Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The State Street Area Art Fair, originating in 1968, holds a special place in the Ann Arbor Art Fair tradition with Bargain Days roots, a merchant event preceding the Ann Arbor Art Fair by 32 years. [9] It is supported by the State Street Area Association (DBA State Street District) in collaboration with local businesses. [10]
Art lovers walk along South Main Street during the 2022 Ann Arbor Art Fair in Ann Arbor on Thurs., July 21, 2022. The annual Art Fair is held from Thursday to Saturday with nearly 1,000 artists ...
Festivals unique to the United States (and Canada and Mexico in some cases) include pow wows, Rocky Mountain Rendezvous, blues festivals, county fairs, state fairs, ribfests, and strawberry festivals. The first U.S. state fair was that of New York, held in 1841 in Syracuse, and has been held annually to the present year. [1]
The mural is an Ann Arbor icon, and is one of the city's most well-known pieces of public art. The work, colloquially referred to as the Bookstore Mural, was painted in 1984 by Richard Wolk [ 1 ] and was commissioned by David's Books, the building's former occupants. [ 2 ]
Art lovers walk along South Main Street during at the Ann Arbor Art Fair in Ann Arbor. The annual Art Fair is held from Thursday to Saturday with nearly 1,000 artists displaying their work over 30 ...
The fair runs the week of Expo, Chicago’s (regular-sized) annual international fair and opens on April 12 at Color Club. In 2023, the gallery Pickleman presented a tiny version of a Chicago ...
57th Street Art Fair, Hyde Park, June; Chicago Art Book Fair, November [1] Chicago Artists Month, September/October [2] Gold Coast Art Fair, Grant Park, June [3] Manifest, Columbia College Chicago, May; SOFA Chicago, Navy Pier, October/November [4] Wells Street Art Festival, Old Town, June [5]
The University of Michigan Museum of Art, where Slusser served as the director from 1946 to 1957. He was known to write letters back and forth with the artist William H. Littlefield. [3] He also worked as an art critic for the Ann Arbor News. [6]