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Local artists use their talent during Disability Pride Month. We speak with two of them. Plus, the American Visionary Art Museum mounts an exhibit on the legacy of disabled artist Judith Scott.
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What's the latest in Charm City arts? Cara Ober, Founding Editor and Publisher of BmoreArt, gives Midday an update.
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Musician Green Gartside discusses how tracks by the Paragons, Robert Wyatt and the Albion Country Band shaped his work.
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Tonya Miller Hall discusses returning home to Baltimore after building a PR career in New York City. Though NYC gave Tonya many professional experiences, coming home to Charm City gave her one experience she never expected — her name in the local paper.
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Donna Drew Sawyer, who led the Baltimore Office of Promotion & The Arts, will no longer lead the department.
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Baltimore City Public Schools is trying to fill the gap of arts teachers by collaborating with Arts Every Day which taps grant funding for more art in the classroom.
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Make Studio is a Baltimore-based workspace for artists with disabilities founded more than a decade ago.
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Host Jason V. talks with artist Jerome Chester, aka TheGroovyVandal. They talk about self-exploration, the blurred lines of a brand and an identity and about Jerome’s upcoming solo exhibition, “It’ll All Make Sense.”
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Artist Ada Pinkston talks about her childhood and travels all over the country, what influenced her move to Baltimore and why she stayed, advice for would-be grant applicants, and much more!