Cincinnati is bursting with culture
Murals and architecture all evidence of a vibrant and inspiring arts scene
Before last month, I had been to Cincinnati only once or twice, but I could have sworn I had lived there. My freshman-year roommate, Dargie, grew up there, and, I’m convinced, must have been sent from the tourism board of the future to indoctrinate me with the idea that Cincinnati is one of the greatest places on Earth. Her family even got involved, with shipments of the city’s famous Skyline Chili.
What I had failed to pick up from those gauzy recollections, though, was just how vibrant and inspiring of an arts scene I would find. Eight years ago, Dargie got married in the impressive Rosenthal Center for Contemporary Arts, or CAC, designed by Zaha Hadid. I had wandered through hall after hall of floor-to-ceiling pieces by Shepard Fairey, blowing open my impression of an artist I had only seen on Barack Obama campaign posters.
This time around, I got to dig deep into the wealth of murals in public spaces; an architectural history to make your jaw drop; and three newly renovated, world-class performing arts venues in a roughly four-block radius.
Shades of New York
Back in 2010, at Dargie’s wedding, friends and I had marvelled at the Art Deco grandeur of the downtown Hilton Netherland Plaza Hotel, where we stayed: Romanesque ceiling frescoes, crystal chandeliers, gilded sconces for days. (To get a taste, have a cocktail at the bar or just peek inside.)
The 49-storey Carew Tower that houses the Netherland was actually an architectural model for the Empire State Building. It’s still the second-tallest building in the city, and for just $4 (U.S.), you can take an elevator to the roof and get stunning views. From there, you can see the John A. Roebling Suspension Bridge (locally known as “the blue bridge”) that connects Cincinnati and northern Kentucky across the Ohio River. Roebling also designed the Brooklyn Bridge, and the resemblance is striking.
Aliving tenement museum
Or go to Over-the-Rhine, or OTR, a neighbourhood once dominated by tenement-living German immigrants, to see the largest contiguous collection of 19th-century Italianate architecture in America. Rust Belt decline actually heeded historical preservation here; abandoned buildings with great bones were never torn down because there wasn’t enough growth to warrant it. Now it’s your go-to spot for pour-over coffee at1215 Vine and phenomenal Belgian waffles at Taste of Belgium.
The mural women
Downtown, you’ll notice beautiful, elaborate murals painted on the sides of buildings. Favourites include a hyperrealistic vignette of vintage toys and a bright, graphic tribute to Henry Holtgrewe, a German immigrant once touted as the strongest man in the world.
They’re almost all the creations of a remarkable, 22-yearold, women-led non-profit called ArtWorks Cincinnati. I spent an inspiring evening with its founder, Tamara Harkavy — through Dargie, who knows her — and learned that teenagers, under the supervision of an adult guest artist, had painted every mural I had been admiring.
The performance triangle
In the late 1800s, OTR’s Vine St. once contained136 saloons, taverns and beer gardens, as I learned on a terrific tour of the city’s underground beer-brewing tunnels. Today, the neighbourhood is the booming heart of the city’s performing arts scene.
Last October, the block-long, 140-year-old Music Hall — a marvel of Gothic architecture and home to every classicalarts institution in the city — revealed a $143-million face lift.
Down the block is Memorial Hall, a concert venue in a building from 1908 (also recently renovated). And across the street from that, the Cincinnati Shakespeare Company just moved into its new $17-million home, modelled after the Royal National Theatre in London and Shakespeare’s Globe, among others.
Cincy Shakes, as they call themselves, was one of the first five companies in the world to complete the Bard’s canon. Even the bathroom sinks have a relevant quote from Macbeth: “A little water clears of us this deed.”
But the venue that had me tearing up was the Ensemble Theatre, which recently renovated after hanging strong in OTR for 32 years. For a long time, they were one of the only businesses, and the only theatre, in the neighbourhood. Their new lobby was created from a parking lot and an abandoned tenement building. “Even a few years ago, having a glass front in the theatre was unthinkable,” said Lauren Carr, the theatre’s director of education and outreach. “Everything down the street was bulletproof, but we wanted to be open to the neighbourhood, and that’s why we stayed.”
Every year, they hold an open casting call and invite their neighbours at Tender Mercies, a halfway house for homeless adults, to give monologues. I went to see the regional premiere of His Eye Is on the Sparrow — a musical biography of the pioneering African-American singer Ethel Waters — with Torie Wiggins tearing up the stage for two hours, joined only by an accompanist. After the show, Wiggins told me she had spent 12 years in New York before finding Cincinnati’s promised land of meaty leads for Black actresses and equity pay.
“I was like, ‘You know what? I think I want to be a big fish in a small pond for a little while,’ ” she said. “That was five years ago.” The swing house Cincinnati’s hottest art installation can be found on a modest residential block in its Camp Washington neighbourhood. Thirty years ago, artist Mark de Jong, who grew up here, dreamed of emptying out one of the city’s abandoned shotgun houses and installing a swing that travelled the length of it. “I just thought a swing would be the perfect vehicle for contemplating the history of the house with all its layers, and contemplating where we are as individuals,” he said. And, with the Swing House, he’s done exactly that.
“You’ve probably noticed the architecture,” de Jong said. “A free-standing house, not connected to any other buildings, this tall and this narrow, is kind of unusual to Cincinnati.”
He bought a three-storey abandoned shotgun house across the street from a workshop his mother once owned and gutted it. The arc of the swing, which hangs from nine metres of rope, dictated where everything went: the kitchen, the bed, the bathroom (which is in the basement). He then used the building’s floor joists to make the seat’s swing, along with the furniture — and all the art that is now in an exhibit about the house at the CAC. De Jong is considering turning the Swing House into an Airbnb, but would like to make sure people don’t see it as just a “cool architectural oddity,” he said. “I’m an artist and my medium to work with is the house.”
You can visit the house on select days, free with CAC admission. I got to try it out, with de Jong pushing me. And if you lay flat, your body stiff as a plank, it feels like flying. Practical tips I loved the Symphony Hotel, around the corner from Music Hall. It’s been in OTR for 22 years and every room is inspired by a classical composer. For a nice meal, try the hip underground Italian joint Sotto. For dessert, try the blackberry chip ice cream on a pretzel cone from Graeter’s. Everyone is going to ask if you liked the chili — just be aware that it’s not a spicy stew, but rather a meat sauce with cinnamon served over spaghetti and topped with cheese. (I love it.)
But the most authentic bite is goetta — pork scraps mixed with oats, then grilled — from sixth-generation Eckerlin Meats in Findlay Market. Ride a streetcar up there with a guide from Cincinnati Food Tours, and, for a respite from all the meat, grab some Lebanese hummus from Dean’s Mediterranean Imports.