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ArticleAt the Vox Populi collective, the space is, as often, split amongst four artists and consequently, a variety of styles and mediums. The current exhibits at this Knight Arts grantee consist of work by Jay Muhlin, Maria Dumlao, Erica Prince and Leigh Van Duzer. On each end of the spectrum...
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ArticleBy Michael Bolden, Knight Foundation editorial director Lourdes Lopez, artistic director of the Miami City Ballet, will serve on the board of trustees for the Ford Foundation, a New York-based nonprofit established by Edsel Ford in 1936. In an announcement, Ford said Lopez is the first artist to join the...
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ArticleLourdes Lopez coaching Miami City Ballet dancers in Apollo. Choreography by George Balanchine © The George Balanchine Trust. Photo © Daniel Azoulay. Lourdes Lopez, artistic director of the Miami City Ballet, will serve on the board of trustees for the Ford Foundation, a New York-based nonprofit established by Edsel Ford in 1936. In an announcement, Ford said Lopez is the first artist to join the board. Lourdes Lopez, Aristic Director of Miami City Ballet. Photo © Daniel Azoulay Lopez, who was born in Cuba, grew up in Miami but left to pursue a dance career at the age of 14. She spent 24 years dancing at New York City Ballet under Jerome Robbins and George Balanchine. She retired as a principal dancer in 1997 but continued to work in the arts world, most recently heading the George Balanchine Foundation. She returned to South Florida in 2012 to head Miami City Ballet. “Lourdes brings a dynamism and creative energy that will enrich and advance the work of the foundation,” Darren Walker, president of the Ford Foundation, said in a statement. “She shares a deep commitment to social justice and has continually broken barriers in her own life while working to expand opportunity for everyone.” Ford said trustees, who set policy for the foundation across a range of areas including grantmaking, serve six-year terms. Ford, which has assets of more than $11 billion, has offices around the world and works in all 50 states and more than 50 countries.
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ArticleBy Juan Carlos Pérez-Duthie With Brigid Baker, one gets the feeling that she has lived several lives. There’s the Brigid from New York City, her hometown, who was part of the late 70s-early 80s creative explosion that saw art and music and all-around coolness collide into a supernova of excitement....
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ArticleRoasted Cafe and Lounge offers so much more than coffee, adult beverages and great food. They are creating an eclectic and international vibe by booking groups like England in 1819, Anna Mae Kersey and One Horse Parade. All of these performing and recording artists have some type of ties to...
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ArticleJeannette Sorrell, director of Apollo's Fire, a Knight Arts grantee, just keeps getting more creative as she goes along. Known and renowned for their work in baroque period classical, sacred, and lay music, Apollo's Fire has been known to take a few steps out of that era and combine it...
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ArticleMinnesota History Center has a charming kids’ program underway this January, February and March — just the thing if cabin fever’s been getting to your little ones. Once a month, the Big Wow Family Variety Show (formerly Global Hotdish) offers 90 minutes of multicultural performance — comedy, acrobatics and dance,...
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ArticleSupport Puremovement Projects and dance with a master as Tony Award-nominated dancer Desmond Richardson hosts two master classes in Miami. The New York Times called Richardson "one of the greatest modern dancers of his time." Now you'll have a chance to dance with him.Each class begins with contemporary ballet barre,...
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ArticleBy Elizabeth Shannon, Bass Museum of Art Courtesy of Meg Pukel Just under a month ago, the Bass Museum of Art installed two new artworks by Miami-based artists in Collins Park as part of tc: temporary contemporary. Christy Gast’s Self Portrait as the Barefoot Mailman (2013)...
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ArticleWorks from Sam Winston commissioned for the Victoria and Albert Museum. It’s really impossible to appreciate the work of London-based Sam Winston by looking at images online; they are too subtle and monochromatic to translate to the screen, and even though they incorporate text, they are...
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ArticlePublic artwork has always thrived in the streets of Philadelphia, and the city is often known for its plethora of murals and sculptures that seems to manifest themselves just about everywhere. Currently, artist Michael Konrad has a few pieces on temporary and permanent display from South Broad all the way...
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ArticleThe crowd gathers for the main event, following the opening cocktail hour. On Monday, February 10th, the DSO’s Max M. Fisher Music Center was the location for the kickoff of the Assemble: IDEA Speaker Series, with a presentation by keynote speaker Vishaan Chakrabarti, followed by a...
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ArticleThe Hanan Arts Cooperative and the Mideastern Dance Exchange present the Diaspora Women's Dance Festival, a weekend of meditation and exploration of dance workshops that culminate in a performance on Saturday, March 8th at 8 p.m. Kaeshi Chai. The culminating performance highlights cross-cultural and interdisciplinary artists...
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ArticleSarah Hayes Watson in "Chaconne." Photo by Christopher Record Collaboration was the main theme running through the 2014 performances of North Carolina Dance Theatre’s “Innovative Works,” but diversity in collaboration took the choreography on divergent paths, creating a wonderfully inspiring miscellany. This year’s “Innovative Works” featured...
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ArticleMacon Film Festival 2014 flyer. For nine years, the Macon Film Festival (a Knight Arts grantee) has been making moves by choosing independent films for all of Middle Georgia to view and by accepting work from independent filmmakers from all over the world. Each year...