The crawl is a bit different than the typical vision people have of arts and crafts, swapping the crafts for craft brews to be served at each participating business alongside local artist's work.
When shoppers walk past Cultivate Urban Rainforest & Gallery, they might miss the colorful cartoon hanging in the window. But a closer look reveals a cartoon bear, moose and beaver asking an owl perched on a tree branch: “Do you know where all the warmth has gone?” And when shoppers walk inside the store, owner.
Kalpana Waikar remembers standing against her mother’s shoulder at a very young age, her small hands smashing little balls of dough into ovals, which she then separated into semicircles. She gripped the dough in her fist, forming a cone and filling it with potatoes and peas. There were always a lot of samosas, she remembers.
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The Evanston ASAPIA Heritage Month Arts Festival was held under blue skies and festive red lanterns on May 22 at Fountain Square in downtown Evanston. This festival, sponsored by the Kitchen Table Stories Project, Asian American Caucus, and City of Evanston, showcased multiple expressions of Asian, South Asian, and Pacific Islander American cultures.