Category Archives: Arts & Humanities

First Online Poetry Reading Premieres this Thursday

Speaking Our Truths: Poems of Identity, Place and Community 

Premieres on Thursday, May 7 at 7:30 pm on YouTube 

The first online poetry reading in the Takoma Park Arts series features four local poets whose work addresses themes of identity, place and community. The poets include Tatiana Figueroa Ramirez, Marti Pates, Sosha Pinson, and Susan Scheid. You can watch the reading later on YouTube if you miss the premiere.

Pates challenges the social climate of urban areas in Baltimore by exhibiting beauty in poverty-stricken neighborhoods. Pinson is a poet from eastern Kentucky whose work focuses on the complicated nature of survival in the aftermath of devastation.

Ramirez was born in Puerto Rico and performs and teaches poetry workshops in the D.C. area. Scheid is the author of After Enchantment and her poetry has appeared in many journals.

Takoma Park Arts is a cultural series offered by the City of Takoma Park. All future events at the Takoma Park Community Center have been postponed due to coronavirus restrictions, but you can watch many former events on our YouTube channel, including concerts, theater, art exhibitions, and more. The arts keep us connected even when we’re apart.

Watch Takoma Park Arts Online Now

It’s tough for all of us going stir crazy at home so the Takoma Park Arts cultural series has gone online! You can watch dozens of our former events on our Youtube channel, including concerts, theater and dance performances, art exhibitions, poetry readings, lectures, and more.

We’re all in this together so let’s stay connected through the arts, which are more important now than ever. City staff are organizing new online events, including a Vintage Movie Night film screening featuring propaganda cartoons and a second film screening that is in the works. We also are planning more online events so stay tuned!

You can keep up with all of our cultural activities in our weekly Takoma Park Arts e-newsletter, and you can sign up here.

Online Vintage Movie Night: Propaganda Cartoons!

Online Vintage Movie Night: Propaganda Cartoons!

Vintage Movie Night host Richard Hall has organized a new online film screening featuring entertaining propaganda cartoons filmed over the past century with political, social, or commercial messages. Dating from silent World War I films through World War II and the Cold War, cartoons have been used as propaganda tools to mold public opinion, sometimes in subtle or more blatant ways.

Vintage Movie Night, which features Hall’s curated collection of short vintage films on different topics, is part of the City of Takoma Park’s Takoma Park Arts cultural series. This screening was planned before the coronavirus outbreak and was scheduled to be shown on April 9 at the Takoma Park Community Center. We moved it online so you can kick back at home, pop some popcorn, and enjoy the cartoons!

You also can go to artsevents.takomaparkmd.gov to find videos of many past Takoma Park Arts events, including concerts, theater, poetry readings, art exhibitions, and more. Please sign up for our weekly e-newsletter for updates about when future events will be rescheduled. Stay safe and healthy. We’re all in this together.

Watch Takoma Park Arts Events Online

All upcoming Takoma Park Arts events at the Takoma Park Community Center have been postponed to help prevent the spread of the coronavirus, but you can watch many of our past events online now! Please use this Youtube link to watch some of our concerts, theater performances, poetry readings, lectures, film screenings, art exhibitions, and more. You can take the arts home with you and share the link with your family and friends to help stave off cabin fever.

You also can sign up for our weekly Takoma Park Arts e-newsletter for updates about the rescheduling of future performances. Stay safe and healthy. We’re all in this together.

Mr. Jon Children’s Concert this Saturday!

Mr. Jon Children’s Music Concert

Saturday, Feb. 22 at 1 pm

Takoma Park Community Center Auditorium

7500 Maple Ave., Takoma Park, MD 

Mr. Jon performs energetic music for the entire family that is all about fun, dancing, and laughter! He has won a Parents’ Choice Award for his music and attracted loyal audiences across the D.C. area. The concert is free with a $10 suggested donation for adults and $5 for kids. No tickets or reservations are required.

Singer-songwriter Jon Lewis has released three albums that have become top sellers on cdbaby.com. Sometimes playing solo or in a group, he plays more than 100 shows a year for kids across the country. To hear some of his music, go to mrjonmusic.com.

This concert was organized by the City of Takoma Park’s Takoma Park Arts cultural series. For more info about all of our upcoming events, sign up for our weekly e-newsletter. 

Free Civil Rights Film Screening this Thursday

Overlooked Films from the Civil Rights Movement

Free Film Screening

Thursday, Feb. 13 at 7:30 pm 

Takoma Park Community Center Auditorium

7500 Maple Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. 

The civil rights movement is a long ongoing struggle with a fascinating history and some neglected stories. Please join us for a free screening of vintage films that shed light on the heroic pursuit of social justice and racial equality. Local filmmaker and film historian Richard Hall will lead this screening of three short documentaries in one of our Takoma Park Arts events celebrating Black History Month.

Filmed in 1963 by the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, We’ll Never Turn Back features interviews with Fanny Lou Hamer, a 20 year-old Julian Bond, and black farmers in Mississippi who were harassed when they tried to register to vote.

