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Meet Pete Scantland, Orange Barrel Media CEO and Art Museum Benefactor
columbusmonthly.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from columbusmonthly.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Columbus Monthly
Tuesday evening found New York-based artist Mark Riegelman II crouched on a Short North sidewalk, adjusting the angle of a spotlight one of six trained on his massive, newly-installed sculpture, Makers’ Monument. Riegelman was trying to achieve maximum impact while also addressing the concern of a resident who had walked down the fire escape of a nearby apartment building to complain that at certain angles, the light shone into his home. The resident left, apparently satisfied, and the team began experimenting with colored gels.
It was a fitting final hurdle for a public project that has been four years in the making. The sculpture was commissioned as part of the recent High Street streetscape improvement project in the Short North, and its cost of nearly $500,000, funded through the City of Columbus Capital Budget and contributions from area property owners, was included in the budget of the $25 million projects, thanks to a “Two Percent for Art” commitmen
Seven Questions with Elissa Washuta
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John Edgar’s Neighborhood: God, Grace and Affordable Housing
The leader of Community Development for All People has a driving mission to help Columbus’ South Side become a diverse, thriving, welcoming “front porch to the kingdom of God.”
Columbus Monthly
Start at Frank Road, where a 90-acre patch of mud marks the spot where the furnaces of Buckeye Steel once roared, and drive north along Parsons Avenue to Livingston, where the glistening towers of Nationwide Children’s Hospital loom. Between the two, you’ll see reminders of the many stages of the South Side’s history: robust industry and modest prosperity, decline and decay, rediscovery, reinvention and nascent renewal.
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Can Columbus Suburban Schools Become More Inclusive?
Central Ohio suburban districts some diverse, some not so much are having some uncomfortable discussions about racial inequities.
Columbus Monthly
When Sophia Baker was in middle school, she was stopped by a police officer while riding her bike on the Bexley street where she lives. She was headed to an after-school sports practice. The officer, she recalls, said her bike “fit the description” of a stolen bicycle. Or maybe
she “fit the description.” Baker was young and flustered by the stop, and doesn’t quite remember what the officer told her. He eventually let her go on her way, and even after confirming with her white teammates that police didn’t pull over any of them on their bikes that day, she put the incident out of her mind. So much so that she didn’t tell her parents, although her father, Jonathan Baker, was a founder of the Bexley Minorit
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