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A seemingly impossible event has occurred that many thought theyd never see at one of the states beloved historic gems.
The Strand Theatre of Louisiana will enter the new year debt-free and with funds available to invest in longoverdueand necessary renovations.
Its a miracle, said Jodie Glorioso, The Strands outgoing president of the board of directors.
Jodie Glorioso - File Photo(Photo: Henrietta Wildsmith/The Times)
The Strand Theatre of Louisiana is the states official theater, opened in 1925 at the corner of Louisiana Avenue and Crockett Street in the heart of downtown Shreveport. Its the flagship theater of the Saenger Brothers, who went on to construct more than 300 theaters across the South.
Keeping The Strand Theatre up to its original grandeur and in operation has been a constant struggle over the decades with a major factor being lack of money for repairs and maintenance. The current board members and staff stayed diligent tofind ways to keep the doors open.
It was going to be a challenge, but I will say weve had the most cooperation from our board members and the staff, Glorioso said, whos served as president for three years. She will remain on the board as vice president of programming as of Jan. 1.
Jenifer Hill, the executive director of the nonprofit arts organization, has played an integral part in the theaters fiscal revival since she stepped into the role five years ago.
At that time, The Strand Theatre was in a state of deep financial hardship a maxed-out $100,000 line of credit, two liens, and a $75,000 debt owed to the stagehands union (IATSE Labor Union). Overall, the theater was more than $275,000 in the hole and the board discussed closing the doors, Hill said.
I had just taken over and I asked them to please, give me a chance, Hill said. Give me until the first of the year to see what I can do and see what we could do.
The board was supportive and together they worked to find a solution. It was a slow, long, and daunting task. However, at the end of 2019, they received what they needed to carry The Strand Theatre in the new decade stable and able to serve the community for many more years to come major donations from generous community members.
The Strand is totally out of debt and all of our bills are paid and that is not something I thought I would see, ever, Hill said.
The Strand Theatre of Louisiana will enter the new year debt-free and with funds available to invest in longoverdueand necessary renovations.(Photo: Henrietta Wildsmith/The Times)
The Strand Theatrerelies heavily on grants, government funding, sponsorships, and patron donations which is then invested in areas such as general operations, programming, and building preservation.
Also, the administrators areobligated to stay within certain guidelines as the theater operates asa nonprofit organization and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
(For) a lot of nonprofits, the last quarter of the year is horrific and frightening, Hill said. We never know if were going to have enough money to make it through the end of the year. We always seem to scrape by."
Unexpected charitable givings large and small are credited to bring The Strand into a secure fiscal position.
This place is blessed because somehow we always seem to make it through, Hill said. This year, we paid off that line of credit and going to make it through the end of the year without touching it. All of our bills are paid. Im blown away.
In 2018, the board of directors launched an aggressive fundraising campaign. They set up a matching fund nicknamed the Magic Fund in which every dollar donated by the public would be matched byindividual and honorary board members.
In the first year, the goal was to raise $25,000 which would be matched up to $50,000.
We blew past that and had $62,000. That was a big deal for us, Hill said.
Related: Riverview Theater and Hall is redone and open for business, entertainment
The 2018 Magic Fund was used for essential improvements, such as replacing one of the three sump pumps to prevent basement flooding, which could ruin the building's electrical system if they go out.
The Strand Theatre of Louisiana will enter the new year debt-free and with funds available to invest in longoverdueand necessary renovations.(Photo: Henrietta Wildsmith/The Times)
Additional improvements included:
In 2019, the Magic Fund campaign returned with the new, higher goal set at $50,000 for donations, which would be matched to a total of $100,000. The administrators reached the goal, thanks to an unnamed old and dear friend of The Strand who donated a large monetary gift, Hill said.
Among the renovations at The Strand Theatre of Louisiana are the faded carpets on the stairs.(Photo: Henrietta Wildsmith/The Times)
The $100,000 will be used for building renovations, which must be compliant with historic regulations. Additional large monetary donations allowed for clearing the two liens off and paying off the line of credit.
While its not enough to finish all of the needed renovations, its a good start to get the more urgent needs addressed, Hill said.
Upcoming improvements will include:
Since The Strand Theatre opened in 1925, limited work has been done due to lack of money and time, Glorioso said.
In the mid-1970s, The Strand Theatre closed until it was donated by the ABC-Interstate Theatres to the newly-formed Strand Theatre of Shreveport Corporation. It reopened in 1984 after a massive restoration project.
More: New season lineup announced for The Strand Theatre in Shreveport
Dec.21, 2019marked the 35th year anniversary since The Strands reopening. The work was enough to sustain the building for a short time, but it was a temporary fix and incomplete.
Among the renovations at The Strand Theatre of Louisiana are the faded carpets on the stairs.(Photo: Henrietta Wildsmith/The Times)
Money ran out and construction was halted for a year before enough money was raised to restart. Money was still short in supply so manythings were left unfinished or never done. However, the venuehad to reopen or risk losing tax credits.
They were not finished but it had to come to an end, Hill said. For the past 35 years, weve still been putting Band-Aids on things. Weve never been able to finish.
Ongoing fundraising efforts provednot to be enough to keep up with the growing list of needs, thus thedebt grew deeper.
Meanwhile, the things that were on that list we have had to suck it up and remain. There are things that just have to be done, Hill said.
And several years ago, a substantial government grant fell that would have allowed for restoration of the roof. The roof had never been fully replaced and had about five layers of patchwork on the roof.
In 2015, a local donor presented a surprising offer. The deal stated that funds to complete the roofs replacement would be provided under the stipulation that the administrators clean up their act, which included getting the liens off the building.
The boardagreed and received a check for $560,000. The complete restoration of the roof was completed that year.
The fact that we have this new roof it preserves the magnificence of this plasterwork, Glorioso said. There was always leaks, moisture accumulation and things like that that caused the paint to peel and the plaster to deteriorate.
