Check Out Baltimore Art With Wireless Internet

Check Out Baltimore Art With Wireless Internet

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Baltimore is a city on a rise, experiencing a major renaissance after decades and decades of blight. People whose only experience of the city is watching programs like HBO's smash crime drama The Wire or the long-running network cop show Homicide: Life on the Street, probably think of the city as the murder capital of the Atlantic Seaboard. In many ways, this part of the city's identity cannot be denied. There is still a considerable amount of crime and poverty that plague the city; any basic search for news articles on Baltimore with wireless Internet will reveal the fact that there is still endless corruption, a blossoming drug trade, and social services that are becoming leaner every day. But there is a group of young, new Baltimore residents who are revitalizing the city in an organic way that no amount of policy ever could. They are moving into the city's many abandoned warehouses from its heyday as an industrial powerhouse, taking advantage of ample space and cheap rents, and they are making art and music and bringing an entirely new cultural edge to good ole B-more.

This youth movement in Baltimore began only a few years ago, partially stemming largely from the diverse student population at MICA, or Maryland Institute College of Art. These arty types have decided to stay in Baltimore after graduation, largely because it is hard to beat the rent in other locales across the United States. Just use wireless Internet to research how much you would pay for a room in a shared loft in other artistic centers of the country, like Brooklyn, New York, Chicago, or San Francisco, and you will see that rates in Baltimore go for about a third of the price! This makes it much more realistic for an aspiring visual or performance artist, or even a musician, to work a survivaljob like waitressing or doing retail in a clothing store, and still have time to do his or her life's passion on the side. In New York, you have to work 70 hours a week just to afford your one room in a shared, cramped apartment that is an eleven-block walk from the nearest subway station, in a sketchy area of Queens. Sure, the Upper West Side is probably safer than downtown Baltimore, but the average artist or musician is not living in such tony Manhattan real estate. Instead, they are probably camped out somewhere afar in the outer boroughs, like remote sections of Brooklyn like Bushwick. Is that really any safer in the end?

So if you are just moving to Baltimore, or if you are trying to rediscover your city, be happy to know that there is an entire scene out there for you to discover. If you are not personally connected to one of the many artists who now call Baltimore home, you can actually research what is going on with wireless Internet. Just whip out your 4G phone, and you can find out about one of the many underground concerts or art openings that go around all across the city just about every night of the week. You will discover a hidden pocket of creative talent in a city that is mostly known for its murders. Go home, and tell people that you saw art in Baltimore, and expect to receive a skeptical look on their faces!


About the Author:
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