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BmoreArt’s Picks: July 8-14

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This Week:  Young Blood opening reception at MAP, High Zero fundraiser at Current, Baltimore, The City of Accessible Arts Public Convening + Disability Pride Arts Fest at Pratt Central Branch, Station North Art Walk, The BIG Show +BIG Party at Creative Alliance, Emergence panel discussion + studio tours with Galerie Myrtis, opening reception for Schaun Champion at Gallery CA, Wickerham & Lomax closing reception at Current, and three exhibition openings at Baltimore Clayworks — PLUS tell stories with The Stoop and more featured opportunities!

BmoreArt’s Picks presents the best weekly art openings, events, and performances happening in Baltimore and surrounding areas. For a more comprehensive perspective, check the BmoreArt Calendar page, which includes ongoing exhibits and performances, and is updated on a daily basis.

To submit your calendar event, email us at events@bmoreart.com!

 

Header Image: “Return of American Pest” detail, photo by Vivian Marie Doering

 

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< Events >

From the Stereo to Your Screen: Rachel Sweet & Hairspray - Cinepunx
 

16th Annual Young Blood | Opening Reception
Thursday, July 10 :: 6-9pm
@ Maryland Art Place

On View:
Thursday, July 10 – Saturday, August 24, 2025Opening Reception:
Thursday, July 10 | 6 pm to 9 pm

Maryland Art Place is proud to announce the return of Young Blood marking MAP’s 16th Young Blood program which has, to date,  provided an important post-graduate artistic platform for transitioning Masters of Fine Arts students. Since 2008 Young Blood has continually brought recent graduates together to make new connections and present special selections from their thesis project(s). The exhibition will highlight exceptional works ranging in media.

YOUNG BLOOD EXHIBITING ARTISTS:

McCoy Chance | UMBC
Lolo Gem | TU
Huxley Green | MICA
Trevon Jakaar Coleman | UMD
Mariia Usova | UMBC
Dooree Kang | MICA
Ahlam Khamis | UMBC 
Cody Pryseski | TU
Rida Yawar | MICA

 

 

Current Space Fundraiser for High Zero
Thursday, July 10 :: 7pm
@ Current Space

We all want more High Zero in our lives, right? The throw-it-at-the-wall and see-what-sticks. The serious concentration with a smirk. The unplanned sudden eruption of genius from people who aren’t in a band together.

Current Space will be holding an outdoor summer fundraiser for the High Zero Festival. You get more music from your local favorites and we get a little more money to help us continue to challenge audiences with performance of the present moment.

We’ve got an incredible roster for July 10th, including but not limited to:
Hunter Batchelder drums
Dave Benham flutes, electronics
Samuel Burt bass clarinet
Ami Dang sitar
John Hoegberg, computer
Shelly Purdy, percussion
Jamal Moore, reeds

Come chill with us under the shade of Current Space’s tent, grab a drink, and listen to so many reminders how Baltimore is the best city in the United States for improvised music.

 

 

Baltimore, The City of Accessible Arts: Public Convening
Friday, July 11 :: 10am-4pm
@ Enoch Pratt FREE Library

Space for this program is limited; registration required.

Please join us at the Central Branch of Enoch Pratt Free Library for a Public Convening hosted by Baltimore, The City of Accessible Arts. This convening kicks off a two-day series of events; for more information about Baltimore’s 3rd Annual Disability Pride Arts Fest, click here.

All are welcome to attend this accessible event, in person or virtually, with ASL interpreters, audio description, sensory breaks, and more. The convening is designed to propel Baltimore towards becoming the City of Accessible Arts. Share this day with museums, public art spaces, artists with disabilities, disability-focused organizations and disability justice activists. You will enjoy a film screening, panel discussions and conversation, and an exhibition of artwork by artists with disabilities.

Are you a person with a disability, a caretaker or family member of a person with a disability who wants to experience the arts but you can’t because of all the barriers that get in your way? Come join us on July 11th so together we can move our City towards becoming barrier-free, the City of Accessible Arts.