The Strand Theatre leaders resolutions for 2020 is to stay debt-free, on the right fiscal track, and to keep moving forward with matching funds so they can continue to do work on the building.
Also, they are devoted to finding ways to stay at the forefront of the communitys mind.
The key is to never let them forget Glorioso said.
Were always challenged to come on this stage each show and ask them (the audience) for their support and their help with the understanding that because of you, were still here, Glorioso said. Its been a challenge, but its been so rewarding in many ways.
File Photo(Photo: Henrietta Wildsmith/The Times)
The board implemented committees to develop new, engaging, and diverse stage show lineups for upcoming seasons to appeal to broader demographics. For the 2020-21 season, a concert series will be announced aimed to attract a younger audience.
Providing programming to entertain and engage all age groups is an investment to create future supporters and donors who will be dedicated to preserving the historic site for future generations.
Enjoy live theater, live performance because theres nothing like it, Glorioso said. You can have your digital whatever on YouTube, but to see the human create in front of you every performance is just great. Thats what you get when you come here.
The Strand Theatre of Louisiana is located at 619 Louisiana Avenue in Shreveport. To learn more about The Strand Theatre's history and current season lineup and to donate, visit atthestrandtheatre.com.
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Strand Theatre clears debts, preps for renovations in Shreveport - Shreveport Times
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Chanukah just ended and Christmas now feels like a distant memory, so all the best deals in retailers year-end sales must be gone too, right? Well, it might surprise you to learn that big stores across the country are still offering some of the lowest prices of 2019 on popular products across all categories. Today alone, top daily deals include an $11 cable that charges your Apple Watch and iPhone at the same time, the best-selling TP-Link Wi-Fi range extender out there for only $14.95 or the upgraded faster versionfor $21.99, a best-selling Roomba robot vacuum for only $199.99, so many discounts on Bose headphones and speakers, Black Friday pricing on AirPods 2, Alexa and Google enabled Wi-Fi smart plugs with extra USB ports for just $7.17 each with coupon code LDWIS2EA, Sonos wireless speakers starting at just $149, the Echo Dot for cars for just $14.40, more than $15 off the Roku Streaming Stick+, and plenty more.
Of all the sales out there right now, theres one in particular thats in the process of wrapping up and youll definitely want to check it out before it disappears. Its over at Walmart, where more than 1,000 different products are on sale at deep discounts in the retailers end of the year clearance sale. Shop the entire sale right here on Walmarts site, and youll find our 10 favorite deals of the day on Monday listed below.
Apple AirPods with Charging Case: $139.00 (reg. $159.00)(more AirPods deals available on Amazon)
Lightning USB Cable Charger Cord (6 feet): $7.81 (reg. $24.99)
iRobot Roomba 670 Robot Vacuum: $244.00 (reg. $329.99)(MUCH lower price available on Amazon)
Farberware 3.2 Quart Digital Air Fryer: $49.00 (reg. $69.00)
The Perfect Appliance: introduce your children to the thrills of 3D printing or moonlight and develop your own 3D creations when the kids are in bed. Weighing a measly 17lb, the da Vinci Mini Series is light and small enough to easily move around the home, no matter what project your working on.
Get and Create 3D Models Easily: Looking to fix that broken bathroom fitting? Well browse through thousands of free 3D models on our online 3D gallery. Just download the files you like, open them in XYZmaker our 3D modelling and print-file preparation software and print. Better yet, XYZmakers easy-to-use interface makes it easy to create your own 3D model, letting you customize everyday household items, quickly and easily.
Play. Make. Learn: The da Vinci miniMaker is a great entry-level desktop 3D printer. Create household items or toys for your children quickly and easily with this innovative and lightweight printer.
Lightweight and Transportable: Weighing less than 18lb, the da Vinci miniMaker is light enough to easily move around your house. Small Size, Big Print Volume: With a 5.9 x 5.9 x 5.9 aluminum print bed, print bigger and higher quality objects on a smaller printer. Stress-free Maintenance: Comes fully assembled with auto-leveling software, making setup, calibration and maintenance simple. Perfect Prints First Time: All of our print materials are quality checked and pre-tested so that when you print a model using our 3D software XYZmaker, all the print settings have been calculated for you. Simply load your model and press print to get greats results every time
XYZprinting da Vinci Mini Wireless 3D Printer: $169.95 (reg. $279.00)
Home Door Ring WiFi Wireless Visual Camera: $39.99 (reg. $129.99)
Microsoft Xbox One S 1TB All Digital Edition 3 Game Bundle: $149.00 (reg. $249.00)
Sceptre 50 Class 4K Ultra HD (2160P) LED TV: $189.99 ($399.99)
RCA 65 Class 4K Ultra HD (2160P) HDR Roku Smart LED TV: $429.99 (reg. $749.99)
HP 14 Laptop, Intel Core i3-1005G1, 4GB SDRAM, 128GB SSD: $299.00 (reg. $469.00)
Image Source: Anton Gvozdikov/Shutterstock
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Walmarts year-end clearance sale is almost over here are todays top 10 deals - BGR
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Home is a feeling. It is an emotion that always keeps you attached to your family. It is an emotion that is always aiming at uniting you with your family and your friends. It is a place where you live with your family for a long time.
What DOES Home Improvement MEAN?
Home improvement is your effort towards making your home your dream home. It is the sum of all your activities, all your ideas, all your tasks that you do to improve the interior and exterior design of your home. It always adds to the beauty of your apartment/home.
Many websites are working on it. They can give you information about 2020 home improvement ideas. Along with magazines, websites, there are lots of YouTube channels, TV shows, etc. to give you many ideas for home improvement.
IDEAS FOR HOME EXTERIOR IMPROVEMENTS:
The exterior part of any home should be the attraction center for viewers. You must go through all these ideas, and you must try them to renovate your home exterior.
