Show Me Your Papers: The Political Cartoons of Lalo Alcaraz
Show Me Your Papers: The Political Cartoons of Lalo Alcaraz
Tuesday, September 26, 7 – 8:30 p.m.
Proscenium Theatre
Show Me Your Papers: The Political Cartoons of Lalo Alcaraz
Tuesday, September 26, 7 – 8:30 p.m.
Proscenium Theatre
In his bequest to Johns Hopkins University, John Work Garrett described his library as “a memorial to my family,” recalling the ubiquity of books, and the love of book collecting, that had shaped two generations of the Garrett family at Evergreen. Join rare book curator Earle Havens, Ph.D., for an illustrated talk that will highlight his new and extensive research on the John Work Garrett Library—one of the truly great private rare book and manuscripts collections of late 19th- and early 20th-century America.
C3: Creative | Creatives | Creating is an artist mixer and performance series presented by Liberated Muse Arts Group.
Cantata 16: Herr Gott, dich loben wir
Handel’s Concerto Grosso in F Major Op. 3 No. 4, HWV 315 - Jeffrey Fahnestock, tenor
Sunday, October 1 at 4 p.m.
Christ Lutheran, Inner Harbor, 701 S. Charles St. Baltimore, MD 21230
MICA and the Mount Royal School of Art M.F.A. program present internationally recognized artist Xu Bing discussing his global art practice, which is known for large-scale installations that incorporate a variety of materials, such as tobacco, silkworms and corn husks, to address cultural and social issues. The lecture will be followed by a conversation with MICA President Samuel Hoi.
“Harmonious Monk: Martin Luther and His Reformation through Music”
Christopher Boyd Brown, Associate Professor of Church History, Boston University
Wednesday, October 4, 7 – 9 p.m.
Earl and Darielle Linehan Concert Hall
We offer FREE admission to the museum on the first Thursday of each month!
UMBC Humanities Forum — Ancient Studies Week
"Life, Love, and Law in Classical Athens"
Victoria Wohl, Professor of Athenian Literature and Culture, University of Toronto
Monday, October 9, 4 – 5:30 p.m.
Albin O. Kuhn Library Gallery
This screening shares stories of immigrants living in the Baltimore area, in the narrators’ native language. This oral histories project between undergraduate students of foreign languages and immigrants in the Baltimore Metropolitan area features interviews in Arabic, Chinese, French, Italian, and Spanish.
Presented in partnership with Loyola University Maryland.
Program Made Possible Through Maryland Humanities Grant Program, Humanities Fund for Baltimore and the Loyola University Center for Community Service and Justice.
7:30pm | FREE - Please RSVP
Join us for our FREE family fun walk and festival at the Weinberg Y in Waverly. It’s an afternoon of activities and entertainment encouraging families to spend time together—eating, playing and reading. Registration begins at 12:30pm; walk & festival start 1:00pm and event ends 3:30pm - ..
UMBC Humanities Forum — Webb Lecture
"The Changing Face of Modern War: Chemical Weapons and Civilian Bodies in the Aftermath of WWI"
Susan R. Grayzel, Professor of History, Utah State University
Wednesday, October 18, 4 – 5:30 p.m.
Albin O. Kuhn Library Gallery
Follow in the footsteps of Baltimore's literary luminaries and discover the elegant brownstone mansions and majestic cultural institutions built by Baltimore's successful 19th century merchants and industrialists. Learn how a neighborhood of scholars, struggling artists and authors, newspaperman, philanthropists and social reformers offered rich opportunities to discuss and debate ideas and open new literary avenues.
The newly renovated Cultural Center at the OPERA HOUSE, Havre de Grace, MD presents Deep Vision Dance Company in their opening season on October 22nd at 3pm. Come see the beautiful space, a few blocks from the Chesapeake Bay. Concert features Deep Vision's final presentation of the revamped, full length version of "Matter, Energy, Human" as well as the fierce solo, "Inner Palette." (Photo by Zachary Z. Handler)
Ongoing research investigating the lives of the enslaved people at Homewood in the early nineteenth century reveals that men, women, and children inhabited unexpected spaces. From destroyed dwellings to the extant rooms of Homewood and the carriage house, historian Abby Schreiber, Ph.D., will discuss the conditions in which people lived and worked, carried on their family lives, and spent their time.