QUEENS OF EGYPT reign currently at an exhibit at the National Geographic Museum in Washington, DC.
Read MoreSUPERFINE!! the fair opened to crowds of art aficionados and new collectors at Union Market / Dock 5 in DC on Halloween night. New to the District, the fair got its start in New York and Miami.
Read MoreTurn Me Loose, the story of Dick Gregory, the first Black comedian-activist to radically explore racial comedy premiered in Washington, DC at Arena Stage to enthusiastic crowds, last week.
Read MoreConcepts of human migration are explored in a group of sculptures by Mexico-city based sculptor, Betsabee Romero.
Read MoreBeloved British graphic artist, Ralph Steadman, sat quietly enough on stage at the American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center until he decided to take off his shoe and share his new Picasso socks with the audience.
Read MorePolitics & Art, now in its fourth year, is an annual event presented by Washington Performing Arts’ Mars Urban Arts Initiative and Councilmember David Grosso.
Read MoreInshallah. The Arabic word means “God willing,” and reflects surrender to what we cannot control and what divine fate ordains. We hear it often working with refugees seeking sanctuary in Greece.
Read MorePop-Up Magazine is what happens when a diverse group of artists decides to create a live magazine.
Read MoreDriving up the lush, tree-lined road leading to Alison Friedman’s house, I arrive at this much-anticipated interview.
Read MoreFor its 2017/2018 season, Arena Stage has focused on producing “Power Plays,” performances that are focused on each decade of American history.
Read MoreThe masterwork of Irish playwright, Brian Friel, is brought to the stage of the Studio Theater in Washington, D.C. in the performance of Translations.
Read MoreD.C. has fully embraced Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright, August Wilson’s, masterpiece drama, Two Trains Running.
Read MoreMarch is Women’s History Month, and in solidarity, the Melrose Georgetown Hotel is joining the fight for women’s equality in the workplace.
Read MoreFor some of us, our understanding of indigenous peoples of North America begins the romanticized tales of the first Thanksgiving and Walt Disney’s Pocahontas and ends with the Trail of Tears or a story about cowboys and Indians on the American frontier.
Read MoreWith sexual exploitation dominating entertainment and political headlines recently, newly empowered women are talking publicly and candidly about their personal experiences that were once silenced.
Read MoreIt’s hard to believe that just a few neighborhoods down from the White House are communities that are struggling against hunger. “Food hardship” and “food insecurity” are terms that unfortunately describe too many households in the district.
Read MoreYour work to inspire global and local action against modern slavery goes back many years.
Read MoreThe dictionary defines the word miscegenation as a marriage or the cohabitation and all that it encompasses (sexual relations, and/or procreation) between two people of different racial groups.
Read More“I’m accepting the structure, but I couldn’t fit in it. I had to break it.”- Ebtisam Abdul Aziz
Read MoreArriving early to this hugely popular exhibit is critical as the lines start forming around 9 AM.
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