The Contemporary photograph

The Contemporary

Use attributes for filter !
Address429 N Eutaw St #1s, Baltimore, MD 21201, United States
Phone +1 410-756-0397
FoundersGeorge Ciscle
Founded1989
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID3063598
Send edit request

Related searches

ica baltimorebaltimore visual artistsbaltimore museum of art logoart space baltimorecontemporary art museumvisionary art museum baltimorebaltimore museum of art tschabalalabaltimore museum of art history

About The Contemporary


The Contemporary is an itinerant museum of contemporary art in Baltimore, Maryland, in the United States. It does not collect artworks. It was started as the Contemporary Museum by George Ciscle in 1989. During its first decade, it had no fixed home, but instead was "dedicated to redefining the concept of the museum".

Where is the The Contemporary

The Contemporary Map
Click on the photo of The Contemporary to view it on Google Maps.

Mean Girls musical: Will a modern take on the cult classic win over Gen Z?

Mean Girls musical: Will a modern take on the cult classic win over Gen Z?
Nov 16,2023 11:11 pm

... " I fear The Contemporary Mean Girls redux will only end in disaster given how firmly rooted the original was in early 2000s culture, " warns one 22-year-old woman...

Whitby Goth Weekend sees darkness descend on seaside town

Whitby Goth Weekend sees darkness descend on seaside town
Oct 30,2023 9:41 am

... The most popular colour choice for The Contemporary subculture is black, but visitors do also opt for a different colour palette, with many attendees swathed in red...

Simon Armitage: Poet laureate on 'life-changing' visit to the Arctic

Simon Armitage: Poet laureate on 'life-changing' visit to the Arctic
Oct 13,2023 9:41 pm

... " And I started to think that that might be part of the role of the poet in The Contemporary age - to speak up for nature, rather than just use it in a poem...

Why US presidents skip British coronations

Why US presidents skip British coronations
Apr 29,2023 12:20 pm

... Attending the coronation, he said, " is but one piece of The Contemporary transatlantic relationship puzzle"...

How Egyptian police hunt LGBT people on dating apps

How Egyptian police hunt LGBT people on dating apps
Jan 30,2023 5:31 pm

... In April 2018, The Contemporary dancer was contacted from a friend s phone number...

Peaky Blinders dance show: 'Anyone who likes Strictly can love this'

Peaky Blinders dance show: 'Anyone who likes Strictly can love this'
Sep 30,2022 11:50 am

... " In the popular imagination, dance is still so often associated with ballet and Swan Lake and fairy tales, but The Contemporary dance scene is so much more than that, and it s great if people s eyes can be opened to that...

Ukraine crisis: Macron says a deal to avoid war is within reach

Ukraine crisis: Macron says a deal to avoid war is within reach
Feb 6,2022 10:47 pm

... " This must be done while respecting Russia and understanding The Contemporary traumas of this great people and great nation...

Tyson Fury: Drainpipe sculpture of boxer unveiled in Morecambe

Tyson Fury: Drainpipe sculpture of boxer unveiled in Morecambe
Dec 5,2021 8:41 pm

... " The sculptor, also from Morecambe, said The Contemporary artwork showed the Lancashire resort was " progressive in its views of art"...

Simon Armitage: Poet laureate on 'life-changing' visit to the Arctic

Apr 18,2020 10:48 pm

By Ian YoungsEntertainment & arts reporter

After a " life-changing" visit to The Arctic , poet laureate Simon Armitage says poets can convey what's happening with Climate Change in a way that scientists and journalists can't.

A Polar Bear is traipsing over a receding glacier that Now resembles a " rotting carcass of ice" wearing a Fur Coat that's " too heavy, too baggy, too hot since The Sun got stuck in The sky".

In Armitage's poem Polar Bear , The writer goes on to imagine The Animal he spotted on his visit being destined to roam in ever narrower circles In Search of scarcer food, until all it can do is reach up for The North Star and " cling by a single claw".

