Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Curious Theatre Branch

 


 

CURIOUS THEATRE BRANCH

STILL IN PLAY:
A PERFORMANCE OF GETTING READY

September 15-17, 2011

 







The MCA Stage's 15th season launches with the world premiere of a work by Chicago's Curious Theatre Branch that reveals a behind-the-scenes view of the hour before a performance begins. The situations that unfold by the 17-member, multi-generational ensemble are inspired by real experiences and rituals within the company. Still in Play: A Performance of Getting Ready was developed by Jenny Magnus through a year-long residency at the MCA, is directed by Stefan Brün, and features live music by ensemble-comprised Crooked Mouth Band. The performances take place at the Museum of Contemporary Art on September 15-17, 2011.   

Still in Play is scripted, but has the feel of real time improvisation as the actors work through activities and anxieties prior to the start of a performance. The ensemble members move back and forth between acting and playing and singing songs with lyrics that act as a "Greek chorus commentary" about what is happening in the story, focusing on themes of fortitude, perseverance, and frustration. Crooked Mouth Band's style is a cross between folk and pop-rock and features guitar, banjo, bass, accordion, and drums. A massive video projection behind the actors adds another dynamic by presenting both live feed and pre-recorded content. The actors are responsible for running the video while they perform, revealing the creative process to the audience. 

Magnus' residency was part of the MCA's ongoing commitment to support the development of new work by visual and performing artists. Her residency, titled Office Hours, took place over the course of a year. Magnus welcomed visitors to engage in conversation about topics they were interested in and related to Still in Play, including the notion of the theater as a place of work; the stress between parenting and being an artist; the ensemble as tribe and clan; how to maintain generational working relationships; and how an artist can create attention on stage. Notes culled from these interactions directly inspired the development of the work and some of the script is a "love letter to the MCA Stage," according to Magnus.

 



 
ABOUT THE ARTISTS
Curious Theatre Branch was founded in 1988 by Jenny Magnus and Beau O'Reilly as the Curious Theatre "Branch" of the alt-rock cabaret act Maestro Subgum and the Whole. Curious works with an ensemble of artists, ranging from pre-teen to late 70s in age, in a non-hierarchical decision-making process. Curious has produced more than 100 full productions of world-premiere shows. Still in Play marks their fourth full performance at the MCA Stage, including Dictator Light (1997), No Danger of the... Spiritual Thing: Short Plays by Samuel Beckett (2006), and Round and round: a sexfarcetragedy (2008).

Jenny Magnus is co-founder of Curious Theatre Branch, a playwright, performer, and musician whose work has appeared nationally and internationally with Curious, Steppenwolf Studio, Cleveland Public Theater, and the Chimney in Berlin. She also teaches theater and writing at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, University of Chicago, and Columbia College. She has released four music recordings.

Stefan Brün, co-artistic director of the Prop Thtr, has been working with Curious Theatre Branch since 1988 when he directed Careening Is a Skill. Other recent projects include I Am In A Small Space For A Reason I Don't Understand and the current version of Room with Jenny Magnus.
 



 
ARTISTS UP CLOSE
First Night
Thursday, September 15
A moderated post-show talk with the company members and MCA Associate Director of Performance Programs Yolanda Cesta Cursach in the theater provides insight about the performance and includes time for questions from the audience.  

CD Release Concert
Friday, September 16
$10 ticket or $5 with a Still in Play ticket
A CD release concert (separate ticket) for a recording by Crooked Mouth Band along with Elvis Bride and Midnight Moxie follows the September 16 performance.
  
Saturday Speakeasy
Saturday, September 17
An informal post-show gathering provides a special opportunity for the audience to engage with the artists. Snacks, hot and cold beverages, and beer and wine are available for purchase.

Still in Play takes place Thursday, September 15 - Saturday, September 17, at 7:30 pm at the MCA Stage, 220 East Chicago Avenue. Tickets are $28 and a limited quantity of $10 student tickets is available. The MCA Box Office is at 312.397.4010 or www.mcachicago.org. Running time is approximately 60 minutes.

