Guest Gallery: Arnold Graef
Today’s guest photographer is Arnold Graef, 59, who works at Spirit AeroSystems. He developed an interest in photography while documenting his travels in the Navy.
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For more than a year, Cabaret Oldtown veterans Christi Moore and Angela Geer have been lamenting that there wasn’t a show that would let them showcase all the female pop and rock classics that they liked.
Today’s guest photographer is Arnold Graef, 59, who works at Spirit AeroSystems. He developed an interest in photography while documenting his travels in the Navy.
Chloe Tucker wasn’t even a gleam in her father’s eye when the Swedish pop group ABBA ruled the airwaves and disco dance floors in the 1970s and 1980s with hits like “Dancing Queen,” “Waterloo” and “Super Trouper.”
There is something familiar about the faces in Dale Strattman’s photographs.
Throughout history, we have seen faces painted on ancient Roman walls, formal Renaissance-era portraits of aristocracy and expressive representations of the “every man” in the colorful impressionist paintings.
Jazz singer Donna Tucker is bringing her musical talents to Prairie Pines, 4055 N. Tyler Rd., Maize, accompanied by several Wichita classical musicians.
Globetrotters aren’t usually girls.
Internationally renowned opera stars, magnificent costumes and larger-than-life sets will breathe life into one of Giuseppe Verdis greatest operas Il Trovatore. Wichita Grand Opera leaps into its 10th main stage season with a magnificent crowd-pleaser, rife with spectacular music, intrigue and passion.
All events are today. Free admission unless otherwise noted; free trolley rides between most venues.
This month’s Final Friday has developed into a photographic affair.
Today’s guest photographer is Deborah Hauserman, 63, a Wichitan and retired Cessna employee. She often goes to the Kansas Humane Society to photograph their animals.
Its time for a toe-tapping, foot-stomping, wild time with the symphony.
Alla Aranovskaya is out to shake up music education in the United States, and she’s starting in Wichita.
The Wichita Art Museum is in the midst of a search for its new director, someone board members hope will leverage the venue as a community resource, emphasize its educational opportunities and broaden its horizons in terms of exhibitions, said Jeff Kennedy, board of trustees chairman.
Crown Uptowns revival of Steel Magnolias, Robert Harlings 1987 celebration of the Southern women in his life and the steel beneath their delicate magnolia veneers, is an evening of joyous and satisfying entertainment.
Fiery virtuosity mixes with magical fairy tales during the next Wichita Symphony Orchestra performance. Scheherazade and the overture to Russlan and Ludmilla by Russian composers Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov and Mikhail Glinka will share the stage with an orchestral work by American-born George Gershwin.
Larry Stephenson embodies what it means to be a working artist. He has an office he goes to every day; it just happens to be a well-crafted studio in the basement of his Andover home. He travels to grow his business, and the empire of his creativity is expanded at art shows across the country. Moments on the road foster inspiration. They color canvases that eventually line living rooms and workplace spaces. He knows how to turn creative intuitions into appealing products.
After all the exhausting glitz of the holiday season, Crown Uptowns Matthew Rumsey figures that audiences are ready for a change of pace to ease into the new year.
The Fiber Studio will hold the closing reception for its “7 Ceramic Viewpoints” as part of the Final Friday monthly art crawl. The show features multiple functional and abstract pieces from area artists. Gallery owner Marilyn Grisham says it’s an opportunity to offer a high standard of artistry at affordable prices.
Sitting down is now an artful affair at Old Cowtown Museum.