News

We are listening.

The Peale is a home for Baltimore stories and aims to be a safe space for the voices of the city’s diverse communities to be heard. As the Reverend Doctor Martin Luther King, Jr. said, “a riot is the voices of the unheard.” It is the Peale’s mission to listen to and amplify the voices of the unheard, so that Baltimore’s soundtrack is inclusive and represents the city’s full diversity.

In this time of pandemic we are temporarily unable to serve as a physical platform for sharing Baltimore’s stories, but we continue to help the city’s storytellers be heard online and across the digital divide as well. Today – and every day – if you have an authentic Baltimore story to tell, we are here to help you share it. You can record your story and hear others’ via our iPhone app, website and Storytelling Hotline: 1-833-TEL-STRY (833-835-7879).

Our staff photographer and storytelling ambassador, Daisy Brown, is recording the voices and portraits of people she encounters around Baltimore during the pandemic; if you see her out and about in your community, she’d love to hear from you. You can also share your story, and we’d love to hear your thoughts on how we can help amplify Baltimore’s voices right now.

This #GivingTuesday, we’re helping Baltimore artists, storytellers, and creators do what they do best . . . keep on creating!

Daisy Brown, 2020.

One fine Sunday two years ago, Baltimore resident Daisy Brown happened upon the Peale after visiting the Farmers’ Market on Holliday Street. She fell in love with the place, and we fell in love with her! Today Daisy is the Peale’s staff photographer, and has recently started the “Stoop Shoots” program shooting portraits of her neighbors and East Baltimore residents from a safe social distance while taking her dog on daily walks. She’s also showing them how they can record their stories during the pandemic – even if they don’t have internet access at home – so we can share them with you and help people everywhere know Baltimore as the storied city it is!

Your gift to the Baltimore Stories Fund helps Daisy and the Peale ensure that all the voices of our communities are heard and preserved in this historic time. This community fund is designed to provide micro-grants, capacity-building, and production support to help creators like Daisy share authentic Baltimore stories.

  • $50 Sponsors one year of Peale promotional and capacity-building support for a Baltimore storyteller
  • $250 Provides a stipend to a storyteller for producing a Baltimore story
  • $500 Publishes one complete Baltimore story across 6 or more digital platforms

Got an idea for a new program at the Peale? We want to hear from you!

WBAL Reporters Tour “Renovations” Exhibition

Renovations artist Christopher Kojzar, who is standing in front of a camera.
Artist Christopher Kojzar talks to reporters about the “Renovations” exhibition.

Last week, Lisa Robinson of WBAL TV stopped by the Carroll Mansion (our temporary home during our building renovations) to chat about another kind of renovation–the Renovations exhibition, currently on display at 800 E. Lombard Street.

The show, on view through March 1, 2020, is an exploration of African American education through the lens of contemporary art and has been lauded by visitors, arts organizations, and historians. Not only does the rarely explored topic resonate with locals but the exhibition makes innovative use of modern technologies to tell its stories–from augmented- and virtual reality to creative video presentations.

Conceived of by Christopher Kojzar, Mollye Bendell, and Jeffrey Gangwisch of the strikeWare Collective. The artists weave together traditional and new media to present a visual experience about the institutions, educators and progenitors who shaped how Baltimore’s Black community acquired formal training and knowledge. The entire project was inspired by the Peale building’s history as “Male & Female Colored School No. 1” in the 19th century.

Check out the interview! 

Holiday Shopping Made Easy! Out of the Blocks Cards

You don’t need a radio show or podcast to have meaningful conversations. Get to know strangers, neighbors, and even friends and family better with your very own deck of questions asked by Aaron Henkin for Out of the Blocks on WYPR. This standard deck of playing cards is an interview toolkit, tried and tested in hundreds of interviews across Baltimore and beyond. Available online here or at the Peale Center for US$10.00 each + shipping!

Learn more about Interviewing Neighbors and Strangers in this video with Aaron Henkin and find more resources for storytellers here.

G300 t-shirts and photographs by Daisy Brown for sale!

Now you can get G300 t-shirts and Daisy Brown’s photos of the “G300 Squeegee Boys” from the filming of By Any Means Necessary: Stories of Survival online!

