Singing About the Dark Times
In the dark times, will there also be singing? Yes, there will be singing about the dark times. —Bertolt Brecht, “Motto” Svendborg Poems (1939), trans. John Willett In Denmark during the middle years of the Second World War, radical lyric poet and playwright, Bertolt Brecht, Read More …
Leah Sandler presents ‘The Archive of Scarcity’
Leah Sandler will discussion her work, The Archive of Scarcity, a one-time project for Window | Regional, on Thursday, March 2nd, 4-5pm at the Rollins College Olin Library. Read more about her project from Window below: “Window (re/production | re/presentation) is pleased to introduce The Archive of Scarcity, a new work by Read More …
Issue Preview. March 2017. Becky Flanders, Chris Carr, Brooks Dierdorff
The March 2017 issue of Artborne Magazine features the confrontational imagery of Becky Flanders, Chris Carr’s Reflective photo series, and the “natural glitches” of Brooks Dierdorff. Also in the March Issue: Architecture: Polytechnic University From the Desk of Pat Greene Mike Kelly House Spotlight Jim Leatherman Spotlight Derek Read More …
Who Do You Think Designed This?
The bus driver asked me where I was getting off. I said Marfa. He said, “I’ve only dropped off Germans and Japanese there in the past.” It was 1999. Marfa, Texas didn’t have a bus station. The bus driver said, “The bus station isn’t really Read More …
Katya Grokhovsky: Bodies as Political Forms
Katya Grokhovsky is an artist, curator, and educator, born in the Ukraine, raised in Australia, and currently practicing in New York. Her interdisciplinary practice spans many mediums, combining painting, drawing, performance, collage, installation, text, and video in an exploration of the body in personal and Read More …
Maxwell Hartley: The Visitor
Maxwell Hartley is not of this world. He is a visitor from a parallel universe; one in which natural resources are cherished like gifts and are conserved and preserved. The humans in his universe reject the perpetual desire for more and for new and for Read More …
Yes, and Dave Gibbs
Improv comedy is alive and well in Orlando, and it’s as fascinating a world on the inside as it might seem from the outside. I caught the improv bug about two years ago, following a whim instigated by a coworker who was going to try Read More …
Artist Spotlight: Samantha Shumaker- Bringing a Classical Style into Surrealist Art
Samantha Shumaker is a young artist tackling old stories; from Greco-Roman mythology, to Native American culture, and her own fear of doomsday. She is creating new art that resonates with all walks of life, by striking at a deep sense of familiarity that isn’t bound Read More …
Architecture at Florida Southern College
About an hour outside of Orlando, past derelict mom-and-pop convenience stores, warehouses, and modest homes wrung out by the hands of time, sits the largest single-site collection of Frank Lloyd Wright architecture in the world. Florida Southern College’s campus in Lakeland is host to the Read More …
Carol Overstreet’s Colony Philosophy: From Honeycombs to Jewelry
For the majority of people, seeing a bee is a scary feeling. Their immediate reaction is to scream, run away, and sometimes even kill these insects. However, many might not know bees are already endangered due to various causes. According to studies done at the Read More …