Melissa Ferrick is one of the few musicians who can claim to have written a “lesbian anthem.” The 2000 song “Drive,” from the album Freedom, doesn’t shy away from anything: […]
ARTISTS
Finding Inspiration in Negative Space
Damion Silver’s show in Eastham is bold, bright, and graphic
Around the start of the pandemic, Damion Silver was working on a sculpture in his studio when he noticed that the shadows cast on the floor made interesting patterns. That […]
WRITERS
Francine Prose Reads Your Amazon Reviews
Her new novel, The Vixen, is a comedy about the Rosenbergs
Simon Putnam, the young protagonist of Francine Prose’s newest novel, The Vixen, is still figuring out who he is. Fresh out of Harvard, having studied folklore and mythology, he has […]
MUSICIANS
Daniel Shevlin Shows His Versatility
The cellist from Well-Strung goes solo
Well-Strung, a string quartet known for its pop covers and hunky members, was founded in 2012 by second violinist Chris Marchant and producer Mark Cortale. Since the pandemic, with group […]
MUSEUMS
Walking Through — and on — History
A look at “cARTography” at the Cape Cod Museum of Art
What happens when you put maps in an art museum? First, one starts looking at them as art. A 1647 map depicting New England and New Netherland, for example, has […]
THEATER REVIEW
‘Under the Radar’ Goes Above and Beyond
Kevin Rice’s site-specific play combines hilarity and history
I’ve never been a fan of audience participation. I like to sit in the back, avoid eye contact with the actors, and enjoy the silent anonymity of a dark theater. […]
DANCE
Provincetown Dance Festival Makes Its Live Return
This time, it has a new outdoor stage, à la Tanglewood
Last winter, the Provincetown Dance Festival met viewers in their living rooms. Dancers emerged from the shadows, pirouetted, and leapt across the stage — but all within the confines of […]
CONCERT REVIEW
Chamber Music Festival Returns, Forte
The Escher Quartet expertly plays Schumann and Coleridge-Taylor
I’ve listened to the dirge-like second movement of Robert Schumann’s piano quintet in E-flat major — specifically, as played by the Beaux Arts Trio in their 1976 recording — so […]
INDIE PUNK
Mal Blum Returns to Live Music
Uncovering a new sound in passionate, grungy anthems
When Mal Blum performs at Truro Vineyards this Saturday, hosted by Twenty Summers, it will be their first concert since the start of the pandemic. “I turned down other gigs […]
LEADERSHIP
A New Director Will Welcome Fellows to FAWC This Fall
Sharon Polli, fresh from Brooklyn, emphasizes community building
“The profound thing that has happened over the past year is that we, as individuals in society, have realized that we can’t really go back to the way things were […]
GALLERIES
Previously Unseen Works by Knaths and Weinrich
A hoard, from the estate of John Hord, comes to light
One of the first works that you see upon stepping off Commercial Street into the Bakker Gallery is a graphite drawing by the artist Agnes Weinrich. It shows a woman, […]
MUSEUMS
A Walk Through ‘Hawthorne, Hofmann, and Hopper’
Canonical works from PAAM’s permanent collection
It’s convenient that three of the most influential artists in Provincetown history share the same initial. It makes for a catchy exhibition name. It’s also convenient that the Provincetown Art […]
BOOK REVIEW
Opening Up With Anne Peretz
Reimagining family therapy for those most at risk
“I knew I had to write this book because I’m the only one who knows the story from beginning to end,” says Anne Peretz from her Truro home. The book […]
LETTER FROM THE ARTS EDITOR
Self-Editing
I was always taught that a good writer takes a complex topic and reduces it to its most essential elements. Working at the Independent, I’ve learned that a good editor […]
ARTISTS
The Art of Adam O’Day Is Totally Bonkers
Hieronymus Bosch meets Area 51
A vintage trailer is parked on a gigantic boulder that emerges out of a murky pond. Balanced on top is a small tugboat inhabited by a tentacled monster. A European […]