 
Image: Curious Theatre Branch performing Still in Play. Photo: Kristin Basta

15 MINUTES: HOMAGE TO ANDY WARHOL
















15 MINUTES: HOMAGE TO ANDY WARHOL
An Exhibition in Sight and Sound


The Pollack Krasner House Foundation opening yesterday honored the shows organizer and producers, ... Jeff Gordon and Path Soong, the exhibition features silkscreen prints and original recordings, ranging from spoken word to music and sound, created by some of the most prominent artists, writers and performers who knew, worked with, or were associated with Andy Warhol. Included are Bob Dylan, Patti Smith, Ivan Karp, Billy Name, Ultra Violet, Lawrence Weiner, Carter Ratcliff, John Giorno, Vincent Freemont, Alexander Heinrici, Brigid Berlin, Christopher Makos, Yura Adams, Nat Finkelstein, Connie Beckley, Susan Breen, Path Soong, and Jeff Gordon. ... http://sb.cc.stonybrook.edu/pkhouse/exhibition/warhol.shtml

The 15 MINUTES Box, sponsored by Sony and released through Sony's Legacy Recordings, and is available for sale.


All Photos © Jamie Ellin Forbes/ Sunstorm Arts Publishing Co. Inc. 2011, above top Roy Nicholson, Helen Harrison, Director of the Pollack Krasner House Foundation, Below Anthony Hayden Guest, Renee Dahl, happy crowd, Jeff Gordon, project organizer and producer, guests, Helen Harrison, Jeff Gordon &, fellow organizer and producer, Path Soong, crowd, Hans Van de Bovenkamp, & Phyllis Graff, Pollack Studio shot








Saturday, August 6, 2011

Karyn Mannix contemporary will be hosting "A Select View" a POP UP show at the Delaney Cooke Gallery, 17 Madison St (across from Il Cappucino), Sag Harbor.



Karyn Mannix contemporary will be hosting "A Select View" a POP UP show at the Delaney Cooke Gallery, 17 Madison St (across from Il Cappucino), Sag Harbor.
Showing multiple disciplines in art; painting, photography, digital art, and sculpture..from six artists; Kristina Gale, Steve Haweeli,  Athos Zacharias, Steven Zaluski,  Evan Zatti, and Zig.
The show will be on view Saturday, August 13, from 1 p.m. to 8 p.m. and Sunday, August 14, from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
The Artist Wine Reception will be held on Saturday, August 13, from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m.

Daria's opening, New World Stages " Flash Back- The Larry River Years" 8/4



Thanks for viewing Daria Deshuk's " Flash Back- The Larry River Years " at the  New World Stages opening 8/4 curated by Bernard Stote, Hanging Art Organization pictured left.

All friends of Daria below had a great time. Every one was wowed by the depth of Daria's  body of work. The space is beautiful and every thing displayed perfectly.

Glad you come with me via the pics.









Thursday, August 4, 2011

SunStorm Arts Fine Art Magazine Lake Placid Celebration of the Arts


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Lake Placid 3 days of art music peace love

SCHEDULE OF ACTIVITES

Each day art exhibition, continuous music, poetry readings, books signings, demonstrations
Thursday Oct. 6 -
VIP Cocktail party, soiree, meet the artists with entertainment 6-10 pm

Friday Oct. 7 -
Exhibition space opens, Celebration of the Arts begins at Noon
Music in Hall 3 begins at 4 pm
Films run continually

7:00 PM LAKE PLACID’S GOT TALENT:
singers, musicians, bands invited to perform John Lennon’s music with prizes

Saturday Oct. 8 -
Book signings, special art demonstrations, films, art show
Dance Concert with Hylton Beckford’s Slickers and Montréal’s Boogie Wonder Band

Sunday Oct. 9 -
7:30 pm JOHN LENNON TRIBUTE CONCERT
Special guests to be announced

Monday, August 1, 2011

The Wassaic Project Summer Festival

The Art Dossier LLC

The Wassaic Project Summer Festival

WP

THE WASSAIC PROJECT PRESENTS FOURTH ANNUAL SUMMER FESTIVAL
Artist-Run Organization Offers Three Days of Free Art, Music, Dance and Film Events

