On the Town: Armstrong Auditorium to showcase ‘Two Fathers, Two Sons’ By: Lillie-Beth Brinkman The Journal Record December 31, 2020
Lillie-Beth Brinkman
Armstrong Auditorium, the stunning performance venue in far north Edmond, continues to bring quality and world-renowned music to live audiences. It will kick off its new season with “Two Fathers, Two Sons” at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 7.
The program features acclaimed cellist Julian Schwarz and his father, internationally recognized conductor Gerard Schwarz, performing with the Mozart Orchestra of New York. Gerard Schwarz has won seven Emmy Awards and eight American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) awards and received 14 Grammy nominations. Thursday’s show also includes Armstrong’s music director, Ryan Malone, on harpsicord and his son Seth Malone on cello.
Главные достопримечательности Воронежа за 1 день: что посмотреть зимой и летом, отправляясь в город на машине
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Щуки, бобры и кровопускание - открылся сезон зимней рыбалки
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Founded in 1982 by a local businessman who had escaped Nazi Germany, The Florida Holocaust Museum’s purpose is to educate the past and how we can avoid future genocides. It is one of the largest Holocaust museums in the United States. The permanent exhibit teaches about how the Holocaust began, the rise of the Nazi party and the non-Jewish victims of the Holocaust. There is also a train boxcar on its original rails on display that is one of the few remaining train cars used to transport prisoners to concentration camps. There are also rotating exhibits to see too. In addition to exhibits, The Florida Holocaust Museum offers speaking presentations from Holocaust survivors and second-generation survivors. As many of the surviving victims have passed on, this is a unique opportunity.
First impressions of a gift to Houston that will keep on giving.
Molly Glentzer December 30, 2020Updated: January 4, 2021, 11:27 am
Aristide Maillol s La Riviere (The River) rests atop a gently trickling reflection pond between the new Kinder Building and the Cullen Sculpture Garden at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, which director Gary Tinterow refers to as the hinge of the campus. Photo: Molly Glentzer / Houston Chronicle
The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston’s new Kinder Building promises to be a gift that gives for decades.
Except for light-sensitive works on paper and photographs, most of the permanent collection artworks installed throughout its galleries will be in place for a year. Taking it all in during one trip could be overwhelming. Knowing each trip back will be a treat, I am looking forward to a slower savor, planning to pace myself later.