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Bmore artists raise awareness and loot with Stew dinners

If you haven't been able to cop a ticket to a Stew dinner, here's a peek at a recent dinner and the trend that is spreading across the country.

"A Stew meal is not elaborate. The main course is soup; tonight it's a choice between vegan spring onion and rabbit with dumplings. Tickets to the event are $10 each. But there's more to this meal than the composition of a plate of radishes, or of the next course: spears of roasted asparagus, pleasantly salted, arranged to form squares that overlap at the corners.

Stew is the brainchild of the Baltimore Development Cooperative (not to be confused with the Baltimore Development Corp.), which was started in 2007 by three recent MICA graduates, all artists now in their late 20s: Scott Berzofsky, Nicholas Wisniewski and Nester. They wanted to use food to foster community and stimulate activism."

Read the entire article here.


Baltimore's gated alleys -- community builder or breaker?

There're 600 miles of alleyways in Baltimore. Trash, rats and drug pushers frequent the majority, but a growing movement helmed by Community Green aims to help these spaces reach their true potential.

Here's an excerpt:

"In the 25 years that Mayo has lived in Baltimore's Washington Hill neighborhood, a short drive east of the city's Inner Harbor, nearby blocks succumbed to poverty and neglect. The ensuing tumult overflowed into her alley. Although she and her husband installed motion-sensor lighting and called police frequently, as did neighbors, nothing improved.

But about a year ago came the sounds of change, as artisans wielded a power drill to install graceful, wrought-iron gates at either end of the narrow passageway. It was the culmination of a 2-year effort to reclaim the troubled alley, abutted by the tiny back yards of eight rowhouses on one side and perpendicular to a single rowhouse on the other."
 
Read the entire article here.


Letter to the Editor challenges Sun article on Baltimore's arts districts

A recent article published in the Baltimore Sun poopooing the City's plans to create a third arts district on Baltimore's westside has stirred up controversy among arts community. In particular, those involved with the Highlandtown arts district have taken exception to the reporter's characterizations of the area. It prompted this Letter to the Editor.

Here's an excerpt:

"Characterizing the Highlandtown Arts District as a "failure" ("Do arts districts live up to their hype?," May 14) is an insult not only to the hundreds of cultural workers who have poured their resources into turning East Baltimore into a set of thriving, expanding neighborhoods, but it's an insult to Baltimore as a whole. Baltimore's arts districts continue to grow and expand, and while most of the artists who work to bolster Baltimore's spirit and reputation are doing it more for love than money, the arts in Baltimore certainly seem to be thriving.

Nearly a decade ago, I moved to Baltimore because I fell in love with the city, particularly because of its place in the history of the arts and the potential for growth that permeated the city's atmosphere. I was in search of a city in which to change careers, and Baltimore won."

Read the entire letter here.


City officials press on with new arts district

The New York Times takes a look at the city's arts districts and its plan to create a third arts district on the Baltimore's westside. The paper of record doesn't draw any conclusions but presents both sides of the debate.

Here's an excerpt

"The idea for a west side arts district has been around at least since the administration of Kurt L. Schmoke, Baltimore's mayor from 1987 to 1999. Over the years, the city took steps to improve the area, though without official arts district designation.

One step was to turn the old Hippodrome Theater at 12 North Eutaw Street into the France-Merrick Performing Arts Center, which opened in 2003. Another was converting the century-old Bromo Seltzer Arts Tower, at 21 South Eutaw Street, which was modeled on the Palazzo Vecchio in Florence, into artists' studios.

Mr. Schmoke, now dean of the Howard University School of Law in Washington, said that while he had not seen specific plans for the new arts district, he supported the idea generally."

Read the entire article here.


TOTW: Tweetin' away

We were busy looking for our happy place this week...here're a few tweets of what others found

@travelmd found the "Baltimore Harbor at Sunset .....my happy place http://bit.ly/dyr68w" and this "another happy place http://bit.ly/aTJLGK

@baltcommfdn "Three unsung #Baltimore community leaders honored by our new #giving circle http://bit.ly/9TMgra"


Don't see any of your tweets? Are you following @bmoremediame or @bmoremedia? If not, you should. You can also submit your candidates for the tweet of the week by email, on Facebook and Twitter.

Charm City sets world record for largest smiley face

To launch the latest tourism campaign, hundreds of Baltimoreans came together last Thursday to set the world record for the largest human smiley face. The event was a success, however, copyright prevented participants from dressing in yellow ponchos. They sported orange ponchos instead.

Here's an excpert:

"For 11 minutes and 32 seconds, 261 people stood at the Maryland Science Center plaza to form an orange and black smiley face to help kick off Visit Baltimore's new summer campaign, "Find Your Happy Place in Baltimore" and to set the new world record for the Largest Human Smiley.