Wassaic, NY – August 1, 2011 – The Wassaic Project, an artist-run multidisciplinary arts organization located in a renovated mill in the hamlet of Wassaic, New York,is pleased to announce the fourth iteration of the Wassaic Project Summer Festival, a free multi-disciplinary celebration of art, music, and community from August 5-7, 2011. This year’s Festival—curated by guest jurors Eric Gleason, Risa Shoup, Ryan Frank, Nicholas Cohn and Wassaic Project co-directors Eve Biddle, Bowie Zunino, and Jeff Barnett-Winsby –will bring together over 100 artists, 23 bands, poetry readings, dance performances, film screenings, and much more.

Housed in and around historic buildings in Wassaic, NY, The Wassaic Project’s annual Summer Festival aims to present art in a venue that challenges the white walls of traditional art spaces, focusing instead on site-sensitive installations and performances. As visitors climb through the vertical levels of the Project’s historic wooden mill-cum-exhibition space, they are able to explore the work of over 100 emerging contemporary artists, whose bold and intricate installations, paintings, sculptures and videos respond beautifully to the unique architecture that houses them. In 2010 over 4,000 festivalgoers shared in the three-day celebration. The 2011 Summer Festival, which promises to be even bigger, offers a unique weekend-long opportunity for the general public, as well as artists of all mediums, to come together, exchange ideas, learn new things, and engage in a thriving arts community—free of cost.

This year, participating Visual Artists include: Ghost of a Dream, Lauren Adelman, Michael Aghy, Ben Bigelow, Lorne Blythe, Jade Boyd, Hannah Brenner-Leonard, Josh Bricker, The Bridge Club, Peter Brock, Benjamin Brown, Dana Bunker, Grant Cornett, Sena Clara Creston, Richard Deon, Danielle Durchslag, Ryan Frank, Joshua Frankel, Jamie Gaul, David Grainger, Jeila Gueramian,Sarah Hardesty, Gregory Hayes, Troy Herion, Janine Iversen, Kate Johnson, Jimmy Johnson, Ben Judd, Hyeon Jung Kim, Henry Klimowicz, Matthew C. Lange, JaeWook Lee, Guillaume Legare, Valerie Magarian, Tom Mason, Shepard  McCallum, Lori Merhige, Naomi Miller, Jackie Mock, Gala Narezo, Alee Peoples, Amy Podmore, Francis Rabkin, Steve Rossi, Lauren Ruth, Tomie Seo, Nicholas Shepard, Matthew Slats, Eliza Swann, Fabian Tabibian, Breanne Trammell, Clement Valla, Leigh Van Duzer, Brian Wane, Ian Warren, Christopher Wawrinofsky, James Weingrod, Audra Wolowiec, Angelo Womak, Michael  Woody, Rick Wray, Angela Zammarelli, Mario Zecca,and more. The Music Lineup features over 20 bands, including Free Blood, Delicate Steve, Patrick Cleandenim, The Acrylics, Cuddle Magic, Bobby, Electric Junkyard Gamelan, Caged Animals, This Frontier Needs Heroes, and more. The Film Program, organized by the Wassaic Project’s Director of Film Programming Liliana Greenfield-Sanders and guest curators Rowan Riley, Joshua Frankel and Amy Basil,is comprised of over 20 short films from emerging filmmakers and two outdoor midnight movie screenings during the Festival.  The line-up includes The Strange Ones (directed by Christopher Radcliff and Lauren Wolkstein), The Substitute (directed by Talya Lavie), Suu and Uchikawa (written and directed by Nathanael Carton), Ten Years from Now (written and directed by Jordan Schiele), and Little Horses (written by Levi Abrino and Wa ssaic alum Luke Matheny, directed by Levi Abrino), among others. The Dance Program, co-curated by Charmaine Warren (Harlem Stage, The Ailey School) and the Wassaic Project Dance Committee, features performances by an all-star cast that includes Malinda Ray Allen, Jamel Gaines (Creative Outlet Dance Theater), Vincent Hardy, Helen Heinaman (Viewpointe), Maré Hieronimus, Earl Moseley (Institute for the Arts), Becky Sellinger, and Antonia Urzua. The performances will embrace the unique structure and environment of the Maxon Mills as the dancers interact with the art installations and audiences on the expansive renovated deck adjacent to the mill.

