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The Global Search for Education: Play it Again Spirio

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Play it Again Spirio




Many experts say it could be as soon as 30 years when machines will be capable of doing almost any job that a human can.

Globally honored musician Leonard Cohen once wrote, "Music is the emotional life of most people." Music is a universal language; the poetry of the soul. We experience this when we listen to a live concert pianist's fingers glide over the 88 keys of a Steinway piano; when we see their body movements; their feet placing the perfect pressure on the peddles at a precise moment in time. Somehow, the feeling and sentiment of one rendition of Rhapsody in Blue is never quite the same as another. But what if it wasn't a live human producing the performance? What if the poetry of the soul was read back by something without a soul - the piano itself?

Enter Spirio, by Steinway and Sons. Making unparalleled advancements in the player-piano experience, Steinway & Sons Spirio may be proving that the future is closer than we ever expected. The possibility of a personal concert available now! From pianissimo to fortissimo, from the smallest brush of the foot pedals, no note or sound or nuance goes uncaptured by Spirio's technology. The Spirio is a player-piano that is already competing with the most accurate productions of your favorite live performances - with only the touch of your iPad. So - just imagine where this monumental leap in technology might take us next. One day will we be able to teach computers to play the piano on their own? Will the great interpretations of Beethoven, Liszt, Bach, Mozart, and Mahler be performed by machines? In my interview which follows, Michael Sweeney, CEO of Steinway & Sons, discusses the specific capabilities of the Steinway and Sons robot pianist, Spirio, and shares his perspective on what Spirio and future versions of Spirio might mean for professional piano players. Is the concert pianist another job that can be automated and substituted by artificial intelligence, or will it work with talented pianists and change the way they as creators, and we as listeners, interact with music? This is something I suspect we will learn more about as time goes by....

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"For the first time ever, pianists can hear their performance played back note-for-note on an acoustic instrument, with all of the color and nuance of the original performance." -- Michael Sweeney




Michael: What is the Spirio difference?

The Steinway Spirio is a new high-resolution player piano that provides an unrivaled musical experience, indistinguishable from a live performance. Utilizing proprietary software along with solenoids (a current-carrying coil of wire), Steinway Spirio brings the piano to life with the world's greatest music, independent of the listener's playing ability, with just the touch of an iPad.

How have you captured the real nuance of human performance?

While many earlier player piano systems rely on midi data files (compressed, low-resolution data files) and others rely on even lower resolution files for playback, Steinway & Sons is recording at the highest resolution possible, and has created a proprietary data file format that captures the nuances and full range of emotion from each artist's performance.

This superior level of playback is made possible through high-resolution recording technology that allows Steinway Spirio to capture smaller increments of velocity on both the hammers and proportional pedaling; to be precise, 1020 different note velocities and 256 pedal positions. The fact that the recordings are recorded and played on a Steinway & Sons piano exponentially increases the differences in performance quality when compared to existing products.

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"Imagine Lang Lang performing a duet with a great pianist from another era, such as Vladimir Horowitz." -- Michael Sweeney




What does Spirio mean for Lang Lang? Will Spirio be filling in for Lang Lang at the Royal Albert Hall anytime soon?

Steinway & Sons' commitment to artists is unshakable. We are toolmakers to passionate artists--professional as well as amateur--and we would never attempt to usurp the role of the artist.

The ever-expanding music catalogue that is being recorded for Spirio features Steinway Artists exclusively, so pianists such as Lang Lang are an integral part of this initiative. We've found that artists have really embraced the technology and are eager to record for Spirio. Besides having their music heard by a wider audience, for the first time ever, pianists can hear their performance played back note-for-note on an acoustic instrument, with all of the color and nuance of the original performance. Because of this ability, artists are using Spirio as a tool to refine their performances.

Additionally, Spirio presents a new world of possibilities for artists to explore. Imagine Lang Lang performing at Carnegie Hall, but you live in Dallas and can't make it to New York. With Spirio there is the potential for the concert to be live-streamed into your living room. Or we can also imagine Lang Lang performing a duet with a great pianist from another era, such as Vladimir Horowitz. Far from replacing artists, Spirio gives them opportunities to reach new audiences and express their artistry in exciting and creative ways.

Where will players like Spirio go next? Tell us how you see this technology evolving and improving 5 years or even 10 years from now?

