Latest news with #TimeLine


Chicago Tribune
22-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Chicago Tribune
TimeLine Theatre Company announces the first show in its new Uptown space
Chicago's TimeLine Theatre has announced its transitional 2025-26 season, including the first production scheduled for its new home, currently under construction in the city's Uptown neighborhood. The three-show slate includes the fall world premiere of 'Hundreds and Hundreds of Stars' (October to November) by longtime Chicago writer and performer Sandra Delgado, directed by Kimberly Senior and presented at the Lookingglass Theatre Company's Water Tower Water Works, 163 E. Pearson St. This will mark the first time Lookingglass has rented its Magnificent Mile space to an external resident company. The second show, slated for the winter, is the recent Broadway hit 'Eureka Day' (February to March 2026), a satire about a progressive preschool with entitled parents. Jonathan Spector's play will be directed for TimeLine by Lili-Anne Brown and staged at a Chicago venue yet to be announced. The plan changed, but TimeLine Theatre finally begins construction on its new Uptown homeThe third show, the debut of TimeLine's new space, will be Amy Herzog's adaptation of Henrik Ibsen's 'An Enemy of the People' (May to June 2026), also recently seen on Broadway. Ron OJ Parson will direct a production that TimeLine plans to open in June at the new TimeLine Theatre, a black-box space seating 250 patrons and located at 5035 N. Broadway. Specific run dates for all three shows have yet to be determined.
Yahoo
07-02-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Latest work by award-winning artist unveiled at County Durham museum
An award-winning ceramicist has installed her latest work in a County Durham museum. Phoebe Cummings' piece, Time Line, was set up at The Bowes Museum in Barnard Castle on Friday. The creation is for an exhibition called From Joséphine Bowes: Trendsetters and Trailblazers, which opens on Saturday, February 8. Phoebe Cummings and Time Line (Image: Sarah Caldecott) The hanging sculpture is made from raw clay and is inspired by a Palladian-style plinth from the 1740s. As the exhibition goes on, the sculpture will change as it dries, cracks, and flakes. Ms Cummings said: "I am delighted to be working with The Bowes Museum to create a new artwork for the From Joséphine Bowes: Trendsetters and Trailblazers exhibition. The sculpture is made from raw clay (Image: Sarah Caldecott) "It is an incredible opportunity to research the history of the museum and its collection, working with the curatorial team to develop a new piece that both responds to and becomes part of the exhibition." Ms Cummings has undertaken a number of artist residencies in the UK, USA and Greenland, and was selected as the winner of the British Ceramics Biennial Award in 2011 The exhibition celebrates the achievements of Joséphine Bowes, who founded the museum alongside her husband John Bowes. The work celebrates the achievements of Josephine Bowes (Image: Sarah Caldecott) It will showcase several pieces from the museum's collection as well as new artworks by other artists including Helen Gorrill, Fiona Moorhead, Pascale Revert, and Kim Sowden. Tickets are available from the museum's website.