walters art museum
- There was no sign of forced entrance, but few other details were mentioned in the document
- Baltimore County unveiled a trio of new features at Robert E. Lee Park on Thursday, including an outdoor art exhibit from the Walters Art Museum that matches the park's bucolic setting.
- The former Ravens owner and his wife were major donors to local arts groups
- Peter Marvit, a 51-year-old scientist who sang with the Baltimore Choral Arts Society and sought to widen music education opportunities for city students, died at Johns Hopkins Hospital after he was shot near his Northeast Baltimore home last Monday night. He had been returning home from a choral rehearsal.
- 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.
- Walters Arts Museum launches 'Off the Wall,' citywide outdoor exhibit of reproductions
- Art Modell, an entrepreneurial owner with the Baltimore Ravens and Cleveland Browns who restored a National Football League franchise to Baltimore in 1996 and delivered a Super Bowl championship four years later, has died at 87 at Johns Hopkins Hospital.
- 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.
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- Hundreds gathered at the Washington Monument for the victims of a double shooting near the Belvedere hotel last week.
- He helped her train for a marathon, and soon they were in it together for the long run.
- Ann McAllister Hughes, an artist who retired from teaching art at Baltimore public schools and had chaired the art department at Forest Park High School, died July 27 of pulmonary failure at Gilchrist Hospice Care in Towson.
- $111,000 grant enables Walters Art Museum to showcase its American collection
- The summer exhibits at Baltimore's two largest museums are very different in nature, but both emphasize local input.
- The cafe at the Walters Art Museum closed a few weeks ago. Chef¿s Expressions, the latest in a line of caterers to operate the space, pulled out on July 2. Museum officials say they are looking for someone to run a scaled-down ¿grab-and-go¿ or vending operation in the short term.
- Baltimore filmmaker Robert Gardner's 'Islamic Art' documentary to air on PBS
- Baltimore's Art on Purpose program helped city residents transform the way they see their world.
- The title, themes and artworks in 'Public Property,' the new Walters exhibit, were chosen by more than 53,000 votes cast online and by visitors.
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- Baltimore's Contemporary Museum, which abruptly announced it was suspending operations last week, vows to return. But it will be to an increasingly crowded field, with everyone from the established Baltimore Museum of Art to new galleries in emerging arts districts expanding the number of venues to see current art.
- Baltimore's Contemporary Museum ponders its next move after May 31 closure
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- Contemporary Museum to let employees go; plans scrapped for new home on Charles St.
- Walters among a number of museums providing photographs to the online encyclopedia
- Baltimore breaking news: Tuesday lunchtime lowdown
- Alice Pinkham Davies, who helped thousands of clients compose their business careers as the co-owner of a resume writing service, died of Alzheimer's disease Thursday at the Gilchrist Hospice Center. She was 85 and lived in Towson.
- Lady Baltimore statue atop Battle Monument to be preserved as part of War of 1812 bicentennial celebration
- Lady Baltimore, the figure atop one of the nation¿s first war memorials, is getting a new home.
- Lady Baltimore, the figure atop one of the nation's first war memorials, is getting a new home.
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- Roseanna V. Perkins, a retired Ruxton Country School teacher, died of cancer March 27 at the Gilchrist Center for Hospice Care. The Glen Arm resident was 62.
- Collection of medieval works will be made available to public with three-year project