1. Greenery All-Around: Plants are beneficial for health as well as beautify the surroundings with their beauties. So, try to plant more and more to make your home exterior attractive.
2. Pools, Ponds, and Waterfalls: Anyone having pools, ponds, or waterfalls can attract more and more popularity easily. It can also prove to be a better idea to improve your exterior home.
3. Exotic Colours: One can be easily mesmerized with the paintings of one's home. And exotic colors are in trend among the home improvement ideas.
4. Huge Driveways: To avoid congestion, you should go with the idea of building bigger driveways.
5. Best Surveillance system: You should install high-exterior cameras so that you can easily control it with your phones, laptops as per your convenience.
Ideas For Home Interior Improvements:
We always love to have our home decorated always. So, there are some ways given below through which you can decorate the interior part of your home.
1. Decorate your Walls: Decorate your wall with hanging pendant lines, art displays, photo clips, paintings, decorating materials which one can easily find on shopping sites like Amazon, Flipkart, etc
2. Floor design: Make your floor eye-catching with colorful carpets. For kitchen and bathroom., choose that one which is cleanable and oil resistant.
3. Go Green: Install some decorating plants and flowers. It can be very impressive to decorate one's home interior with environmental pieces.
4. Colour: Always choose colors that can inspire you. Go for exotic colors.
Name of Some Websites, Magazines, and Tv Shows to get more Home Improvement Ideas
Websites: My Decorative, Angies List, Houzz, DIY or NOT, DIY Network, One Project Closure, etc.
Magazines: Better Homes & Gardens, This Old House, The Family Handyman, Fine Home-building, Old House Journal, etc.
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2020 Home Improvement Ideas For New Homeowners What is Home? - The African Exponent
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SPRINGFIELD You may not notice the latest addition to MGM Springfield because its on the eighth floor of the casinos parking garage.
A trip to the top floor not only provides a great view, but soon a solar canopy that covers most of the floor will be generating electricity.
Jason Rosewell, the vice president for facilities at the casino, explained to Reminder Publishing the solar canopy had been in the plans all along and the parking garage was designed and built to carry the additional weight load.
We always knew we wanted to do it, he said.
The solar array should be on-line early in 2020, he added.
In May 2019, MGM Springfield was awarded with the worlds first United States Green Building Councils Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) New Construction Platinum level certification for a casino resort.
This solar array is expected to generate more than 1,600 megawatt hours of electricity, helping reduce the propertys annual carbon footprint by approximately 410 metric tons of CO2e (carbon dioxide equivalent).
The design of the canopy has not eliminated any parking space, Rosewell added.
The solar facility is part of the companys overall effort to be energy efficient and sustainable. Among other innovations are:
Rosewell said the company has placed an emphasis of bettering the community in which we operate.
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MGM further invests in casino with construction of solar canopy - Reminder Publications
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Picasso and Paper
Paper wasnt just something to draw on for Picasso it was yet another material he could manipulate. That effortless creativity started with sticking newspapers on to early cubist canvases to invent collage and evolved into his own style of playful origami sculpture yet he also found time to create some of the greatest etchings ever, including the wondrous Vollard Suite, with its minotaurs, bullfights and voluptuous lovers.Royal Academy, London, 25 January to 13 April
Ghent honours the greatest painter of the early northern Renaissance with numerous exhibitions and side-events, from the scholarly to the daft including floral displays, themed food events, a Van Eyck shop, and even the Jan van Eyck Marathon. The main event however is Van Eyck: An Optical Revolution, featuring at least half of the known works by the artist and including the outer panels of Hubert and Van Eycks astonishing Ghent Altarpiece, following six years of restoration, and also including more than 100 works by Van Eycks contemporaries from across Europe.Museum of Fine Arts, Ghent, 1 February to 30 April
By the end of the last century, painting had been buried but it turns out the funeral was premature. The young 21st-century artists exhuming its oily corpse in this survey include Michael Armitage, whose subtle, complex paintings draw on memories of Kenya, and Ryan Mosley, whose art is a grotesque Dada carnival of bulbous humanoid forms. This is figurative painting, but not as we know it. Whitechapel Gallery, London, 6 February to 10 May
Bringing together artists, civil rights photographers, makers of quilts, guitars (one fashioned with wood from a hanging tree), assemblages, expansive archive material, music and much more besides, We Will Walk focuses on African-American artists from Alabama and the surrounding states. The work dates from the civil rights period and its aftermath to the present day and also features the work of contemporary artists and thinkers, including Kerry James Marshall and Angela Davis, who both migrated from Alabama. It is a story that isnt over, and not told enough.Turner Contemporary, Margate, 7 February to 3 May
In his film Hunger, perhaps his finest work, McQueen homes in on the dying, emaciated body of the IRA hunger striker Bobby Sands in a way that evokes both Christian paintings of the passion and Sandss identification with them. Its typical of the way he brings high art into cinemas as well as film-making into the gallery. How will this retrospective capture the unique achievement of the only person to win both an Oscar and a Turner prize?Tate Modern, London, 13 February to 11 May
Performance artist, zine maker, musician, documentary-photographer, Linder is known primarily for her post-punk Dadaist photomontages. This extensive show gives full reign to Linders expanded practice. Using the Kettles Yard Archive she will also evoke the elusive presence of Helen Ede, wife of Jim Ede, founder of Kettless Yard. Staging interventions throughout Kettles Yard and a new performance, at Murray Edwards College, Cambridge, Linder will shake things up.Kettles Yard, Cambridge, 15 February to 16 April
Victorian Britains kinkiest reprobate gets a well-deserved airing of his refined and beautiful yet utterly sordid prints. Beardsley portrayed himself as a self-confessed monster hiding in his four-poster bed and illustrated Lysistrata by Aristophanes with sumptuously pornographic images of bottoms. He also created a darkly beautiful illustrated edition of Oscar Wildes Salome. This will be wicked.Tate Britain, London, 4 March to 25 May