For over 160 years, Steinway has been a company that is constantly innovating, so we're already thinking of how Spirio might evolve over time. This could include live-streaming of performances into one's living room, or recording capabilities so that you can capture special musical moments at home. It's exciting to think of all the possibilities and where this technology can lead us.

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"We're already thinking of how Spirio might evolve over time. This could include live-streaming of performances into one's living room, or recording capabilities so that you can capture special musical moments at home. It's exciting to think of all the possibilities and where this technology can lead us." -- Michael Sweeney




How did you prioritize the repertoire for Spirio? What are your personal favorites from Spirio's catalog?

Before Steinway launched Spirio, we wanted to make sure that the music catalog was diverse enough to appeal to a wide range of individual tastes and occasions. The Spirio catalog offers everything from jazz to classical, pop to the American songbook, so listeners can find just the right music for any moment, whether it's a cocktail party with friends or a quiet Sunday morning reading the newspaper.

It's hard for me to select my favorite music from the Spirio catalog, but lately I've been listening to "Still Shining" by Robert Glasper. It's a dramatic score that was inspired by a piano that the visual artist Mark Bradford created as part of the Steinway Commission project. The physical treatment of the piano and Glasper's music come together to tell a story of personal challenge and outrage, that ultimately resolves with a sense of hopefulness. It's a moving piece and one that I keep exploring over and over.

I have also very much enjoyed our first performance by Lee Musiker, who spent 12 years as Music Director for Tony Bennett. Lee's rendition of "I Love a Piano" has all of the virtuosity and creativity for which Lee is known in the music community. I am looking forward to offering more of Lee's work to our customers very soon.

(All Photos are courtesy of Steinway & Sons and CMRubinWorld)

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C. M. Rubin with Michael Sweeney





C. M. Rubin is the author of two widely read online series for which she received a 2011 Upton Sinclair award, "The Global Search for Education" and "How Will We Read?" She is also the author of three bestselling books, including The Real Alice in Wonderland, is the publisher of CMRubinWorld, and is a Disruptor Foundation Fellow.

-- 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.


DanzAbierta in the Joyce Theater's Cuba Festival

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Photo courtesy Casey Stoll/Copperbridge Foundation


There's a great dance piece hidden within DanzAbierta's Showroom but Susana Pous's choreography was overloaded with extraneous and repetitious ideas. There was some fine dancing with great energy and goodwill from the performers but ultimately it was not enough to sustain the hour-long show. The central theme is a simple metaphor: there's a flashy Tropicana-style floor show taking place onstage while there's a completely different reality backstage, just like in real life. The stage was effectively represented by a rolling proscenium that rotated to change the audience's perspective. Turned sideways, the floor show happened on one side of the stage while the backstage shenanigans were being depicted on the other side. During the performance the mobile proscenium was moved into just about every position you can think of until the concept was fairly exhausted.

The show opened with the six dancers, clad in skin toned underwear, moving in slow motion toward their costumes which were scattered across the floor. They gradually donned pieces of their ruffled white costumes, getting ready to do a show. The costumes went on and off with regularity, most often being taken off "backstage". Once they were all dressed, the floor show started and we quickly learned that it was a sham. They let their performance faces slip to show us that they were only pretending to enjoy what they were doing. It seems to me that there is a downside to letting that performance face falter. The reason I say that is that it is no longer possible to engage the audience with that "onstage" portion of the show because it is all understood to be false. The real show is only happening backstage. It would have been okay if they hadn't kept returning to the floor show and subjecting us to a relentless onslaught of transparently fake smiles that eventually became fatiguing. It would have been more effective to have just Mailyn Castillo, the female lead, betray a false face showing cracks in the façade while the rest of the dancers maintained the fiction of the show.

Unsurprisingly, backstage life turned out to be fairly lurid. It started out with two of the women fighting while the men looked on and then two of the men fought. Then it became all about sex and every combination of girl-girl, boy-boy, girl-girl-boy, etc. was run through until it seemed like everyone had had sex with everyone else at least once and possibly twice. It was simply too much carrying on no matter how attractive you found the chiseled physiques of these fine Cuban dancers. It would have helped the piece to focus on just a couple of the pairings and let them have more narrative definition. By letting them develop, the audience would have more time to invest in their stories. Instead it was jumbled as they randomly paired up and split up, put on and stripped off costumes and kept up a frenzied pace.

