John Fusco of Morristown, an award-winning screenwriter, film producer, novelist, singer-songwriter and musician, with more than 15 major movies and television shows to his credit, has received the 2020 Governor’s Award for Excellence in the Arts from the Vermont Arts Council.
Anne Cummings is a Vermont eco artist, creating work from recycled, reused and repurposed materials, with the intent of making art that minimizes its impact on the environment and educates the viewer about environmental issues.
Sarah Patnoe, a student in Lamoille Union High School’s Lancerships class, has created a business that focuses on safe and healthy communities.
Cesar Cornejo will discuss the relationship between art, architecture and society in a virtual artist talk at the Vermont Studio Center in Johnson, Monday, Jan. 11, 7 p.m.
The Vermont Holocaust Memorial has announced the winners of its student essay contest “Rescuers in the Time of COVID-19.”
The affordable housing committee and the South Burlington Library are co-sponsoring a book discussion series on “The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America,” by Richard Rothstein.
They call themselves “artivists.” They are artists. They are activists. And they are middle schoolers.
John Yau, the author of 13 books of poetry, has joined the board of trustees at the Vermont Studio Center in Johnson.
The Vermont Folklife Center and the Pride Center of Vermont have teamed up for a new exhibit, “Pride 1983,” which explores the origins and legacy of the state’s first pride march that summer.
“Screentime,” a group exhibition that is part of the “2020 Vision: Seeing the World through Technology” Vermont Curator’s Group statewide project, is in the upstairs gallery at River Arts, 74 Pleasant St., Morrisville, through Jan. 15, Tuesday-Saturday 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
It’s one stone at a time for Jacques Paul Marton, of South Burlington, as he builds stone cairns behind the barn on the old Wheelock farm at the corner of Spear and Swift streets.
Almost 40 young creatives sent in a variety of responses to our coloring page, asking what they were thankful for in this unusual, tumultuous year.
The Furchgott Sourdiffe Gallery is sponsoring Nest in Colors, an exhibit of work by Bonnie Acker, Miriam Adams, Elizabeth Allen, Neil Berger, Clark Derbes, Holly Hauser, David Maille, Jessica Scriver, Bettina Stark, Barbara Wagner, Frank Woods, and Julia Zanes.
NEKarts, the non-profit volunteer board that manages the Hardwick Town House, is seeking community input about the building and its role in the region.
Mornings boast a certain silence that allows anxiety to sleep-in before worries bounce from ear to ear.
It’s 4 p.m. on Friday, which in late November means it’s almost dark, and the clouds above Morristown have gone pinkish gray against patches of soft blue sky.
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