Quantcast
Channel: Culture & Arts
Viewing all 14859 articles
Browse latest View live

First Nighter: Melissa Errico, Richard Troxell in the Richard Rodgers-Stephen Sondheim "Do I Hear a Waltz?"

$
0
0
Richard Rodgers, ladies and gentlemen! Those melodies! The abundance! This isn't news, of course, but maybe these days it needs to be a reminder. The King and I continues at the Beaumont with Marin Mazzie having replaced Kelli O'Hara as Anna Leonowens, but that, of course, is top-drawer Rodgers and Hammerstein.

The reminder this week is that even in lesser-known Rodgers -- towards the later end of his career and after the celebrated collaborations with Hammerstein and Lorenz Hart -- he still produced melodies that cascaded sumptuously from the stage.

We're talking here about his short-lived 1965 Do I Hear a Waltz?, now revived for the City Center Encores! series and bringing back Melissa Errico, who became a toast of the town when she did the One Touch of Venus revival in 1996.

Do I Hear a Waltz? is the one with lyrics by Rodgers family-friend Stephen Sondheim, whose arm doesn't need to be twisted in order to have him go on about how unhappy the brief partnership was. Apparently it was, although this reviewer wasn't there to corroborate.

What can be said is that the results are right up there with some of the best scores Rodgers helped turn out -- and Sondheim's agile words are also among his most devilishly clever. So it wasn't that element that led to the musical's short stay. (Maximizing the score's beauty is conductor Rob Berman and his 31-musician orchestra in which harpist Susan Jolles has plenty to do.)

Surely, it you ever want to hear a waltz this side of Johann Strauss, it's a Rodgers waltz you want, and the tuner's title song fills the bill, or as Sondheim pens, "Such lovely blue Danube-y music/How can you be/Still?" (That query might be in the Top 10 of Sondheim rhymes.)

The woman who wants to hear the waltz in order to know for certain that she's in love is American secretary Leona Samish, who began life when Arthur Laurents wrote The Time of the Cuckoo in 1952 with Shirley Booth in the leading role on Broadway and then again when David Lean turned it into the Katharine Hepburn 1955 starrer Summertime.

Since director David Lean adapted Laurents's play for the screen with H. E. Bates and an uncredited Donald Ogden Stewart, Laurents based his book for the musical strictly on his play, and it presents a tricky problem: focal character Leona Samish (Errico this time).

A prickly spinster, Leona arrives in Venice on a holiday for which she's scrimped over the years and during which she hopes to find a man at last. Defensively crisp, she has a habit of referring to friends and acquaintances as Cookie while she guards her beliefs in proper behavior. For instance, not unlike Nellie Forbush in South Pacific, she's wary of men either married or previously married. She recoils on learning that Renato Di Rossi (Richard Troxell), the antiques proprietor pursuing her, is married with children.

In the course of her stay at the Pensione Fioria, owned and operated by the worldly-wise Signora Fioria (Karen Ziemba), Leona begins to understand cultural relativity and thereby to change her mind about rigid precepts. She receives help from the other Americans staying at the pensione -- older McIlhenny couple (Richard Poe, Nancy Opel) and younger, rocky Yeager couple (Sarah Hunt, Claybourne Elder). She's not always helped by slow-moving pensione retainer Giovanna (always hilarious Sarah Stiles).

But even as she broadens her outlook, Leona remains, as Laurents has written her, a difficult character. Unless handled with extreme care, she's not very likable -- not far removed from the typical naïve American tourist expecting special treatment wherever she goes. Furthermore, the problem with Leona is compounded when she discovers a few additional hitches in Renato's courtship and insults not only him but just about everyone else within verbal-abuse distance.

Though singing as well as she always does, Errico hasn't found the key to making Leona sympathetic, appealing despite her spite. Her frequent spouting of "Cookie" doesn't quite work. (Check out how in the Lean film Hepburn makes it simultaneously annoying and charming.) When Errico plays the lengthy and volatile angry scene, she seems not to be fighting out of vulnerability, just harshly alienating.

Stating subsequently that his attraction to her has waned, Di Rossi comes across as simply expressing what any decent, self-respectful man would say. Troxell does it gracefully, which is the way he's proceeded from the outset. Actually, the lyric tenor has been an interesting presence. A portly fellow, he doesn't seem at his entrance the sort of figure instantly impressive as leading-man material. Then he starts to sing and out come melting notes to trigger memories of Ezio Pinza.

There's more than one reason for the reminiscing. Aside from the glancing similarity to plantation owner Emile de Becque even in name, Renato di Rossi sings the passionate love songs "Take the Moment" and "Stay," as de Becque sings "Some Enchanted Evening" and "This Nearly Was Mine." Leona takes on the lighter songs, as Nellie did in "South Pacific."

(FYI: When Pinza was cast in South Pacific, Mary Martin let it be known she would sing no duets with him. Rodgers and Hammerstein obliged. Perhaps in preparing this score Rodgers kept that precedent in mind.)

A large part of the Do I Hear a Waltz? score is how Rodgers and Sondheim spread their goodies around. All the supporting players benefit. Ziemba sings about Signora Fioria's attitudes towards tourists from various countries. Stiles shines in a number about languages and incomprehensibility. There's a cynical ensemble number called "Perfectly Lovely Couple."

Perhaps best of all, Elder and Hunt as the fighting Yeagers intone "We're Gonna Be All Right," which can be regarded as a well-honed finger exercise for the songs the young Sally, Phyllis, Buddy and Ben chant in the "Loveland" section of Sondheim's Follies, where he parodies Rodgers and Hart.

Evan Cabnet directed amiably from his concert adaptation. (The Encores! actors still carry their script in black binders but in recent years they consult them less often.) Chase Brock choreographed, employing his lyrical dancers more as mood setters than as anything else.

Do I hear a waltz? You bet I do. I can't get it out of my head, nor do I want to. Not a bad thing to say about a musical, and something always said when Richard Rodgers is at hand.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


Poem: God Having a Bath

$
0
0
God Having a Bath

When we are alone, I want to tell you about
God having a bath. The Milky Way just
a thin film in the corner of a sud on his finger.
All the business with Atahualpa and Spiderman
and the Bastille and dental floss and all those songs
happening in the time it takes
God to brush the bubble from his hands.
Whether he even notices Andromeda
careen into the Milky Way,
their stars spattering across each other
like a paint fight, or whether he's too focused
on scrubbing behind his ears. Waiting
for his mother to tell him the water
has gotten too cold,

                            and I want to find a way
to make all this sound romantic. To say something
about the gravitrons and photons
flitting between us like secrets. About how
the magnesium and iron in our bodies was forged
in the hearts of stars, or how, for all the moon cares,
you and I are close enough to be considered
a single object, but none of it would be right.
Trying to make something like that
small enough to give.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Craig Orsini: Invictus Games

$
0
0
The 2016 Invictus Games are just wrapping up in Orlando, Florida, and after Queen Elizabeth and Prince Harry challenged President Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama to "bring it," the media coverage on the event has been blowing up. Photographs of many of the athletes this year were provided by Boston photographer Craig Orsini, whose experience with Invictus begins with his commitment to advocating for veterans.
2016-05-12-1463060600-5251976-craig_orsini_swimmer.png
The Invictus Games are a series of Olympic events for wounded veterans, started several years ago in London by Prince Harry. The games are sponsored by the Fisher House Foundation, another organization dedicated to improvement of life for wounded veterans and their families. FHF provides housing for families of veterans who are in VA and DOD hospitals. Craig connected with the FHF years ago as a volunteer, and since then he's enjoyed photographing and directing videos for them for various projects. When they asked him to shoot a library of images for this and subsequent years' Invictus Games, he was all in.
2016-05-12-1463060703-3819007-craig_orsini_weights.png
Planning for this shoot was pretty intense. Craig got a call on Friday that they wanted the shoot to happen the following Friday in Washington D.C. He immediately called Wonderful Machine's executive producer, Jess Dudley, to take care of production for the shoot. Jess took care of all the accommodations for Craig and the crew, while FHF worked like fire getting the athletes in from all over the country and making sure accommodations were in place for any and all of their equipment and needs.
Getting twelve people with wheelchairs, bikes, and all sorts of sports equipment in from around the country was a logistical masterpiece.

2016-05-12-1463060888-8840304-craig_orsini_basketball.png
2016-05-12-1463060930-5465697-craig_orsini_runner.png
Craig says these photos diverged a bit from his usual photography, which tends to be more context-heavy and lifestyle-focused. But these images did fit his style in that his goal was to make a connection between himself and his subjects. He says his true specialty is capturing real people with something real inside that he can connect to with his camera.
I am always after the same style if I am shooting or directing--it's connecting with the people I am working with.

2016-05-12-1463060998-715860-craig_orsini_tennis.png
After all the timing and organization, Craig was excited to meet the athletes and get rolling with the shoot. "Shooting is always the fun and exciting part," he says. And in this case, it was all the better to be photographing for a cause and group of people he felt so strongly about.
2016-05-12-1463061035-3056382-craig_orsini_archery.png
Meeting all of the soldiers was a very moving and great experience. Every shoot for the Fisher House Foundation is rewarding on so many levels.

2016-05-12-1463061122-8264658-craig_orsini_vollery.png
Craig--along with Barack and Michelle Obama--is cheering loudly for the athletes at Invictus, and he looks forward to working with the Fisher House Foundation more in the future.
I think working with the Fisher House Foundation is a life-long project and will never be finished. My goal is to make more people aware that the veterans and families need our support for life.

2016-05-12-1463061265-2126977-craig_orsini_invictus_cover.png
To view more of Craig's work, visit orsinistudio.com.
And to learn more about the Fisher House Foundation, visit fisherhouse.org.

Wonderful Machine is a production company with a network of over 700 photographers around the world, and we love to share their stories. Check out more cool projects on the Wonderful Machine Blog!

If you're interested in this story for your blog or publication, contact anna@wonderfulmachine.com or call (610)260-0200.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Meet the 2016 Tony Nominees

$
0
0
The night before the Tony Awards were announced, Phillipa Soo was feeling a bit anxious and unable to fall asleep. She planned to get up at the crack of dawn. But as the Hamilton actress shared, "I woke up to my lovely fiancé (Steven Pasquale) saying 'good morning my Tony Nominee' -- that's how I found out."

This past Wednesday, May 4, 2016, just 24 hours after hearing the news, the 2016 Tony Award nominees gathered at the Paramount Hotel to meet the press. They had a chance to reflect on what it all meant. "I feel so lucky, grateful and excited," said Jennifer Simard, who got a Best Actress nod playing a wayward nun in Disaster! "I have wanted to do a role like this my whole life. I thank my friends for writing it and letting me create her with them."

Michael Shannon, nominated for Long Day's Journey Into Night continues to be humbled acting in Eugene O'Neill's most personal play that the playwright didn't even want to be performed until after he died. "He deveined himself on the page and gave it to the world," said Shannon. "People like to call the play a mountain, but I look at it like a labyrinth." He added that his work on Jamie is ever evolving. "I haven't locked off my performance. I'm still going out there with a huge amount of curiosity," shared Shannon. "It's tiring and challenging but every night when we're standing backstage about to go on, we're a very happy little group of people. What makes the play work is love."

In fact, it was a love fest all around. Love for their shows and the people who created them. "I saw Hamilton Off-Broadway right before I joined the cast and I wept through the whole thing and couldn't believe I got to be in it. It's so inspirational," said Jonathan Groff who was nominated for his turn as King George. "You know what makes Hamilton really special? Usually when someone super smart, like Lin (-Manuel Miranda), is writing something incredibly intelligent, there's a jaded quality. Often super-intelligent people are pessimistic. But somehow with Lin, he's super intelligent and optimistic. You're learning so much but what sends it over the edge is that the lyrics are so optimistic, like "...in the greatest city in the world." It's inspirational and aspirational. And that normally isn't combined with something so intelligently written."