There were some powerful moments depicting a performer's essential loneliness. There was a striking visual moment when Castillo segued into a fantasy in which she was dancing atop a Carnaval float. She was ecstatically happy until it was revealed as imaginary and then her despair was palpable. As a work of choreography there were other issues. It appeared that not all of the steps were choreographed and that left a number of the in between steps orphaned. For example, it hampered the effectiveness of a duet which I was enjoying very much. It was happening "backstage" while the floor show was going on and the two dancers were moving together very well. They came out of one interesting lift and then suddenly moved into something else without a clear idea of what steps they were doing and no effective transition. It was visually jarring. Leaving things like that to chance is a mistake because it breaks the illusion of continuity. It happened frequently throughout the show and I came to believe that it was a case of simply not finishing the work.

Given just one show in the Joyce Theater's mini Cuban Dance Festival, DanzAbierta got sold short. It seemed that Ms. Pous stretched her Showroom into an evening length piece when the central idea really only supports about twenty minutes worth of dance. I would like to see some different repertory from this company of strong and engaging performers as I believe they are capable of much more.

-- 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 Takes Long Journey to Healing

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Hiding in Plain Sight courtesy of the artist 2016

TERRIBLE BEAUTY: under the canopy

It was one of those warm, humid Midwestern days made slightly more tolerable by the light afternoon breeze. I was making my way home after another day of riding around on my blue metallic Huffy. In this small town in 1966, there were no bounds to my exploration. After all, my daily routine included riding up to the town square's drugstore to buy pixie sticks or candy cigarettes, checking out the back issues of Jack and Jill at the library or stopping in at the appliance store to see if any refrigerator boxes were available for my ongoing architectural projects. Nothing too unusual, and not many risks along the way. Just as I rounded the corner of my street I noticed four or five teenage boys loitering in the distance on the sidewalk up ahead. I didn't think anything of it and assumed they would step aside as I approached. It would never have occurred to me to ride into the street to avoid them. My mother's rule ran through my head: only go where there are sidewalks and stay on the sidewalk unless you are crossing the street. They must not have known my mother's rule, since they didn't move to let me pass by. Instead they blocked my path, took my bike away and quickly pulled me into the nearby woods to sexually assault me. My carefree bike ride had become an irreparable encounter which changed my life from that day for many years to come.

TERRIBLE BEAUTY: video


What happened was so far beyond my understanding. As an 8 year old I lacked any sort of context to make sense of it. Complete trauma, confusion, and a vague sense of shame influenced my decision, before I even made it home that day, to never tell anyone. I kept that promise to myself for over twenty years. The death of my father seemed to be the trigger that washed away that cracked and broken wall.  Grief for my Dad infused itself with sorrow for the innocence that was lost the day of the assault.  His death reminded me of the "unsafeness" of the world and somehow I now felt as vulnerable as that day when I was a child. The secret became an overwhelming burden and I knew it was time to let it go.  I chose to break my silence and thus began the long and cumbersome journey to healing.

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Fear was My Imaginary Friend courtesy of the artist 2016


Years later, in 2006, I was sitting with a group of homeless women from Mary's Place - a day shelter for women and children in Seattle.  I grew to know and love these women through my weekly volunteer work teaching art.  When I witnessed how they handled the daily grind of life on the streets, I came to see them as some of the strongest and most courageous women I had ever met. One day, while we were painting, the subject of childhood sexual assault came up.  Each woman had her own heartbreaking story.  I sat in silence, not ready to share mine.  It bothered me a bit that I couldn't speak up, so while sitting there I made up my mind. I would take that step into the wider world.  As an artist, I would someday explore this very personal and difficult subject.

There are really no words to describe how my mind and senses became overwhelmed at the moment of of trauma. At a certain point during the incident, my brain attempted protective distractions: the tree above, the tilt of the bicycle wheel by my head, the blue sky through the leaves. These distractions were all innocent enough in isolation. However, over time, they morphed into visual metaphors of the day the world became a dangerous place. All these years, these images in my head seemed to be the natural beginning of my visual diary. The experience as an adult looking back and identifying the overt and obscured psychological carnage became a powerful vehicle for expression and closure. The process of returning to the day of the assault has been neither short nor easy.  Going to that very dark space and time demanded honesty, and a certain kind of fearlessness and compassion for myself.  After an initial and difficult reckoning, the physical experience of expressing my words and ideas proved strongly cathartic.  In addition, the repetitive nature of completing certain pieces became a deliberate meditative journey to healing.  Frankly, it stunned me that after completing the work I was left with the unmistakeable sense a tremendous weight had been lifted. After all of these years, I am no longer followed by the lengthened shadow of fear and subtle undercurrent of impending doom. They have finally faded. In the end, this mental, emotional and artistic journey which has been years in the making has been well worth it. Going back and giving that small girl a voice has made all the difference.