ABOUT THE WASSAIC PROJECT
The Wassaic Project is an artist-run sustainable, multidisciplinary arts organization that focuses on community engagement and facilitates artists and participants to exhibit, discuss, and connect with art, each other, our unique site, and the surrounding community.

We seek to make connections between artists of all disciplines. We facilitate interaction and collaboration among artists and the public by utilizing our historic location to create new ways of working in the arts and to inspire new ways of seeing art. The Wassaic Project’s activities include an annual summer festival, a year-round artist residency, studio visits/critiques for artists involved with the organization by guest curators and visiting artists, artist workshops with community members, published catalogs, and fundraising exhibitions in Wassaic and New York City. Our programs intend to generate dialogue and collaboration across geographic, ideological and disciplinary boundaries.

GETTING THERE:
Maxon Mills and The Luther Barn are located within walking distance from Metro North’s Wassaic station. For schedules and fares, visit the MTA’s website at http://mta.info/index.html.

CAMPING:
Visitors are invited to camp at the Wassaic Project on the Luther Barn field. Tickets for the entire weekend can be purchased online in advance for $40 or onsite during the Festival for $60.  No camping equipment will be provided at the site. Please note that only gas camping stoves are permitted at the camping grounds.

For more information on the Wassaic Project’s Summer Festival and its year-round programming, visit www.wassaicproject.org.

Press Contact:
Jessica Shaefer
press@wassaicproject.org

The Wassaic Project Summer Festival
August 5th - 7th, 2011
At the Maxon Mills + Luther Auction Barn
37 Furnace Bank Road, Wassaic, NY 12592

Gallery Hours: Friday-Sunday, 12pm-7pm
Art Reception at Maxon Mills: Saturday, 5pm-7pm
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Copyright © 2011, The Art Dossier LLC, All rights reserved.
P.O. Box 1456
New York, NY 10159
theartdossier.com
contact@theartdossier.com

(e)merge art fair

Ai Kijima: Non Stop Everywhere

The Art Dossier LLC

212GALLERY


Ai Kijima, Judgement, 2011 (27 x 31 inches, textile)

Ai Kijima: Non Stop Everywhere
1 August 2011 – 15 September 2011


212GALLERY is pleased to present the fabric collages of Ai Kijima.

Ai Kijima crafts patchwork extravaganzas out of American pop culture.  Following a generation of artists like Arturo Herrera, who began his career by using Disney character imagery as the raw material for a kind of subversive formalism, Ai Kijima combines the traditional hand-working technique of quilting with postmodern appropriation.

The nine candy-colored cartoonscapes on display at 212Gallery will range in scale from 20 inches to over eight feet and will absorb the viewer into their layered narratives of fantasy and subliminal associations that muse on consumerism, sexuality, superficiality and moral decay.

Scouring flea markets, garage sales and thrift stores from Asia, Europe and North America, Kijima uses disparate materials of varying iconography -  a Pink Floyd T-Shirt, a Kimono, childrens’ “Disney” bedding. Stitched together, Kijimas wall hangings juggle American pop culture icons with traditional Japanese symbols such as the chrysanthemum and koi.

Kijima’s process is painstaking. What begins as an intuitive layering of images is then ironed to a fusible web to which she adds backing; then the sewing machine.  The images bounce off one another suggesting connecting narratives. Kijima uses color-matched shiny polyester thread to sew minute stitches on the fabrics. When seen from afar, the large works, composed of hundreds of fabric pieces, appear as two-dimensional paintings. The intense, seemingly cacophonous imagery morphs into highly choreographed quilted collages. The end result is an astonishing array of beauty and intensity.