Tacita Deans portraits of ancient yew trees in English churchyards, their branches propped up with crutches as their gnarled trunks send roots down the centuries, are among the most moving art works of our time. Her arboreal meditations are among the many reveries in this survey of contemporary arts relationship with trees. It starts with the arte povera movement that brought the forest into the gallery in the 1960s and brings us to the present with Peter Doigs painted firs and Anya Gallaccios pastoral installations.Hayward Gallery, London, 4 March to 17 May
In his lifetime Warhol was dismissed as shallow but the further we get into a century he never lived to see, the more uncanny his insights into modern life appear. There are so many sides to his apparently simple pop art. The last Tate retrospective emphasised his dark view of America this one discovers him as the forerunner of identity politics. He is our mirror, to quote his protege Lou Reed.Tate Modern, London, 12 March to 6 September
This once-in-a-lifetime exhibition reunites the greatest mythological paintings ever created a cycle Titian called his poesie in which the loves and transformations of the gods become subtle feasts of sensual paint and rich emotion. Venus begs Adonis to stay, Jupiter as a bull carries off Europa and Perseus rescues Andromeda in canvases that match the dramatic heights of Shakespeare (and that Shakespeare may have been influenced by).National Gallery, London, 16 March to 14 June
The gallery becomes an outsized graphic novel in this Nigerian-American artists first British show but the story is far from straightforward. Powerfully delineated figures are lost in contemplative stillness. Line-drawn landscapes enfold their inaction in a mysterious limbo that could be a park or alien planet. These intense drawings illustrate a myth invented by Odutola herself. She believes drawing and writing have the same root. This is art as inspired daydream.Barbican Curve, London, 26 March to 26 July
The first feminist artist ever, born in Rome in 1593, gets her long-awaited due. Raped as a teenager by the painter Agostino Tassi, Gentileschi spent a lifetime fighting back. In her great canvas Judith Slaying Holofernes, two women hold a man down on his bed so they can cut his head off he is her rapist. This and just about all her other paintings will be in this raw and bloody blockbuster. National Gallery, London, 4 April to 26 July
To mark its 50th anniversary, the Serpentine Galleries have invited more than 50 leading artists, musicians, architects, poets, film-makers, scientists, thinkers and designers to propose artworks and projects in response to the climate emergency. Participants and collaborators include Brian Eno, Black Quantum Futurism collective, Judy Chicago, Olafur Eliasson, actor and activist Jane Fonda, indigenous Australian film collective Karrabing, Ed Ruscha, Tomas Sarraceno and many others. Imagining the future, the unthinkable and the possible, this promises to be a daunting, necessary show.Serpentine Galleries, London. Dates to be confirmed.
Alec Baldwin and Julianne Moore bring a Hollywood touch to the plight of refugees by reading out their words. Wait its not as glib as it sounds. This installation by South African artist Breitz questions why we take celebrities more seriously than the suffering millions. Moore and Baldwins polished performances are meant to send you to the second part of the show that gives migrants a direct voice.Tate Liverpool, 9 April to 7 June
No one forgets the myths and monsters this genius of art and cinema created. Harryhausens animated masterpieces, from the army of skeletons in Jason and the Argonauts to Sinbads swordfight with a Hindu goddess, have an imaginative power that lodges in your mind. He was equally at home creating flying saucers, giant crabs and Harpies. This blockbuster survey of his stop-motion menagerie should be a delight.Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh, 23 May to 25 October
The Arctic is not just a natural wonder but a human home. Peoples including the Smi of Scandinavias far north and the Inuit in Canada, Alaska and Greenland preserve ways of life superbly adapted to ice and cold. Their cultural creations include ingenious hunting and fishing gear, icebound legends and works of art. Their achievement has been to live in harmony with nature at its most extreme but as climate change destabilises the Arctic, what will become of this extraordinary heritage?British Museum, London, from 28 May
The maquette for The End, Phillipsons forthcoming commission for Trafalgar Squares fourth plinth, shows a gigantic ice-cream cone with a cherry on top. A fly climbs the swirl of ice-cream and theres a drone, ready for take off. Its a tawdry monument to national hubris, the feelgood factor turning sickly before our eyes. Phillipsons work churns with humour, autobiography, knockabout asides and a poets sense of the unlikely and surprising conjunction. Then in June, the artist fills Tate Britains Duveen galleries with the next Tate Britain commission. What will she do?Trafalgar Square, London, March, and Tate Britain, London, 16 June to 18 October
The Paris-based American artist has used weaving as the basis of her work for more than 50 years. Drawing on wildly different weaving traditions and indigenous textile practices, and working on both small woven drawings she creates on a hand-held frame and large scale installations that respond to the architecture of the gallery, this show follows major retrospectives in the US and Europe. Including more than 70 works, it promises to be as ravishing as it is overdue. The Hepworth is a perfect venue for her art. The Hepworth, Wakefield, 24 June to 7 October
Lewis Carrolls Victorian masterpiece of surreal nonsense has inspired art and cinema ever since Punch cartoonist Sir John Tenniel created its brilliant original illustrations with their solid renditions of the fantastic. Jan Svankmajer and Tim Burton are among the modern visionaries to have fallen down this rabbit hole. The V&A isnt just showing the history of Alice, its giving Carroll the Bowie or Pink Floyd treatment with an immersive spectacular where you can ask Alice what the Dormouse said.V&A, London, 27 June to 10 January 2021
Now in its 11th outing, the Liverpool Biennial thinks about the city and a wide range of interrelated exhibitions as a fluid organism that is continuously shaped by and shaping its environment. The curatorial premise talks about three entry points the stomach, porosity and kin. Make of this what you can. Many of the art works include sound, shun direct representation, destabilise gender binaries or look at intense forms of contact. There will be dance, music, all kinds of interdisciplinary shenanigans from a roster of international artists. If you have the stomach, pass the port. Various venues, Liverpool, 11 July to 25 October
The craggy hard mind of Paul Czanne found its mirror in the rugged rock formations of his native Provence. One of his close friends as a boy in Aix grew up to be a geology professor and their conversations about rocks and fossils informed his understanding of landscape. His paintings of lonely sun-bleached stony hillsides and voids cut into the earth are among his most forceful, profound and unforgettable works. This is where modern art begins.Royal Academy, London, 12 July to 18 October
