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Philly weekender: Bok Bar reopens and Otaku Fest

Philly weekender: Bok Bar reopens and Otaku Fest

Axios11-04-2025

You know it's spring when Parks on Tap returns. The traveling beer garden sets up shop in the Azalea Garden near the Philly Art Museum.
Today-Friday, 4-10pm; Saturday-Sunday, noon-10pm
🎉 Rooftop bar season is upon us. South Philly's Bok Bar reopens Thursday. Stop by for tacos, beers or cocktails and enjoy views of the city. Hours vary.
🍽️ Last call for Dine Latino Restaurant Week.
Deals or special menus at more than two dozen restaurants run through Saturday.
🦸‍♀️ Embrace a full weekend of cosplay at Otaku Fest at Cherry Street Pier on the waterfront.
Also count on video game tourneys, dozens of vendors, panel discussions, food and drink. Friday-Sunday, hours vary.
🥳 Young professionals get their own night at the Barnes Foundation on Friday.
🎶 A pop-up exhibit on Saturday will spotlight Marian Anderson and the backstory of the singer's historic concert in 1939.
Runs 10am-4pm at the South Philly museum dedicated to the singer. Admission: $5
🖌 Stock up on arts supplies at Art Star's CRAP Bazaar on Saturday from 11am-4pm inside the Independence Visitor Center. It's a rummage sale of gently used and overstock supplies.
Plus: A spring pop-up market will set up shop nearby featuring a handful of local craft vendors.
🚗 Saturday is your chance to see a handful of early 20th-century cars out on the road in Southwest Philly. Simeone Foundation Automotive Museum's Demo Day will also feature a presentation about the autos. 11am-2pm
🛍️ Shop more than 50 vendors at the Ready, Set, Bloom Market under the El near 5 Sisters Ice Cream Parlor in Fishtown.
Saturday, 11am-5pm
Free live music, vendors, food and giveaways are on the agenda. Saturday, noon-7pm
🐕 Bring your pooch to Evil Genius brewery's Block Pawty on Saturday from noon-6pm in Fishtown.
This family-friendly event includes dog-themed vendors, food trucks, beer tents and music.
🚶🏿‍♀️Stop by Rittenhouse on Sunday when seven blocks will go car-free again from 10am-5pm. This week's schedule includes a stringband, bubbles, entertainment and double-dutch lessons.

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PEORIA, Ill. (WMBD) — Cold beer, live entertainment, and the great outdoors came together once again as Parks on Tap made its second stop of the season at Donovan Park on Sunday. Hosted by the Peoria Park District, the summer-long series transforms local parks into lively gathering spots. It features a traveling tap house, food vendors, and performances from local musicians. The initiative first launched in 2021 and has quickly become a favorite seasonal event for many residents. Cassie Robbins, community events manager for the Peoria Park District, said Parks on Tap is about more than beer and music — it's about showcasing the city's natural beauty and strengthening neighborhood ties. 'Peoria has so many hidden gems,' Robbins said. 'Even if you're from around the area, you may not be familiar with our parks. And that's a big part of what we're doing with Parks on Tap—coming out, showing people what they can enjoy right in their city. It's a community coming together, and that's really what makes Parks on Tap so special.' Parks on Tap runs from May through the end of August. The next stop will be at Sommer Park North on May 30. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

In Philadelphia, Art Shows by Women Teem With Eros and Audacity
In Philadelphia, Art Shows by Women Teem With Eros and Audacity

