A large, antique letterpress greets visitors to Hey June, a Richmond stationary store and print studio that opened on Bridge Street this November.
A project of the University of Vermont’s Reporting & Documentary Storytelling program.
A project of the University of Vermont’s Reporting & Documentary Storytelling program.
All in Arts
As quarantine transitioned from spring into summer, Duxbury artist Torrey Smith felt increasingly separated from her fellow community members.
Living and painting off the beaten path on the side of Camel’s Hump, Erik Nelson easily draws inspiration for his paintings from nature.
Vermont “sound healer” and former environmental engineer, Kirk Jones, isn’t just trying to push an alternative to mainstream medicine — he wants the medical community to come around to his way of thinking.
Vermont chorus groups are finding new ways to make music, learning through necessity how to use digital tools to keep their groups together and safe during a pandemic that spreads readily through singing.
Vermont chorus groups are finding new ways to make music, learning through necessity how to use digital tools to keep their groups together and safe during a pandemic that spreads readily through singing.
A Vermont doctor, author and Holocaust academic warns that today’s politics in the U.S. are increasingly similar to Germany’s short-lived pre-Nazi democracy, and he implores people to get involved in the “civil opposition.”
Travelers on Route 100 in Waterbury Center are noticing a new addition to the scenic view with a new shiny sculpture of an eagle that’s recently replaced the galloping metal horse — both created by Martin McGowan from Newark, Vt.
“We were just all drunk on hope; it was a very exciting time.” Meg Little Reilly said, dawning purple hair and her signature fuchsia lipstick.