Tokyo born, Brooklyn-based artist Ai Kijima received her M.F.A. in Fiber and Material Studies at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL. She has been exhibited in solo and group exhibitions around the world and has permanent collections at the Mint Museum of Craft and Design, Charlotte, NC and the University of Chicago Comer Children's Hospital, Chicago, IL. She was recently awarded a residency at Miami, Florida’s Fountainhead Residency program.

Ai Kijima: Non Stop Everywhere
1 August 2011 – 15 September 2011
Opening Reception 2 August 6-9pm.

Images are available upon request. Please call 970-925-7117 for further details.
Click here for more images.

212GALLERY features innovative, established and emerging international artists working across media including, photography, painting, sculpture and mixed media.
 

Gallery Hours are Monday through Saturday 10-7 and Sunday 10-6.
212GALLERY 525 East Cooper Avenue, next to Ralph Lauren

Tornabuoni Art Brings Major Italian Figures to FIAC

New Acquisitions - Grotto of Curatorial Mysteries



NEW ACQUISITIONS

Grotto of Curatorial Mysteries

Braque  Chagall  Dine  Hockney  Johns  Kadar
Kitaj  Maillol  Motherwell  Picasso  Rivers  Stella  Vuillard

continuing through August 27, 2011

Jim Dine, The French Watercolor Venus, 1985, soft-ground etching in black overlaid with extensive hand coloring, 41 5/8 x 31 3/4 inches
Larry Rivers, HollywoodThe works in the New Acquisitions show at Leslie Sacks Fine Art, Brentwood, span very nearly the entire history of modern art, from a Vuillard still life of 1910, and a stellar 1911 proto-cubist Braque etching, to a 2005 Kitaj charcoal portrait of the school of Paris master, Jules Pascin, whose passion for painting and parties lit up the Parisian avant-garde in the early 20th century.
This show also includes a large, detailed Larry Rivers colored pencil drawing in art deco style entitled, Hollywood, a study from History of the Jews (right), which illustrates the creative Diaspora that led from Europe (more specifically London as indicated by the Savoy Hotel in the background, which was the gathering place for writers and entertainers in London in the 1930s), to New York (more specifically Broadway), and westward (ho!) to Hollywood.  In this image a showgirl, or perhaps a star of the day, cakewalks down the Great White Way, the New York skyline seeming to sway as though its skyscrapers were a conga line.
 
A period piece ca. 1930-1940 by the preeminent Hungarian modernist Bela Kadar reinforces focus on pre-WWII high style with a portrait on paper of a well coiffed woman wearing an intensely red hat, set against a deeper red background. This Kadar relates nicely to Hockney's Celia with Green Hat , which is not merely similar in subject but likewise colorful, with a European feel, and rendered in an almost cartoonlike style akin to certain mid-20th century Picasso portraits.

David Hockney, Pretty TulipsThere are also three truly elegant Hockney still life prints in the show: Pretty Tulips 1969 (left), Lilies 1971, and Potted Daffodils from 1980, the latter done in the artist's transitional style of that time, combining loose, evocative lines inspired by Matisse (which would inform much of Hockney's work in the 80s) with the tight yet equally graceful academic treatment of a draped tablecloth in quintessential Hockney style of the 70s. Suffice it to say, this man can really draw.

New acquisitions from the 70s and 80s also include an extremely rare Jim Dine, which may well be his finest Venus print -The French Watercolor Venus (above) of 1985. This extensively hand colored image is from an edition of only 8 (plus 4 artist's proofs). One of Dine's most recent Venuses,Women and Water, also appears, along with Little Heart in a Landscape 1991 which is a superb example of printmaking, combining several types of etching and a crimson chine colle heart.
 
A classic Jasper Johns Corpse and Mirror litho (below) from 1976 and an equally classic, outrageously colorful Frank Stella print,Estoril Five II from Circuits of 1982 round out the selections from the 70s and 80s. Though Stella first earned his art historical stripes in the late 50s as the father of minimalism, his work since then has become increasingly complex and unrestrained; his use of color in particular going well beyond any art that came before, with the possible exception of the black light posters that hung in college dorms and head shops in the late 60s and early 70s.