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Is there such a thing as being too tall to be an artist? Christina Ramberg, the subject of a long-overdue retrospective at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, stood 6-foot-1 and considered her height a liability. She grew up in the Eisenhower era, when the average American woman was 5-foot-4 and aspired to have an hourglass figure, and she sewed her own clothes, since standard sizes didn't fit. As if wanting to somehow shrink herself, she painted images of the female body constrained by fabric — corseted, cinched, girdled and even bound. By a nice coincidence, Cecily Brown, a generation younger than Ramberg and the subject of a retrospective at the nearby Barnes Foundation, is also a devotee of the human figure — but unbound. If Ramberg's imagery evokes a period when women were tethered to traditional roles and constricting fashions, Brown's world is just the opposite: untethered and uninhibited. Brown is known for exuberant semi-abstractions, in which gleaming nudes in shifting gradations of salmon pink turn up in French forests and other far-flung places. The two artists could not be more different, but their work teems with eros, emotion and painterly audacity, and it has turned Philadelphia's Benjamin Franklin Parkway, the site of both museums, into a temporary capital of the much-heralded female gaze. Ramberg, who died in 1995 and remains underknown, was officially a Chicago Imagist, one of a dozen or so figurative artists who defined their work in opposition to New York, the country's No. 1 painting town. Spurning abstraction, the Chicago Imagists worked on the margins of cartooning and surrealism. They pursued the rough, often raunchy edges of American culture with a zealousness that made the art of both coasts seem relatively polite. Ramberg's work is easy to recognize, even from the next room. She painted cropped, centered, fastidiously crafted images that isolated a female hand or a vintage hairdo against a blank ground, as if turning them into heraldic emblems. And she can fairly be called a connoisseur of undergarments. With nearly devotional detail, she captured the texture of different fabrics, contrasting the smooth, blue-black sheen of satin bands with the intricate patterns embedded in lace. Her colors, compared to the screaming hues of other Imagists, tend to be soft and muted, with an emphasis on peachy beiges and grayed lavenders reminiscent of women's slips. Her work can put you in mind of Roy Lichtenstein, with his nostalgic subjects and thick cartoon outlines. He and Ramberg both made memorable paintings of a female hand raised to display its slender white fingers and red-painted nails. A mesmerizing series by Ramberg of three small paintings from 1971, '(Untitled) Hand,' show a sinuous, near-boneless hand binding itself in a length of cloth that mutates into a glove. In the place of Lichtenstein's Pop jokiness, her work feels psychological and interior. Ramberg was adept at turning the visual clichés of cartooning into an entirely personal language, and her influence can be felt in the work of painters as different as Elizabeth Murray, Amy Sillman and Julie Curtiss, all of whom spent some time in Chicago. Born in 1946 in Ft. Campbell, Ky., Ramberg moved frequently. Her father was a high-ranking officer in the U.S. Army, and her mother was a piano teacher. She believed that her father (her first critic) viewed her as 'awkward and unattractive,' as she later wrote, and she attributed her negative self-image to him. After her family settled in the Chicago area, she attended the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She later joined the faculty and served as head of the painting department. She married a fellow artist and Chicago Imagist, Phil Hanson. They separated in 1980, but Hanson returned to care for her in 1989, when she was diagnosed with early-onset dementia. She died six years later, at age 49. One of the fascinations of her short career is her devotion to the same limited repertory of subjects. 'Hair' (1968), her undergraduate thesis show, consists of a series of 16 small, square, olive-green panels that each depict the back of a stylish woman's head, with hairdos that are variously bobbed, plaited, or curled, and patted by a manicured hand. Whose head is this? Impossible to know, but I had a shivery vision of the young Ramberg watching the back of her mother's head as she played the piano, pressed into silence in that era when children were seen and not heard. In the 1970s, Ramberg's paintings shed their retro flavor and began courting figurative grotesqueries. The exhibition culminates in a room ringed with large-scale torso paintings, each about four feet tall and dominated by an action figure with broad shoulders, a small waist, and signs of brokenness. 'Troubled Sleeve' feels like a bad dream, with its four pickle-shaped organs sprouting from beneath a woman's tightly wound belts and tourniquets, defeating her efforts to control her body.¶ Philadelphia is the only East Coast stop for Ramberg's show, which was organized by the Art Institute of Chicago. Her work has never been properly assessed by a New York museum, perhaps as a result of the geographic bias that has often afflicted American artists working outside of New York. The good news is that the situation is likely to improve in September when the Whitney Museum will feature Ramberg and other Chicago Imagists in 'Sixties Surreal,' a rethinking of more than 100 artists whose work was initially eclipsed by the shiny surfaces of Pop art. 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The furniture, which includes a tall grandfather clock, suggests that the room is a 19th-century European studio, or a picture gallery that looks a little chaotic. The dozens of picture frames hanging on the wall form a jumble of rectangles that emit a quivering energy, as if shaken by an earthquake. Looking at 'Selfie' you may feel it echoes your own situation amid the Barnes, its walls crowded from floor to ceiling with masterpieces by Cézanne, Matisse and Renoir. There are so many paintings in the world, more than we can ever see, but as Brown's work exhorts us, take it one picture at a time, and look as searchingly as you can.

Philly weekender: Bok Bar reopens and Otaku Fest
Philly weekender: Bok Bar reopens and Otaku Fest

Axios

time11-04-2025

  • Axios

Philly weekender: Bok Bar reopens and Otaku Fest

You know it's spring when Parks on Tap returns. The traveling beer garden sets up shop in the Azalea Garden near the Philly Art Museum. Today-Friday, 4-10pm; Saturday-Sunday, noon-10pm 🎉 Rooftop bar season is upon us. South Philly's Bok Bar reopens Thursday. Stop by for tacos, beers or cocktails and enjoy views of the city. Hours vary. 🍽️ Last call for Dine Latino Restaurant Week. Deals or special menus at more than two dozen restaurants run through Saturday. 🦸‍♀️ Embrace a full weekend of cosplay at Otaku Fest at Cherry Street Pier on the waterfront. Also count on video game tourneys, dozens of vendors, panel discussions, food and drink. Friday-Sunday, hours vary. 🥳 Young professionals get their own night at the Barnes Foundation on Friday. 🎶 A pop-up exhibit on Saturday will spotlight Marian Anderson and the backstory of the singer's historic concert in 1939. Runs 10am-4pm at the South Philly museum dedicated to the singer. Admission: $5 🖌 Stock up on arts supplies at Art Star's CRAP Bazaar on Saturday from 11am-4pm inside the Independence Visitor Center. It's a rummage sale of gently used and overstock supplies. Plus: A spring pop-up market will set up shop nearby featuring a handful of local craft vendors. 🚗 Saturday is your chance to see a handful of early 20th-century cars out on the road in Southwest Philly. Simeone Foundation Automotive Museum's Demo Day will also feature a presentation about the autos. 11am-2pm 🛍️ Shop more than 50 vendors at the Ready, Set, Bloom Market under the El near 5 Sisters Ice Cream Parlor in Fishtown. Saturday, 11am-5pm Free live music, vendors, food and giveaways are on the agenda. Saturday, noon-7pm 🐕 Bring your pooch to Evil Genius brewery's Block Pawty on Saturday from noon-6pm in Fishtown. This family-friendly event includes dog-themed vendors, food trucks, beer tents and music. 🚶🏿‍♀️Stop by Rittenhouse on Sunday when seven blocks will go car-free again from 10am-5pm. This week's schedule includes a stringband, bubbles, entertainment and double-dutch lessons.

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