A Time for Freedom documents the 1957 Prayer Pilgrimage for Freedom where Martin Luther King Jr. and Rosa Parks spoke at the Lincoln Memorial, six years before King’s famous “I have a dream” speech. In 1977, the U.S. government produced The Time Has Come, narrated by actor James Earl Jones, featuring interviews with prominent black elected officials, including a young John Lewis.

The Takoma Park Arts cultural series organizes free concerts, theater, poetry readings, art exhibitions, and more. To learn more about all of our upcoming events, please sign up for our weekly e-newsletter at https://takomaparkmd.gov/initiatives/arts-and-humanities/arts-newsletter-sign-up/

Image: Still from We’ll Never Turn Back

 

Artists Sought for Mural on Lincoln Avenue

CALL FOR ARTISTS FOR MURAL IN TAKOMA PARK 

Complete Call: muralcall.takomaparkmd.gov 

Application Form: muralform.takomaparkmd.gov

Budget: Up to $25,000 

Deadline: March 2, 2020

The City of Takoma Park is seeking submissions from artists for a mural covering sections of a concrete retaining wall stretching three blocks along Lincoln Avenue in Takoma Park, Md. Artists must submit a cover letter, 3-5 sketches or mock-ups of their design, and a summary of prior public art projects. The theme of the design is up to the artist or artist team but should reflect the historical, cultural, or environmental character of Takoma Park in some way. Bids will be accepted up to $25,000. 

Artists do not need to be Takoma Park residents, and there is no fee to apply. Please review the full Call for Entries at muralcall.takomaparkmd.gov before applying using the online submission form at muralform.takomaparkmd.gov. Please share the news with your artist friends!            

Yasmin Williams Guitar Concert this Friday!

A Night of Guitar Music with Yasmin Williams

8 pm on Friday, Feb. 7 

Free concert with $10 suggested donation 

Takoma Park Community Center Auditorium

7500 Maple Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. 

Have you ever heard a guitar played with a bow, lap tapping, or alternate tunings? In this free concert, local acoustic finger-style guitarist Yasmin Williams expands the possibilities for guitar in a night of captivating music. She will perform songs from her debut album Unwind along with covers of instrumental classics.

NPR Music says Yasmin’s music “transcends the standard idea of what a guitarist should do.” U.S. Rep. Gerry Connolly said, “If only we could supplant gun violence in America with the beauty of Yasmin’s music.” To hear some of her music, go to www.yasminwilliamsmusic.com.

The City of Takoma Park’s Takoma Park Arts cultural series series organized this concert which celebrates Black History Month. For news about all of our upcoming events, please sign up for our weekly e-newsletter at https://takomaparkmd.gov/initiatives/arts-and-humanities/arts-newsletter-sign-up/

 

Hear a Black Union Soldier’s Life Story this Thursday

From Slavery to Freedom: A Black Union Soldier’s Life Story

Free Lecture at 7:30 pm on Thursday, Feb. 6 

Takoma Park Community Center Auditorium

7500 Maple Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. 

In an engaging lecture, Dianne Cross will share the remarkable life story of her great-great-grandfather Sgt. Isaac Hall who earned his freedom from slavery fighting in the Union Army during the Civil War. Starting with only his name, a portrait, and some oral family history, Dianne spent years researching his background to weave a compelling story of his life as one of more than 200,000 black soldiers who fought for freedom during the Civil War while facing discrimination and low pay in segregated units.

After earning a bachelor’s degree in history from Rutgers University, Dianne worked for 31 years for Lockheed Martin (now L-3 Communication System). She is retired now and lives with her husband in Laurel, Md.

The City of Takoma Park’s Takoma Park Arts cultural series series organized this event which celebrates Black History Month. For news about our upcoming events, please sign up for our weekly e-newsletter at https://takomaparkmd.gov/initiatives/arts-and-humanities/arts-newsletter-sign-up/

A BALKAN JOURNEY-Free Concert this Friday, Jan. 24

A BALKAN JOURNEY by the Orfeia Vocal Ensemble

8 pm on Friday, Jan. 24

Takoma Park Community Center

7500 Maple Avenue, Takoma Park, MD

Free concert with $10 suggested donation

Have you heard the complex rhythms and beauty of Balkan music? Expand your musical horizons at A Balkan Journey where the Orfeia Vocal Ensemble will lead a magical journey through the rich musical heritage of the Balkans, famous for its sharp dissonances, haunting lyricism, and asymmetric rhythms. Orfeia will share its extensive repertoire, spanning the Bulgarian, Serbian, Bosnian, and Roma traditions by situating each song in its unique cultural context. The audience can join in by learning a traditional Bulgarian village song.

Founded in 2006 by the legendary Bulgarian folk singer Tatiana Sarbinska, Orfeia is an all-woman vocal ensemble dedicated to preserving and sharing traditional music from Bulgaria and Eastern Europe, ranging from traditional village songs to sacred chants from the Middle Ages to today.

This concert was organized by the City’s Takoma Park Arts cultural series. Please sign up for our weekly e-newsletter to learn more about all of our upcoming FREE events, including concerts, theater, poetry readings, art exhibitions, lectures, film screenings, and more!