Lunch will be provided.

Convening Agenda:

• Exhibition by Make Studio and VisAbility Art Lab resident artists
• Screening: “Seeing without Sight” by Alyscia Cunningham
• Keynote by Robin Marquis (Senior Inclusion Strategist, Prime Access Consulting, Content Lead – Museum of the Blind Peoples’ Movement)
• Convening Communities: Presentations by Arts and Disability Organizations and Disabled Artists
• Access Consortiums: Arts and Access Network (DC), Museums, Arts and Culture (NYC), Cultural Access Collaborative (Chicago) and Art-Reach (Philadelphia)
• Next Steps – facilitated by Dr. Sheri Parks, Community Strategist and Research Associate at the National Center for Smart Growth
• Closing Reflections by Dr. Schroeder Cherry, curator, James E. Lewis Museum of Art (JELMA)

:: Related Event ::

Baltimore’s 3rd Annual Disability Pride Arts Fest
Saturday, July 12 :: 10am-2pm
@ Enoch Pratt FREE Library

Program registration is recommended but not required.

Make Studio, a nonprofit art center and collective of disabled artists, is proud to present Baltimore’s 3rd Annual Disability Pride Arts Fest! In partnership with the Maryland Department of Disabilities and Enoch Pratt Free Library, over a dozen disability and arts organizations, as well as individual exhibiting artists, will present performances, free and inclusive arts experiences, and resources at the Central Library for Disability Pride Month. Disability Pride Month marks the anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and disability pride is all about accepting each person’s uniqueness and honoring the history, achievements, experiences, and struggles of the disability community.

All are invited to come together to learn and to celebrate creativity, human diversity, and people with disabilities and their many contributions to society.

For more information visit: https://make-studio.org/disabilityprideartsfest.html

This event is the second of a two-day series; for more information about Baltimore, The City of Accessible Arts: Public Convening, click here.

 

 

Station North Second Friday Art Walk – July
Friday, July 11 :: 5-9pm

Experience something fresh and inspiring every month at Station North’s Second Friday Art Walk—art, community, and surprises await!

This series of monthly self-guided tours of all the art and culture that Station North (near Baltimore’s Penn Station) has to offer is a grassroots, artist-led effort organized by community members and stakeholders. Spanning the neighborhoods of Charles North, Greenmount West, and Barclay, Station North is a diverse collection of artist live-work spaces, studios, galleries, rowhomes, and businesses, all just steps away from Penn Station and several higher learning and cultural institutions in the heart of Baltimore.

See below for venue list (coming soon)! Join us every Second Friday of the month for MONTHLY Art Walks in the neighborhood.

Check out the map for venues and create your own self-guided tour! Map will continue to be updated: https://shorturl.at/fuCV6 Printed maps available at some venues. Follow @stationnorth on Instagram for updates and map pdf!

 

 

The BIG Show | Opening Reception + BIG Party with Jonathan Gilmore
Friday, July 11 :: Reception 6-8pm, Party 8pm
@ Creative Alliance

Opening Reception: FRI JUL 11, 2025 | 6PM

On View: FRI JUL 11 – SAT AUG 16

Our 30th annual members’ extravaganza is back — and bigger than ever!

Don’t miss this opportunity to have your artwork on our gallery walls!

The BIG Show Exhibition Opening takes place on Friday, July 11, 2025 – and we want YOU to participate! The exhibition will be on view in our main gallery and online from July 11 through August 16, 2025.

The evening kicks off with a salon-style exhibition opening from 6–8PM, where every Creative Alliance member — kids included! — is invited to submit one piece of artwork for display. Whether you’re a professional artist or just getting started, this is your chance to share your creative voice with the community.

This year’s BIG Show is especially meaningful as Creative Alliance celebrates 30 years of building communities through art. Since 1994, we’ve been dedicated to supporting artists, engaging youth, and revitalizing neighborhoods through visionary programming and inclusive cultural events. The BIG Show embodies this mission — highlighting the depth and diversity of our Creative Alliance family.