Weve come a long way from British arts past. By which I mean the 1990s, when shock and celebrity were everything. Politics, identity and social media matter more than elephant dung these days or will that cliche about 21st-century British art be disrupted in turn by this latest instalment of the biggest and most ambitious survey of the scene? Kicking off in Manchester before touring, this promises to unveil a new creative generation and state of feeling.Manchester Art Gallery and the Whitworth, from September
The worlds most charismatic performance artist has become part of 21st-century pop culture but here is a chance to explore the real story of Abramovis art in a retrospective of her career. Born in communist Yugoslavia in 1946, she insists in her early work on individual experience, including personal endangerment and pain and this self-exposure is still the essence of her art even if the risk now is emotional rather than physical. A blazing star, and thats not just a reference to the one she lay in for a death-defying 1974 performance.Royal Academy, London, 26 September to 8 December
The first major UK exhibition of the French artist Jean Dubuffet (1901-1985) in over 50 years. Provocateur and founder of art brut, or raw art, Dubuffet began to collect what became known as outsider art in postwar Paris. One gallery focuses on Dubuffets extensive collection of this. Immersed in French intellectual and artistic life, and in the waning idea of an avant garde, Dubuffet embraced the arbitrary and irrational. Using crude materials and working with an ironic rejection of skill and finesse belied his sophistication. A complex, fascinating man. Barbican, London, 30 September to 17 January 2021
Visitors will be able to ride reflective-wheeled bikes round the main gallery of this extensive exhibition by the Folkestone-born artist, who works in Brussels. Janssens immersive installations bathe viewers in light. Her ephemeral, perceptually arresting works often feature tinted fogs and densely coloured smoke. But theres more to her work than smoke and mirrors. Janssens can make light appear solid and make solids melt into air. This will be the first opportunity to experience the full range of her compelling and often joyous art. She tunes our eyes. South London Gallery, September.
This good-looking as well as gifted Renaissance wonder died in 1520, at the age of 37, after exhausting himself with a nights arduous lovemaking or so claimed his biographer Vasari, perhaps romanticising syphilis. The National Gallery honours his 500th anniversary with a blockbuster survey of an artist who stands alongside Leonardo and Michelangelo at the apex of the canon, and whose art is just as beguiling as theirs when you surrender to its sweet harmonious musical beauty.National Gallery, London, 3 October to 24 January 2021
Possibly the most innovative, daring and influential of American artists. However familiar his art seems to be, he has constantly reinvented himself in his long career, always giving something new. Mending fences on the ranch, watching cats in the barn, evoking interrogations, domestic strife, slapstick and Samuel Beckett theyre all in there.Tate Modern, London, 6 October to 17 January 2021
This paradoxical 19th-century titan invented modern sculpture by returning to the Renaissance. In an age of sculptural vapidity, Rodin rediscovered the expressive power of Michelangelo. His icons of passion and pain start in hell all his famous statues evolved from the anguished swarming figures in his unfinished masterpiece The Gates of Hell. Out of this giant illustration of Dantes Inferno, he conceived The Thinker, The Kiss and his other visions of the agony and ecstasy of modern life.Tate Modern, London, 21 October to 21 February 2021
In our age of tinpot tyrants, prepare to meet their prototype. The Roman emperor Nero made people listen to his awful singing, killed Christians for fun and set Rome on fire - or so the historian Tacitus said. But did he exaggerate Neros madness to prove his theory that absolute power absolutely corrupts? And will we get to see the booby-trapped boat with which Nero attempted to drown his mother Agrippina?British Museum, London, November
Emin is creating a colossal statue, The Mother, for the new Munch Museum (see below) that opens in Oslofjord in the spring. This exhibition explores their artistic intimacy. Her recent giant selfies showing her face exhausted by insomnia are homages to an insomniac Munch self-portrait, while her entire truth-telling confessional project emulates his terrifying honesty. Read our interview with Emin about the project.Royal Academy, London, 15 November to 28 February 2021
At the age of 75, the radical Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas is bored of the city. His next frontier? The countryside. Almost a decade in the making, this ambitious research-driven exhibition promises to confound your every preconception about the great outdoors, tackling leisure, climate change, migration, rural preservation and digitised agriculture in a multifaceted portrait of the 98% of the Earths surface not occupied by cities.Guggenheim Museum, New York, 20 February to 14 August
Staged in the newly refurbished crypt of St Mary Magdalene in Paddington, west London, this thoughtful exhibition will examine the way that social and economic pressures have changed the nature of faith spaces in the UK over the past decade. It will feature 20 diverse projects, from the stunning new Cambridge Mosque, to a floating church designed to ply Londons waterways, and a proposal for a Finchley synagogue with a striking geometric roof.From 22 February
Standing as a great bulging sphere on Miracle Mile in Los Angeles, the new Academy Museum of Motion Pictures looks like an arrival from a Hollywood sci-fi movie. Designed by Italian architect Renzo Piano, it is an appropriate guise for what promises to be a dazzling new mecca for film buffs, bursting with movie memorabilia and offering a behind-the-scenes look into how films are made. Los Angeles, early 2020
It might not sound like a Bowie-level blockbuster, but the V&As forthcoming foray into bags will delve deep into the duffle, probe the purse and scrutinise the sack, shining a spotlight into every velcrod pocket and zipped compartment of the ultimate accessory. From rucksacks to despatch boxes, Birkin bags to Louis Vuitton luggage, the exhibition will showcase 300 objects from the 16th century to today.V&A, London, 25 April to 3 January 2021
Can you tell your Air Jordans from your Air Force 1s? The Design Museum gets down with street style next year, with an exhibition that will track the influence of trainers from high-performance sportswear to cult objects and red carpet attire. It will look at how 3D-printing, self-lacing and recycled materials are changing footwear, and give visitors a chance to design their own pair of superfly kicks.Design Museum, London, 6 May to 6 September
Housed in an enigmatic aluminium mesh tower that leans forward at the top, as if craning its neck out over Oslos harbour, the new Munch Museum is a controversial new addition to the Norwegian capitals waterfront. The building will finally provide an adequate home for the collection of 28,000 paintings, sketches, photographs and sculptures that the artist bequeathed to the city, arranged over 13 floors, making it one of the largest museums in the world dedicated to a single artist.June (to be confirmed)