T-shirts

Logo of the "G300 Squeegee Boys": white text on a black background reads "Support your Baltimore Squeegee Squad" with a fist holding a squeegee in silhouette. The image resembles a fist holding a hammer from the tradition of Marxist and labor logos.

 

 

Unisex black t-shirts in a range of sizes, $20
(Link goes to direct purchase from the G300’s online sales page.)

Photos

Order large (20″x30″) or small (11″x14″) photographs by Daisy Brown below. Proceeds excluding shipping costs are shared 50/50 between the photographer and the G300.

N.B. delivery by mail is available only for the smaller size prints. Large prints can be picked up from the Peale at Carroll Mansion: 800 E. Lombard St., Baltimore, MD 21202 by appointment only. Email us to make arrangements: info@old.thepealecenter.org

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G300 photo small 11″x14″ (with shipping)

Select photo:


G300 photo small 11″x14″ (pick-up only)

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G300 photo large 20″x30″ (pick-up only)

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BIG NEWS! Green Grant from BGE

Extra! Extra! We’re thrilled to announce that the Peale has received a Green Grant from BGE to add gardens and greenery to Watchhouse Alley, the areas between the Peale and its neighbors on Holliday Street. The additional green spaces will not only help nature by encouraging pollinators to visit but will also help beautify the community! We’re super grateful to BGE for this opportunity! Read more about the BGE Grant.

The project will create:

  • An engaging space, connecting to the streets beyond. The Peale Center is improving and extending an existing garden by bringing in new plants and trees. It will also add seating to the area. Between a coffee shop planned for the museum and the nearby Ida B’s Table, a highly praised restaurant, Proctor expects the alley to be a destination itself, as well as a gateway to the museum and other neighborhood businesses.
  • An invitation to birds and butterflies. A group of artists first revived the long-neglected garden as part of a 2017 exhibition about the effects of light pollution on birds, supported by a BGE Green Grant. Today, the goal is to extend the pollinator plantings to attract beautiful flying creatures to the neighborhood.
  • A place for stories and exploration. The garden area will be the perfect place to tell stories about Baltimore culture and natural history; about where birds go when they migrate and how we can help bees and butterflies; and about the vibrant community that is Baltimore today. It also will be a place for hands-on learning and workshops.
  • A place for experimentation. Initially, many of the plants and trees will remain in pots. Staff and volunteers will be able to move them around to determine the best permanent locations. They also will monitor which creatures – human and otherwise – visit and enjoy the plantings.
  • A safer place. Vintage-style gates to be locked during the museum’s off-hours will help prevent the accumulation of garbage and vandalism and protect against fires.

Renovation Update: Ceiling Joists

A hole cut in the ceiling in one of the rooms at the Peale.

Peale Renovation Update!

This week we opened a small hole in the ceiling of one of the Peale’s rooms to check on the load-bearing capacity of the adjacent wall. The wall divides the 1814 ground floor room (reportedly where the live animals were kept when Rubens Peale ran the museum), and which was originally the same size as the Picture Gallery above. The renovation plans call for opening the wall up again to create space for a café. In the meanwhile, we get a special glimpse at some original 1814 timber in the fabric of the building! Stay tuned to get weekly updates about our progress and other special insights into the country’s first purpose-built museum.

Renovation Update: Taking Out the Trash

A heap of trash includes lots of cardboard boxes found in the basement of the Peale!

Help us take out the trash!

This summer an intrepid team from BGE cleaned out the basement of their company’s birthplace – the Peale Museum. We now need to haul the broken chairs, dented metal cabinets, and other detritus from the Museum’s 20th century life away for recycling and safe disposal. A generous board member has offered up to $1,500 in matching funds for the costs of removal. Can you make a donation or offer in-kind help for this essential renovation clean-up? Email us if YOU can help!

We’ve Moved While the Peale is Being Renovated

The red brick Carroll Mansion, located in Baltimore.

Say HELLO to the Carroll Mansion!

In 2020, during our renovation, the Peale will take up residence at the Carroll Mansion, which has also seen many varied and interesting lives!

