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    The Delray String Quartet, from left: Tomas Cotik, Mei Mei Luo, Richard Fleischman and Claudio Jaffe. Photo by So-Min Kang The first debate of the presidential campaign takes place tonight in Denver, and this weekend in Miami Beach, a local South Florida string quartet is chiming...
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    By Sharon Gillberg, Downtown Akron Partnership What better way to welcome autumn than with an evening of strolling entertainers, musical performances and tours of artist studios, galleries and shops? Experience all of this and more at Downtown Akron Artwalk on Saturday, Oct. 6, courtesy of the John S. and James...
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    By Susan Jedrzejewski, McColl Center for Visual Art McColl Center for Visual Art is pleased to welcome Mel Chin as a Knight Artist-in-Residence from September 23 to December 31, 2012. Both analytical and poetic, Mel Chin’s art evades easy classification. Known for the broad range of approaches in his practice,...
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    "Genesis" from Clayton Swartz. The city of Opa-locka has always been a strange, unique, other-worldly place to many a South Florida resident. The city is often associated with poverty, corruption and crime (in 2004, it had the highest crime rate in the country). But it is...
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      Site-specific installations (like this one from Bring to Light 2010, in New York) will draw upon the convergence of light, technology and art. Building on a tradition established in France the mid-’80s, Detroit will join the international festival of electricity known as Nuit Blanche (“White...
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    When I think about Edgar Allen Poe, which I don't do often, the words terror and psychological torture come to mind — and suffering, too. His writing has a way of unhinging the human psyche to reveal the darkness that resides in all humans. These are things we fear the...
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    Visitors to the Akron Art Museum have less than week left to check out Gravity and Grace: Monumental Works by El Anatsui before the exhibit – shown for the first time in the United States – is packed for a national tour.  On view through Oct. 7. 2012, the exhibit features the work of globally-renowned contemporary artist El Anatsui (pronounced Ah-not-schwee)  with more than 30 of his metal and wood works that transform objects into site-specific sculptures. The Akron Art Museum describes Anatsui work as striking a "rare combination of stunning beauty, fascinating communal process and deep metaphorical and poetic meaning. A global artist, Antatsui draws on artistic and aesthetic traditions from his birth country of Ghana, his home in Nsukka, Nigeria and various Western art forms. Anatsui's work is about transformation." The exhibit also includes wooden wall reliefs and a small selection of drawings. The exhibit, which is supported by Knight, is the largest ever oragnized by the museum and is part of its 90th anniversary celebration. Although Anatsui's work has been exhibited around the world, including at the Venice Biennale, only one piece from the exhibit has previously been shown in the United States. After it closes this Sunday in Akron, the exhibit will travel nationally. Its first stop in 2013 is scheduled for the Brooklyn Museum, where it will be available to the public from Feb. 8- Aug. 4, 2013.  Dr. Mitchell Kahan, the director and CEO of the Akron Art Museum, recently blogged about the exhibit for KnightArts.org, writing: “The variety of form, color and expression that Anatsui draws from discarded materials is no less than a visual feast. His large-scale metal wall pieces become even more remarkable when one realizes they are made from the discarded metal caps that wrap around the tops of liquor bottles.” The Akron Beacon Journal reviewed the exhibit writing that in this workshop: "there are no rules, no blueprints, no patterns. Here, you're on your own with someone else's project."