Read more about the 2016 Tony nominees here at NewYork.com.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Artist Haile King-Rubie Celebrates New Art and a Birthday

$
0
0
2016-05-12-1463067930-4964118-new14.jpgHaile King-Rubie has been a bit of a celebrity in his Central Harlem neighborhood since childhood. He has enjoyed an active social and community calendar, entertained guests on countless occasions at his family's majestic brownstone and, most of all, captured our hearts and imaginations with his layered and joyful works of art. (He is a sharp-dresser, to boot!)

As a child growing up with Downs Syndrome, it was the nurturing of Haile's parents, followed by his neighborhood and learning communities, that imbued him with the tools and confidence to experiment and grow in the arts. His extraordinary view of the world - perhaps because of his condition - at the same time, manifests in the richly expressive colors, forms, and subjects that identify his art. According to a DSE (Downs Syndrome Education) article on Creative arts, imagination and expression, persons with Downs Syndrome experience deep feelings they may express eloquently through visual and performing arts, but otherwise find difficult to communicate. With exposure to quality arts experiences, an outlet in which to produce, and the expectation that they can, the results can be transformative. Haile, who turns twenty-six on Saturday, has exemplified this for more than ten years through paintings that reflect his sense of family, global concerns, his love for music, and the village that raised him. He has also studied martial arts and loves drumming, but painting is where Haile's artistry really shines. The family would discover this when they paired him with professional artist, Carl Thelemaque, as a young teenager (pictured below).

2016-05-12-1463072621-4510896-hailecarl.jpgThe Learning Tree Preparatory School provided the most valuable foundations of Haile's academic and artistic development. He went on to study at the Art Students League of New York and Harlem School of the Arts (HSA), and has privately studied with artists Carl Thelemaque of Haiti, Reynaldo Davidson of Jamaica, and Donald Babatunde Eaton. His combined Latin, Caribbean and African heritage features prominently in his paintings, which revolve around a variety of themes of personal, sentimental value. While vestiges of cubism, surrealism, dadaism or abstraction are evident in some of Haile's compositions, the artist isn't reaching toward any particular style. Whether capturing the childhood glee of chasing balloons, the festive spirit of Caribbean carnival, or a fearsome movie character that captivated his imagination, Haile's art is an unadulterated outgrowth of his heart. This purity of expression has reigned in viewers and supporters of Haile's work since the beginning: It is the same element found in the works of Thornton Dial, Jean Michel Basquiat, Picasso, and others who created outside the box. In many respects, Haile is just like any other artist.

2016-05-12-1463068328-1907653-balloons2.jpgHaile has exhibited throughout New York City and received recognition from some of the city's highest local officials and institutions; including Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Congressman Charles Rangel, and The Studio Museum in Harlem. More importantly, he has used his creative voice to support the efforts of organizations working to raise awareness about Downs Syndrome and the richness of the lives of persons living with it, like himself. Some of his outstanding accomplishments include a public art commission for the Harlem River Park Project, fundraising through the arts for Haitian earthquake victims, and four paintings in the permanent collection of the Pediatric Unit at New York's Mt. Sinai Hospital - an institution that saved his life.

On Saturday, May 14, 2016, New Harlem Besame Restaurant - owned by Haile's father, Bernardo Rubie - opens a new exhibition of the artist's latest works. The opening reception will also double as the 26th birthday celebration for Haile, whose special day is a robust tradition celebrated by his family and a lifetime community of friends who know him for his loving and creative spirit. While Haile's art has adorned the restaurant walls since its opening last year, this new installation marks a push in the family's efforts to expose, market, and sell the art. Limited Edition giclées of dozens of works are becoming available for sale, and a coffee-table book - featuring images of Haile's art and his triumphant story - is in production and expected out this Fall. The current exhibition will remain on view at Harlem Besame throughout 2016.

2016-05-12-1463068745-2549319-new5.jpg


New Harlem Besame Restaurant is a bustling family-owned establishment featuring traditional Latin, Caribbean, Soul Cuisine and cocktails. The restaurant realizes its passion for the arts, the neighborhood, and the diaspora through elements of décor including historic photographs, an impressive African Mahogany mural from Liberia (which tells the story of the African migration to America and back to Liberia), and the showcased works of local visual and performing artists. The reception is free to attend and begins at 3pm on Saturday, May 14th at New Harlem Besame, 2070 Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. Blvd., New York, NY 10027. RSVP recommended.

All images of Haile King-Rubie and his art appear courtesy of the Rubie family. Visit hailesimo.com for more information and to view additional art.




-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

The Undiscovered American Modernist

$
0
0
The Undiscovered American Modernist

Exhibition of Paintings by William Sanger
The Tides Institute and Museum of Art, Eastport, Maine
May 13 - June 12, 2016


It is axiomatic in the art world that most painters are ignored during their lives and forgotten after their deaths. William Sanger (1873-1961) fared better than many artists during his life because of his innate talent and after his death because of the notoriety of his wife, Margaret. While living, Sanger had several solo exhibitions in the 1920s and 1930s at such galleries as the Touchstone Gallery, the Brown-Robertson Studio and the Delphic Studio, all in New York City, along with exhibiting in numerous group shows in the city and around the country. His last solo show was in 1931.

Now, 55 years after his death, and 85 years after his last solo exhibition, William Sanger is the subject of a solo exhibition at the Tides Institute and Museum of Art in Eastport, Maine, a town that Sanger visited in the 1920s and the site of some of his most vibrant watercolors, including South End Bridge, now in the Brooklyn Museum and Unitarian Church, Eastport, Maine, exhibited at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1927, its location now unknown.

Several artists trekked to Eastport in the 1920s to paint. It is as far east as one can get in this country. When I was there last weekend dropping off a dozen paintings for the show, my IPhone automatically switched to Canada time. The steep rocky cliffs and swirling surf of the Maine coast downeast were the subject of most of Sanger's paintings. Sanger also ventured into New Brunswick, Canada to Grand Manan Island, where he painted the Gannet Rock Lighthouse several times, as well as the island's harbor.

Art historian Alexandra Anderson has contributed a critical essay for the exhibition catalogue, where she cites the influences of Albert Pinkham Ryder, Thomas Hart Benton, Marsden Hartley and John Marin on Sanger's paintings.

Sanger's palette consists of aquamarine, deep blue, grey, sharp white and russet earth tones. More than one critic commented that he was a master of leaving white spaces in his scenes. Sanger's seas are stormy, the skies are dark and threatening and the rocks unforgiving. There is, as Anderson says, a frenetic feeling and pulsating energy. There is turmoil, foreboding, a sinister feeling.

2016-05-13-1463155687-579807-Unknown.jpeg

The influence of El Greco is palpable. Sanger had gone to Spain in 1917 in the middle of the Great War (a not undangerous voyage) to see El Greco's works first hand. Sanger was a) German-born, b) too old for U.S. military service and c) would have refused to serve as a conscientious objector if drafted.

Sanger visited the 1913 Armory Show multiple times and decided to leave his architecture practice in New York and go to Paris to paint. He spent a year there, returning only when the outbreak of war, and his wife's arrest in New York for her birth control work, compelled him to return.

It is the incident following Margaret Sanger's arrest for publishing The Woman Rebel that William Sanger is best known for. Margaret went into exile rather than face trial. Anthony Comstock, the government's obscenity enforcer (birth control was obscene under the law) entrapped William into handing one of his wife's pamphlets to an undercover police officer. Comstock offered to drop the charges if he would reveal his wife's whereabouts. He gallantly refused, even though they were estranged and headed for divorce, went on trial and was sentenced to 30 days in prison after a trial as tumultuous as one of his later paintings of the Maine coast. The trial made headlines, and William Sanger became a hero to all who opposed government censorship of medical information and who supported a woman's right to choose when and whether to have children.

William Sanger was a radical and revolutionary at heart, a romantic, a fighter for his beliefs and a political philosopher (he was working on an illustrated biography of Thomas Paine at his death). He fought against injustice and poverty his whole life. He was an angry, agitated man. He endured the worst tragedy a parent can when his and Margaret's 5-year-old daughter Peggy died of pneumonia shortly after he was released from prison. He never forgave himself.

More than once he painted ships crashing onto rocks. The seas are menacing, reflecting, as his granddaughter Nora Hoppe says, his portentous view of the world. The sense of impending doom and tragedy envelope the viewer, as I think they enveloped William Sanger.

So why was William Sanger forgotten by the art world? Watercolors are undervalued in the art world. Even masters like John Marin are now largely ignored. Marin and Sanger's styles were overtaken by Abstract Expressionism. But Sanger's works are too powerful and visceral to be ignored.

As Alexandra Anderson says, he is an undiscovered American Modernist and overdue for rediscovery.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Mark Cohen's Arresting Work at Danziger Gallery With a Few Animals That Sizzle Spotted

$
0
0
2016-05-13-1463147866-2103137-mrssizzledanziger.jpg

2016-05-13-1463147882-2034437-marccohenmrs.sizzle.jpg

Working in the environs of his small town of Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, Mark Cohen shows that you don't have to travel far to unleash a distinctive photographic vision. Cohen got closer to his subjects and looked more closely at the texture of the world around him than anyone shooting on the street had before and went on to influence countless photographers and the way we see the world. The work is on view at the Danziger Gallery for a month starting on May 10th. Let us give you a preview of what opening night was like with photos from Rebecca Smeyne.

2016-05-13-1463147902-4374199-marccohenmrs1.sizzle.jpg

2016-05-13-1463147923-411877-mssizzlemarccohen.jpg

2016-05-13-1463147945-7018729-marccohenmrs2.sizzle.jpg

2016-05-13-1463148009-8533048-marccohenmrssizzle.jpg

2016-05-13-1463148032-6608983-MarkCohenDanziger05.jpg

2016-05-13-1463148063-6321829-gracecottingtondanzigergallerymrssizzle.jpg

2016-05-13-1463148087-9864555-markcohendanzigergallerymrssizzle.jpg

2016-05-13-1463148105-8303446-mrssizzledanzigergallerymarkcohen.jpg

2016-05-13-1463148127-1025031-mrssizzledazinggallerymarkcohen.jpg

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

First Nighter: Cheryl Stern's Shoes and Baggage Lively Clothes-Horse Confession

$
0
0
If you loved Love, Loss, and What I Wore, which opened off-Broadway in 2009 and is the Nora Ephron and Delia Ephron adaptation of Ilene Beckerman's book of the same title, you're likely to revel in Cheryl Stern's Shoes and Baggage, now at The Cell.

Even if you missed the Ephrons' long-running opus about women and their wardrobes but you're on to the fashion commitment many women share -- some even to fashion-victim status -- you very well might get a boot (a kinky boot?) out of Stern's show.

Yes, it's a show, but it's also a confession, and like many confessions, it's a compulsive confession. Stern, who refers to herself as "a working actress" (as opposed to a Broadway star), wants to come clean about a devotion to clothes that certainly qualifies her as a clothes horse but stretches spandexically beyond that to a clothes-aholic of the sort who might decide she'd better hie herself to Debtors Anonymous.

She's written the tell-all for herself, but it's hardly the first time she's shown up on stage -- as her long bio, which has to make her mother proud, attests. She's been on and off Broadway enough times not only to act with box office names but also to shop with them. When she was in the 2001 revival of The Women, Claire Booth Luce's jungle-red-clawed dramedy, she bonded with Jennifer Tilly, another inveterate credit-card wielder.

