-
Cities like Chicago and Philadelphia cancelled their Cinco de Mayo parades this year, citing fears of deportation. Painesville decided to go ahead with its fiesta.
-
A charity event for members of the Haitian community will take place at the John Legend Theater in Springfield on Saturday evening.
-
Two decades after the completion of the flood wall, Franklinton is seeing explosive development. Now gentrification threatens to displace the neighborhood's families.
-
Of the 15 acts for consideration this year, 10 are on the ballot for the first time. The final list of inductees will be released in April.
-
Getting a tattoo is one of the most permanent decisions you can make; it stays with you until you die. But one Ohio company is changing that: preserving tattoos as tributes to last beyond death.
-
The Columbus Symphony Orchestra is banking on state grants and private donations to help fund the costly facility.
-
The Columbus Symphony Orchestra submitted a preliminary site plan to build a Center of Music Innovation and Education on the Scioto Peninsula just south of COSI at West Bank Park.
-
The contract is scheduled to take effect on Feb. 5 and will go through June 30, 2026.
-
The focus on environmental films takes place a year after the disaster spilled 39 million gallons of toxic chemicals.
-
A new painting of Ohio’s big names in space exploration—including John Glenn, Neil Armstrong, Jim Lovell, and Judith Resnik—was mounted just off the Statehouse rotunda.
-
Did you know the famous Henny Penny chicken fryer used in restaurants like McDonald's, KFC, and Chick-fil-a was invented just north of Cincinnati in Preble County? The local historical society is on a mission to tell the county's story.
-
Classical 101The documentary Symphony of the Holocaust chronicles Hungarian violin prodigy Shony Alex Braun’s musical journey through the Holocaust, the composition of his Symphony of the Holocaust after the war’s end, and the efforts to bring the beauty of music to a place that saw some of the world’s deepest darkness.
-
It's the first time since 2008 that the federal government has released its assessment of U.S. eighth-graders in the arts. While there are some signs of progress, troubling achievement gaps remain.
-
Over the weekend, hundreds of musicians offered special vinyl releases for the 10th Annual Record Store Day. And some of those shiny black disks were...
-
Lower than projected state tax revenue totals will make budgeting more difficult for Ohio’s lawmakers in the coming weeks. Advocates for the arts know the…
-
The region’s record stores are stocking their shelves for one big day this month. April 22 is Record Store Day , an annual event that gives a boost to...
-
The National Endowment for the Arts sends about $2 million a year to Ohio, which benefits a variety of arts organizations and artists across the state. President Donald Trump’s budget calls for the elimination of the NEA, and that doesn’t sit well with many in the arts community. “The financial impact will be significant, but the impact on us as a culture will be much deeper,” said Great Lakes Theater’s Producing Artistic Director Charles Fee.
-
The pop duo Twenty One Pilots has come a long way since growing up in Columbus. Now the Grammy Award-winning act is bringing its accolades back home with…
-
Hollywood isn't a big town; everyone knows what everyone else is doing. Still, rival studios often face off, refusing to blink, in movie showdowns that didn't need to happen.
-
Adele's attempt to share her album of the year Grammy with Beyoncé on Sunday was a gesture that held within it a history of privilege and power that listeners and institutions alike reckon with.
-
Adele swept the major categories over Beyoncé, David Bowie posthumously won every award he was nominated for and the Grammys sometimes obliquely addressed a charged political climate.
-
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame announced a $9 million donation from Christopher Connor, board chair and former Sherwin-Williams chairman, and his wife…