The exhibition, "TERRIBLE BEAUTY : under the canopy" will take place June 2 - July 3 at Gallery 110 in Seattle. Images and writing are viewable at www.amypleasantseattle.com
More information is also available at www.gallery110.com

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Voices in Her Head courtesy of the artist 2016

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Under the Canopy courtesy of the artist 2016

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The Mind's Aegis courtesy of the artist 2016

More images available at amypleasantseattle.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.

Expression Sets You Free: How Playwriting Broke My Silence on Sexual Abuse & Surgeries

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How has expression set you free?

This weekend, I had my first official public reading of my full-length drama, Imprints.

IMPRINTS (3)

As an actress, I love the stage.  But as a playwright, watching my own life played out before my eyes, I had never been more nervous in my life.

Reliving What I've Tried to Forget

It's one thing to perform a one-woman musical about my life.  But to hand off a script to actors you've never met before and have them play roles that have been to interwoven into my own life was a tremendous act of trust, bravery and good faith.

These actors were reenacting memories that I had tried to repress for years...until I realized that as long as I chose to run from my memories, I was choosing to run from myself.

Journals From a Coma

Imprints was based on a journal that my brother Jeff kept for the first 72 day I was in a coma.  It all started with one entry from Jeff, as he sat beside me in the ICU:

"April 25th, 2005: 1st nightt. took part of stomach out b/c of 4.5 inch tear. most of it was black and dead. blood suppl not enough. some of your colon.  stomach and intestines perforated"

passover

The night before, we had our Passover Seder.  Now, Jeff was typing in his laptop what he could recall:

"Sunday night:  dad got home, ame still throwing up. rock hard stomach. dad and mom took you to pediatrician. you went to ER about 8:30. you were there 20 minutes before you saw DR. they put IV in to draw blood. took 3 times. wheeled her to x-ray. told dad you'd need surgery b/c something was hard with rock-hard ab and asked who he uses. he called les who recommeneded garvey and dad called. garvey started to drive in. pain kept getting worse and worse. wheeling her to X-ray, take her back. then, and air pockets formed on neck and face. then you collapsed. they stabilized you with IV's. garvey operated stomach grew so big, pain so intense. stomach crushed blood supply to intestines. when they cut into abdomen, blood hit ceiling b/c of so much pressure from ab blowing up. you went into septic shock b/c all of these toxins poured into your ab sand overwhelmed your defenses. septcic shock precipitates DIC. bacteria so overwhelmed your defenses that you couldn't clot and everything started leaking. you blew up to three times your normal size."

Yes, I almost died.  And my brother's journal entries - all 174 pages, are raw, potent and hard to read.

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With every surgery, Jeff documented my struggles and triumphs:

May 12th, 2005: You just went down to the operating room. We all gather where the waiting room meets the hallway each time you go to . And each time you go I get angry about my thought of it not being the last time  see you. You are once again in the hands of Dr. Garvey wants to make sure everything inside of you is doing well. I am seeing progress. four pressers are down to two. your swelling continues to go down. your body is not needing as much new blood as it required just days ago.

Eventually, I started to show signs of life.

2:30 pm -almost out of coma>??  today, we want you to wake up. you've been sleeping for a while now, and we know your body is strong enough to be awake. they even want you to start breathing on your own, which I know you will be doing soon. I want to ask questions, but sometimes I am scared to get answers. plus, you are doing really well right now, and I don't want to jinx anything. the nurse said that she asked you to move your hand again this morning, and you moved your right. you also were opening your eyes for Mom.

I want you to wake up today.


Reaching-Star




And, soon enough, I was back to my old, spunky self - ventilator, IVs, oxygen tanks and all.

