Artists always want muses without realizing they are a big responsibility, demanding regular walks, a ticket to every sunset, and smoothies made of old pastels and Greek yogurt. Cultivate your creativity an easier way with today's Groupon to the Pittsburgh Center for the Arts. Choose between two options:
- For $30, you get an individual associate membership, plus one admission to an Arts Crash Course (a $90 value).
- For $45, you get a family associate membership for two adults and any children under 18 years of age, plus one admission to an Arts Crash Course (a $120 value).
The Pittsburgh Center for the Arts acts as both the patron and the glittering stage for the local arts community, raising awareness of Pittsburgh's visionaries-in-residence with a host of educational programs and exhibitions. Its members scamper freely through galleries stuffed with canvases and sculptures by local artists such as Brian Dean Richmond and Gregory Witt. Prospective Picassos and vicarious Velazquezes, meanwhile, can pour their inner outsider artist into bright and bold Plexiglass prints, hand-hammered metal jewelry, and subtle Chinese brush paintings during a day of three hour-long studio sessions at an Arts Crash Course. If you're still suffering from excess inspiration afterward, burn off the rest before it curdles into images of poker-playing dogs with a $25 member discount to sign up for ongoing classes in watercolor painting, ceramics, and other crafts. Admission to the galleries at local cinema and media center Pittsburgh Filmmakers is also included with your membership benefits, as well as a 10% discount on colorful blown glass vases and funky jewelry in the gift shop and assorted discounts on art supplies at three area stores.
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The Groupon Guide to: Baking
With winter upon us, more and more citizens are warming their family's hearts and hearths with bundles of baked goods. Even amateur bakers can take the cake if they follow these surefire tips to pursuing patisserie perfection:
- Baking is equal parts art and chemistry. Many of the base components needed for baking can be acquired by boiling household paintings.
- The term "baked goods" actually refers to any baked item and is not a judgment of its quality or lack thereof. This is in order to spare the feelings of the failed baker who could not get it together to do a good job.
- The famous "five-second rule" applies to both the cleanliness of food that falls on the floor and the amount of time that it is possible to touch a hot baking sheet with your bare hand and not get burned.
- For the "health nut" in your life, you can lick all the frosting off a batch of cupcakes in order to turn them into healthy muffins.
- A cake is done on the inside when you can stab a toothpick into it and it does not scream.
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