"Baltimore makes us happy everyday, and we think the world's largest smiley face is the perfect symbol to kick off our summer travel season," commented Tom Noonan, president and CEO of Visit Baltimore."

Read the entire article here.

TOTW: Tweeting 'bout Bmore

It's all about making Baltimore great on Twitter this week...

@WhatsToEatBmore sounds the rallying call, "Real Food Farm - Baltimore's Urban Ag Program needs Volunteers! http://ow.ly/1JMz7"

@PPooch RTs that, "@bmorehumane - is in need of canned dog food. Science Diet is what we usually use but any brand will work... http://bit.ly/aOO61A"

According to @Econ_Alliance, "Greater Baltimore: 3rd lowest unemployment rate (8.0) in March among the 25 largest metro areas, behind only DC (6.7) and Minneapolis (7.8)." and "Greater Baltimore 1Q2010 home prices are #9 among the 25 largest metro areas in the US at $234,900."

@ConstellationEG wants to help make the city greener with this RT, "@EnergyStarBldgs: 30% of energy that buildings use is wasted. See how 14 buildings are competing to lose the waste:http://bit.ly/aoEyrW"

Don't see your tweet here? Follow us @bmoremediame and @bmoremedia. Or have a tweet you think should be on the list next week? Send it us!


Quilting for social justice rips apart the fabric of societal representations of women

A recent MICA exhibit, A Pathway to Awareness: Quilting for Social Justice, examined the possibilities of a medium that has only recently gained acceptance as an artform, to convey messages related to social justice. One piece in particular, stood out for Art-Full Life blogger, Doreen Bolger.

Here's an excerpt:

"On a recent visit to MICA, I was surprised but delighted that A Pathway to Awareness: Quilting for Social Justice remained on view after its scheduled conclusion in April. The exhibition presented the artistic results of teaching and mentoring done by Dr. Joan M. E. Gaither, a documentary quilter who recently completed a quilt that told the story of Barack Obama's journey to the White House. As she spoke to the creators of textile work like this, she urged them to quilt "the story that needs to be told, one that only you can tell."

Demonstrating art's potential to impact society, every piece in A Pathway to Awareness had a story and a message. Perhaps the most arresting work was Sex is a Weapon (American Dream). The hand-crafted dress composed of individual quilted parts stood on an old-fashioned wire seamstress form. While its ruffles and medallions could be on any party dress, its quilted squares revealed images of objectified women, each striking a suggestive pose in a skimpy bathing suit."

Read the entire post here.

Read more about Baltimore's artsy goings-ons here!


One theater lover's take on the latest at The Strand

Baltimore is replete with independent theaters that offer theater lovers a wide range of choices from the well-known to the avant garde. The Strand, in the city's Station North neighborhood, recently launched a four-pack of short works written by company members. If you've been wondering what they're all about...take a gander at this brief review.

Here's an excerpt:

"On Saturday evening at the Strand Theater, Playwrights Group of Baltimore presented "Skin in the Game," an anthology of short plays written by members of the Group. Different in style, each play pivots around the phrase "Skin in the Game," apparently coined by Warren Buffet to indicate passionate investment. A packed audience at the Strand witnessed staged readings of plays ranging from the melodramatic to the romantic to the fantasist."

Read the entire post here.

Check out more about Baltimore's arts scene or Station North!


City plans third arts district in West Baltimore

Last week, The Baltimore Sun ran a couple of pieces on the city's proposal to create a so-called arts district in West Baltimore.

Here's an excerpt from articles for and against the project:

"City officials backed by Mayor Stephanie C. Rawlings-Blake are to be applauded for moving ahead with plans to create a new arts and entertainment district on Baltimore's West Side near downtown. The area has been pegged for redevelopment as a cultural hub for more than a decade, but the pace of change has been disappointing. Anything that helps jump-start the process is all to the good.

One might well ask why the area even needs a formal designation as an arts and entertainment district, given the ambitious renovation of the Hippodrome Theatre (which re-opened on the west side in 2003) and the imminent arrival there of the Everyman Theatre Company. Isn't it already on a path to becoming the cultural magnet its backers originally envisioned?"

Read the entire article here.

"A proposal endorsed by Mayor Stephanie C. Rawlings-Blake would make the city's west side into an arts district, which the administration hopes will help turn around the ailing neighborhood.

This is not the solution. Why? Baltimore already has two arts districts -- Highlandtown/Patterson Park and Station North. It doesn't need a third.

