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Killed By Grace
In Craig Wright’s play, Grace, currently premiering on Broadway, “Grace” is not an angry housewife set on mortal revenge. Rather, it’s a message-loaded melodrama of what can happen when two otherwise...
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Artist of the Week 10/3-10/9: Dina Johnsen Uncovers ‘The Unseen Beauty’ of the National Theatre
Russian artist Dina Johnsen has only recently jumped headfirst into the constantly evolving field of photography. Before her plunge into the flash induced world of ballerinas, actors, and opera singers of the National... -
Artist of the Week 10/3-10/9: Alban Grosdidier Drowns And Resuscitates Emotions In His Work
To many, Alban Grosdidier, 22, may seem like the typical college student — a determined goal of getting through school, despite a few setbacks, with a couple of stamps on his passport to match. Archetypally for...
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An Enemy for All Seasons
The line between right and wrong can often be blurred by politics and nowhere more so than in Henrik Ibsen’s An Enemy of the People. The play centers on a pair of brothers on different sides of a moral debate. At...
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Connecting the Dots: ‘Regarding Warhol: Sixty Artists, Fifty Years’
Winding your way through the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Warhol wonderland is a bit like trying to make sense of a connect-the-dots drawing. The shape and the subject are there somewhere but where?
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From Baby Steps to Long Pants
If you’re smart enough and talented enough to boot, it doesn’t take that long to grow up. Constellation Theatre Company’s bright revival of Taking Steps by Alan Ayckbourn at Source in Washington, DC is a case...
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From Denver with Love: Designer Mondo Guerra Challenges Fashion Conventions, One Stitch at a Time
In the pantheon of fashion meccas, New York, London, Milan and Paris are typically the first places that come to mind. Denver, Colorado, is usually an afterthought.
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Artist of the Week 9/12-9/18: Wilma Hurskainen Recreates Her Childhood Photos
Have you ever wished you could go back in time to a moment that was forever encapsulated in a worn-out childhood photograph with its ripped, brown edges – a moment of subliminal innocence and delight that held no...
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Fly Me to the Moon: A Horse to Bet On
If you think Fly Me to the Moon is a swinging ’60s ballad, you’re getting close, but if you guess it’s a winning black comedy by Northern Irish playwright Marie Jones about a race horse aptly named after the...
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Artist of the Week 09/05 – 09/11: Oliver Warden Conveys an Analogous Reality through Otherworldly Video Game Art
From out of his studio apartment, located on a mysteriously unmarked street in Bushwick, New York, Oliver Warden displays selected works on his gessoed white walls, an attempt at replicating the walls of a gallery....
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