In another work, Armitage describes his boat drifting through The Remains of an " Ancient Empire of snow" that appears to have been smashed to ruins, leaving The " marbled wreckage" of imagined icy temples, palaces and tombs.

A third poem is inspired by a conversation with a scientist who is researching seabirds whose stomachs contain pieces of plastic from around The World .

" In The small intestine/of The little auk/we found Mexico City , Manila, Shanghai, New York . "

As well as his poems, Armitage has made a BBC Radio 4 series about The Trip . In The First episode, he says poets have had their " money's worth when It Comes to nature" by using it as inspiration for centuries, and it's " time for poetry to pay something back".

He explains: " It's occurred to me recently that We Are doing terrible damage to The Planet , and The Planet can't Speak Up for itself. It doesn't have an articulate voice in that way.

" And I started to think that that might be part of The Role of The Poet in The Contemporary age - to Speak Up for nature, rather than just use it in a poem. "

When Armitage was chosen as poet laureate in 2019, He Said he wanted to put a Focus On The climate.

His interest in The Environment goes back Further - he studied geography at Portsmouth Polytechnic in The 1980s. Back Then , " Climate Change was barely there as a topic" he says.

" I don't remember that phrase Coming Up very often, and it certainly wasn't part of my study.

" But it's Everything Now - Everything that was being observed and documented and recorded and measured by all The Scientists in that place [The Arctic ]. It dominates their thinking. "

Armitage spent about a week In July on The Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard, home to The World 's most northerly permanent settlement and The UK Arctic Research Station. The region is warming much faster than The global average.

What surprised him most? That answer is very easy, he says. " It was very warm. "

The thermal clothes he was advised to pack stayed in his suitcase as The temperature hovered around 11C for four or Five Days .

" In some ways it was incredibly fortunate to have That Kind of stillness, calmness, visibility - just to be able to See so clearly its incredibly breathtaking beauty. "

But it was a " weird beauty" he continues.

" You're Seeing Things you probably shouldn't be able to See - The sides of mountains which, up until recently, were covered in glacial ice; The insides of The glaciers as The Front end is carving off; islands appearing which they thought were parts of The Mainland ; lakes forming at The Front of glaciers which were never there on The maps before.

" Literally, The maps are changing. So [it has] this very unstable and literally fluid geography, which tests your belief in The stability of The World and The Planet . "

Seeing The Effects of Climate Change for himself was " a life-changing experience" and made him come to The conclusion that The Planet as we have traditionally thought about it " doesn't exist any more".

" It exists in pockets and patches, " he says. " But it's not there any more. It's a kind of fiction. That's this really heavy sense that I've come back with, or it's some kind of awakening to a situation. "

He doesn't want to sound gloomy, he stresses. " But I felt As If I were writing elegies, actually. "

We already hear a lot about Climate Change , of course. And in The introduction to The pamphlet containing his Arctic poems, Armitage admits poetry " is hardly The Mass Communication tool to overcome The World 's selected deafness".

But he holds out hope that literature can be more persuasive than news reports or scientific data. And, approaching The halfway point in his 10-year tenure as poet laureate, Armitage has a bigger platform than most.

" Part of The Project was to come back and talk about this stuff, maybe in a slightly different Language - in artistic terms - because scientists, by their own admission, don't always have The have The Language to convey [it], or facts and figures aren't often what people want to want to hear. "

While scientists and journalists normally try to maintain some objectivity, poets are free to make full use of literary devices like metaphors.

" When you use one effectively, people don't just understand The comparison, they actually experience it, " Armitage says.

" For example, I Heard some of The Scientists talking about how a lot of The glaciers were ill or sick. I think when they use those words, they know they are slightly overstepping The Mark . They've entered a territory of Language which is subjective.

" But I'm all about The subjective, so I try to Take That a little bit Further .

" In one of The Poems , I refer to The glacier as a carcass. And if I'm trusting My Own work, I feel As If that hits home. "

Related Topics

Source of news: bbc.com

Related Persons

Next Profile ❯