A rippling dune-like structure rising out of the desert in Sharjah in the United Arab Emirates, one of Zaha Hadids last posthumous buildings will open next year. This lithe headquarters for the emirates waste management company is one of her most futuristic works, billed as the worlds first AI-powered office building. From visitor arrival to energy consumption, every aspect of the buildings performance will be tracked by an omniscient digital brain.Summer (to be confirmed)
Architect Junya Ishigami said his client asked for something like a wine cellar, but the result couldnt be more strange. Burrowed into the ground, as if excavated by gigantic worms, this grotto-like residence and restaurant will be one of the most unusual buildings to open next year. Formed by digging a series of holes into the ground, casting concrete into the spaces, then carving out the earth beneath, it promises to be a gnarled, primitive place like no other.Yamaguchi, Japan, autumn
Looking like something the pharaohs might have summoned into being, the Grand Egyptian Museum rises out of the landscape near the Great Pyramids as a chiselled, geometric form. Designed by Irish practice Heneghan Peng, the building is wrapped with a veil of translucent stone, covering a series of sunken halls that will contain almost four football pitches of permanent exhibition space, where the Tutankhamen collection will be displayed alongside innumerable other treasures.Giza, Egypt, October (to be confirmed)
A veritable transformer of a building, the Taipei Performing Arts Centre will finally realise the architects holy grail of a truly flexible and adaptable performance venue. It combines a 2,000-seat auditorium, a 1,500-seat theatre and a black box space, each of which can function separately and be combined into an enormous multi-sided events space, while a public loop meanders its way through the building, giving enticing backstage glimpses.Autumn (to be confirmed)
Including work from visual artists in Palestine and Israel as well as Britain, this show explores how images are used to manage peoples ability to live or move freely, particularly in contested regions where the boundaries between civilian and military ways of seeing are constantly and intentionally blurred. Artists include Hagit Keysar, who experiments with aerial photography in Israel and Palestine, and Argentinian-born Miki Kratsman, who has documented the harshness of daily life in the Palestinian territories.Open Eye Gallery, Liverpool, 16 January to 22 March
This underrated pioneer of the visual novel (fictional storytelling combined with photographs) travelled through the US in the immediate aftermath of the Great Depression, producing three books that form the basis of this show. Unlike more celebrated contemporaries like Walker Evans, Morris never made portraits, instead photographing everyday objects and landscapes to create a haunting depiction of human struggle and decline.Foam Amsterdam, 24 January to 5 April
A provocative response to the often anonymous trolls who responded to Morris-Cafieros work on social media. Following the publication of her previous series, The Watchers, she became the focus of a sustained wave of body-shaming. She has responded by dressing up like her most vociferous detractors, whom she tracked down online, and posing alongside representations of their most abusive comments. Selfies, but not as we know them.TJ Boulting, London, 13 February to 14 March
Created in Mexico in 2018 and 2019, and named after a well-known Spanish folk song, La Cucaracha mixes arresting portraits and mysterious still-lifes made by the South African photographer on various visits to Mexico City, Oaxaca de Jurez, Juchitn and Hermosillo. Alongside the flamboyance and high-pitched register of this series, there is the ordinariness of the everyday, Hugo has said. I am drawn to the fabulousness of the banal and the banality of the exotic.Huxley-Parlour, London, 18 February to 14 March
An ambitious and timely group exhibition exploring the changing nature of masculinity through the work of 50 artists. Addressing complex themes patriarchy, power, queer identity, race, sexuality, class, fatherhood it will show how photography and film have been crucial in shaping masculinity in its many forms. Includes work by Richard Avedon, Peter Hujar and Annette Messager. Barbican, London, 20 February to 17 May
Art without snobbery didnt interest him, said Tom Wolfe of Beaton, making it a tricky moment to celebrate this photographer. This exhibition of portraits of the famous and the privileged of the 1920s will do nothing to sway sceptics. Expect glamour aplenty, though, and a cast of characters that includes socialites (Diana Mitford), film stars (Tallulah Bankhead) and the supposedly brightest of the bright young things (Stephen Tennant).National Portrait Gallery, London, 12 March to 7 June
Tate Modern hosts the first major survey of the work of Zanele Muholi, the photographer-activist whose massive archive of South African black lesbian and trans people, Faces and Phases, is one of contemporary photographys great documentary projects. The exhibition will also include a more recent series of dramatic self-portraits, Somnyama Ngonyama (Hail the Dark Lioness).Tate Modern, London, 29 April to 18 October
Having drawn huge crowds to Tate Britain in 2019, this retrospective of the revered war photographer opens in Liverpool this summer. Alongside his iconic images from the Vietnam war and famine-stricken Biafra, the show will also include an added selection of photographs depicting everyday life and the industrial landscapes of northern towns and cities during the 1960s and 70s. Among the wealth of ephemera is his Nikon camera that was struck by a bullet in Cambodia. Tate Liverpool, 5 June to 27 September
Spanning the years between the end of the second world war and the election of Margaret Thatcher, this exhibition maps out a defining period for British photojournalism and documentary photography. It will include iconic images by the likes of Bert Hardy, Lee Miller, Bill Brandt, Henri Cartier-Bresson and Don McCullin. An intriguing visual portrait of another Britain, both familiar and impossibly distant.Tate Britain, London, 30 June to 27 September
One of the greatest American street photographers, Helen Levitt began shooting in New York in the 1930s. Her work is quieter and more socially aware than that of the mainly male counterparts who followed in her wake, with children appearing often in her photographs. Her colour tones are richly hued and her eye for gesture second to none, bodies crouching or stretching in a wonderful choreography of the commonplace. The exhibition includes many rarely seen images and short films. The Photographers Gallery, London, 10 July to 11 October
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Palette cleansers: our photography, art and architecture picks for 2020 - The Guardian
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By JLNJ Staff | January 02, 2020
(StatePoint) From the Big Game to awards shows, youll want to ensure that you are prepared to host all the greatest television events of the season.