Also strewn about the grotto are ceramics by Picasso, a Chagall monotype and a large Motherwell lithograph and screenprint with collage, Hermitage (spelled out in Cyrillic on a "Motherwell red" ground). For summer fun or serious collecting, explore New Acquisitions: Grotto of Curatorial Mysteries, another roadside attraction in Brentwood, at Leslie Sacks Fine Art.

Beefcake Heroes

'Beefcake Heroes': Joe Phillips Brings Gay Superheroes Out Of The Closet - By David Moye



Exhibit at Alexander Salazar Fine Art -

Extended to October 2011


IN

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/07/25/superheroes-come-out-of-the-closet_n_906716.html#s313913&title=Gay_Comic_Artist
It's common for superheroes like Batman, Superman and Spider-Man to have secret identities, but there has long been speculation in certain circles that they have other secrets as well.

The whispers began in 1954 when psychiatrist Dr. Fredric Wertham wrote "Seduction Of The Innocent," a book that alleged, among other things, that Wonder Woman was a lesbian and that Batman and Robin were gay lovers.

Although Wertham's allegations have been long been ridiculed by the comics community, some industry insiders like Joe Phillips see a gay subtext throughout the superhero genre.

"It is there," he insisted to The Huffington Post. "Think about it: A guy develops the ability to do something incredible and the first thing he does is to wear something tight-fitting and colorful and tell the world, 'I'm going to fight crime'?"

Phillips has illustrated heroes like Superman and the Avengers for DC and Marvel. He says he's fascinated by the underlying "gayness" of the superhero, and he's taking it out of the closet and into a series of paintings he calls "Beefcake Heroes," currently on display at a San Diego art gallery.

The series shows classic characters like Batman, Dr. Strange, Superman and Captain America bearing their oiled, rippled physiques in either tight jockey shorts or skintight spandex and wearing come hither looks more common in gay magazines like Blue Boy than, say, the pages of "Superboy."

He admits the pictures are provocative, especially because he's using iconic male characters, but takes a "what's good for the goose" posture.


"There's a huge audience that loves seeing pin-up pictures of girls," he said. "I wanted to take the same approach with these iconic characters and have them them do the same sexy looks and poses."
By design, Phillips makes his pictures perfectly suitable for publication in a mainstream comic -- except he has the character raise an eyebrow or stare provocatively at the viewer.

"We are so used to seeing women as sexual beings, but we don't want to see men doing the same thing. Men are supposed to be stoic and distant," he said. "I wanted these works to show off these heroes' strength, but also their cockiness and competitiveness."

Although the typical reader of a superhero comic is tagged as a heterosexual young adult male, Phillips says the characters have also had a big influence on the gay community. For instance, much of what is considered the ideal modern physique among that demographic is greatly influenced by the hyper-masculine illustrations of seminal artists like Jack Kirby and John Romita in the 1960s.

"It really actually started with the California body building movement in the 1960s which promoted a more well-defined physique," he said. "But the superhero genre recognizes body-conscious clothing. Take Comic-Con: If a chunky guy knows he wants to wear a Batman outfit, he knows it doesn't look right unless he works out."

Phillips sells his works for $1000 each and, so far, he has been amused by the reaction to his work.
"I've seen some guys buy a piece for their girlfriend -- at least, they say it's for their girlfriend -- and I think it's because they realize, 'Hey, I've been looking at boobs!'" he said.

Meanwhile, he says he's getting an interesting reaction from professional artists.
"It's a mixed bag," he said. "It's not overwhelmingly negative, but different people have different comfort levels."

Phillips is considering doing a similar series involving villains like the Joker, and he believes that will be even more provocative.

"Villains would be interesting," he said. "They take power and have this attitude of 'Look at me! I don't play by the rules.'"

Gallery owner Alexander Salazar, who is displaying Phillips' series, thinks his work is a sign of the times.

"Comic art is finally coming out of the closet," he said. "The heroes and their fans can't ignore they are sexy."

Although Phillips is openly gay, Salazar admits putting a gay-friendly spin on popular superheroes is an act of bravery since he still works in the industry.

