
By Interesni Kazki, on a Baltimore wall
Above: Part of Open Walls Baltimore: work by Interesni Kazki, on Maryland Avenue, just above North Avenue.
We brake for street art.
The latest we saw and liked is this piece from Ukrainian artists Interesni Kazki, on the west-facing wall of a building on Maryland Avenue that houses an Adult Day Care business.
It’s part of the Open Walls Baltimore project we wrote about earlier.
Speaking of Open Walls, they’re co-hosting an event at The Baltimore Museum of Art on Wednesday May 2 at 7:30 p.m., “A Conversation with Artist Martha Rosler.”
Admission is free, but reservations are required. For more information, go here.
Here’s how the BMA describes the event:
Rosler has created pioneering videotapes, photo/text works, and performances that span several decades. Though long considered an underground artist for her innovations in combining a variety of media, her work is now widely recognized for examining the ideological, political, economic, and social realities that dominate everyday life beyond the traditional boundaries of the art world.
Rosler “has spent the last four decades pointing out how Americans’ pursuit of the good life has often blinded us from noticing how our nation has fallen short of its ideals,” wrote Modern Art Notes Editor Tyler Green, who has followed Rosler’s career for many years.
Green will be leading the conversation with Rosler at this free event which will include an audience Q & A.
For diverse and sundry other events, see the Brew’s new Coming at You listings.