But listening to her tell it, as she prances up and down the all-white set that a clever (and uncredited) designer has imagined as a runway, she presents herself -- in monolog with songs (music by Tom Kochan) -- as not only someone who delights in whatever costumers create for her when she's behind the footlights but also, and perhaps even more importantly, what get-up she can sport to the opening night party.

Occasionally flashing back to childhood, she reports on apparel she's coveted and purchased over the years. She talks about spending money she may or may not have had on breathlessly desired dresses, coats, shoes and bags. Among other lists of acquisitions she's treated herself to at least three ( four?) Louis Vuitton bags.

And although she never refers to the above-mentioned Debtors Anonymous, what she comes around to saying about solo sprees or those she's shared with two longtime shopaholics whom she calls Rena and Karen increasingly sounds like a 12-step program qualification.

While remaining amusing throughout her 80-minute or so wardrobe jeremiad, she reaches a point where she's facing the opening of the Nine revival and eyes a pair of $900-plus stilettos she knows she can't afford. Should she or shouldn't she? After all, she's not Carrie Bradshaw with that seemingly bottomless Sex and the City bank account. How long can she continue to buy-buy-buy heedlessly?

The answer she unburdens won't be supplied here, but when she discloses the eventual fashion choices she made for the event, lighting/video designer Nathan W. Scheuer flashes a snapshot of her at the celebration on the two screens above the stage. She looks as piquant and happy as she can be.

Early on in the vigorous routine directed silkily by Joe Barros, Stern mentions returning home after a binge and hiding voluminous shopping bags so that her husband won't be on to her. She refers to the man more than once, making him sound like the most tolerant spouse a clothes-mad woman would be lucky to find. How does she do it? More to the point, how does this living male saint do it? And why? Any significant others attending the show will thank the heavens for not being in this groom's loafers.

When Stern is gabbing about coats, she brings up a butterscotch-colored mink. Tilly wanted it but settled for an $8,000 black mink she paid for but never claimed. That's not the last time Stern refers to it. So keep an eye peeled.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


Good Fortune

$
0
0
2016-05-13-1463147319-4078093-550pxMichel_de_Montaigne_1.jpg

Here is a saying found in a Chinese fortune cookie: "Your heavy desire, only allow you to see what you are looking for." Will the anonymous writer of this brilliant spiritual admonition please make his or her identity known? But what is the import? Is it what the recovery people are talking about when they ask "you know what you want, but do you know what you need?" Is it the concept of "limited objectives" that don't let us see the possible munificence and magnanimity of the world? Is it the idea that lies behind another saying, "when one door closes, another opens?" You are full of urges and they compel you to fulfill immediate desires instead of taking a longer view. Sometimes you can hold the urge at bay, but once you have crossed the Maginot Line, all hell breaks loose and there's no turning back. It's also the notion of Answered Prayers. "There are more tears shed over answered prayers than over unanswered ones," said Saint Teresa of Avila. "Watch out what you want for you may get it," is another homily that conveys a similar idea. Of course all these could easily qualify to be fortunes too, although to be effective your normal cookie cutter fortune has to have a D.I.Y. feeling--something which in the case of the fortune above is conveyed by a grammatical error, "Your heavy desire, only allows" is how it should read and the writer should have lost that initial comma, but when you make it read like one of the aphorisms of Montaigne, who also addresses these issues, you lose the charm. The problem is that once you get a fortune like this one, you rush to crack open the cookie in the next restaurant, only to be disappointed. The message coming to you was like one of those bottles that floats up to shore on the beach, carrying greetings from the denizens of another time. It's by definition impossible to recreate the feeling of serendipity. In your drive to satisfy the desire, you become as narrow casted as the person the fortune teller was addressing, in his or her initial missive.







Michel de Montaigne




{This was originally posted to The Screaming Pope, Francis Levy's blog of rants and reactions to contemporary politics, art and culture}

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Mohamed Diab's 'Clash' in Cannes: A Message About Humanity

$
0
0
2016-05-13-1463161824-8192136-13217065_1105285446159057_6067815250065644161_o.jpg

The cast and crew of Clash attend the film's world premiere in 'Un Certain Regard' in Cannes


Sometimes a film makes history even before it is screened.

Such is the case for Mohamed Diab's latest Clash ('Eshtebak'), the much-awaited follow up from the talented Egyptian filmmaker to his Cairo 678, a personal favorite. Clash opened 'Un Certain Regard' at this year's Festival de Cannes, marking the return of Egyptian cinema to the section, the first time since Yousry Nasrallah's After the Battle was screened there in 2012. That could be groundbreaking enough, but it's not all the film is achieving.

Most importantly, Clash bring to the forefront a concept, an idea that has haunted me since I glanced at the intro to Fawas A. Gerges' book titled ISIS, A History. There, on the front inside cover, the sentence, "... how ISIS emerged in the chaos of Iraq following the 2003 U.S. invasion, how the group was strengthened by the suppression of the Arab Spring..." It's a provocative and unsettling supposition.

Diab's film takes place entirely in the back of a police van, in the wake of then elected president Mohamed Morsi's ousting from power, in July of 2013. There, in the small enclosed quarters, Diab offers a microcosm of modern Egypt, with Muslim Brotherhood members sharing space with pro-military supporters; men, women and children. All there, all part of a new and chaotic Egypt, all in a caldron waiting to boil.

I usually don't write about films I have yet to watch but with Clash, I know that I'll end up being deeply disturbed but also perfectly illuminated by Diab's work. I can't remember the last time I've craved to watch a film this much and the reviews are only fueling that fire.

Luckily, I was able to reach out to the filmmaker and ask him a few questions to find out his thoughts on this wild ride, pardon the pun, from his previous film to now -- Clash in Cannes.

In your beautiful Variety guest piece after the Paris attacks, you described Clash this way: "The film unfolds inside a prisoners transport vehicle, carrying detainees from all walks of life -- activists, Islamists and military supporters. In the course of a hellish day, they are forced to see one another beyond the stereotypes and discover each other's humanity." Do you think cinema as a whole, but more specifically films from the Arab world can help us, at this difficult time, find a way out of the madness?

2016-05-13-1463163211-3746630-MohamedDiab.jpeg Mohamed Diab: In times of war, people see each other as black and white. You saw it after 9/11, you see it after every big city that is hit by terrorism, you saw it in countries that had civil wars, even between its citizens... It's black and white. It's me, I'm good and "the Other" is evil, I'm white he's black, and I think it's very hard to convince people, to talk reason to them, just in a conversations.

The best thing about film is it gives you a real time, you see the world through someone else's eyes and for the first time you can take a pause and really analyze the world in a very calm and fair way. So yes, films can help. By the way, everyone I knew around me advised me not to make this film right now because it would be so dangerous. Not only because one side is going to hate me but everyone is going to hate me. Egypt is so divided now that we don't only have two sides but so many sides and everyone of them wants to see the world and what happened through their eyes. We have a saying in Egypt now, "If you don't see things 100 percent like me, then you're a 100 percent against me."

Film can help because for a moment it can calm you down and show you the world through someone else's eyes. I made Clash now because the best time to make a film like this is when the fight is on, not after the battle is done.

Can cinema change the world?

Mohamed Diab: Definitely, it can change it -- one person at a time. I'm going to talk as a person, because ten years ago when I started writing films and making films, it changed me as a human being. I remember writing a story about a drug lord and I was so judgmental about the guy until I started writing him. Being him, changed me. I eventually made the film about whether it was really his choice to be this way or not... He asked that question, all through the film, his own existential question. As a person cinema changed me, I am way less judgmental and I can call myself more mature because of cinema, and I think every film you watch, it's not like just meeting a person, you get into their lives. Film can show you someone's life, from the beginning to the end.

With your previous film, you dealt with the sexual harassment women faced in Egypt, pre-Arab Spring. Now in Clash it's a new Egypt you deal with, and yet the common thread seems to be, in my humble opinion, that you are not making films about your country. Rather, they are films about humanity at large and how incredibly similar we all are. Can you talk a bit about that?

Mohamed Diab: I think it's normal that a filmmaker expresses himself and his personal experience. There are definitely universal values and I think they are in my films. Something like sexual harassment, you're going to find it everywhere and women are going to react the same in the same conditions as my heroines in my film but it's still very Egyptian because it's my experience in a way.

The same thing with Clash, it has Egyptian elements but also very broad elements to it, it could be set in the Ukraine or anywhere in the world where people face trouble or civil war. People can relate. Even disputes, like what is happening in America right now, the presidential elections, you can imagine the people who clashed at Trump's rallies, if they are stuck in one place together similar things could happen. Definitely I don't think there is a way a film can succeed universally unless it has the main universal values of everyone. It could be about a town in South Africa, or New York, you are never going to relate unless it has those universal values.

2016-05-13-1463163109-8513197-A064C006_151031_R0EZ.00569400.jpg

A still from Clash by Mohamed Diab


How does it feel to have made the opening film of 'Un Certain Regard' in Cannes this year?

Mohamed Diab: I was so proud, yet so stressed and it came the same day. I thought I would be more happy but I'm so stressed, it's my first time in Cannes. And there is the extra stress of not only the artistic side but the political side or how people are going to receive the film. It's my first experience and I can't wait for it to happen. It's the greatest feeling for any filmmaker in the world.

What do you hope audiences will take away from Clash?

Mohamed Diab: I think Clash is complicated, it's very hard to say that there is one thing that they can take away from the film. There is definitely the message about co-existence, there is the message about humanity, you don't know anyone until you are really close to them. Understanding people, motives, one of the most important thing in the film is the vicious cycle of violence, how it starts and how it never ends. If you keep feeding the vicious circle, it will never end, it's just going to continue. And I think the film explains that very well, the origins of violence and I think it's essential not only for Egyptians but for the whole world, because you can understand the roots of ISIS and extremists.

Do you think of yourself as a bridge across cultures

Mohamed Diab: I call myself a citizen of the world. I don't live in borders, I believe we're all the same. As a filmmaker, I'm trying to express that as much as I can. As I grow, this is the main message that I wish I could communicate, how we are all the same. Yes, there are different cultures, but the core of a human being is the same, the core of a society is the same.

I learned my English from movies and songs and the first time I was in the U.S. I was blown away. I was in love with the place just because of movies! And that's one of the reasons I love different cultures and I love film and I wish I could just express that in my films -- bring people together in a way, as much as I can.

We would never ask an American filmmaker if he feels like he's representing his whole country at a festival, yet the question can't be avoided in the case of a filmmaker like you, originally from Egypt. How does it feel?

Mohamed Diab: Do I represent the whole Egypt? If you'd asked me five years ago, I would have said, maybe, yes. But now Egypt is so divided I can't have the audacity to say that. I just represent myself and I represent everyone who thinks like me, and I try to be fair enough to represent every character from their own point of view, as much as I could. Maybe people will disagree with me, maybe people will agree with me, but I tried my best to be true to every single character. And every single one of them is expressing a portion of Egypt. I think seeing the film, you can see a wide spectrum of Egyptians, if not all Egyptians.

Top image courtesy of the Dubai International Film Festival, all other images courtesy of MAD Solutions, used with permission.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

There's a New Bright Star on Broadway and her Name is Tony-nominated Actress, Carmen Cusack

$
0
0
The first time Carmen Cusack knew she had the performing bug was when she was 5 years-old and singing at church. In fact, what first really motivated her was chocolate. When asked to sing "Amazing Grace," the very shy Cusack negotiated that she would do so if she could have first dibs from the preacher's box of chocolates.

But she soon discovered that the sweet motivator wasn't just candy. "They clapped and smiled," she recalls. "I knew I had something to do with that." She was further inspired after watching Calamity Jane on TV with Doris Day. Cusack longed to be her -- especially since Jane seemed so happy and free.

