This Week's Highlights
Loring Cornish: In Each Other's Shoes
Article by: Marlena Murtagh and Sarah Damiano
Loring discusses how he became a Baltimore artist, and the meaning behind the work in his current exhibit.
Loring Cornish on the front stoop of his Parkwood Avenue home.
Photo courtesy of Loring Cornish's website.
Photo courtesy of Loring Cornish's website.
Art Education Reflections
by: Kristen Dudley
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Dr. Joan Gaither's Wise Words to Young Artist-Teachers
by: Zach Lawhorn
As Dr. Joan Gaither was sitting in the lobby of the train station waiting to depart, she was working on one of her multi layered quilts: a composition busy and vibrant with photography, traditional fibers material, along with less traditional elements like strings of pearls and caution tape. Her quilts take on this quality in order to tell complex stories, such as the forces that led to Barack Obama's election in 2008, or the stories of the landowners (many of them African American) that owned and had to give up their land so that Maryland could build the Baltimore
As Dr. Joan Gaither was sitting in the lobby of the train station waiting to depart, she was working on one of her multi layered quilts: a composition busy and vibrant with photography, traditional fibers material, along with less traditional elements like strings of pearls and caution tape. Her quilts take on this quality in order to tell complex stories, such as the forces that led to Barack Obama's election in 2008, or the stories of the landowners (many of them African American) that owned and had to give up their land so that Maryland could build the Baltimore