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This past year has forced us to reckon with every aspect of our lives and find ways to cope with the challenges brought about by the pandemic. While some found solace in sourdough, others devoted themselves to sunrise walks, online yoga sessions, and wellness apps in search of mental, emotional, and spiritual balance.
Humans have searched for meaning and inner peace for centuries. The enlightenment that can be found in labyrinths has been well known from antiquity, and not only to escape Cretan minotaurs.
From the magnificent circular 13th-century labyrinth in Chartres Cathedral in France to the intricate and ephemeral labyrinths created by Oregon-based Circles in the Sand, these tools of transformation offer a path to emotional healing and a way of coping with pandemic life and beyond.
/ A stroll though Ewing and Muriel Kauffman Memorial Garden is a fun, whimsical outing for the Kansas City introvert.
Cautious Kansas Citians can happily reconnect with the city they ve missed on their own terms. Here s how.
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I was in my early 20s when I hit my stride at parties.
As a pre-teen on the school cafeteria dance scene, all I had to do was bust a move like Young MC told me. But after that, small talk and mingling became prerequisites for having a social life, and it took a while to find my people and get the hang of it. Point being, these skills were learned and not quickly.
Art As Reparations: This Painter Is Cutting His Prices For People Who Live East Of Troost In Kansas City kcur.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from kcur.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
10 Ways for Museums to Survive and Thrive in a Post-Covid World
That the pandemic did damage to museums is unquestioned but their resilience has been remarkable.
Pablo Bronstein’s “Historical Rhode Island Decor,” part of last year’s “Raid the Icebox Now” installation at the Rhode Island School of Design.Credit.via RISD Museum
This article is part of our latest
, which focuses on reopening, reinvention and resilience.
You thought a museum with no visitors would be a quiet one? Not last year it wasn’t not when the longest closure of America’s cultural institutions since World War II coincided with intense scrutiny of just how those institutions behave. Leadership was working overtime. Staff and audiences raised their voices, sometimes angrily. It’s natural to want to get “back to normal” after such a devastating suspension; in Los Angeles, museums were closed for over a year. But American museums in 2021 have a far bigger challenge than flipping the lights
From masterpieces looted by the Nazis to maritime paintings and works by gay artists, a wide variety of art in a wide variety of media will be on display.