Whether you’re looking to show your work, or simply cheer on your fellow creatives, come be part of our vibrant creative community and help us make this 30th anniversary year unforgettable. It’s also a fantastic opportunity to expand (or begin) your art collection with pieces from some of Baltimore’s most exciting artists.

Let’s make this the BIGGEST Big Show yet!

 

 

Cover artwork details: Kim Rice, American Quilt, 2025, HOLC “redlining” maps, acrylic gel, thread, 10 x 11 ′, Photographer: Vivian Marie Doering; Image courtesy of the artist and Galerie Myrtis

Emergence: Stories in the Making – Virtual Panel + Studio Visits
Saturday, July 12 :: 2-4pm
presented by Galerie Myrtis

Galerie Myrtis invites invites you to join our upcoming virtual program, “Tales from the Workshop.” Select artists from the group exhibition Emergence: Stories in the Making will provide an intimate look into their creative processes through guided tours of their studios. Please note, the livestream link will be issued via guests registered emails on July 11th!

“Tales from the Workshop” will also include a discussion on the vital role of storytelling in addressing the challenges faced by communities globally. The session will conclude with a Q&A segment, offering the audience an opportunity to ask questions about each artist’s practice and community engagement.

The program will be moderated by Co-curator and Assistant Director Ky Vassor. Featured panelists include: Schaun Champion, Damilare Jamiu, Alanis Forde, Charles Philippe Jean-Pierre, Maxwell Pearce, Linnea Poole, and Kim Rice.

Exhibition Overview:

Emergence: Stories in the Making is a group exhibition spotlighting a dynamic cohort of emerging artists who use storytelling as a powerful tool for expression and change. This thoughtfully curated show brings together an international roster of contemporary griots—artists whose works delve into themes of solidarity, cultural heritage, and social transformation.

Co-curated by Gallery Directors Noel Bedolla and Ky Vassor, Emergence underscores the vital role storytelling plays in shaping public discourse and advancing societal awareness. The exhibition features a compelling lineup of artists: Aliana Grace Bailey, Schaun Champion, Unyime Edet, Alanis Forde, Damilare Jamiu, Charles Philippe Jean-Pierre, Kachelle Knowles, Maxwell Pearce, Linnea Poole, Ransome, Kim Rice, and Bria Sterling Wilson.

Visit our website for more information on the exhibition: https://galeriemyrtis.net/emergence-stories-in-the-making/

 

 

Myths We Tell Ourselves, works by Schaun Champion | Opening Reception
Saturday, July 12 :: 6pm
@ Gallery CA

Gallery CA is proud to present Myths We Tell Ourselves, the latest show from visionary Baltimore photographer, Schaun Champion.

Schaun Champion creates work that explores the interconnectedness of the environment, the eyes, and oral/visual historical narratives. Using vignettes of quiet moments that ask for deeper thought about the re-memory of personal and collective or communal histories. Champion draws from our infectious competition to capture the human “stories” developed to cope with our understanding of the world around us.

Acknowledging that living subjects aren’t always human but have been touched by their presence and asking, “What does it mean to be IN nature?” The “Myths We Tell Ourselves” explores how humans with no access to previous mythology or ideology might make sense of their situation or “home”.

Please join us for the opening reception on Saturday, July 12th, at 6 pm. Sneak peek will be available at the Station North Artwalk on Friday, July 11th, 5 pm -8 pm
For more information about the artist, please visit this link.

The exhibition will be on view 7/11-8/24.

 

 

Image: Vivian Marie Doering

The Return of American Pest | Closing Reception
Saturday, July 12 :: 6pm
@ Current Space

Current Space is proud to present The Return of American Pest, an exhibition of works by Wickerham & Lomax.

Please join us for the Closing Reception and Artist Talk on Saturday, June 12th from 6-9pm with the talk at 7pm.