After majoring in opera at the University of North Texas, Cusack got a job singing and dancing on the MS Queen Elizabeth 2 which took her to England and transformed her career. She ultimately made her West End debut as Fantine in Les Miserables and appeared in the original West End productions of The Secret Garden and Personals. After living in London for over a decade she headed back to the States and earned raves playing eclectic parts like Elphaba in Wicked, Nellie Forbush in South Pacific and Dot and Marie in Sunday in the Park with George

And then came Bright Star, a heartfelt and soulful foot-stomping bluegrass musical from Steve Martin and Edie Brickell.

Three years ago she and her husband had moved to L.A. "I wasn't actively pursuing musical theater work. I was working on my own stuff and nesting for a bit," she explains. "But if I saw something that piqued my interest, I'd go after it hard." She did some fantastic readings and workshops, focusing almost exclusively on new material. "I really entered into one of the most rewarding creative periods of my life," adds Cusack. "Bright Star was the very first of those readings. I immediately knew that the role of Alice was one of those roles I would go after hard."

Mission accomplished. In 2013 she would play Alice, a southern literary magazine editor in Bright Star's workshop production at New York Stage and Film at Vassar. In fact, for 32 years, the nonprofit company has been devoted to helping artists develop new work for theater and film and many productions (think Hamilton, Humans, Doubt and more.) "It was crazy, living in these dorms in Vassar, but then going to rehearsal and there's Steve and Edie!," she recalls. "I had no expectation that they'd be present. But they've both been constantly at hand, and open to everyone's contribution. Without ego throughout. I love them."

And last week, Cusack, in her Broadway debut, was nominated for a Tony for Best Leading Actress in a Musical. The actress recounted her busy "roll your sleeves up, full of responsibility and reward" day. As the title song goes, "Bright Star, keep shinning for me. And one day I'll shine for you."

Carmen Cusack shared her busy day with NewYork.com. Get the full story here.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

One Man's Quest to Face His Fear Becomes Documentary and (Almost) Lands Him On Stage With U2

$
0
0
2016-05-13-1463157507-3595432-ScreenShot20160513at12.37.56PM.png


Fear. Is there any more daunting, more soul-draining, more life-destroying emotion than fear?

Millions of volumes of psychology books have been written on the human race's fascination with, and, most of the time, begrudging submission to, fear.

Fear keeps us from loving, from being happy, from truly experiencing life, and, of course, helps create mankind's most unifying nightmare (something the liquor companies know all too well) dancing while everyone's looking.

Why does fear haunt us so much? Because it prevents us, as indivduals, from being truly free. And, ultimately, it seems the desire to be free is the common quest that unites us all, as a species. A quest each of us end up pursuing in our own ways.

Vancouver-based, Patrick Stark's a successful, well-rounded creative director at a computer animation company with a wife and kids. By all accounts, he's had a normal childhood; loving parents, supportive siblings, etc. But there's one thing that's always haunted him his entire life. His fear of singing.

Not singing in the shower, or in his car. He's perfectly fine with that. It's when he's asked to sing in front of a group of people that his knees go weak and his stomach wants to send back the contents it may have accumulated that day. Thank God he's not a singer by trade, or he'd be in a bit of trouble.

However, unlike many sufferers of performance anxiety, Patrick is not one to let his fear get the best of him, so, about eight years ago, after a lifetime of what he believed to be an irrational phobia to singing, he began documenting his journey to overcome his fear by forcing himself to get up and sing, whenever, wherever he could.

But, for Patrick Stark, an open mic night in front of 20 people just wasn't quite a big enough leap. As scary as performing in even the tiniest of bars would be, and trust me, just talking about performing live sends him into a panic attack, he wanted to really put his fear to the test and come out with a bang. So, back in '09, Patrick decided to do it where anyone with a fear of singing would think of taking their first step: outside Vancouver's BC Place stadium. Uh, huh. And, why stop there? While you're at it, why keep it to just you and your guitar? Why not hire a band comprised of Vancouver's best session musicians and perform selections from your favorite band who just happened to be playing there that night? U2.

Patrick's quest to sing with U2 is the underlying theme in the film. And, believe it or not, it almost happened.

In 2011, two years after his debut, Patrick finally summoned up the courage to try again (In between, he had done another gig or two on the street, but his fear was so intense, it took him, and still takes, literally close to a year between performances to get his nerve up.). Of course, he had to outdo his first attempt, so he traveled to Seattle's Westlake Center, where U2 was again on tour, hired the Total Experience Gospel Choir and performed U2 songs on a stage off the back of a semi tractor trailer. But again, no love from the band.

Then fate intervenes. Fast forward to May, 2015, where, months before, he manages to secure a performance with Canadian band, Trooper, in front of over 7,000 fans, and, if that wasn't enough, who does Patrick wind up having dinner next to on this particular night? You guessed it.

A nervous but determined Patrick approached Bono and the boys and told them of the documentary he was filming, the premise behind it, and his dream of singing with them. Two seconds after the pitch, Bono says, "What are you doing Friday?" He was so intrigued by this guy's guts and determination, he actually invited a shell-shocked Patrick to sing with the band at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver - in front of about 20,000 people.

Backstage, the fear was overwhelming, but Patrick was determined to beat it and live out his dream. However, sadly, as he stood in the wings practicing his scales and doing his best to keep from fainting, fate intervened again. This time, dealing a cruel blow.

Just prior to the band taking the stage, Patrick got word that they would be doing a tribute to their good friend, blues legend B.B. King, who died the night before. Unfortunately for Patrick, his almost unthinkable, impromptu appearance was scrapped. That was just about a year ago to the day.

I asked Patrick if he thinks he'll ever get another shot to sing with his idols, to which, he replied, "I would love to, but that's not what this film's about."

"If you manage to summon the courage to climb Mt. Everest, how hard will it be to do anything beyond that? This is my Mt. Everest," he says.

I also asked if he had any idea where his paralyzing fear of performing came from, and he instantly replied "My siblings." Patrick was the third child out of four and, although he says his family was incredibly supportive, his brothers and sisters could be extremely critical of each other growing up. #shocker

Having enough objectivity to realize the thing holding you back from truly living life is one thing. Documenting it is another. But the subject of overcoming fear isn't just for regular folks. In fact, the argument can be made that the bigger the performer, the bigger the fear. Whether it's fear of not staying on top, fear of those around you, or even, paradoxically, fear of crowds.

Fear as the enemy, and, ironically, his unabashed lack of it when it comes to approaching established artists to appear in his film, is why Patrick has managed to snag interviews and conversations with a veritable who's who in the entertainment world; i.e., mega-producers Daniel Lanois and Steve Lillywhite, New Order's Peter Hook, the Queen of Rockabilly, Wanda Jackson, author of Necromancer William Gibson, even The Rolling Stones' longtime manager, Andrew Oldham, all make cameos in the upcoming documentary.

Patrick and his ever-growing production team plan on taking the soon-to-be-completed film to SXSW, Sundance, Tribeca, and other festivals in 2017.

Not bad for a guy who, a few years ago, couldn't be forced up on a stage if his life depended on it. Oh, and he's also deathly afraid of flying. #Sequel?

2016-05-13-1463157721-9851-olnrposter.jpg


One Life No Regrets - Trailer 3.1 from Regret Me Not Pictures Inc. on Vimeo.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Nate Dee Art

$
0
0
2016-05-13-1463151656-1105378-image.jpeg




I heard about Nate Dee from a friend, who insisted I check out his art. I am a lover of art, albeit an amateur in this new found love, but I can certainly appreciate the love and passion artists put into their creations. Nate Dee was open to answering a few questions, and his answers are quite interesting and enigmatic as his art portrays. Please enjoy the explorations of this guy's beautiful mind and artwork



Who are you and what do you do?

I am Nate Dee, I am an artist, painter, muralist hailing out of South Florida2


What is your background?

I was born and raised here in South Florida but my background is Haitian.

Does your background have an influence on your art? How so?

The colors I use are definitely a nod to my Haitian heritage. Color is a primary focus in traditional Haitian are. it is used boldly. The colors are rich and very vibrant. In my paintings I often use very bright colors.

What inspires your work, if possible describe a real life situation?

Culture, folklore, history, society, metaphysics, animals. A little bit of everything... for example my current "Masked" series explores the projection of certain character elements by the wearer of the given animal mask framed by a given cultural context.



What themes do you pursue?

Ideas of power and how its projected by women specifically.


Why art?

Art has been in my life since I was a child... I developed a relationship with it when my then baby sitter (who also illustrated for the local newspaper) would draw and work on projects as he watched us. I was transfixed as he would start out with a blank piece of paper and in a mater if 30 minutes create an entire two dimensional world. I wanted to be able to do the same. He saw my interest and let me doodle on my own piece of paper as he worked. it was then that my artistic journey started.

What is your dream project?


To be commissioned to do an official presidential portrait, I have my preferences but any president would do, lol

2016-05-13-1463151847-2815855-image.jpeg


Name other artists that you admire or have been an inspiration and why?

Being in Miami I'm surrounded by so many talented artist and count myself lucky to be friends with many who inspire me in so many ways. There is Trek6 & Ruben Ubiera.. not only are each skilled in his own right... but what i really take from them is their work ethic. These guys really "go hard in the paint". They are never not working.. which is key to success as an artist, no matter how talented you are you wont accomplish much if you are lazy.

I once had a conversation with Trek and he was telling me how he is open to work with any artist... even if they are not fully realized in there skill as long as they have a good work ethic. He doesn't respect any artist that doesn't have one... after being involved on different projects with many different artists.. I really understand what he means and why he feels that way.

Another friend is street artist EVOCA1 , his raw talent constantly inspires me.

and so many others.



What's the best piece of advice you have been given?

"Even If you hate a project, do it as if it was the only thing your talent will be judged by."



How did you find the strength to follow your passion for a living?

After graduating from undergrad, I started teaching art but I didn't create any art professionally let alone as a hobby for just over 5 years, when I went for a certification part of the course involved me making some artwork and I realized how much i missed it. Since then I never looked back. I realized at that time that there was a void in my life that i couldn't put my finger on until I started creating again.

What were the pivotal steps or choices you made that lead you to this point?

First pivotal decisions was to go to grad school. I met a Professor/ Artist named David Chang. Through his instruction a became an entirely new and much superior artist.

The second choice was to pursue an art career with full dedication and conviction.

I am a spiritual person so the third is to show God appreciation in everything that I do, so that my path towards my goal is blessed.

What do you think is responsible for your success?

Tireless Determination

Check out Nate's website. Link is below:
http://www.natedee.com/
Nate's Instagram:
http://instagram.com/miaminate


2016-05-13-1463152030-6445816-image.jpeg

2016-05-13-1463152241-2036341-image.jpeg

2016-05-13-1463152385-7759842-image.jpeg

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Ten Essential Picks for the Piatigorsky International Cello Festival, Los Angeles, May 13-21

$
0
0
2016-05-13-1463120035-8799125-Piatigorsky1197576.jpg



If you want to understand what the great cellist Gregor Piatigorsky was like as a man and a cellist, and most profoundly, as a musician, you'll have to read Terry King's book, Gregor Piatigorsky: The Life and Career of the Virtuoso Cellist. You can get an excellent idea of Piatigorsky from an interview with King published in Strings magazine earlier this year here.


