Artist set to open La Cosecha gallery in Old Brooklyn
Will Sanchez hopes to open his new gallery March 1 and keep growing there as a painter, proprietor, poet, and neighborhood activist.
Will Sanchez hopes to open his new gallery March 1 and keep growing there as a painter, proprietor, poet, and neighborhood activist.
Refugee Response, a nonprofit organization that empowers refugees resettled in Northeast Ohio to thrive in their new home, and Facing History and Ourselves, a group that uses lessons of history to challenge teachers and students to stand up to bigotry and hate, are relocating to the Urban Community School campus.
A pandemic might seem like a strange time to plan a cultural and civic organization’s next 100 years. But leaders of Coventry PEACE Inc. say it’s more important now than ever to build the community’s future. Last month, the group launched a fund-raising campaign called “$100,000 for 100 years.”
Natalie Roelle, co-owner of Voodoo Monkey Tattoo, is opening her second tattoo shop in Cleveland, this time by herself, above Blazing Saddles bike shop in Gordon Square.
On Monday, Jan. 11 three Cleveland organizations announced a joint initiative designed to inspire residents to support local businesses while practicing social distancing. “Roam the Winter Wonderland” intends to help various Cleveland neighborhoods through the winter months of the pandemic with events and promotions through April.
Tanya Kaiser, an artist, educator, and newly minted gallerist, is bringing international and interdisciplinary art to Clevelanders through the newly established Kaiser Gallery.
For the last nine years, I’ve had the privilege of being the general manager of the Cedar Lee Theater. In these surreal times, I’ve discovered a deeper sense of what the theater means to me, and how it’s come to be part of my identity.
The nonprofit organization led by Daniel Gray-Kontar has worked with adult and youth residents in Midtown and Hough to create a vision for a Black Avenue in Cleveland.
Although movie theaters are expected to survive the pandemic, they’re having a rough time. We talked to Jon Forman, owner of Cleveland Cinemas, about the hit his business is taking during the Covid-19 pandemic and how longtime supporters and patrons can help.
Not only will the memorial now headed to Imperial Avenue honor and celebrate the women who lost their lives there. It will be a shining example to urban planners everywhere, a model of what to do with blighted space and helping a neighborhood move past trauma.