Here is how to upgrade the viewing experience for you and your guests well before kickoff:
Stadium seating: When it comes to maximum visibility for all, nothing beats stadium seating. While you are unlikely able to build out levels in your living room or den, you can replicate the concept in any space by using chairs of differing heights. To create the back row, use stools. The next row can consist of the couch, folding chairs or other seating of standard height. Finally, create a first row on the floor by adding comfortable seating options such as pillows and bean bags.
Consider a projector: Whether you are on a budget or you simply want the best viewing experience, consider a home theater projector. You can get a projector and 100-inch screen for under $1,000, whereas an 80-inch TV is going to run you at least $1,500, if not much more.
The LampFree projectors from Casios SLIM series are ideal for any home theater environment. Weighing in at five pounds, they are only 1.7 inches thick, making them the thinnest high-brightness projectors in the industry. Now in its eighth generation, the improved laser and LED hybrid light source offers a 30 percent increase in light output, in addition to an estimated 20,000 hours lifespan with minimal brightness degradation and continuous operation. Each model is fitted with a fully connectable interface, including three types of video and audio inputs, as well as HDMI, RGB and RS-232C terminals.
Better audio: There is no better way to experience your favorite televised events than with surround sound. For easy installation and versatility, consider a wireless speaker system.
Room Selection: For crisper images, youll ideally create your home theater in a low-lit room. If thats not possible, there is good news. These days, high-quality projectors can produce sharp images using intelligent light control that perceives the rooms brightness and adjusts accordingly.
With a few upgrades, you can roll out the red carpet for guests, making your home theater the go-to destination for must-watch events.
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Home Theater Tips for The Big Game and More - Jewish Link of New Jersey
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The biggest problem with even the smartest robovacs is that theyre not actually that smart. They can navigate your home and avoid collisions with large pieces of furniture, but smaller obstacles, like hazards left behind by pets, theyll simply plough right through creating even larger messes. Lucy, a new robot vacuum from a company called Trifo, thinks an extra camera, and AI powered smarts, could finally put an end to encounters of the turd kind.
Revealed today just ahead of CES 2020 getting under way in Las Vegas next week, Trifos Lucy distinguishes itself from an ever-growing list of robotic house cleaners with several features that could potentially improve its independence. That starts with a pair of cameras that should see the world in 1080p, even at night, thanks to a depth sensor that can detect objects and obstacles with minimal ambient light.
Being able to accurately gauge distances would also bolster Lucys ability to intelligently map a room which, in turn, should improve cleaning efficiency. If it knows where its already been while cleaning floors than it wont go over the same areas twice, so its not wasting battery life. Using AI-powered image recognition Lucys cameras can also supposedly recognise objects like beds allowing the robovac to automatically divide a house into pre-labelled rooms based on the furniture detected. This then allows users to specify which room needs cleaning, either using an accompanying mobile app, or through voice commands courtesy of Amazons Alexa smart assistant. It also makes it easier to designate areas the robovac should avoid without having to install unsightly wires or infrared barriers around a home.
Lucys 5,200 mAh battery promises runtimes of up to 120 minutes, but that will vary on the level of suction selected, the terrain it has to navigate (maybe its time to finally ditch the shag carpeting), and the amount of dirt its already picked up, hauled around, and is waiting to empty. More than likely, youll see a full two hours of performance while Lucy is in its autonomous surveillance mode, serving as a roaming security camera for your home that lets you remotely select areas to keep an eye on while youre out.
Most impressive, however, are Lucys claimed obstacle avoidance capabilities. Its cameras and sensors should be able to spot objects as low as an inch off the ground, so items like slippers, Hot Wheels toys, or books, wont get run over and chewed up by the robovacs spinning brush bar. It also means that, at least for larger pets, Lucy could have a better chance of spotting poop before dragging it across the floor as it continues its routine.
Lucy is en route for some time in 2020, and will be priced at $800 ( 610, UK pricing TBA), which puts it on the more expensive end of robot vacuums.However, as anyone with a robovac already roaming their floors will attest, improved smarts could be the game-changing upgrade these machines are more desperately in need of.
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Poo-Spotting Cameras Could Be This Robovac's Secret Weapon - Gizmodo UK
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Two Rutherford County homes sold for upwards of $1 million as home prices rose across Tennessee.
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Brinley Hineman, Murfreesboro Daily News Journal Published 11:10 a.m. CT Dec. 30, 2019 | Updated 2:37 p.m. CT Dec. 30, 2019
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If you're in the process of house hunting, the price of homes for sale may not surprise you.
A report from Middle Tennessee State University's Business and Economic Research Center shows that in the third quarter of 2019, the Tennessee housing market showed positive trends with rising home prices across the state. Compared to this time last year, home prices have jumped.
Two Rutherford County homes sold for more than $1 million in 2019, down from three a year ago. Four of the top 10 are located in Murfreesboro's Mirabella subdivision.
