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Updated March 13 with revised event detailsIn light of the recent developments concerning the coronavirus (COVID-19), the Pulitzer announced that they are鈥
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On a steamy recent afternoon on Cherokee Street, Chicago-based artist Josh Rios showed off his latest piece 鈥 a bicycle and attached wagon, both decorated鈥
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A teenager from Democratic Republic of the Congo finds himself on the other side of the world, starting a new life in St. Louis. A young Bosnian woman鈥
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National and local artists will explore the past, present and future of city life in an upcoming exhibition in St. Louis.Organizers of Dwell in Other鈥
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For three decades, Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Linda Greenhouse covered the U.S. Supreme Court for the New York Times. She currently freelances for鈥
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Fifty-four works. Forty-two artists. A meditation on the colors blue and black. The Pulitzer Arts Foundation鈥檚 current leading exhibition 鈥淏lue Black,鈥濃
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What would you do with $2,500 and three pallet loads of brick? Four St. Louis art groups and collaborators will soon have an answer in the next phase of a鈥
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It may seem counterintuitive for two architects-turned-artists to have crafted an artistic exploration of urban landscape around the idea of tearing down鈥
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Turn-of-the-century artist Medardo Rosso defies categorization as much as his body of work, now on display at the Pulitzer Arts Foundation, was ahead of鈥
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The Pulitzer Arts Foundation will take on a new role this weekend 鈥 as the stage for an original play.The Pulitzer and Shakespeare Festival St. Louis are鈥