The city declared Highlandtown/Patterson Park an arts district in 2003. That same year, the Creative Alliance at the Patterson (pictured), a mixed use arts/performance space, opened. Offering art exhibits and cutting edge performances, the Creative Alliance was supposed to be the cultural anchor for an arts renaissance in Highlandtown.

Nearly seven years later, Highlandtown/Patterson Park hasn't seen a sliver of the artistic explosion and revitalization that was supposed to happen. Aside from the Creative Alliance and the Southeast Anchor Library, Highlandtown/Patterson Park doesn't have much more in the way of arts than it did in 2003."

Read the entire post here. And now tell us what you think...



Book blogger jazzed about Baltimore's CityLit Fest

Baltimore's CityLit Project will host its annual literary festival this weekend, bringing joy to all of the area's literary-minded folks, including Age 30+...A Lifetime of Books' Heather J., Ambassador of Books.

Here's an excerpt:

"I'm planning to be there for most of the day. If you are within driving distance I'd love to meet you and hang out for all/part of the day! Let me know in the comments if you're planning to attend and we can coordinate our schedule. I can't wait!!!"

Read the entire post here.
Check out the CityLit site here.

Baltimore's education reforms on the ground

Education is a major concern not only in Baltimore but in every major U.S. city. "The Takeaway," a New York City morning talk show, talked to local talk show host Marc Steiner about education in Baltimore.

Here's an excerpt:

"We've been talking all week about how to make American schools better. Do we increase funding, create better tests or shut down failing schools? This time, we look to learn from two cities experimenting with their own education policy reforms, Baltimore and New York City.

Baltimore is opening charter schools at a rapid pace, more than thirty in a last five years. New York is pushing to close its lowest-performing schools and create new ones; so far the Bloomberg administration has closed 91. But recently the city ran into a roadblock after a judge ruled against closing 19 more schools unless they had a clear plan for the students that they currently serve.

Two journalists from these cities, Marc Steiner of the Marc Steiner Show on WEAA in Baltimore and WNYC's education reporter Beth Fertig discuss whether there are lessons to be learned from the reforms happening on the ground. The question is whether these policies, touted by the Obama administration, will work in cities across the country."

Listen to the talk show.


Baltimore's unfinished business

In its most recent newsletter, Cities for CEOs highlighted a November 2009 essay in which The Goldseker Foundation's Tim Armbruster shares his thoughts on philanthropy and how it can be used to help transform cities.

Here's an excerpt:

"Timothy Armbruster, President & CEO of The Goldseker Foundation, has spent nearly half of his life shaping the social and economic agenda in Baltimore. Fortunately for the rest of us, he has captured his wisdom in an insightful and refreshingly personal essay titled, Unfinished Business: Lessons from Baltimore.Tim's 30-year career in civic and philanthropic leadership in this post-industrial city reveals a very nuanced perspective about civic leadership and placemaking that is attuned to, but not overly influenced by, the latest city trends. His ingredients for success are simple and clear: patience, collaboration and commitment."

Read the essay here.

Your Money Bus Tour stops in Charm City

A bus filled with financial advisors made a stop in Baltimore during its nationwide tour. The advisors offered Baltimore residents affected by the recession free financial advices.

Here's the video:


TOTW: Tweet, tweet, tweet

With temps hitting the high '60s and 70's we were more outside than inside last week, but here're a few tweets that caught our eye.

A good question...@bmoreconnected wonders, "Dear founders. Does it make you sad that everytime someone doesn't like something, but lacks the ability to stop it, they invoke your name"

@SpaceManAndy asks, "Settle a bet for me. Which is weirder: being nude at NASA or being nude in a church? Not that I've done either of those things..." We think the question is a little weird, but...

Now here's something we can all get behind, @davetroy says, "Just got done with @BmoreFibermeeting. We have real fundamentals in place - and we're making a better city here. No stunts, just smarts."

In response to the news that Maryland is trying to switch its regional identification from a southern state to a northern state because Maryland's culture is not particularly Southern, @clippersncrows says, "Go down to Southern Maryland or the Eastern Shore. Heck, go up to North East. You'll see it. I doubt it. Only people who just moved in from elsewhere or who visit from NY, NJ, CA, or Boston would think this."

@JanineCulotta says something we think everyone can agree with, "I'm really tired of all this healthcare fighting...it is making me SICK!"

Seems we're not the only ones with spring on our minds...

@danieldubya says, "Raise your hand if you'd rather be outside!" (We're raising our hands and waving wildly!)

And finally, mad props to @a_nic who says, "I just signed up for the Baltimore 10-miler in June and for training for a half marathon in the fall. Nervous but also excited!" Good luck!

Want a chance to see your tweet in our weekly roundup? Follow @bmoremediame or @bmoremedia.
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