Exhibit Runs: June 6 – July 12, 2025
Closing Reception and Artist Talk: July 12th, 6-9pm – talk 7pm
Gallery Hours: Saturdays 1-5pm, by appointment, & whenever we’re open (check out the show anytime you’re here)!

Read Cara Ober’s Essay about the exhibit here.

Wickerham & Lomax is the collaborative name of Baltimore-based artists Daniel Wickerham (b. Columbus, Ohio, 1986) and Malcolm Lomax (b. Abbeville, South Carolina, 1986). Their practice is based on the accelerated exchange of frivolous information, gossip, and codified language that crystallizes into accessible forms in hopes of giving dignity to that exchange.

Wickerham & Lomax are new media artists focused on the impact of cultural practices and productions as formative structures on the individual and the collective. Since 2009, they’ve utilized digital imagery, sculpture, CGI, video and the web –– to work across diverse media, curatorial platforms, and institutional contexts. The work presents questions of identity and the body, focused on the impact of digital technologies and social spaces on the formation of subjectivities and speculative corporealities. The collaborative has created an approach that allows components of their projects to work through a networked sensibility. More recently exhibitions have evolved to function as containers of swarm-like indexes, with each sign forming covalent bonds with those around it. Through employing queer sensibilities, speculative fictions, and networked virtuality the duo presents a discourse focused on identity, subculture, marginality, and connectivity as a way to complicate mainstream tropes. Wickerham & Lomax are influenced by queer theory, speculative fiction, human geography, and the socio-political as it relates to urban space.

In 2021 the Baltimore Museum of Art acquired the Wickerham & Lomax work Romance as Intrusion (2020) for its permanent collection. Earlier in the year Artforum commissioned Wickerham & Lomax for its Project series, which was published in the April 2021 issue.

Recent exhibitions by Wickerham & Lomax include Domestic QT & The Spatial Anomalies at von ammon co, Washington, DC (2020–21); The Writers Room at the Reginald F. Lewis Museum, Baltimore, MD (2018); DUOX4Odell’s: You’ll Know If You Belong, commissioned by Neighborhood Lights, Light City, Baltimore (2017); Uncool at Terrault Contemporary, Baltimore (2016); Take Karaoke: A Proposition for Performance Art at Brown University, Providence, RI (2015); the Sondheim Prize Finalist Exhibition, Baltimore (2015); Girth Proof at Dem Passwords, Los Angeles (2015); the premiere of Encore in the AFTALYFE at the Artists Space booth, Frieze NY 2014; and BOY’Dega: Edited4Syndication for New Museum’s First Look series; DUOX4Larkin, Artists Space, New York (2012).

Wickerham & Lomax are the recipients of the 2020 Trawick Best in Show prize of the Bethesda Contemporary Art Awards and the 2015 winners of the $25,000 Janet and Walter Sondheim Prize.

Wickerham & Lomax are represented by Von Ammon Co.

 

 

Conscientious Objectification | Opening Reception
Saturday, July 12 :: 6-8pm
@ Baltimore Clayworks

Baltimore Clayworks is proud to present Conscientious Objectification, a solo exhibition by Lormina Salter Fellow, Kristyn Rohrer (they/she). Born into a Mennonite family in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, Rohrer explores the complexities of cultural inheritance, personal identity, and social critique through ceramic object.

Bringing abstract concepts into sculptural forms, Conscientious Objectification invites viewers to engage with the intersections of art, culture, and activism. Historically, Mennonites have been associated with conscientious objection due to their convictions of pacifism and nonviolence. Prior to the end of the US Military Selective Service Act in 1973, Mennonites and other Anabaptists participated in Civilian Public Service (CPS/1-W service), anti-war protests, civil disobedience, or at times were imprisoned rather than participate in US wars. Conscientious Objectification questions: What does it mean to be a conscientious objector in contemporary American society — not just in matters of war, but in systems of oppression and conformity? What does resistance look like amidst the rise of Christian nationalism in Trump’s America? What could it mean to be a modern Mennonite?

