The ‘American Idol’ winner will star in a production of ‘Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat.’
Bob Keyes
Bob Keyes writes about the visual and performing arts for the Portland Press Herald/Maine Sunday Telegram. He appreciates that his job requires him to visit museums and attend plays and concerts across Maine, and most enjoys interviewing artists in their studios. He’s a New Englander by birth, and has lived in Maine off and on, most recently since 2002. He lives in Berwick with his wife, Vicki, and their son Luke.
‘Morning Classical’ host Suzanne Nance leaving Maine
Maine Public Radio’s director of music, performance and public affairs has accepted a radio job in Chicago.
Emilie Blum and ‘Shake That Bird’ are final show at Coleman Burke
The Brunswick gallery chooses the performing and video artist for its last exhibition.
Civil War hits home in Maine
Items in a Maine Historical Society exhibition illuminate how the conflict affected average citizens.
10 key things to see at Alfond-Lunder Family Pavilion
The Lunders’ collection represents a broad spectrum of American art.
Colby College museum reopens as ‘a major player’
The new Alfond-Lunder Family Pavilion was built to house more than 500 pieces of art valued at more than $100 million, an extraordinary donation by a Waterville couple.
Theater at Monmouth finds surprising depth in ‘Our Town’
The Thornton Wilder classic is on the summer roster of shows.
Bob Keyes: An old school (Hudson River) revisited
BETHEL — It’s the inexplicable awe that Erik Koeppel and Lauren Sansaricq are after. They’re not merely interested in creating glowing, light-filled canvases that bring viewers back to a previous century of landscape painting. They want their paintings to inspire jaw-dropping awe. “I’m interested in expressing the feelings of a place, and not just recreating […]
Home is where the art is for Cathie Pelletier
The author has come back to her roots in far-northern Maine to live … and write.
Author Q&A: Place value
In his new book, Andrew Carroll ferrets outs unmarked spots across the country where big, historic things happened – including one in Portland.