Durham Arts Council displays work of Parker, Feir, Assani
Large amounts of wool, recycled washers and spoons are just a few of the objects on display in the Durham Arts Council galleries through Jan. 2.
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Large amounts of wool, recycled washers and spoons are just a few of the objects on display in the Durham Arts Council galleries through Jan. 2.
It all started when one of Kathy Alderman’s daughters gave her a set of paints and an easel in 2005.
Susan Bean was formerly an anthropology professor at Yale University, and she helped curate the Peabody Essex Museum in Massachusetts. She visited India for a year in the early 1970s and was immediately amazed at everything there to see.
New York City, London, Madrid, Helsinki, Tokyo, Hong Kong — and now Durham will all have an arts event in common starting Oct. 26.
Carrboro’s reputation as a quaint, family-friendly arts and innovation hub is likely to flourish even more with The ArtsCenter’s proposal to shift to a new, larger location in the next two years.
“Is it art?”