Public Art in Baltimore: Practice, Curation and Collaboration
UMBC's Center for Art, Design and Visual Culture (CADVC) presents Teri Henderson, Arts and Culture Editor at Baltimore Beat, who will discuss public art in Baltimore.
A program of the Greater Baltimore Cultural Alliance
UMBC's Center for Art, Design and Visual Culture (CADVC) presents Teri Henderson, Arts and Culture Editor at Baltimore Beat, who will discuss public art in Baltimore.
To launch our new partnership with the Baltimore City Chamber of Commerce, GBCA is excited to announce a special happy hour event happening on Thursday, March 30 from 6 - 8 p.m., at Urban Reads Bookstore located at 3008 Greenmount Avenue, Baltimore, MD.
This event is open to GBCA members and non-members.
You've heard of Wheel of Fortune, The Price Is Right and Who Wants to Be A Millionaire. All beloved game shows based on one principal: having a lot of money and stuff is great and makes your life better. But none of these televised cash grabs really get at the heart of what makes our society tick.
Join the Reginald F. Lewis Museum for a double film feature examining the origins of Afrofuturism and discovering what it takes to keep Black love in the future. A post discussion with filmmakers Alexis Aggrey, Jamal Gray and Denai “B Fly” Nixon will follow.
VINTAGE BLACK EXPO 2023
Join us on Saturday April 15th, from 11am-7pm at the historic Eubie Blake National Jazz Institute and Cultural Center for our next Vintage Black Expo | Baltimore 2023 It is a day to celebrate, educate, cultivate and elevate Black vintage history, culture and traditions through the lens of fashion.
At the Vintage Black Expo you can expect...
▪︎ Networking with fellow vintage lovers
▪︎ Learning from vintage experts and historians
▪︎ Shopping with sustainable businesses across the region
FREE! RSVP in advance!
Join us at The Peale building for a thought-provoking panel discussion that includes artist Anna Foer Fine and a diverse group of multi-disciplinary experts.
In the exhibition, Compensation for Loss, Anna Fine Foer’s carefully researched and meticulously crafted works re-imagine the Renaissance cabinet of curiosities for the present. These cabinets were a precursor to the museum, where collectors displayed natural specimens, often from far-off locales, to advance scientific study and to impress visitors with their erudition and wealth.