"We do have to play it safe in some ways, because he's still in his career as a comics illustrator," Salazar said. "He's long been doing this in some respects. All of his males have bulges. They're well-hung."

Will Phillips' interpretation of Superman being super-sexy play to the mainstream? Well, the verdict is still out on that one.

One Comic-Con attendee, a twenty-something male who asked not to be named, admits admiring Phillips' artistry, but not much else.

"He's a good artist -- I'll give him that -- and I'm cool with guys who are gay, but I want to see superheroes saving the world, not picking each other up," said the man.
Gay Comic Artist Brings Superheroes Out



 TO INTERVIEW ARTIST PLEASE CONTACT GALLERY AT
619-531-8996

Pittsfield Hoopla Festival Returns to Springside Park

PITTSFIELD HOOPLA FESTIVAL RETURNS TO SPRINGSIDE PARK
WORKSHOPS, HULA HOOPING CONTEST, SLACKLINING & MORE!


Press contact: Stefanie Weber, FounderStefanie@fertileuniverse.com or 413.281.6734

On Saturday July 30 from 10 am to 10pm, the Pittsfield City Hoopla festival will return to the public gardens of Springside Park, Pittsfield Massachusetts’ largest public park located at 874 North St, for its third year of festivities inspired by the craft, craze and creativity of the hula hoop.  Boasting a full day of hoop related classes, contests, jams, art, vending and performance, the Pittsfield City Hoopla is a unique family-friendly event that celebrates the value of the movement arts in our everyday lives and community.

In addition to free hooping workshops for all ages and abilities on the lawn with professional teaching hoop dance artists from the Boston Hoop Troop and Hooping Harmony between 12 noon-3pm there will also be more focused smaller workshops available for a fee.

Workshops with Pittsfield based movement professionals include:
10am: Openings: A Yoga Class for Entering the Hoop with Rachael Plaine of Berkshire Pure Movement and Yoga Depot
3pm Intro to HoopTap with festival maker and founder Stefanie Weber
6pm Hip Hop for the Hooper with dancer Marie Georgefils
7pm Sundown Stretch & Flow with Gillian Gorman of Radiance Yoga.


Workshops from visiting guest artists include:
11am Hoop Tutorial with Robin Rapture of Hoopium in New Hampshire
3pm Putting the Dance in Hoop Dance with Laura-Marie from Hooping Harmony in Greenfield, MA,
4pm On&Off Body Axis Flips & Twists with Lolli Hoops and Core Hooping: Navigating Between Waist and Neck with Rachel, both from the Boston Hoop Troop.

Space is limited for the above workshops and pre-registration is suggested. The cost is $10 per workshop and lower if you attend 3 or more.

Participants can begin the day by making their own hoop on site at 10am for $25 guided by Hoopla artists. Pre-registration is required and space is limited.

This year’s Hoopla will introduce some new activities for participants. ‘Yogaslacker’ Danielle Gismondi from Frog Lotus Yoga in North Adams will facilitate a slackline throughout the day. According to Slackline.com, slacklining is the sport of walking a small, flat nylon rope between two points. It is practiced in the backyard, on college campuses and city parks, and even 3000 feet above the ground. Some people do it for fun, others for the obvious athletic benefits, and others still for a meditative purpose, in seeking a higher state of mind. Since slacklining’s development in the late 1970s, slacklining has grown into an international craze, and is a common and popular pastime within the outdoor community. Also a part of the circus arts scene, slacklining is making it way back to the stage in more creative ways.

Artist Bridgit Noone will facilitate a table for coloring mandalas. The Mandala Project, founded by Lori Bailey Cunningham, explains a "mandala" as being from the classical Indian language of Sanskrit loosely translated to mean "circle”. “Far more than a simple shape, it represents wholeness, and can be seen as a model for the organizational structure of life itself--a cosmic diagram that reminds us of our relation to the infinite, the world that extends both beyond and within our bodies and minds”, she states. Both Navajo and Tibetan cultures are known for their colorful mandalas.

