Black and white photo of Gershwin, a Jewish man in a black suit and tie, hand in pants pocket, looking to his left, outside

The BSR Weekly Arts and Culture Roundup, July 25-31, 2024

Clay workshops in Kensington, special orchestra concerts, and more

Music from Black Pearl Chamber Orchestra and the Philadelphia Orchestra, Guachinangos, and more arrive this week. Kyle V. Hiller rounds up.
Kyle V. Hiller

Kyle V. Hiller

Previews 4 minute read
All 4 performers outside in a park smiling and laughing, looking towards Kanu’s character. Lindner holds a mandolin

Shakespeare in Clark Park presents As You Like It

A little taste of dystopia

Shakespeare in Clark Park presents As You Like It with a modern twist, transposed to near-future Delaware to explore themes of exile, love, and community. Kiran Pandey previews.
Kiran Pandey

Kiran Pandey

Previews 2 minute read
Selfie of Docherty in a booth with lighting consoles and monitors behind her, a stage can be seen through a window

The art of lighting design with Alyssandra Docherty

Lighting up the space

Freelancer Alyssandra Docherty talks about her work as a lighting designer, how the light bulb got turned on for her, and how she manages to keep learning and growing. Melissa Strong previews.
Melissa Strong

Melissa Strong

Profiles 4 minute read
Johnson, a Black woman wearing a long flowered skirt & striped blouse, sings passionately with her hands outspread.

Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival presents Alice Walker’s The Color Purple

Celie’s story comes to the Center Valley stage

Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival mounts an excellent production of The Color Purple with acclaimed local director Amina Robinson, but the show glosses over some of the difficult moments so important to this story. An Nichols reviews.
An Nichols

An Nichols

Reviews 6 minute read
Atop a multi-tiered outdoor stage against a dimming evening sky, the actors pose in brown robes with yellow accents.

Delaware Shakespeare presents Julius Caesar

This textual triumph is especially stirring in an election year

Delaware Shakespeare opens its 22nd year with a finely mounted production of Julius Caesar—one of the Bard’s shortest and darkest plays—in Wilmington’s atmospheric Rockwood Park. Gail Obenreder reviews.
Gail Obenreder

Gail Obenreder

Reviews 4 minute read
Hu in a red velvet suspender dress sits in front of a piano, one hand over other, head turned left, slight smile in pose

BSR Classical Interludes, July and August 2024

Black Pearl Chamber Orchestra, a piano festival, and music at Longwood Gardens

A list of late July and early August concerts, including performances by the Philadelphia Young Pianists Academy and new music from up-and-coming musicians from Black Pearl Chamber Orchestra’s Kaleidoscope Initiative. Gail Obenreder previews.
Gail Obenreder

Gail Obenreder

Previews 3 minute read
Gold-framed collage-like painting in blue, pink, black, and green, featuring two Black figures, described in text below.

Arthur Ross Gallery presents David C. Driskell and Friends: Creativity, Collaboration, and Friendship

Proving Black art's place at the center of American history

Throughout his groundbreaking career, artist David C. Driskell laid the foundation for the academic study of Black American art, long ignored by the art world. A new exhibition at Arthur Ross honors him and his legacy. Pamela J. Forsythe reviews.

Pamela J. Forsythe

Reviews 4 minute read
A dramatic smoky yellow sky over a hill with a tiny train puffing up, smokestacks at right & icy river at the foreground.

PAFA presents Layers of Liberty: Philadelphia and the Appalachian Environment

The world’s oldest mountains get a gallery at last

PAFA’s new Layers of Liberty exhibition, a rare close-up on Appalachian art, continues a trend of museums exploring our complicated, often greedy relationship with the natural world. Gail Obenreder reviews.
Gail Obenreder

Gail Obenreder

Reviews 5 minute read
Samuel, a white man seen in profile from over his shoulder, looks thoughtfully out on a city street.

The hardest thing about stuttering isn’t stuttering at all: it’s how people react to it.

If I want your help, I’ll ask.

Samuel Dunsiger has a speech disability, but the hardest part about talking to others isn't his stuttering; it's the assumptions people make.
Samuel Dunsiger

Samuel Dunsiger

Essays 4 minute read
The book cover. Title & editor appear in bold black text over a painted illustration of flowers in green purple orange & pink

Disability Intimacy: Essays on Love, Care, and Desire, edited by Alice Wong

Our right to be loved, show love, and to love ourselves

Disability Intimacy, the second essay collection from editor Alice Wong, dives into the ocean of human connection with a disability lens, from dating, sex, and kink to caregiving, parenting, and art-making. Alaina Johns reviews.
Alaina Johns

Alaina Johns

Reviews 5 minute read
Hundreds of people, many holding handmade signs, rally on a June day on the steps of the pillared Hamilton Hall building.

A UArts student speaks: “It’s clear that I’ll have to settle, no matter where I go.”

A young writer promises that his school’s demise won’t silence his craft.

Jay Clark was a rising junior at UArts and this year’s winner of the school’s Creative Writing Poetry Prize. On May 31, he got a tuition bill. The same day, news broke of the school’s closure. What’s next for him and hundreds of others?

Jay Clark

Essays 5 minute read
Pérez-Vega, a Puerto Rican woman dancing solo in a purple leotard, poses gracefully mid-stride with her arms lifted.

