E. Sparks, an artist, educator and a nationally known printmaker who developed and chaired the department of printmaking at the Maryland Institute College of Art for nearly 40 years, died Aug. 2 of prostate cancer and pneumonia.
- The Carroll County Arts Council is celebrating its 10th annual Members Art Exhibit at the arts center, 91 W. Main St., Westminster.
- A four-year project funded by the University of Maryland's Art Gallery involves painting large-scale murals on one barn in every county in Maryland.
-
-
- Alice Webb's two-dozen watercolor paintings, displayed on the covers of a series of Baltimore Sun hometown guides, make up a new exhibit called "Around the Beltway with The Baltimore Sun" at Howard Community College in Columbia.