WHAT WEEKLY

From That Day to This

16 May 2013

★ Gatsby

We want to continue to create alternative spaces in Baltimore that provide venues for artists to showcase their work. The house show as we know it does wonders to help move away from the exclusivity of traditional galleries, but often presents itself in too casual a light. There is something lost from the formality of the museum, which offers a space that honors the work within it. Is it possible to create an environment that feels welcoming to the artists, viewers, and the art itself? From That Day to This aims to share with any who see it the gratifying labor of art work.

What_Weekly_Rosemary_Miss_03

There was a time when art and craft were not isolated from each other. Most of what was used around the house was made by hand, and many hours of focus and skill went into the details of its creation. The home served as workshop, studio, and gallery. Visitors were not only good company, but an audience to the results of careful handicraft. This was a time of hospitality. This was a time of storytelling.

 What_Weekly_Rosemary_Miss_02

 Work in progress courtesy of Morgan Frailey,

From That Day to This focuses not just on myths and fairytales told in these times, but the patterns that make them up. The repetition of tasks and themes in the stories we know today is part of what has kept them alive. The repetition of spinning, the repetition of sewing, the repetition of splitting wood, of painting, story, and song: these are the same rhythms that have cycled through our lives as long as we have worked with our hands. The artists represented in this show embrace this rhythm in their work, whether it appears visually or in the individual’s process. Like good storytellers, they practice their craft until it feels natural, an extension of themselves. A memorable story feels like an extension of the truth, and its telling often feels like an intimate exchange. The stories we know grow to become part of us, and we sometimes call telling them “sharing.” We want to let the same feelings hold true to art, so we seek to create a welcoming space in which to share it. We want to invite you in, feed you well, and show you what we’ve made. We want you to feel at home. We want to tell you a story.

What_Weekly_Rosemary_Miss_01 

Poster design by Jesse Klompus

 

Gallery opening, 7-10 pm.

Featuring work by:

Morgan Frailey

Hannah Gilson

Kirsty Hambrick

Annelies Kamen

Emiko Kurokawa

Jesse Klompus

Rosemary Liss

Emma Louthan

Jack Neill

Morissa Rothman-Pierce

Zachary Schoettler

Caitlin Selzer

Catesby Taliaferro

Kyle Tata

 

Music by:

Soft Cat

Sianna Plavin

The Remington House Ramblers

 

Come early for a cider and mead tasting by Millstone Cider

Food & Drinks provided by Will Weaver, Jack & Zach’s Food, and 

 



fashion

RAW Artists: Cultivating Creativity

It seems like every day a new “unconventional” art gallery opens up in Baltimore. This is great news for any…

Smart Textiles

From Russia, With Lace

Confirmed Stock

The Tailor at Hour Haus

FashionEASTa 2015

nightlife

Infernoland

Each year millions of families travel by planes, trains and automobiles to amusement parks all over the world. Upon arrival…

The Death Set: Slap Slap…

Comedy Noir

Sound and Fury Signifying… Oscar.

Emily Wells: Symphony 1 In the Barrel of a Gun

Bent Ear

social innovation

Outside The Black Box

Our ever-increasing flow of technological wonders means we can now carry a big chunk of human knowledge, a broadcast and…

Occupy Everywhere

The Baltimore Algebra Project

What is a Tool Library?

Ultimate Block Party

Loveasaurus Records

artist profiles

Ceda and Dume

Baltimore has mixed feelings about the artists who often exhibit their work on the neglected and decaying parts of the…

Britt Olsen-Ecker

BROS

Glenford Nunez

A Conversation with Bob Rose

Minás Konsolas: ArchiteXture

sustainability

Strange Folks at Ash Street Garden

Urban gardens are sprouting up all over Baltimore. If you don't have a small plot of land for growing food,…

Small Time

Baltimore Free Farm

Welcome to the Free Farm

An Ambitious New Charter School Comes to West Baltimore

Farmageddon