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St. Louis-based video artist William Morris' new video, “The Protest Project,” combines “pandemic and epidemic” to explore how the coronavirus pandemic collided with an equally devastating problem this spring — racism and police brutality.
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When performance and video artist Yvonne Osei arrived in St. Louis from Ghana in 2009, she noticed that everyone seemed concerned with physical…
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Early on election night last November, artist Bunny Burson looked to New York City’s Javits Center ceiling, expecting confetti to fall to celebrate…
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Kahlil Irving sits down to the potter’s wheel in his studio, picks up an unfinished pot, the muddled grey of unfinished clay, and begins to turn the…
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After Bruno David opened his gallery in Grand Center 11 years ago, he was a cheerleader for the area’s emergence as a major arts destination. Now Grand…
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Bruno David Gallery in Grand Center has closed its doors.Bruno David said his namesake art gallery shut down because of structural concerns recently…
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This article originally appeared in the St. Louis Beacon, April 20, 2013: Shakespeare’s Romeo finds hope in the candle-lit glow of Juliet at her window:…
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This month, St. Louis-based video artist Zlatko Ćosić presents two simultaneous—but quite different—exhibits. In one, Ćosić closes a mournful and war-torn…
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When William Morris was growing up in St. Louis in the 1970s, his mother was close behind with her Super 8 camera.Much later, Morris stumbled upon some of…
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Max Starkloff was known for his work as a disability rights activist. But he also was a painter.Later this month, several of Starkloff's paintings will be…