Cultural Council for Palm Beach County
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It’s May, and that means it’s time to celebrate MOSAIC (Month of Shows, Art, Ideas and Culture) in The Palm Beaches!
Here to help you with three deals for the coming week is the Cultural Council for Palm Beach County, the official support agency for arts and culture here in Florida’s Cultural Capital.
To learn more about the deals below, along with all of the other exciting ways to experience MOSAIC this May, visit mosaicpbc.com today. Check each organization’s website for COVID-19 safety protocols and guidelines.
DEAL
Press release content from Globe Newswire. The AP news staff was not involved in its creation.
Cultural Council for Palm Beach County Launches MOSAIC which Promotes Local Institutions for a .
Cultural Council of Palm Beach CountyMay 3, 2021 GMT
Image: Bruce Helander, Magical Mosaic (Everything Under the Sun), 2021
Image: Bruce Helander, Magical Mosaic (Everything Under the Sun), 2021
Lake Worth Beach, Fla., May 03, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) The Cultural Council for Palm Beach County is pleased to announce the return of its MOSAIC (Month of Shows, Art, Ideas and Culture) celebration, which promotes the area’s arts & culture institutions, many of which are offering unique programming and special offers throughout this month.
Looking for things to do in May? The cultural capital of Florida offers some incredible ideas
MOSAIC campaign will launch soon
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When is the last time you went to Palm Beach County?
It’s really only a short drive from Orlando.
Spanning from Jupiter to Boca Raton, this is often considered Florida’s cultural capital, according to a recent interview with the Cultural Council for Palm Beach County.
Palm Beach Daily News
It took a brain tumor threatening Yvette Norwood-Tiger s life nearly 10 years ago to persuade her that singing should no longer be a hobby but a career path.
Norwood-Tiger, a jazz vocalist and founder of the Palm Beach International Jazz Festival, which opens at the Rinker Playhouse on Saturday, said she has always been a spiritual person and that she owed her second chance at life to her faith.
“The doctors told me to get my affairs in order because they couldn’t remove all of the tumor during surgery,” Norwood-Tiger said. “I know it was God and so many people praying for me that got me through it.”