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    A Dutch poster from 1936 in the Wolfsonian Collection. The Wolfsonian-FIU has really been on a roll lately. First it received a $5 million Knight Foundation grant in December, in particular to beef up its online presence so more people can get to know its unique...
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    At Pentimenti in Old City, six local artists display work that exhibits an understanding beyond the scope of Philadelphia – although that's where the logical starting point is in “Global Conscious, Local Artists.” Shaina Craft, Tim Eads, Tim Portlock, Raul Romero, Emily Schnellbacher, and Jay Walker present a range of...
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    By Sebastian Spreng, Visual Artist and Classical Music Writer Good music refreshes body and soul. Two sequential events this torrid June confirmed the error of the equation “Miami + Beach + summer = Bye-bye, classical music.” Both the Baroque concert at the Iglesia-Museo Perú Nuestra Señora de la Merced and...
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    By Gary Steur, Chief Cultural Officer for the City of Philadelphia As some may have already heard, I have been appointed the new President and Chief Executive Officer of the Bonfils-Stanton Foundation in Denver, Colorado. I am so excited about taking on this new challenge but, of course, sorry to...
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    By Katherine Bergman, Zeitgeist Each year, the American Composers Forum and the McKnight Foundation invite composers from outside of Minnesota to design and produce their own residencies within a Minnesota community. This year’s McKnight Composer Fellow is Hugh Livingston, a California composer with a keen interest in the communication between...
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    By Julie Burtch, Detroit Institute of Arts Given the popularity of the DIA’s Inside|Out installation throughout metro Detroit, it’s no surprise that other museums have launched similar projects. In fact, the DIA isn’t even the first museum to install high-quality reproductions on buildings and in parks—the National Gallery transformed London’s...
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    On my way to Afua Hall's “Red” at the Miami Theater Center last Friday, I got stuck in traffic caused by Miami Critical Mass—an event held the last Friday of every month where bicyclists take over major city streets en masse. Their goal is to spark county-wide awareness of climate...
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    Dale Mezzacopa - Philadelphia Public School Notebook - IgKnight Speaker from Knight Foundation on Vimeo. Last week, we had the inspiring opportunity to gather our grantees in Philadelphia at The Barnes Foundation. What was really unprecedented was that the grantees were from all of our portfolios. It was an opportunity to share, learn and connect beyond those boundaries. I wish I could say it was all my idea, but our grantees came up with this. They told me last fall that they would like more opportunities to meet one another and form connections. So, we designed the gathering to allow them to create new relationships, share information and learn new things. Many met each other for the first time. Others already knew one another but learned a little more. Two grantee panels shared how you can spread the word about your work on a shoestring budget and how to raise money whether you are an individual, a small startup, or a large, seasoned organization. Faye Anderson, a donor-advised fund grantee, who is usually in the tech space, connected with BMe grantee Lovett Hines of The Philadelphia Clef Club. They plan to work together to develop and disseminate a Philly jazz app. Barbara Allen of Fresh Artists grabbed some folks, including me, and talked about what could be a possible next step: working to create an exchange for grantees to share resources, skills and knowledge. Michelle and Anthony Martin of the Urban Youth Racing School sparked interest in Jon Gosier, a Knight News Challenge winner from the design firm D8A, to become an e-mentor in their What It Takes program. Thom Butler, a BMe grantee with the Philadelphia College Prep Roundtable, spent time with David Clayton of Breadboard, a Knight Arts grantee, talking about doing an IgnitePhilly talk. And we had our own version: Seven of the grantees set the stage on fire when they shared their passion and their work with us through their IgKnight talks, short presentations limited to five minutes and 20 slides.  
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    The city of Opa-Locka is said to have the largest concentration of Moorish architecture in the United States. That in itself starts to tell the strange, fascinating tale of this landlocked area of Miami-Dade County, which many people know about but have never seen. Magnus Sigurdason's...
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    Karen Hinkle, "Not Quite Contained." Photo by Clint Beeler Maybe you’re like a lot of people. When someone puts a word like “new” in all uppercase in the title of their art exhibit, as the current “Converging Visions: NEW Works in Fiber” at the galleries in...