You can also learn a lot about Piatigorsky and the role he played in shaping the 21st century cello world, at the Piatigorsky International Cello Festival taking place for 10 days, at Disney Hall and USC, beginning May 15. There will be concerts, workshops, seminars, displays of fine instruments, marketplaces and more cellists than you have ever seen in one place before. If you can't attend them all, the following ten picks, as they occur throughout the Festival, will give you an essential cello experience:


1. L.A. PHILHARMONIC: GABETTA PLAYS MARTINŮ Sunday, May 15 - 2:00 PM Walt Disney Concert Hall


2016-05-13-1463120079-1174737-SolGabetta.jpg

Argentine-French cellist Sol Gabetta has become one of the cello's world most important young musical forces, with her integrity and deep empathy with the music she plays, and her sublimely radiant technique. She has not crashed the North American market. Yet. She will play Martinů's First Cello Concerto with the Los Angeles Philharmonic.



2. GALA OPENING CONCERT AT USC Sunday, May 15 - 4:30 PM  USC's Bovard Auditorium


The Festival opens on its home campus, the University of Southern California, with a concert you cannot miss for the Italian cellist and composer Giovanni Sollima's unique improvising, and the cello head of UCLA's new Alpert Music School, Antonio Lysy's multimedia Te Amo Argentina.


3. QUINTET+: CALDER QUARTET & SOLLIMA + LEONARD + SAKURA Monday, May 16 - 6:30 PM USC's Alfred Newman Recital Hall


In a program calibrated by a madman or a fiend, the cello quintet called Sakura plays a Carmen Fantasy, Ron Leonard plays Barber and Boccherini, then Giovanni Sollima and the Calder Quartet will subvert. I hope.


2016-05-13-1463121334-5736429-LesserPhotographbyCarlinMa.jpg

4. QUINTET+: CALDER QUARTET & LYSY + LESSER + SAKURA Wednesday, May 18 - 6:30 PM  USC's Alfred Newman Recital Hall


The SAKURA cello quintet plays olde-tyme English madrigals, Laurence Lesser plays his illuminating version of Bach's immense and thorny C minor Solo Cello Suite, and the Calder  Quartet, this time with Antonio Lysy, play Onslow's often feverish and intense Quintet No. 15 in C major Op. 48; it's called The Bullet Quintet which is crazier than you think.


5. EVENING RECITAL: SOL GABETTA & DAVID GERINGAS Wednesday, May 18 - 8:00 PM USC's Bovard Auditorium


Sol Gabetta plays boudoir Chopin for openers then David Geringas illuminates the Eastern soul with Schnittke, Vasks, Šenderovas and Tchaikovsky.


6. IMPROVISATION WORKSHOP WITH GIOVANNI SOLLIMA Thursday, May 19 - 5:30 PM USC's Alice and Eleonore Schoenfeld Symphonic Hall


According to Evgeny Tonkha, the young cellist around town who runs the K17 series of private concerts, Giovanni Sollima has the kind of musical footprint that makes his own compositions and improvising as unique as his cello playing. And all of this is communicated with style and charisma. His improvisation workshop will be geared towards helping cellists express themselves more fluently through their instruments. This event is free. Seating is first-come, first-served.




2016-05-13-1463120057-1845628-SollimaGianMariaMussaar.jpg7. EVENING CONCERTO CONCERT: GERINGAS, QIN & WALLFISCH Thursday, May 19 - 8:00 PM
USC's Bovard Auditorium


An extraordinary trio of concertos by an extraordinary trio of cellists. Absolutely not to be missed. Backed by the USC Thornton Chamber Singers and Wind Ensemble, Raphael Wallfisch and Li-Wei Qin will play concertos by Jacques Ibert and Freddy Gulda, and David Geringas will play Sofia Gubaidulina's 40-minute long Canticle of the Sun for Cello, Chamber Choir and Percussion. 


8. REMEMBERING GREGOR PIATIGORSKY Saturday, May 21 - 6:30 PM USC's Alfred Newman Recital Hall


Four of Piatigorsky's outstanding former students--Laurence Lesser, Mischa Maisky, Jeffrey Solow, and Raphael Wallfisch--celebrate the career of their great teacher through film and a panel discussion, hosted by KUSC's perennially popular Gail Eichenthal. The spirit of Festival namesake Gregor Piatigorsky will be present not only in the recollections of his students, but also in images and the sound of his voice. This event is free. Seating is first-come, first-served.


2016-05-13-1463122309-4656723-JeanGuihenQueyras16.jpg

9. FOUR BAROQUE CONCERTOS WITH THE LOS ANGELES CHAMBER ORCHESTRA Saturday, MAY 21 at 8:00 PM USC's Bovard Auditorium


It will be Jean-Guihen Queyras in an obscure Giovanni Benedetto Platti concerto, Giovanni Sollima in somewhat more well-known Leonardo Leo and Boccherini concertos, then Colin Carr, Thomas Demenga and Queyras again in popular Vivaldi and CPE Bach. Crackling, competitive, cooing stuff. Not to be missed.


10. BEETHOVEN CLOSING GALA CONCERT Sunday, May 22 - 7:00 PM USC's Bovard Auditorium


The 2016 Piatigorsky International Cello Festival concludes with a Beethoven free-for-all, featuring Ronald Leonard, Laurence Lesser, Thomas Demenga, Colin Carr, Matt Haimovitz, Mischa Maisky, Andrew Shulman and Jean-Guihen Queyras, with pianists Bernadene Blaha and Jeffrey Kahane, in all of Beethoven's music for cello and piano. It's really most cellist's heart and soul, although they'll say Bach, and if you can stay the course you'll find out why yourself.



2016-05-13-1463120011-3166319-GPandKirshbaum.jpg

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

For Selene Wendt, Being a Curator Is About Making Meaning in and of the World

$
0
0
"The job of a curator is very much like that of an editor, in so far as an editor often works to tweak things, and to highlight the strengths of an artist. As a curator, I work to tie together various formal approaches to hopefully bring to the forefront a way of examining or seeing things anew, or even differently, in a body of work. Being a curator, to me, is about collaboration and dialogue and meaning making." So maintains Selene Wendt, Independent Curator and Founder of the Global Art Project, a professional platform for the communication, development and presentation of international contemporary art across geographical borders, based in Norway.

Wendt was born in Geneva to Norwegian parents and would be raised all over the world. After completing high school in New York she obtained her bachelor's degree from a small liberal arts college in Minnesota and went on to get a Master's degree in Art History from the University of Chicago. Despite writing a thesis on Edvard Munch and his contemporaries, Wendt, even from her graduate school days, was becoming more and more interested in contemporary art and in art from "the global South." After obtaining her various degrees and working for a short time in New York, Wendt decided to return to Norway where she remains today. For six years as the curator of the Henie Onstad Kunstsenter, Høvikodden, she was responsible for exhibition programming related to Norwegian and International Contemporary art. Following her time at the Henie Onstad Kunstsenter, she was Director and Chief Curator of the Stenersen Museum, Oslo. Beginning in 2013 she started working independently.

"Looking back at it now I realize that, of the many exhibitions that I curated at the museums where I worked, certain themes were emerging which I get to dedicate myself to full-time right now. One of these is working with strong female artists like Shirin Neshat, with whom I had the tremendous pleasure of working. I also became very interested in working with artists with strong socio-political awareness. The global south was always a recurring theme. These subjects are quite trendy now, but when I started out doing this kind of work, it was not nearly as trendy. In starting the Global Art Project, I wanted to work with different institutions in different parts of the world; I did not want to feel tied down to one institution."

I became aware of Selene Wendt's work when she curated an exhibition of contemporary Jamaica art, entitled "Jamaican Routes," for Punkt Ø /Galleri F 15, Jeløya, featuring a strong cadre of young Jamaican artists, including Camille Chedda, Andrea Chung, Marlon James, Leasho Johnson, Matthew McCarthy, Olivia McGilchrist, Oneika Russell, Ebony G. Patterson, Storm Saulter, Cosmo Whyte and Andre Woolery. While reading through the essay she wrote in the catalogue, it was easy for me to see that Wendt had an informed and sustained interest in Jamaican art and culture. For Wendt, the Jamaican art scene is quite vibrant and there is a particularly wonderful synergy between the visual arts and the music industry on the island. "Visual artists in Jamaica work on album covers, on music videos, and there is something going on between the visual artists and the musicians that is like a heartbeat. It was nice to bring aspects of that to Norway where the exhibition was very well received."

With her heavy emphasis on socio-political themes in the visual arts and her insistence that art is a window onto any given society, I wondered about the place of, say, pleasure, beauty and joy in art being produced in some of the troubled places that Wendt has ventured to as a curator in putting shows together. "You know, Jacqueline," she said to me, "that is a really solid question and maybe that was a question I, too, had when I did the exhibition "Beauty and Pleasure in South African Contemporary Art." For me, that exhibition provided an antidote for some of the heavy political issues often associated with contemporary art from South Africa. I think what happens with art from the global south is that joy, desire and beauty are there in the work, but they tend to reside alongside other urgent socio-political issues that tend to get more of the attention."

She continued, "If you look at the work of an artist like Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons, from Cuba but based these days in Boston, her work is at times really political but can also be incredibly personal and aesthetically quite beautiful. The same thing can be said of the work of artists Yinka Shonibare and Frances Goodman. Kay Hassan's "My Father's House" is simply breathtakingly beautiful. So I think artists from the global south are tackling and showcasing beauty in their work, but sometimes this gets overshadowed by other kinds of concerns and questions."

So what would Selene Wendt say to a young woman who wants to do the kind of work that she is doing? Be the kind of curator that she has become? "I think it is very important to have an art historical background as a base. That is a good foundation for any curator to have and will always put someone on firm ground. In addition to that, though, I would encourage anyone wanting to be a curator to take advantage of the many residencies that have sprung up for curators in recent times. Believe me, those residencies were not there when I was coming up and some of them are quite good! Another thing that I would advise a young curator, or someone who wants to be a curator, to guard against is the whole business of curators as art world stars. Curators should never, intentionally or otherwise, usurp the artist whose work they are showcasing."

Speaking directly to female artists Wendt was unequivocal that men remained favored in the art world and that it is difficult to understand and come to terms with the many injustices that female artists continue to face and field in the art world, especially given that there are so many female curators. What gives Wendt hope, though, is that more and more people are becoming aware of these injustices and thankfully, she maintains, more people are speaking up about it. She advises all artists, but particularly women artists, to get themselves ready for the art world by having a professional website, a CV, an artist statement, and high-resolution images of their work that can be accessed immediately. "Those things seem small, they may even seem inconsequential, but they are incredibly important. Doing that makes it that much easier for a curator to grasp your work." And then there is social media. "Artists should be making use of social media to help showcase their work," she said.

These days Selene Wendt is very focused on an exhibition she is working on in Brazil, "The Art of Storytelling", for the Museu de Arte Contemporanea, in Niterói. In this exhibition Wendt developed a book project with the Dulcineia Catadora artist/writers collective that directly engaged youth from the neighboring Morro do Palacio favela and gave them a rare opportunity for artistic and creative expression. These youths from the favela have produced works in the form of books made on or from recycled cardboard. "This work builds upon a longstanding interest I have in storytelling and it is wonderful to see youth who would look at but not approach the museum in their community now come into the museum. It is so wonderful that these youths from the favela can see themselves and their world in the art that they have helped co-create."

See a short clip of Selene Wendt's Brazil storytelling project here:


A arte de contar histórias from A Fábrika Cinematográfica on Vimeo.



Until next time.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


Jenny Oaks Baker: America's Violinist

$
0
0
2016-04-21-1461245142-1037344-Summercopy.jpg

2016-04-18-1461019116-4478235-08cc11_8218db174646488bbd4eb5db471cc464copy.jpg

PINBALL WIZARD (The Who) BY JENNY OAKS BAKER



When we listen to the music of Jenny Oaks Baker it reminds us of sunshine, fresh mown grass on a summers evening, the smell of a newborn baby and watching the sun set over the Gulf of Mexico. Her music suggests intellectual passion, coupled with tranquility.