UArts alums Keila Pérez-Vega and Meredith Rainey explain what the school’s closure means for Philly’s dance scene

“A loss for Philadelphia”

The fallout from the June closure of UArts continues for students, staff, faculty, and alumni, including artists who are central to Philly’s dance scene. Melissa Strong talks to Keila Pérez-Vega and Meredith Rainey about what our city has lost.
Melissa Strong

Melissa Strong

Features 4 minute read
Partner Content

Phillyfunguide logo in gray Phillyfunguide Operated by the Greater Philadelphia Cultural Alliance…your source for discount access to arts and cultural events.

Sign up for our newsletter

All of the week's new articles, all in one place. Sign up for the free weekly BSR newsletters, and don't miss a conversation.

Also on BSR

Campos in an apron, long blue skirt, patterned top, holds a farm bucket, smiling, turning, looking behind over her shoulder

The BSR Weekly Arts and Culture Roundup, July 18-24, 2024

Trans World, Somewhere Over the Border, gothic science, and more

A pair of Goth-themed events in unusual places, People’s Light’s regional premiere of Somewhere Over the Border, and a Mannequin movie night. Kyle V. Hiller rounds up.
Kyle V. Hiller

Kyle V. Hiller

Previews 4 minute read
Barbosa, left, and Alford leap joyfully in matching poses, left arms extended and right curving over their head.

BalletX Presents its 2024 Summer Series

Three world premieres mark BalletX’s last show at the Wilma

BalletX says goodbye to the Wilma stage with its 2024 Summer Series, featuring eclectic world-premiere choreography by Stina Quagebeur, Loughlan Prior, and choreographer-in-residence Amy Hall Garner. Camille Bacon-Smith reviews.
Camille Bacon-Smith

Camille Bacon-Smith

Reviews 5 minute read
Passyunk Ave street sign, centered at a distance. A bed of colorful flowers in the foreground—buildings, blue sky in backdrop

The BSR Weekly Arts and Culture Roundup, July 11-17, 2024

Barnes on the Block, Italian summer on Passyunk, and Astral Mixtape

Barnes on the Block returns, take an Italian summer stroll on Passyunk Ave, and a variety of offerings from DVAA, ICA, Astral Artists, and DANCE IQUAIL! Kyle V. Hiller rounds up.
Kyle V. Hiller

Kyle V. Hiller

Previews 4 minute read
A small crowd of people move around outside the lit-up marquee of the Alamo Drafthouse entrance.

Alamo Drafthouse theaters have a new owner. It’s time for them to come to Philly.

The need for screens

The popular Austin-based movie-theater chain Alamo Drafthouse (recently acquired by Sony Pictures Entertainment) has spread to cities across the country, but never to Philly. Stephen Silver asks if it’s time to change that.
Stephen Silver

Stephen Silver

Essays 3 minute read
Mixed media image, a person holds a mask that has a TV still image embedded in it to their face, various images behind them

The BSR Weekly Arts and Culture Roundup, July 4-10, 2024

Swiftly as a Thought, Entre Dos Palmas, Embodied Sound and The Earth Has A Fever

A handful of exhibits open in the city this weekend, along with outdoor summer concerts, First Friday at the Barnes, and more. Kyle V. Hiller rounds up.
Kyle V. Hiller

Kyle V. Hiller

Previews 4 minute read
A stylized woman sits in a chair next to a large flower bouquet, a book in her lap and her cheek leaning on one hand.

The Barnes Foundation presents Matisse & Renoir: New Encounters at The Barnes

The OGS of their genres

A new exhibition from the Barnes draws on the best of the foundation’s extensive collection of works by Matisse and Renoir, and places them in conversation with each other. K.A. McFadden reviews.
K.A. McFadden

K.A. McFadden

Reviews 4 minute read
Canales, in flamboyant orange 60s garb, gleefully tips a leopard-printed Greer, scared by Peakes, into a canvas cart.

Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival presents The Merry Wives of Windsor

Shakespeare did it first

Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival brings a thrillingly modern tenor to The Merry Wives of Windsor, which comes to life with musical verve and comic effervescence. Kiran Pandey reviews.
Kiran Pandey

Kiran Pandey

Reviews 4 minute read
2 dancers on the floor reach to clasp the other’s hand. At right, one lies on her back, balancing another on her arms & legs

Anne-Marie Mulgrew and Dancers Company and Yu.S.Artistry present Two Worlds

Contemporary dance, worlds apart

A split bill from Anne-Marie Mulgrew and Dancers Company and Yu.S.Artistry titled Two Worlds offered strikingly different styles of contemporary dance, from folklore and fantasy to urgent real-world tragedy. Melissa Strong reviews.
Melissa Strong

Melissa Strong

Reviews 4 minute read
Six dancers of different races and genders sit slouch on the floor around a table of boxes, pretending to eat morning cereal

Philadelphia Dance Projects presents Lily Kind’s I’ve got a tape I wanna play

As much fun as you can have in an hour of dance

Lily Kind brought her puckish humor to the Philadelphia Dance Projects with a new hour-long show, I’ve got a tape I wanna play, which builds on the star quality and choreographic elements of her previous work. Camille Bacon-Smith reviews.
Camille Bacon-Smith

Camille Bacon-Smith

Reviews 3 minute read
Acrylic on canvas painting, a young woman to the right, painted in blue and black. Lined paper figurine cutouts on the left

The Barnes Foundation and Mural Arts Philadelphia present Visions

An exhibition for restorative justice

The Barnes and Mural Arts’s Visions opens this week featuring artworks from system-impacted young people in southeast Pennsylvania. Cass Lewis previews.
Cass Lewis

Cass Lewis

Previews 2 minute read