Conscientious Objectification interrogates the tensions between tradition and transformation, faith and queerness, and belonging and resistance. Drawing inspiration from Pennsylvania Dutch folk art and personal history, Rohrer tells the story of reclaiming and redefining their relationship to Mennonite culture and utilizing ceramic art as a tool for social commentary.

:: Related Events ::

Shape, Shift & Mend // Community Arts Summer Showcase | Opening Receptions
Saturday, July 12 :: 6-8pm
@ Baltimore Clayworks

The 2024-25 EMBARC Fellow Exhibition features the thought-provoking work of Kashima Robinson. This exhibition highlights Kashima’s exploration of sculptural forms, mosaics like structures, tiles, and intricate containers that reflect themes of self-discovery and transformation. Their work invites viewers to engage with moments of transition and ambiguity, challenging perceptions and offering insight into the spaces between defined forms.

+++

Celebrate the vibrant spirit of summer with Baltimore Clayworks’ Community Arts Summer Showcase! This dynamic exhibition features inspiring ceramic works created by participants in our community arts programs across Baltimore. The showcase highlights the transformative power of clay and the creativity of our city’s residents. Join us in honoring the incredible stories, talents, and collaborations that emerge when art meets community.

 

 

< Calls for Entry >

How to Get The Most Out of your NYC Summer Internship — Making it in Manhattan

 

WE NEED STORYTELLERS for our upcoming August and September shows
posted by Stoop Storytelling

Friday, August 22nd at 7pm
Naked: Stories about baring bodies, souls, and secrets
Checkerspot Brewing Co. – Baltimore
With musical guest Danah Denice!
Stories of shedding shame, showing skin, and standing in your truth — whether it’s beautiful, awkward, freeing, or all of the above.

Friday, September 12th at 7pm
Kitchen Sink Stories: Tales about the messes, magic, and memories of cooking
Our Time Kitchen – Baltimore

Saturday, September 27th, 7pm
Close Calls & Narrow Escapes: Stories about “phew,” “whoa,” and “how did I survive that?”
New Spire Arts in Frederick, MD

 

 

Open Calls and Auditions for Garbage Quest
applications for Production Roles close July 5
posted by BROS

Experience the hottest new video game of 7025, Super BROS Adventure VI: Garbage Quest DX, coming October 2025! This RPG adventure stage show is packed with music by Baltimore band Garbage Masher, and follows a story path determined by choices made by the audience.

We are filling production roles NOW! Whether you are an audio wiz, prop magician, or motion graphics maven, it’s your time to shine.

Open roles include:

Directors, Managers and Coordinators

Director- lead this production to glory
Technical Director- make the tech work together
Production Manager- bring everyone’s visions together
Stage Manager- keep us on schedule, seriously
Assistant Stage Manager- keep us on schedule, please
Bar Manager- there will be beer for sale
Craft Services Coordinator- help coordinate meals

Designers, Assistants, and Technicians

Wigs, Hair and Makeup Designer- decorate faces and serve up glam
Props Designer- make mad props
Set Designer- create the world/sets
Front of House Designer- design our immersive experience
Sound Designer- beep boop
LIT Designer- make techy magic
Costume Designer- design/make costumes
Costume Stitcher- make costumes
Audio Technician- run the audio system
Audio Assistant- help run the audio system
Pixel Artist/Animator/Motion Graphics- make the show a game
Lighting Assistant- help light it up

 

 

2023 The Scarecrow Kessto Kreatures, Anthony Michael Stokes photo: Stella Gutierrez

The Jim Henson Foundation Puppetry Residency
deadline July 14
posted by The Eugene O’Neill Theater Center

The Jim Henson Foundation Puppetry Residency is an annual residency at the Eugene O’Neill Theater Center for an artist or company working towards the completion of a new piece of contemporary puppet theater.  The residency is a collaboration with The O’Neill, which in addition to rehearsal space, room and board offers dramaturgical support.  A grant of $5,000 will be awarded to the artists by the Jim Henson Foundation to help cover expenses. Residencies may be between 2-3 weeks and can support up to 10-12 project participants.  Applications are open to all, however preference is given to works that have received a Production Grant from The Jim Henson Foundation, and have a Presenter committed to premiering the work. To learn more about The Jim Henson Foundation Residency, visit:  theoneill.org

