Things they lost in the pandemic
6 artists reflect on what they miss most
Hiking familiar trails. Eating out at favorite restaurants. The simple act of working with other people. Camaraderie.
These are some of the things that six people from Baltimore’s art and restaurant communities said they missed the most about life under quarantine. They likely seem familiar to many around the world as the COVID-19 pandemic takes more lives—
With that in mind, here are some of the things for which these creative class members said they’re yearning, as well as the first activities they plan to do once the pandemic clears.
Mark Clarke and Maya Camille
Founder Mark Clarke and curator Maya Camille operated their conjoined institutions,
“Hopefully, when they tell us we can go back outside, we can plan a really official, big old grand opening where everyone can come in, meet artists and buy art, and just have a really nice time,” Camille said.
In the interim, the gallery and museum had to deal with the monetary issues that
“We’re a family down there, so it’s really crazy to not have that kind of camaraderie in my life at all,” Camille said. She added that she can’t wait to go hiking in places like Lake Roland in Towson without worry.
Asked what he’ll do first when the pandemic clears, Clarke said, “I’ll probably just go eat somewhere,” and “I want to hop right back into having an event.”
Ashley Minner
Despite the loss of some art-related gigs,
“Other people definitely have it worse than I do,” she said.
That doesn’t mean that COVID-19 hasn’t hit home. A class she teaches at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County had to move online. One of her students tested positive for the novel coronavirus. She’s scared for elder people in her life, who she feels don’t take the pandemic seriously enough. Still, her introverted nature eases the burden of sheltering in place a bit.
The first things she plans to do when it’s allowed: “Probably going out to eat pho with my husband. Going to shop and not having to do so in fear.”
As a couple of trips she planned to take got cancelled, she said she looks forward to traveling again.
Ashish Alfred
The namesake head of The Alfred Restaurant Group, which includes
“If people feel badly for us or want to help us, the best thing they can do is follow the rules…we want and desperately need to get back to work, and the longer people keep acting like this is an extended spring break, the longer that’s going to take for us.” he said.
Alfred has reason to be concerned. With the restaurant industry taking
“I’m am looking forward to, the most, putting paychecks in the hands of my people,” he said. “And that’s not a PR answer, that’s a real answer.”
He added that he misses the “simple pleasures,” including getting a haircut, going to the gym and AA meetings. He also plans to hug his mother, who he said “falls into the category of people that’re most at risk for COVID,” as soon as the pandemic passes.
Shan Wallace
Before the pandemic,
“Not only are people dying, but a lot of black people are dying,” she said.
Wallace acknowledged that for her, personal and professional realms are not separate. She said she’s missing “being out in the streets for 12 hours a day, meeting strangers, meeting sitters [for my art] who essentially become family.”
When the pandemic clears, she plans to immerse herself in the social and artistic world.
Joy Davis
The director and curator of the
Ironically, Davis said that she has more social time now.
“If anything, it’s forcing me to talk to people that I kind of put off, because I [didn’t] have time,” she said. “I actually have time to socialize.
That said, like other respondents, she said that she missed the social and community aspects of her work the most. She looks forward to doing that again and traveling again.
“Being in the space and working with the artists is something I’m looking forward to professionally,” she said. “Personally, it is going on vacation, actually being able to leave the state…being able to move about and feel unrestrained.”