July 9 through August 29 Opening Reception: Friday, July 9, 6:30 to 9 p.m. Artists Noah Breuer, Alexandra Knox and Manda Remmen all look at the issues lurking behind capitalism labor, ownership and consumerism from different points of view. Breuer delves into family members lost in the Holocaust who ran a textile-printing business, Carl Breuer and Sons, until Nazis took it away from them in 1939 through the reproduction of textile designs from the C, B & S archives; Knox addresses the hardships of child-rearing with “Stockpile,” a sculpture of plaster milk bags, and “PunchCard,” a series mimicking time cards punched for the labor of caring for a newborn; and Remmen uses rearrangeable house-paint color chips named in fancy script to cast shade on the ridiculous commercial names of said colors.
After Martin s Tavern Incident, Patron Remains Frustrated With Restaurant s Lack of Response
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Activists Unveil Mural In Opposition To Legislation
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It became clear I was targeted | Black woman alleges discrimination at popular Georgetown restaurant
Kristi Riggs said a manager at Martin s Tavern used the restaurant s COVID policy to kick her out of the restaurant. Author: Delia Goncalves Updated: 6:24 PM EST March 2, 2021
WASHINGTON A D.C. woman claims a well-known Georgetown restaurant used its COVID-19 policy to discriminate against her.
Kristi Riggs, a black woman, said she visited Martin’s Tavern on Wisconsin Avenue, NW Friday evening. Riggs said upon arrival shortly after 5:15 p.m., the host told her they are asking diners to limit their meal to 1.5 hours. She was seated and served.