May 27 Tuesday
The immersive “Protect This Earth” installation that turned heads at Milan Design Week is making its U.S. debut—exclusively at the Under Armour Brand House in Baltimore.
Under Armour and zero-plastic pioneer UNLESS have teamed up on a first-of-its-kind capsule: a fully regenerative sportswear collection made entirely from plants. No plastic. No waste. Designed to perform—then decompose.
THE DETAILSLocation: Under Armour Brand House, 101 Performance Dr., Baltimore Launch Date: April 22 (Earth Day) Store Hours: 10 AM – 9 PM Availability: In-store only through mid-June or until sold out. Not available online or any other retail locations.
The capsule features hoodies, tees, and shorts across men’s, women’s, and unisex styles ($30–$160). Select elements of the original Milan installation—including the immersive “Protect This Earth” experience—will be reimagined in-store, giving visitors a deeper look at the product lifecycle from plants to performance to compost.
This is just the beginning—the next evolution of sportswear made for athletes and built for the planet.
May 28 Wednesday
Maryland Art Place, in partnership with Hotel Indigo Baltimore is pleased to present LIFE, a solo exhibition by Maryland-based artist, Waymond Harrison. The exhibition is free to view at Hotel Indigo, located at 24 West Franklin St. from March 4 - May 30, 2025. A public reception will take place Thursday, March 27 from 5 PM to 7 PM.
About the artist: Waymond Harrison is an artist whose life is a testament to transformation through creativity. From a young age, he found himself ensnared in a cycle of legal troubles, spending much of his youth in and out of juvenile facilities and prisons. It was in Los Angeles, at the age of 30, during a lengthy incarceration, that he first encountered the redemptive power of art. Surrounded by the starkness of prison walls, he began painting, using materials from the prison print shop, and immersing himself in the works of legendary artists like Picasso, Basquiat, and Kerry James Marshall.
Art became his refuge, a means of self-expression, discipline, and personal growth. Through painting, Waymond discovered a profound sense of purpose, channeling his experiences into works that speak to resilience, introspection, and the capacity for change. His journey reflects not only the pain of the past but the beauty of reinvention—a powerful reminder of how art can illuminate the path to healing and self-discovery.
A selection of approximately 40 paintings, prints, and drawings from the BMA’s collection explores the role of water and landscape in defining the early modern Dutch Republic.
The water’s edge was a site of rich and often fraught ideas, where environmental, economic, political, and social narratives came to the fore. It also served as a site of immense inspiration for Dutch artists such as Frans Hals, Rembrandt van Rijn, Jacob van Ruisdael, and Salomon Van Ruysdael, among many others. Landscapes depicting harbors, trade, travel, and leisure abounded, as did the production of maps, still lifes, and portraits. Together, these images offer insight into the identity of the young Dutch Republic.
This focus exhibition of 10 works explores the relationship between burning fossil fuels—namely, coal—and the emergence of European modernism. Drawing on research conducted by climate scientists and art historians, the exhibition presents a range of paintings and works on paper by Henri Matisse, Claude Monet, James McNeill Whistler, and others to explore the ways that their artistic practices and style emerged, in part, in response to widespread pollution in London and Paris.Presented as part of the Turn Again to the Earth environmental initiative.
Witness the powerful photography of Baltimore-based artist Devin Allen, whose black-and-white images capture the raw emotion of the Baltimore uprisings that followed Freddie Gray’s death a decade ago in 2015. Documenting a defining moment in Baltimore’s history, Allen reveals both the pain and strength of its people. See these images—rarely on display—in remembrance of Gray’s life.
A stunning exhibition of monumental paintings and works on paper, breathtaking films, and poignant child-size sculptures by artists exploring questions of history, power, climate change, and social and environmental justice.
May 29 Thursday