Budding artists had an area to call home as Kidscape offered hands-on activities for children. Mini workshops had an emphasis on this year’s theme: Join the Movement. There was plenty to keep the little ones engaged and entertained – everything from face painting and crafts such as: guitars, kites, maracas, and pinwheel making to hula-hooping with friends and fun circus themed challenges. In addition, the Get Up and Move Stage presented by Walmart, featured kid-friendly concerts, dances, and lessons to encouraged everyone to get up and move!

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Artscape 2014 featured many artworks exploring the notion of movement, including sculptures.  Mobiles, Whirligigs, Automata, Rube-Goldbergs & other Kinetic Contraptions was a temporary outdoor artwork exhibition of kinetic sculptures.  This exhibition runs from Artscape through Friday, October 31, 2014.

Artists:
Steven Baker (Baltimore, MD) creates a field of five dancing sculptures made of steel and colored glass.  The sculptures move through wind power.

Jennifer Becker (Baltimore, MD) pays homage to the handmade lawn decorations, community gardens and green spaces in Baltimore by creating a sculpture that transforms recycled material into a large bouquet of spinning flowers.  She utilizes photo transfer techniques on canvas that will then transform into large pinwheel like flowers.

Christian Benefiel (Keedysville, MD) uses sailcloth, aluminum and wire mesh to construct a large cylindrical sculpture that rocks and rotates along a central base pivot point.
Paul Daniel (Baltimore, MD) includes three of his metal and mirror whirligigs into the exhibition: Tattletoo, 2008; Red Eye, 2007 and Argus, 2006.

Steven Jones (Baltimore, MD) creates a motorized merry-go-round like sculpture celebrating five of Marylander’s favorite foods: crabs, corn-on-the-cob, oysters, chicken and Smith Island Cake.

Patrick McDonough (Washington, D.C.) produces 132008-solar powered sculpture, a work that employs a passive solar tracker, a device that utilizes coolant reservoirs to slowly rotate an aluminum armature so the surfaces of the tracker panels stay square with the sun, to control its movement.  The sculpture will also contain high octane glow in the dark paint that will charge during the day and be illuminated at night.

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The MEA Energy Stage featured a diverse lineup of national and regional acts, including winners of Sound Off Live!, Anthony Hamilton, Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings and more.

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Luck of the Draw large

Luck of the Draw – a drawing class taught by Cameron Shojaei

“Sometimes drawing a face or a hand seems like a gamble. There are ways to improve your luck. Eyes are spheres not symbols, hands match heads, and the spirit can be made visible with three pencils and some decent paper. This class will have a minimal supply list. It’s time to unlock your inner Daumier, Sargent, Giacometti, and Ingres. We will draw everything in a panoptic sweep that covers animals, vegetables and minerals. I will teach you to draw everything. Lets go!”

Four Saturdays from 11:30am to 1:30pm. July 26th, August 2nd, August 9th, and August 16th, 2014!

Registration costs $100, and is open to students age 18 and up.  Approximate supply fee of $15.

Please visit http://bit.do/k5Ug for more information about the following classes. Call (443) 263-4350 or email qpalmer@promotionandarts.com to register!

 

video-games-live_event

Tommy Tallarico, host, creator and producer

Emmanuel Fratianni, conductor

Handel Choir of Baltimore          

Arian Khaefi, Artistic Director

Sat, Jul 26, 2014  7:30 PM Meyerhoff Symphony Hall

A completely immersive concert experience! Music from the greatest video games of all time performed live with the BSO, featuring MegaMan, Silent Hill 2, Metroid, Shadow of the Colossus, Journey, God of War, Mass Effect, StarCraft II, Dota 2, Beyond Good & Evil, music from the upcoming release Destiny, and more, including new arrangements from Final Fantasy and World of Warcraft!

Arrive at 6:00 pm to participate in a Guitar Hero Contest and a Costume Contest. Winner of Guitar Hero Contest will be featured on stage during the show!


Add the VIP package for $100. VIP tickets include pre and post-concert meet-and-greet with show producer and performers, VIP laminated pass, copy of conductor’s score, video game albums and more giveaways!

To buy tickets visit www.bsomusic.org/calendar/events/2013-2014-events/video-games-live.aspx

Tenchi Nage (Heaven and Earth Throw), 1996 by Rodney Carroll

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Illustration by Precious Blake

Fifteen sculptors from across the country who were alumni of the Rinehart School of Sculpture at the Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA) were invited to create new works of art for an Artscpae exhibition planned by the city for the summer of 1996 to mark the centennial of the founding of that graduate program. This  sculpture by Rodney Carroll(’83) was one of the pieces commissioned for that exhibition, Celebrating Rinehart, and is one of five that has remained on site.

Carroll’s choice of this site determined the scale of this piece. Most of Carroll’s sculptures of the time had a verticality that would not have worked in front of MICA’s Main Building on Mount Royal Avenue. So, Carroll began a new series of sculptures that would deal with the dynamic relationship between teo people and two elements. For inspiration he turned to Aikido, a Japancese martial art that focuses on using one’s own energy to gain control of an opponent in order to throw that opponent away from oneself, but to never permaently harm him or her. Tenchi Nage is one such throw. Literally translated as ” Heaven and Earth Throw.” It was so named because during the throw, one hand travels upward toward the heavens while the other hand travels downward toward the earth.

Here the  arcing element in the front represents the figure that is lifting and throwing his opponent, who is represented by the figure behind it. The energy exerted between the two elements, or opponents, is represented by the central curving tubular form. The three elements are bolted together and mounted on a circular concrete base. When the piece was first installed, the uncoated steel had a silver color, which today has weathered to a rich reddish brown.

To see more of Carroll’s work, visit his website at www.rodneycarroll.com

Want to know more about Baltimore Public Art? Pick up the book Outdoor Sculpture in Baltimore: A Historical Guide to Public Art in the Monumental City by Cindy Kelly.