Grammy Nominee Jenny Oaks Baker is one of America's most accomplished classical violinists. She's is known fondly as "America's Violinist," an expression that was actually coined by the Director of most of her videos- Danny Drysdale because he felt as if it fit her brand of being a violinist who performs music that everyone throughout America can enjoy, while trying to be a role model of family centered American living.

Her journey started young when she began playing violin at age 4. She made her solo orchestral debut at 8 years old, and subsequently won several competition awards in her youth. Her father, Elder Dallin Oaks is a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, past Justice of the Utah State Supreme Court and former President of Brigham Young University. Her mother June (nee Dixon) whom Jenny credits with being "very instrumental in my musical development," earned her Bachelor of Science degree at BYU and served for eight years (by Governor appointment) on the Utah Arts Council. She also served as a board member of the Utah Symphony Guild, and as co-chair of the Utah Symphony's Outreach program in the public schools.
Jenny was the youngest of six children.


2016-04-21-1461236595-3653825-Autumncopy.jpg

2016-04-19-1461078637-49919-08cc11_9b4facd01c1b485a9fee892225d9fa21copy.jpg


YESTERDAY by THE BEATLES performed by JENNY OAKS BAKER



A deeply religious person, we've known Jenny for a number of years, when she was living in Washington DC and playing in The National Symphony Orchestra. She's self-effacing about her profound talent, and always meets you with a huge smile that inevitably lights up the room when she enters. The music she plays conveys that smile admirably, adding passion and huge amounts of emotion, that is invariably transferred to the listener in every song she plays.

She earned her Bachelor's Degree in "Violin Performance" at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia. Curtis is a small music conservatory with a large impact. Its mission is to educate and train exceptionally gifted young musicians for careers as performing artists on the highest professional level. And that's exactly what they did with Jenny Oaks Baker.

Jenny then went on to earn her Master of Music Degree from the renowned Juilliard School in New York City, earning several prestigious awards along the way.

In 1998 Jenny released her first album On Wings of Song, with Shadow Mountain Records. Over the course of the next 18 years Jenny Oaks Baker released 13 more albums, selling over half a million copies, and collaborating with artists such as Lexi Walker, Alexandria Sharpe of Celtic Woman, Kurt Bestor and the former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. These albums have consistently charted on the National Billboard Charts, her album Then Sings My Soul garnering the No 1 spot for multiple weeks, and Jenny's Disney album, Wish Upon A Star earned her a GRAMMY NOMINATION in Pop Instrumental in the 54th Annual Grammy Awards.

2016-05-07-1462654179-5251468-RobinWilliams.jpg


2016-04-19-1461078941-2859624-08cc11_f4570771188e4bb3a1e02fe476594094copy.jpg


"IT'S A HARD KNOCK LIFE" PERFORMED BY JENNY OAKS BAKER



2016-04-21-1461245712-4861427-JennyLOGOcopy.jpg

In 2000, at age 25, Jenny Oaks Baker joined the National Symphony Orchestra in Washington DC as a first violinist. She performed there for seven years but resigned in 2007 in order to devote more time to her young family. Jenny is married to Matt Baker. They have four children, Laura, Hannah, Sarah and Matthew and live presently in Salt Lake City, Utah.

After leaving the NSO, Jenny embarked on a successful solo career. She has performed with the Pittsburgh Symphony, Jerusalem Symphony. Utah Symphony, The Mormon Tabernacle Choir as well as The National Symphony Orchestra under the direction of the late Marvin Hamlisch. Jenny has also performed as a soloist at Carnegie Hall, The Coolidge Auditorium at the Library of Congress, Strathmore Hall, The Kennedy Center and The Lincoln Center.

In 2014 Jenny launched the Jenny Oaks Baker YouTube Channel to enable more people throughout the world to experience the beauty and passion of her music performance. This channel features music videos such as her Amazing Grace with Condoleezza Rice accompanying her on piano, as well as other Inspirational, Classic rock, Film, Disney, Classical and Holiday favorites. This year Jenny launched her new video blogging YouTube channel- America's Violinist where she discusses the topics she is passionate about- faith, miracles, music, family, and motherhood.
All of her videos and video blogs, as well as her recordings, sheet music and tour dates can also be found on her website - WWW.JENNYOAKSBAKER.COM

On April 29th 2016 Jenny Oaks Baker released her latest album AWAKENING In Jenny's own words "I love all of my albums but Awakening is really special. It is my most spiritual, emotional and 2016-05-07-1462654482-8002943-Awakening_JennyOaksBaker_cdpage001.jpgepic album yet, and I think fans of my music will be thrilled with it. The album features soul-filling and uplifting arrangements of such hymns as "Nearer My God to Thee," "Abide with Me," "I Know That My Redeemer Lives," and Classical favorites such as "Ode to Joy," "Nessun Dorma" and "O Fortuna."
The album also features Condoleezza Rice joining me on Amazing Grace, GENTRI on Come Thou Font and Lexi Walker on The Prayer. Emmy-Award winning composer Kurt Bestor, whom I have been working with for over twenty years, produced and arranged the album, and I am so grateful for his lush and gorgeous writing. "
Kurt Bestor, Jenny's longtime producer, interjects. "Once again I am honored to produce this album for Jenny Oaks Baker. Probably more than any other collaboration we've done, Awakening pushed me to a deeper place emotionally and spiritually." To purchase a copy of Awakening please visit iTunes


2016-04-20-1461172938-7011546-Wintercopy.jpg



2016-04-19-1461079266-6878736-08cc11_669471982dfb41d2b007cbc1f6262596copy.jpg


"AMAZING GRACE."JENNY WITH CONDOLEEZZA RICE ON PIANO



In a series of recent interviews, we had with Jenny Oaks Baker, she had the opportunity to explain about her passion for performance, about her PATREON video sponsors, and how she manages to juggle her career while being the mom of 4 young children.

BD. How has your faith helped you in your career and family life?

J.O.B. My violin life and my family life are completely intertwined with my Faith. I have always known that Heavenly Father gave me a musical gift. I have seen how God has given me tremendous teachers and opportunities to develop my musical talents, and incredible ways to share them, especially when I am sharing them in a way that build's God's Kingdom. All my musical experiences have increased my faith and helped me to know that God knows me, loves me and knows and loves all of His children. I feel this love when I perform. Having to perform which can be scary at times, also has enabled me to truly rely on the Lord to get me through each stressful performance, and then see Him truly bless me.

BD. How do you juggle family and career?

J.O.B. I work hard. Really hard. I also try and prioritize- and I don't sweat the small stuff. I always make sure that my kids get their practicing done every day, but they may not always have their hair done when they get to school- in fact, one of my good friends recently told me that her daughter, who is best friends with my 11-year-old daughter Sarah, recently refused to allow her mother to do her hair, saying that she wanted to wear it "Sarah style". I also rely a lot on my husband. He is wonderfully supportive of my music, and my children's activities, and is always willing to help out with everything when he is not traveling away on business. And lastly, I rely on the Lord. I do all I can do, and He always makes up the difference. I am so grateful for the life I have been given!

BD. You've been playing violin since you were 4 years old. How do you keep it from becoming mundane or a chore?

J.O.B. I love performing! As long as I keep performing- especially great music, it never gets old. Sometimes I do get kind of tired of specific pieces, but then I just program other pieces on my shows. I feel blessed that I am able to continue to make new albums, singles and music videos which give me lots of new music to perform. I am also grateful that this music is uplifting and and seems to touch the hearts and souls of people throughout the world.

I do get sick of practicing however. I thought that when I graduated from Juilliard with my master's degree that I wouldn't have to practice as many hours moving forward. But then when my four children each turned three or four years old, I started them each on their own instruments. Since I still practice with them, the practicing has continued to take over my life. It is not fun, but it is worth it-especially when I see their talents becoming so well-developed.
My four children, Laura, Hannah, Sarah and Matthew, are all musical and often join me on stage. We perform together nowadays under the name, "Jenny Oaks Baker & Family Four." To watch a YouTube video of Jenny Oaks & Family Four visit http://youtu.be/ilmViIElTlU

BD. Making videos is very expensive. Tell us how your fans around the world can help defray some of the costs?

J.O.B. Yes my videos are very expensive to create. I belong to a crowdfunding company called Patreon. If my fans are interested, they can go to www.patreon.com/jennyoaksbaker?ty=h and become a patron. If you join Patreon, you automatically become a part of my fan club, "The Creators Circle", and will have access to all kinds of amazing new content, behind the scenes perks, and merchandise. Every little bit helps! Thank you so much for your support!

Thank You Jenny for talking to us today, and thank you for your wonderful music.

Jenny has produced over 25 videos during her career, and has published them on YouTube, capturing over 2,325,483 plays from fans around the world. For anyone who worries that classical music won't survive the modern world, fear not. What Jenny Oaks Baker breathes into the violin, "springs eternal."

2016-04-20-1461163741-8068652-Springcopy.jpg

2016-04-19-1461098753-1538784-08cc11_4e8af352fe2c46d081d275019cd88cc9.jpg


DING DONG MERRILY ON HIGH VIDEO BY JENNY OAKS BAKER



And while we're talking about great music, let us draw your attention to:

"SIR TIM RICE LAUNCHES NEW MUSICAL IN THE US"


2016-05-07-1462657753-9704308-TIMRICE.jpg


2016-05-03-1462308824-1612228-FHTEBanner2.jpg


2016-05-03-1462308127-268608-FHTEBanner.jpg

Sir Tim Rice's New Musical from London's West End
Buy Tickets Now
Alternatively, you can call the box office at 315 255 1785 or toll free at 1 800 457 8897

Performances will be from June 29 - July 20 2016
Merry-Go-Round Playhouse 6877 Eastlake Rd, Auburn. NY 13021

It's 1941 in Honolulu, Hawaii. The men of G Company are restless and disgruntled. One of their own, the rebellious but soulful Private Prewitt falls for escort club girl, Lorene and his platoon sergeant embarks on a dangerous affair of forbidden love with his commander's wife. As the infamous date approaches, the claustrophobic world of the four lovers and the desperation of the soldiers of G Company splinter amidst an escalating war.
Sir Tim Rice's new musical makes its US premiere in Auburn NY. Don't miss this epic, sweeping story of love, redemption and hope set against the backdrop of a beautiful but conflicted paradise.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Latin American Filmmakers Blossom Thanks To Tribeca Film Fund

$
0
0
This story originally ran in the print May 2016 issue of Latin Trends Magazine.

April showers may bring May flowers, but spring also brings the Tribeca Film Festival every year. Though the 2016 Tribeca Film Festival ended April 24, it planted a seed that will keep Latin American filmmakers flowering for years to come: A strong fifth year for the new era of the Tribeca Film Institute Latin America Media Arts Fund.

Since 2011, TFI has offered grants and guidance to promising filmmakers living and working in Central and South America. José Rodriguez, director of documentary programs at TFI, tells Latin Trends, "When I started in late 2010, the idea was to revamp the program entirely and to refashion it as an open-call fund." He adds that the team wanted to draw in filmmakers from across Latin America. Prior to that, the Latin America Fund existed in the form of two grants awarded to Mexican documentary projects exclusively. But those parameters greatly limited the fund's scope.

"We wanted look for those stories coming from those countries that show a new side what Latino culture is, to move away from the stereotypes," Rodriguez says. "We're not really that interested in stories about Mexican drug cartels or Brazilian stories about the favelas and how poor they are."
Rodriguez especially wants to steers away from depressing, predictable narratives and create a means for Latin American filmmakers to make "funny" and "heartwarming" documentaries with a "unique and refreshing perspective."