According the Carroll Mansion’s website: “The first house structure was built on the current Carroll Mansion site between 1804 and 1808. Subsequent owners made additions to the original structure, the most extensive of which being made by Christopher Deshon, who owned the house from 1811 to 1818. Deshon sold the mansion to Richard Caton, son-in-law of Charles Carroll of Carrollton. Richard and his wife Mary moved into the mansion in 1820.”

Located in downtown Baltimore at 800 E. Lombard Street, on the edge of the Inner Harbor and Little Italy, the Carroll Mansion is another federal style building which will generously host the Peale’s programs and offices. The Mansion is open for tours Saturdays and Sundays from 12-4pm as well as for special events. There is free parking for visitors on S. Front St. beside the Mansion and parallel with President St. with a provided parking pass. The Carroll Mansion is also served by MTA Busses 7, 10 and 11, an the Shot Tower/Market Place Metro Stop.

During the Peale’s extensive renovations, the Carroll Mansion will not only host our staff but also our lively and innovative programs, from exhibitions to storytelling workshops. Please check the Peale’s What’s On? page regularly for new programs.

Composer Scott Patterson Comes to the Peale on August 8

Scott Patterson's back faces the viewer as he plays the piano.

“Scott Patterson may turn out to be one of the most important composers of the 21st century,” predicts Peale Center director Nancy Proctor after seeing Scott play last year. “As an audience member, I can say that his original compositions, which blend an incredible range of genres and instruments, from the Peale’s 19th-century piano to 21st-century beat boxing, are moving in a way I’ve never heard before.”

Last fall, the Peale was fortunate to host the premier of Scott’s operatic ballet, the Cease & Desist Ballet, created by Afro House Baltimore, an organization that’s “committed to the development of a music culture that is disruptive, exuberant, innovative, emergent, and transformative.” Proctor says she’s been a fan ever since seeing the ballet at the Peale Center.

She’s not the only one who’s taken note of Patterson’s performances. The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review describes Patterson’s playing as, “a masterly blend of virtuosity, singing style and beautiful voicing.” His blend of classical, soul and rock music is futuristic, emotive and luxuriant. Early this year, Scott received the $40,000 Mary Sawyers Imboden Prize, the largest artist award given in the region.

Scott has toured with Camille A. Brown & Dancers andat numerous venues, including the Lincoln Center, Belfast Festival at Queen’s, White Bird, The Joyce Theater, and Debartolo Performing Arts Center. He is contributing composer of the Bessie Award winning Mr. TOL E. RAncE and Brown’s critically acclaimed work, BLACK GIRL: Linguistic Play.

Scott Patterson plays a vintage piano.

Here in Baltimore, Scott has taken on a new challenge: composing new pieces for the Peale’s 1879 Knabe Square Grand Piano – a very different sounding instrument from a modern piano. He’ll perform in the Peale’s historic Picture Gallery on August 8, and the performance will be recorded by Peale residents, ArtsLaureate, for publication. The Peale gratefully accepted the piano from the Baltimore Museum of Industry because it dates to the period when the Peale was Male and Female Colored School No. 1, and Baltimore’s music scene first took flight: the decade when musical instrument manufacturers accounted for over 1% of the city’s GDP (there were three piano manufacturers in Baltimore in that period), and Ford’s Opera House hosted no fewer than 24 different opera companies! (See Jackson Gilman-Forlini in Maryland Historical Magazine, Spring/Summer 2017). This was the dynamic music scene into which Baltimore legends like Eubie Blake were born.

Symbolically, Scott’s concert brings together the birth of Baltimore’s modern music scene with the origins of public school education for people of color in the city and is an opportunity to think about the connections and legacy of both these historic moments for contemporary life in Baltimore.

The staging at the Peale will be unusual, offering an immersive environment to experience the music rather than usual concert seating. Audience members are welcome to bring cushions to lounge on during the performance, a modern-day version of the “groundlings” experience at the original Globe Theater!

An Elegant Rendezvous with Scott Patterson
August 8, starting with a champagne toast with Scott at 7pm, doors for general admission at 7:30pm, and the concert at 8pm.
Get your tickets through Artful.ly or Mixolo.