 

 

Ucross Residency
deadline July 15

Since its founding in 1981 and first residency period in 1983, Ucross has grown into a vital and relevant resource for artists of all backgrounds and disciplines, who come to Ucross from all over the United States and the world. The uninterrupted time and space we offer is increasingly rare, and the connections built within our community are of great importance to artists. We are honored that our artist residency program plays a dynamic, invaluable role in the creative life of our country.

Ucross strives to provide a respectful, comfortable, and productive environment, freeing artists from the pressures and distractions of daily life. Each year, we provide residencies to approximately 115 individuals. Residencies range from two weeks to six weeks in length. At any one time, there are up to ten individuals in residence, typically four writers, four visual artists, and two composers.

Ucross provides each artist with living accommodations, meals, work space, and uninterrupted time so that the artists can focus on their creative process. Lunch and dinners are prepared Monday to Friday by a professional chef with ample provisions on hand for breakfasts and weekends. Lunches are delivered to individual studios; group dinners take place at 6 p.m. Towels and all linens are provided, as is weekly housekeeping for bedrooms. There is cell phone service and wireless internet throughout residency facilities. Residents are responsible for providing their own working materials and for their travel to Sheridan, Wyoming.  There is no charge for a residency.

The residency program is open to visual artists, writers, composers, choreographers, interdisciplinary artists, performance artists, and collaborative teams. Applicants must exhibit professional standing in their field; both established and emerging artists are encouraged to apply.

Learn more about the dedicated Fellowships for Native American Visual Artists and Writers.

 

 

Leigh Yawkey Woodson Museum Glass Box Residency
deadline July 15

Located on the Leigh Yawkey Woodson Art Museum campus in Wausau, Wisconsin, the Glass Box Studio provides space and time for artists to experiment, explore, and produce individually developed or collaborative artwork in any medium. The Woodson Art Museum Artist Residency Program will increase community engagement and accessibility to the visual arts in north central Wisconsin by providing opportunities for artists to share their creative processes through outreach, workshops, and programming.

The Woodson Art Museum Artist Residency will bring visual artists from across the country to the Wausau area annually. Participating artists will be included in community programming developed with Museum staff. The program supports artists by providing a studio space, living space, honorarium, as well as networking and outreach opportunities.

Each residency is unique. Residencies are organized by Museum staff members and are catered to each artist’s strengths and interests. Artists will be expected to participate in outreach or educational programs over the course of their residency and are given the opportunity to teach hands-on workshops to a variety of audience types. Artists will be expected to keep regular open studio hours for a minimum of two days a week over the course of the residency during the Museum’s open hours so visitors can observe and engage with the resident artist.

 

 

2026 Cultural Capital Application
deadline July 16
posted by First Peoples Fund

The Cultural Capital (CC) Fellowship Program strengthens the Collective Spirit of artists who perpetuate generosity, wisdom and integrity within their communities as they further their important cultural work. The fellowship is intended for Native artists who have strong community ties and are dedicated to preserving and transmitting ancestral traditions.

Cultural Capital Fellowships offer $10,000 grants to artists and culture bearers dedicated to community outreach and cultural preservation through the arts.

Cultural Capital Fellowships will be awarded to artists who:

Are active within and connected to their Native or Tribal community.
Demonstrate a commitment to passing on ancestral knowledge and practices within Native communities.
Are actively working to sustain cultural sharing as a way of life within Native communities.