Take the film, "The Creator of Universes," a documentary by Mercedes Dominioni. The film centers on the director's 16-year-old brother, who was diagnosed with Asperger's, and the home movies he makes with his 96-year-old grandmother. Little by little, the boy begins to worry about his grandmother dying and starts to make home movies that explore his personal thoughts on death. Dominioni tells Latin Trends that a film like hers may be personal but it also reveals something of Uruguayan culture and tells a family story that is universally relatable.

2016-05-13-1463159018-5504880-ScreenShot20160513at1.02.58PM.png


Today the Latin America Fund assists over ten projects--in any stage of development--a year. This was the second year that it awarded grants to fictional, scripted films. The review process now is as follows: TFI receives applications from September to November. Applicants submit treatments, scripts, clips, and budget summary. TFI then spends the next two to three months screening and evaluating films before notifying the winners in February. Select grantees have the opportunity to come to New York during the film festival to meet with industry leaders.

When Rodriguez came to TFI and the fund was only open to documentaries, he says they received 70 submissions for the Latin America Fund. This year, there were around 230 submissions. According to Rodriguez, the growth has been organic.

"[My first year], I combed through every single [Latin American] production company, festival, post-production house that I could get my hands on and created a massive outreach list," he says. "In those earlier years when we didn't have much traction, I relief more on that list. Now, more and more, the list has been crystalized."

This year, for the first time ever, the Tribeca Film Festival showed a film that won a grant from the Latin America Fund. "The Charro of Toluquilla," directed by José Villalobos Romero, first screened at Tribeca on April 14. The documentary, which Rodriguez calls a "funny and incredible portrait piece," ­follows the journey of Jaime García--a Mariachi, a father, and an HIV-positive man. The film won the audience prize at the Guadalajara International Film Festival in March.

Rodriguez believes in the TFI Latin America Fund's mission because he thinks Tribeca has the power to introduce Latin America cinema to American audiences.

"What it comes down to is a different set of perspectives," Rodriguez says. "The creativity, the visual richness of their stories [is incomparable.]"

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Can the New SFMOMA Turn Tech-Bros Into Art Patrons?

$
0
0



Snøhetta expansion of the new SFMOMA. Photo: © Iwan Baan, courtesy SFMOMA.


Art + Tech: Strategies for the Digital Age at the #newSFMOMA



"I am the love child of people who love art and people who love tech," announces a sultry voice in my ear. This is how the new SFMOMA mobile app defines itself. Combining geolocating technology with immersive audio tours, the iOS app claims to represent "a new breed of museum app experience," and is one of the forward-looking methods through which San Francisco Museum of Modern Art is distinguishing its new identity, and inaugurating its new building. To anyone who has observed the changes occurring in the San Francisco Bay Area in the wake of the tech boom, the fact that SFMOMA is embracing a new core of digital engagement strategies as one of the primary identifying features in its re-launch should come as no surprise. Charles Schwab, the Chair of SFMOMA's Board of Trustees, announced it at the press preview as "a museum for the age of sharing."





The new SFMOMA, view from Yerba Buena Gardens. Photo: © Henrik Kam, courtesy SFMOMA..



SFMOMA, which re-opens to the public on May 14, 2016, has been closed for nearly three years. The museum didn't disappear entirely during this time; it went "On The Go," mounting exhibitions and staging events at other venues. Yet while the museum was undergoing the construction of a $305 million expansion, adding 100,000 square feet of gallery space to its building and a distinctive new entity to the San Francisco skyline, the city around it was undergoing massive changes, too. In 2013, the construction cranes over SFMOMA joined the multitude of others building up the downtown landscape with new luxury apartment buildings in a seismic socioeconomic and cultural shift already in process, as an influx of wealth from the burgeoning Silicon Valley-based tech industry threatened the vibrant mix and unique character of the city. San Francisco was becoming "Googlized, stripped of artists, minorities, and the non-rich," as one observer put it at the time.





Charles Ray, Sleeping woman, 2012, solid stainless steel, 35 1/2 x 44 1/2 x 50 in. Collection SFMOMA. © Charles Ray. Photo: courtesy Matthew Marks Gallery.



Personally, after spending a few years away from San Francisco, the transformation is startling--in appearance and in culture. Relentless development and gentrification has taken root all over the city. On my Uber ride over to SFMOMA's press preview I shared the car with two other passengers who never once looked up from their phones. How does one engage this new kind of audience?





German Art after 1960: The Fisher Collection exhibition at SFMOMA. Photo: © Iwan Baan, courtesy SFMOMA.



The new SFMOMA is optimistic it can reach out to a digital-driven public. "Digital tools can strengthen the connection between art and people," SFMOMA Director Neal Benezra stated, as he introduced the museum's digital program, which includes interactive media installed in various interpretive galleries and other displays. The centerpiece of the program is the app, which detects the viewer's location in the museum, triggering audio programming related to the artwork the viewer is standing next to, or simply identifying where the nearest bathroom is. (No human interaction necessary.) The technology allows for an audio tour experience that is seamless and immersive. Notable and unexpected voices guide the viewer through unique and personal takes of the museum: Avery Trufelman of the architecture radio program 99% Invisible leads a tour of the new architectural features of the building; high-wire walker Philippe Petit leads a tour encouraging the viewer to run through the museum; a German woman leads the viewer on an emotional journey through the galleries of Anselm Kiefer and Gerhard Richter. In addition, there are hundreds of individual recorded responses to the artwork on view, with commentary by artists, composers, comedians, and many others. "We saw that audio tours have this great potential," Erica Gangsei, head of SFMOMA's Interpretive Media department, explained to me, "it's like having your favorite podcast in your ear."





Jananne Al-Ani, Shadow Sites II (still), 2011, single-channel HD video projection, color, with sound, 8:38 min. Jointly owned by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. © Jananne Al-Ani. Photo: Adrian Warren.



Along with the complementary digital content and interpretation, new media art infuses many of SFMOMA's inaugural exhibitions, with video and screen-based works by Matthew Barney, Rivane Neuenschwander, and Owen Kydd among the painting, sculpture, and photography sections. The seventh floor of the new building contains the Media Arts galleries, where the museum demonstrates its longstanding dedication to time-based media, sound- and computer-based artwork with an exhibition, Film as Place, featuring an early video installation by Beryl Korot, a film by Jananne Al-Ani, and Julia Scher's Predictive Engineering (1993-2016), an installation of surveillance cameras and video feeds.





Laura Hyunjhee Kim at SFMOMA. Courtesy of the artist. Photo: Jenny Sharaf.



It was in Scher's surveillance installation where I encountered a group of local artists, documenting themselves interacting with the artwork. San Francisco-based new media artist Laura Hyunjhee Kim was wearing a wolf mask and making noises into a microphone connected to the surveillance installation, while Oakland-based artist and electronic musician Ricardo Saavedra recorded the proceedings along with San Francisco-based artists Jenny Sharaf and Cara Rose DeFabio. As Kim explained to me, the artists were invited to the museum's press preview day to "document something special and spontaneous at SFMOMA geared towards the social media audience."  As an artist whose practice is deeply involved in digital technology, and as a resident of San Francisco, Laura Hyunjhee Kim has first-hand experience with both sides of the tech boom in the Bay Area.  It is something that has prompted the closures of art spaces and the mass relocation of many artists out of the Bay Area, while also providing fodder and inspiration for her work. It provides a somewhat strange and isolating environment. "I sometimes do forget that I live in a socio-cultural tech bubble," she admits. While there have been detrimental effects to the local arts community due to the influx of tech capital, Kim has also seen how it has brought the remaining artists together and "fueled the arts community to be more creative and experimental utilizing alternative spaces."





Takeshi Murata, Monster Movie, 2005, single-channel video, color, with sound, 4 min. Collection SFMOMA. © Takeshi Murata. Photo: courtesy the artist and Ratio 3, San Francisco.



While artists keep their tenuous hold on the city, a wave of new commercial art spaces has accompanied the imminent re-opening of SFMOMA. As SFMOMA looks to the tech community as a source of new potential patrons and museum-goers, commercial galleries are also chasing tech-industry wealth: Gagosian and John Berggruen are opening new galleries adjacent to the museum; Pace recently opened up a gallery right in the heart of Silicon Valley's Palo Alto; and Minnesota Street Project aims to create a vital urban center of commercial galleries and studio space in the Dogpatch district. "In theory, more commercial art and spaces that sell art is great!" says Kim, "However, how many of the artists residing within the city benefit from this? It is not for everyone." A sustainable art ecology is an elusive but important goal in the Bay Area, one perhaps only achieved through the cooperation of people who love art, and people who love tech.





Roberts Family Gallery featuring Richard Serra's Sequence (2006) at SFMOMA. Photo: © Henrik Kam, courtesy SFMOMA.



--Natalie Hegert



 




-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

The Gugulethu Project: From the Townships of South Africa to the World's Ballet Stages

$
0
0
2016-05-14-1463189308-918051-Mdabeniphoto.jpeg

Mbulelo Ndabeni, founder of London-based N'da Dance Company


The growing number of empty seats at New York's Metropolitan Opera had a panel of opera critics agonizing over strategies to bolster audiences in a recent issue of The New York Times.

Ballet companies face the same patronage predicament. They, too, are reaching out to millennial audiences with high-tech productions and sci-fi story ballets, nurturing hip young choreographers. And they are grappling with the same question that tenor Russell Thomas brought to the opera debate: "Why aren't the stages representative of the communities in which they are located?"

The traditional mold of a uniformly pale and willowy classical ballet ensemble is gradually being broken, not just by the vanguard Dance Theatre of Harlem and Ballet Black, but by companies like Ballet Memphis, Rambert Dance, and Birmingham Royal Ballet. Misty Copeland's leap into American mainstream consciousness has lit a rocket under ticket sales, inspired the creation of a Barbie doll in her image, and prompted at least one television announcer to admire the "Misty Copeland-esque moves" of a leading wide receiver in college football. Copeland's advocacy, her travels to Kenya to work with young dance students, her mentorship role in Project Plié, American Ballet Theatre's program to nurture young dance students of color, have all spotlighted for the broad public what was once a concern debated in relatively small circles: why aren't there more black ballet dancers?

2016-05-14-1463189338-4296476-photoKeelanZama1.jpg

2016-05-14-1463189387-672391-photoKeelanZama2.jpg
Keelan Whitmore with students at Zama Dance School (Photo: Andrew Warth)


Today, with more training opportunities available to talented young black students, filling the pipeline for these programs remains a challenge. How do you spot talent and recruit students when they may have no idea what ballet is? Unlike sport, which has long saturated mass media, ballet is still trying to shed its elitist reputation as the art form of kings who, pre-French Revolution, codified its vocabulary and used it to instill courtly manners.

Among the handful who are on a mission to diversify ballet's stages, one remarkable teacher zeroes in on that codification as a boon: "Ballet is an international language - you can take ballet class anywhere and we are already united in our language," contends Kristine Elliott, former American Ballet Theatre soloist who has traveled to South Africa for the past 12 years to teach in the townships around Cape Town and Johannesburg. Several of the young students she has mentored have gone on to make extraordinary lives for themselves, both in South Africa and outside the country - chalking up more wins for diversity on ballet stages, and lifting themselves and their families out of poverty.

The indefatigable Elliott - who once performed on world stages with Rudolf Nureyev and Mikhail Baryshnikov, and whose leading roles include a memorable Giselle with Kevin McKenzie (now artistic director of American Ballet Theatre) - created and ran the ballet program at Stanford University before founding the Gugulethu Project, in partnership with local dance schools in South Africa.

