We’ve been asking ourselves what our organization can do to take meaningful action in response to this moment of uprising against racist violence. You may be asking that too. Like many of you, we are outraged at the senseless killing of George..
Greetings from my dining room table! The Arts Center is closed and our staff are working from home. And, like the rest of you, I am figuring out how to stay safe and navigate in this new reality. One thing we know..
Groundbreaking research in neuroscience reveals that our need to connect with other people is even more fundamental than our need for food and shelter. Social connection is a super power that makes individuals smarter, happier and more productive.* At Kennedy Heights Arts..
Are you a high school student (ages 14 – 18) who is helpful, creative, models leadership, and likes working..
This series of artwork by Cincinnati artist Beth Goldstein aims to portray an awareness of the stark reality of our present and future lives in such a dynamic, explosive, and life-changing landscape of global conflict and the concurrent quiet chaos that ensues...
“My intention is to give guests permission to feel ambiguous about their interpretations of this body of work, which explores my emotional reflections of our precarious existence.” – Beth Goldstein This series of artwork by Cincinnati artist Beth Goldstein aims to portray..