 

 

Cultural Arts Curatorial Fellowship
deadline July 20
posted by Montgomery College

The Cultural Arts Curatorial Fellowship is a paid professional development program for emerging performing arts presenters. Fellows will receive a $2,000 stipend for their work, a $3,000 budget for their events, and individualized mentorship from Montgomery College Cultural Arts Center (MCCAC) team members and guest speakers. Designed to offer a hands-on experience that demystifies the presentation process, the program will give fellows real-world experience and understanding of what it takes to be a performing arts curator, including creating new initiatives, balancing budgets, working with artists, running events, and all the magic in between. While mentorship will be a key element, the program also emphasizes independent leadership, encouraging fellows to activate their valuable networks and explore what artistic communities they want to amplify.

Cultural Arts Incubator
deadline July 20
posted by Montgomery College

The Cultural Arts Incubator is a new paid program for performing artists ready to take risks, push boundaries, and experiment across disciplines. Designed for artists working in dance, music, theater, and other performance-based art forms, this program prioritizes creatives who are exploring multidisciplinary and innovative approaches to their craft. Artists will receive a $5,000 monetary stipend, free rehearsal space, and a fully-produced culminating performance at the Montgomery College Cultural Arts Center, complete with professional lighting design, technical support, and professional documentation. With the support of a dynamic cohort of fellow artists, the Cultural Arts Incubator offers the opportunity to experiment, refine, and present daring new work in a collaborative environment.

 

 

In Focus: An Open Call to Women Artists for Black and White Photography
deadline July 20
posted by Yellow Studio

Black and white photography strips away distraction to reveal the essential. In this curated exhibition, we celebrate the power of photography to capture emotion, form, and story with striking clarity.

We’re excited to showcase the diverse perspectives of women photographers working in this timeless medium through a retail exhibition at The Co-Op and Beehive at Yellow Studio. From intimate portraits to sweeping landscapes, detailed abstracts to candid street scenes, “In Focus” brings together artists who embrace the sophisticated elegance and enduring appeal of black and white photography.
Yellow Studio invites women photographers in the community to submit their black-and-white work – imagery that demonstrates the enduring power of light, shadow, and composition to move and inspire.

 

 

Layers | Call for Entry
deadline July 20
posted by Falls Church Arts

Falls Church Arts is asking artists to submit work that contains multiple layers for an upcoming exhibition. Works must not be generated through the use of artificial intelligence. Artists may submit up to three artworks.

Exhibition: August 16-September 28, 2025
ONLINE and at Falls Church Arts Gallery

Meet the Artists Reception: 7:00-9:00 pm, Saturday, August 16
Art Drop-off: Mon., Aug. 11, 10am-noon or 6-8pm
Art Pick-up: Mon., Sept. 29, 10am-noon or 6-8pm

 

 

Lab410
deadline July 20
posted by Baltimore Center Stage

As part of Baltimore Center Stage’s dedication to making art and cultivating artists in our beautiful city, we are proud to welcome back our playwright’s residency, Lab410, for its second year! Every production we do starts with an idea, perhaps expressed in words, mostly in the form of scripts, and Lab410 gives us the chance to cultivate some of the world’s best works of theater right here at Baltimore Center Stage. We believe the diversity, terrain, and depth of Baltimore’s culture deserves the best platforms, and this season-long playwriting residency is just one of the ways we plan to put Baltimore on the world stage. After the success of this season’s 410Fest, we are excited to welcome a new cohort of writers.

 

 

header image: Detail from Wickerham & Lomax, “Return of American Pest” at Current, photo by Vivian Marie Doering

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This Week: Soft Gym celebration at the new YNot Lot, screening of "Without Arrows" at The Walters, artist talk with Jaz Erenberg at Loyola University of Maryland, Baltimore Clayworks Winterfest, Rooted in Joy reception at Coppin's Cary Beth Cryor Art Gallery, Arts for Learning celebration, and more!

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This week's news includes: Amy Sherald shines brightly in Baltimore, Hilton Carter makes his house a home, Inviting Light returns with a Wickerham & Lomax, John Akomfrah moving image + sound installation opens at the BMA, mayorial portraits unveiled at City Hall, Maryland Film Fest is here, and more

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