Returning again this year, David Frazier from the Vincent Hebert Arboretum will be leading walks along the trails at Springside Park for any one interested in learning more about the trees, gardens, and history of the grounds.

At 5pm the Hoopla will offer its first-ever hooping contest featuring prizes from local businesses. Sign-ups for the contests will occur through out the day and are open to all interested.

Food will be available for purchase on site and vendors will be selling handcrafted hoops and other creative items.

The grand finale of Pittsfield City Hoopla begins at 8p with an “enchanted illuminated spin extravaganza” featuring live drumming by Aimee Gelinas and her Rhythm Keepers from Pittsfield, and fire hoop and dance performances by Lita Lundeen-Setchfield, Angyl Fyre, Maria Mariposa and more.

Pittsfield City Hoopla is created by Stefanie Weber/Creatures of Habitat in partnership with Pittsfield’s Office of Cultural Development and is supported in part through funding from the Massachusetts Cultural Council, Pittsfield Cultural Council and Greylock Federal Credit Union. Additional community supporters and sponsors include Mark Tomasi, Day Mountain Sound, The Earth Shoppe, BerkshireGirl, Elm St. Barber Shop, New Image Salon, Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival Community Day, Lenox Community Center and Berkshire Dance Theater.

The 3rd annual Pittsfield City Hoopla festival will be held Saturday, July 30th, from 10am to 10pm, rain or shine. For more information visit www.pittsfieldcityhoopla.org. To pre-register for a workshop email Stefanie@fertileuniverse.com or call 413.281.6734.

Tiki Oasis '11

Tiki Oasis 11 Banner


"Burros, Black Velvets and Other Delights"
group art show at Tiki Oasis 11  
to benefit WiLDCOAST


Fri. Aug. 19th  through Sun. Aug. 21st, 11 am - 4 pm     
Reception for the artists: Saturday Aug. 20th, 1 pm

Lahaina Room in The Crown Plaza Hotel  
as part of Tiki Oasis 11

August 18-21, 2010
San Diego, CA

 
Show preview available after August 1
  
Inspired by toreadors and jai alai, street tacos and warm summer nights on sandy beaches, "Burros, Black Velvets, & Other Delights" conjures up visions of tequila fueled visits to Tijuana when Herb Alpert & the Tijuana Brass were king. Contributing artists were asked to submit an original black velvet painting or modify a random Tijuana style Burro or Piggy Bank sent to the artist by show curators Baby Doe and Reesenik

All proceeds from "Burros,   Black Velvets, & Other Delights" will benefit WiLDCOAST, founded in 2000 to protect and conserve some of the most ecologically important coastal wildlands, lagoons, and marine ecosystems that remain in California and throughout Baja California. WiLDCOAST has successfully conserved more than 1.8 million acres of coastal wildlands and wildlife habitats. WiLDCOAST works with local communities in San Diego to protect and restore their beaches and open spaces through hands-on restoration projects, cleanups, environmental education and community involvement.

 
        
 Tiki Oasis is proud to feature the top tiki artists  
paying homage to Tijuana's past including: 
  
Atomikitty 
 Babalu
 BigToe
 Bowana
 Cass McClure (aka junkhauler)
 Crazy Al Evans
 Danny Gallardo
 Dave Lozeau
 Dave Warshaw
 Dawn Frasier Sophista-tiki
 Derek Yaniger
 Doug DoOr
 Doug Horne
 Eric October
 Erin Joy
 Jason Rodgers
 Jason Sallin
 Jennifer Kenworth "Juanita"
 John Mulder
 Joshua Ellingson
 Ken Ruzic/Little Lost Tiki
 Maya Rodgers
 Michael Fleming (aka Tweedlebop)
 MP
 Pizz
 Reesenik
 Thor
 Tiki King
 Tiki Tony
 Wendy Cevola

images: 
"Mai Tai" Piggy bank by Derek Yaniger
Piggy Bank by Doug DoOr   
Burro by Babalu  

For more information - please contact Lee Joseph at  
leejemail@gmail.com or 818-848-2698 (p), 818-415-5543 (f)