The Gugulethu Project (film by Ben Pierce):


On her first trip to the country in 2004, Elliott taught for a program called Dance For All, which serves underprivileged youth in the South African townships, as well as for the University of Cape Town's School of Dance and the associated Cape Town City Ballet Company.

On that trip, I witnessed firsthand how classical ballet training can bring about social change in a country where widespread poverty, violence and crime still pose serious threats to children and teens. The principles inherent in the study of ballet, including self-discipline, perseverance, respect for the self and the integrity of the body, are all transferable into the daily lives of the students who are fortunate enough to be involved in such training. - Kristine Elliott


Elliott has since returned annually from her home base in northern California. Her Gugulethu Project sends talented South African students to study in the U.S. and brings American choreographers, teachers, and dancers to teach in South Africa. "This is not just a mission to train young dancers - it's an exchange, a sharing of traditions. I teach, but I learn a great deal, too, from this project," says Elliott.

She understands how arts education has been integral to the healing of South Africa post-apartheid. In addition to giving people a way of working through trauma, immersion in the arts has given impoverished children a way to imagine a better future. It has equipped them with life skills, and helped to direct them away from destructive behavior.

With an assist from the Gugulethu Project, a handful of youngsters with innate talent and tenacity have broadened their horizons and forged fulfilling career paths.

Seeing them succeed and, in many cases, return to their communities to act as mentors for the next generation of youngsters, has been an inspirational learning process, and one that I look forward to continuing. - Kristine Elliott


2016-05-14-1463189572-1535026-FullSizeRender10.jpg

Keelan Whitmore with student Kholekile Biyongo (Photo: Robin Elam-Rye, Betalife Productions


Mbulelo Ndabeni danced in Matthew Bourne's Swan Lake, was a member of the Rambert Dance Company in London, and now spearheads his own troupe in London, N'da Dance Company.

Nathan Bartman, working closely with choreographer Jose Agudo, is now dancing in Birmingham, England, with ACE Dance Company.

Aviwe November, freelance dancer and choreographer in Cape Town, has worked at Donroy Independent films.

Xola Putye, principal dancer with Cape Town City Ballet, was the first black South African dancer to perform the role of Prince Siegfried in Swan Lake.

Byron Klassen, performs around the world and in South Africa with the Garage Dance Ensemble.

Bathembu Myira took 1st place in South Africa's So You Think You Can Dance and toured with The Lion King in Hamburg. He returned to South Africa in 2015 to open a dance and music school called eYona for children in Khayelitsha.

Noluyanda Mqulwana is a singer and dancer. She has performed in The Lion King in Singapore and Hamburg, and is currently in a production of West Side Story in Salzburg.

Zandile Constable dances at DANCE Factory and with Bovim Ballet in South Africa.

Mbulelo Jonas is a freelance dancer in Cape Town and a member of the Cape Dance Company.

Nqaba Mafilika, placed among the top 10 in South Africa's So You Think You Can Dance, and now teaches dance to children in Khayelitsha, the community where he grew up in Cape Town.

Thandumzi Moyakhe danced with South African Ballet Theatre in Johannesburg, among other companies, and was a founding member of Mzansi Productions before his untimely death in a car accident at the age of 24.

Among those who have traveled to South Africa to share their talents through the Gugulethu Project are the choreographer Darrell Grand Moultrie, San Francisco Ballet dancer Sarah Van Patten, An American In Paris star Garen Scribner, and Alonzo King LINES Ballet dancers Keelan Whitmore and Caroline Rocher. Both Richard Gibson and Amy Seiwert created ballets especially for the South African dancers to perform back in South Africa. American schools that have offered Gugulethu students scholarships include the Academy of Ballet and LINES Ballet School in San Francisco, Zohar School of Dance in Palo Alto, Kaatsbaan International Dance Center in New York, and the Alvin Ailey School in New York, while Stanford University created a residency in 2009 for four South African dance students.

2016-05-14-1463189417-2196367-photoKristine.jpg

Sarah Van Patten (l), Keelan Whitmore, and Kristine Elliott (r) with students at the Zama Dance School (Photo: Andrew Warth)


Each year the project's net has widened as more seek to be involved. Currently, Elliott is providing assistance for Bathembu Myira's new dance program in Khayelitsha. She is also helping to support one of the country's finest ballet teachers, who works in an area of extreme poverty, deep in the hinterlands. And as a faculty member in the LEAP (Liberal Education for Arts Professionals) program of St Mary's College, she is organizing next year's course that will bring a new set of dancers to teach in the townships, at partner schools. This year they include Zama Dance School in the township of Gugulethu, Dancescape in the township of Zolani, Cape Academy of Performing Arts (CAPA) in Cape Town, and the South African Education and Environment Project (SAEP) in the township of Philippi.

Kristine Elliott's journey through the dance world has been an uncommon one indeed, and she has brought many along with her on this joyous and rewarding ride.

A LEAP class at the Cape Academy of Performing Arts:



A children's class at the Zama Dance School in Gugulethu (filmed by Andrew Warth):

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

'To Be or Not to Be, I There's the Point.' Or Conversations Overheard!!

$
0
0
2016-05-13-1463160262-840471-British_library_london300px.jpgDo you ever do that? Deliberately put yourself in line of hearing other people's conversations? My wife and I are terrible offenders, if indeed it is an offence. We know intuitively when there is a situation, a possibility, to observe and hear life and people unedited, which can yield such fascinating results. Let me relate an experience we had recently.

We were visiting a place that we did not know at all, the new British Library near Saint Pancras Station in north London. (It was new to us because it opened in the '90s just as we were leaving for the States.) A real treasure, the Library doesn't look anything like a gem when you first see it, more like one of those Soviet mausoleums that we used to see on TV as the backdrop for May Day marches. But don't be off put by its appearance because there is beauty here, which validates architect Colin St John Wilson's assertion that "the meaning lies in its use." He has produced a building that really works internally.

2016-05-13-1463160298-9952822-View_of_the_Kings_Library_British_Library300px.jpgYou enter and there is space. Tons of it. Very high ceilings and this monumental six-story bronze and glass tower that confronts you the moment you try and get your bearings. It contains the King's Library, 65,000 books acquired by King George III and later given to his son the Prince Regent later to become George IV. It is magnificent and the signature image for the whole building. Today the Library is the biggest in the world, which surprised me to discover as the Americans always make that claim for everything ever built. The collection includes the Magna Carta, (which I must say is a pretty untidy piece of work for something of such historic importance) along with the Papal Bull that annulled it almost instantly. The latter is a much better produced document although less democratic for sure (they just had more stylish scribes in Rome at that time.) There's Nelson Mandela's trial speech; Da Vinci's Notebook; the original Penny Black postage stamp of 1840 which you can just pull out of a wall for a really close up view; Jane Austen's writing table with a prim and proper copy of Persuasion in her own very neat hand contrasted with Ian Fleming's The Living Daylights the handwriting of which is perfectly dreadful. 2016-05-13-1463160368-2480090-Tyndale_Bible__Gospel_of_Johncopy300px.jpgAnd for me that great example of courage and tragedy, Tyndale's Bible (in photo right), which led him to be tried and then burnt at the stake during the reign of Henry VIII for heresy, his offence being to translate the Bible from Latin into English, which obviously offended the Church's regime of "authority, miracles and mystery," just as Dostoyevsky's Grand Inquisitor would have said.

And I am only just skimming the surface of what the Library has on offer. It is heaven for the scholar and it is a paradise for every thinking living human being curious about our world and our great heritage. And it's all free.........

So forgive the circuitous introduction, but it is relevant because on the day we visited the Library, there were streams and hordes of school kids being given every chance to develop their intellectual capacity and understanding of the world. And it was the kids' response to the place that suddenly captured our intense interest.



The encounter happened in front of a large glass case. We found ourselves looking at an ancient and most beautifully illuminated version of the Quran displayed in its own case and open to a particular page. A group of children aged about 8 years old came over with their teacher to take a look and she asked them in a squeaky high voice:

"So who knows what this is?"
"It is the Quran," said a young boy of medium height wearing a heavy coat.
"And how do you know that?"
"Because I read it every day."
At which point this particularly stupid teacher (that was my immediate assessment at least) just sort of walked off, leaving this boy with two of his friends.
His friends said, "Why do you want to be a Muslim then?"
"I am a Muslim" said in the most dignified and quiet way.
"But your religion is sick," and they said this almost by rote, certainly unthinkingly. It was a default comment and it was not meant to cause harm.
"But I am a Muslim."
"Sick, sick, sick," they said as they wandered off trying to find their teacher, I imagine, leaving this very brave, noble young soul looking at the Quran.

What came into our view almost immediately then was a group of eighth graders, all young men of colour who had just come from the audio section and were singing of all things, the "Hallelujah Chorus" from Handel's Messiah. They weren't sending it up; in fact they were singing it with gusto, with good intonation and with some delight. They found their teacher, a bright, youthful 40-something dressed in a kaftan who was obviously taking great delight in his students' rendition. It was all so accepting, so understanding, seeing the beauty in Handel whilst at the same time experiencing the beauty in the Muslim faith because they too looked with some interest at the illuminated Quran. This inspired a spousal discussion about the power of teachers to influence and provide messaging, but the message to us was without doubt heartening and hopeful.

2016-05-13-1463160439-8067655-To_be_or_not_to_be_Q1300px.jpgThen we wandered into "Shakespeare in 10 Acts", commemorating the 400th anniversary of the Bard's death with an exhibition celebrating his enormous influence. It was fascinating. Among the highlights, we saw some sketches, in what is purported to be Will's own hand, of a play that came to nothing based on the life of Sir Thomas More. Also the Folio from 1623 of his complete works, produced seven years after his death and at great expense by his close friends including Ben Jonson. We are in their debt as they preserved virtually everything that now sustains our experience of Shakespeare. Best of all, there was the original Quarto (a kind of cheap paper-back version of some of the plays) from 1603. It was open to what was apparently Shakespeare's first go at Hamlet. So just try this for truly terrible writing:

To be, or not to be, I there's the point,
To Die, to sleepe, is that all? I all:
No, to sleepe, to dreame, I mary there it goes,
For in that dreame of death, when wee awake,
And borne before an euerlasting Iudge,
From whence no passenger euer retur'nd,
The vndiscouered country, at whose sight
The happy smile, and the accursed damn'd.
But for this, the ioyfull hope of this,
Whol'd beare the scornes and flattery of the world,
Scorned by the right rich, the rich curssed of the poore?
The widow being oppressed, the orphan wrong'd,
The taste of hunger, or a tirants raigne,
And thousand more calamities besides,
To grunt and sweate vnder this weary life,
When that he may his full Quietus make,
With a bare bodkin, who would this indure,
But for a hope of something after death?
Which pusles the braine, and doth confound the sence,
Which makes vs rather beare those euilles we haue,
Than flie to others that we know not of.
I that, O this conscience makes cowardes of vs all,
Lady in thy orizons, be all my sinnes remembred.

2016-05-13-1463161158-8922254-William_Shakespeare_1609copy250px.jpgIt's so terrible because we know how good it was to become. Maybe, just maybe, we should not have been overhearing him as he tried to get this one just right.

It made me wonder what Will would have made of our contemporary maelstrom, our ability to be tolerant and, in turn, murderous of ideas and peoples, our sense of beauty and reverence for our culture contrasted with our promotion of extremism and destruction for other cultures. His intuitive analysis of the human psyche would perhaps have recognized a few more contradictions and paradoxes over the last 400 years. And if he were with us now might have inspired another great tragedy or perhaps even a comedy.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Viewing all 14859 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>