This list reports the top-selling homes on residential-zoned properties across the county and relies on data provided by the Rutherford County Property Assessor's Office as of Dec. 20.
SUPPORT OUR WORK:To support award-winning journalism here in Murfreesboro,sign up for adigital subscription to DNJ.com.
Reach Brinley Hineman atbhineman@gannett.com, at 615-278-5164and on Twitter @brinleyhineman.
Read or Share this story: https://www.dnj.com/story/news/2019/12/30/rutherford-county-most-expensive-homes-sold-real-estate-for-sale/2709276001/
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Check out the most expensive homes sold in Rutherford County in 2019 - Daily News Journal
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DENVER, CO It doesn't take millions of dollars to live in your own 'fairy tale' home, but for a few listings in Colorado, money definitely helps.
Denver's metro area has no shortage of luxury homes; however, not every local mansion has a rich history and fairy tale-like appeal.
Here are three homes that belong on the pages of childhood classics:
This old-world Denver luxury home on Cedar Avenue has been listed for $7.9 million. Built in 1933, the fairytale-like Tudor estate was commissioned by famous Denver architect Temple Hoyne Buell.
The 11,500-square foot house features intricate exterior brick walls that were built by skilled England bricklayers, listing agents said. Most of the home's rooms surround a spiral staircase that leads to the third floor, where a 60-foot tower offers 360 degree views.
The home also features its original leaded glass windows, crystal chandeliers, ornate handcrafted wood paneling, parquet flooring and hand-painted ceilings.
The home's kitchen has been upgraded and a new family room has been added.
The property also offers more than one acre of land with a covered formal patio, rose gardens, 4,000-square-foot patio, an outdoor kitchen, a fire pit, a large pool and a cabana with a TV.
Lakewood's most expensive home listing features eight bedrooms, six bathrooms and a tennis court. Listed for $3.2 million, the 8,500-square-foot home sits on a five-acre lot at 6650 Lakeridge Rd.
The English Tudor 'fairy tale' home, which features private lakefront access, includes a boat house, a dock and a sandy beach.
"Enjoying your coffee overlooking the sprawling mountain views," the home's listing read. "Surrounded by equestrian land and exquisite estates, this property is serenity at its best."
The house also features a two bedroom, one bathroom guest house.
The mansion was built in 1918, and maintains many of its original features, listing agents said.
This six-bedroom, nine-bathroom country club home, at 380 N Gilpin St. in Denver, has been listed for $5.9 million.
Dubbed 'The Corner Chateau," the property also includes fairy tale-like, professionally landscaped gardens.
"Designed by Burnham Hoyt in the 1920's, it retains much of its original character, including a 4,000 volume wood-paneled library, leaded glass windows with the initials of the original owners, a weather vane designed and gifted to the owners by Hoyt, and much more," the home's listing read.
The home also includes an exercise room, three fireplaces, walk-in closets and a home theater.
For Sale: $235,0001 bd/1 full ba, 634 sqft
For Sale: $1,195,0005 bd/6 full ba, 3,620 sqft
For Sale: $400,0003 bd/2 full ba, 1,566 sqft
For Sale: $199,9001 bd/1 full ba, 810 sqft
For Sale: $385,0004 bd/2 full ba, 1,632 sqft
For Sale: $346,5002 bd/1 full ba, 837 sqft
For Sale: $385,0003 bd/2 full ba, 3,004 sqft
For Sale: $235,0001 bd/1 full ba, 550 sqft
For Sale: $615,0003 bd/4 full ba, 1,746 sqft
For Sale: $327,0002 bd/1 full ba, 933 sqft
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3 Metro Denver Homes That Are Straight Out Of A Fairy Tale - Patch.com
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Residential real estate insiders will tell you that spring is the No. 1 season for buying and selling homes. But when does the spring season start?
In a hot housing market like North Texas, listing your home after the first of the year is a great idea. If you want to buy a home, you may want to get started working with an agent during the first months of the new year.
Allie Beth Allman & Associates, the leader in sales in Park Cities homes, per MLS statistics, has created a comprehensive list of homes where the owners have lowered their price. The full list of homes with price adjustments can be found at more.alliebeth.com/new-home-new-price.
Here are three homes with adjusted prices that Allman associates think should be considered.
The recently renovated four-bedroom residence at 209 Glendale Drive in Coppell is offered by Tim Schutze. Features include wood flooring and two fireplaces. The kitchen provides an island, stainless-steel appliances and granite countertops. The breakfast room offers a bay window and French doors that lead to a large patio. The master bathroom has a separate shower and tub.
Aaron Carroll and Blake Eltis are marketing the four-bedroom home at 5317 Emerson Ave., near Inwood Village. The first level is an open floor plan with wood flooring throughout, a spacious living room with a fireplace and a dining room with a wet bar. The kitchen features a large island and stainless-steel appliances, including a Sub-Zero refrigerator and wine cooler. The first-floor master suite has a bedroom with a fireplace, walk-in closets and a bathroom with marble countertops, dual sinks, a jetted tub and separate shower. The second floor offers a spacious den and a large side porch. The backyard has a pool and an open cabana.
Located near Dallas M Streets, the four-bedroom Craftsman-style home at 6036 Palo Pinto Ave. is offered by Blair Hudson. This residence features extensive owner upgrades, including Hunter Douglas window treatments, a surround-sound system, white oak wood flooring and updated lighting. The kitchen provides quartz countertops, custom cabinetry, a five-burner range, double ovens and a built-in micro drawer. The dining room has a wet bar and wine chiller that opens to a great room with a stacked-stone fireplace and 20-foot ceiling. The master suite offers dual closets and a balcony. There are also two balconies, three porches and a saltwater pool.
To find your perfect home, visit http://www.alliebeth.com.
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Ring in the new year with a new home - The Dallas Morning News
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