Saturday 6:08pm: ame - you are so punchy today. it is wonderful. you want that tube out, and as soon as we get all this residual fluid out of you, it will be thus. I feel you improving. I hadn't seen you move your legs thus far; you moved both of them when Mom, Matt and I were with you. Mom says you are definitely recognizing her. you are starting to cry, which we hear is great news. you are hating this tube. I cannot wait until it is out.

And...be careful what you wish for.  Soon enough, I was my talkative, restless self:

Wednesday Morning: I'm going to try to catch you up quickly on the last few days. yesterday, by far, was your greatest day thus far. Mom called me in the morning to tell me that they tested you off the ventilator for an hour and you did fine, so they were presently disconnecting the ventilator. I came in to see you breathing on your own. I welled up. you were working very hard, and breathing quickly, but your o2 saturation numbers looked great. and, you were talking! I hope you remember some of this when we're all out of here (though I guess I also hope you don't remember a lot of this). Matt, Mom and I were with you and I was trying to tell you to relax and conserve your strength (you were naturally agitated). after not hearing you speak for about 11 days, you replied, "I fucking know that." we started laughing hysterically. it was beautiful. you also kept saying my name and asking me to get the car and take you home. ame - it was so cute, and it made me even more eager and excited for the day we get to take you home.

Progress was slow, and for a while it seemed that I was making no progress at all.  As doctors told us, going from "minute to minute" and transitioning to "day to day" meant a major improvement - it means it was probably that I would survive.

June 20th, 2005: I can feel things changing. I was just speaking with sarah, who is your nurse tonight, and she was saying that you're going to be fine, though it will be a long road. it is nice that we are starting to hear people say that. I want to tell you this myself, and not have you read it, but I will just say that this was not always what we were hearing.

And perhaps Jeff's most important message of all to me:

Amy - when you are out of here I want you not to get discouraged at what else you have to do. it is impossible to overstate how far you've come and how much you've already done. and Amy, we will be with you every step of the way. expect days where you are so angry and just want all this to stop. but don't you dare lose hope. you  have been through hell. but you have already beat so much, and you are still here. and we all are beside you.

Words have tremendous power.  Reading Jeff's journals has overwhelmed me with gratitude for life, how far I've come, and the support all around me.

What is Re-Membering?

Reading Jeff's words helped me re-member.

Why the "dash" in "re-membering?"

Because I like to think of remembering as literally re-membering - putting the pieces (the members) of your life back together.  Recalling past events puts back the pieces of yourself.  Remembering may be difficult, scary and sometimes overwhelming, but remembering is healing.  

Remembering is how we literally put the "members" of ourselves back together!

What was it like waking up from a coma?

When I was finally discharged from the hospital, writing about my memories helped me to process them.



I wrote: "The ICU is a whole world in itself.  It exists in its own winding and bizarre current, so breeched off from the normal flowing river that is life.  No one in the real world could ever perceive the upside down hell that being chained to beeping machines is with 48 other "sickest kids in America", all wondering when or if life will start for us again.  Or if we'll even keep the life we're given now, because for a while that wasn't for sure either.  It's like a whole cyclonic vortex all on its own, but once you are sucked in, you are exposed to this whole scary alternate universe.  I didn't know if I would ever be able to go on my own again.  Back in diapers, back to being a baby, wide-eyed, innocent, unable to manage in the real world."

Healing Through Theatre

Ten years of dealing with memories of sexual assault and medicaltrauma had left me with the severe symptoms of PTSD, including intrusive memories, flashbacks and dissociation.  For years, I grappled with two halves of me, desperate to rediscover wholeness and comfort in my own body.

I came to know these two polarities as Wounded and Thriving, and learned that only when these opposing halves acknowledged the other, could I really move forward, and heal.

While the story broadcasted in the news emphasized the inspirational message of hope, gratitude and resilience, I wanted my Imprints to show the pain, the losses and ultimately the gift of transformation and growth that stem from trauma - the beautiful marks that imprints can create.

 Integrating my life before and after my coma

In "Imprints," the part of me that woke up from a coma is Patty.  My more innocent, healthy, pre-coma high school self is Patricia.  I had "Rita" (a hospital art therapist) help Patty and Patricia accept one another.

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Healing Through Writing and Expression

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Coming out of a coma, words gave me strength.   As I wrote, I discovered ways to handle difficult situations successfully and to learn from my situation and grow.  Strength is the ability to keep a positive attitude towards a situation that proves to be hard and painful and manage it in a healthy way.   Strength is the ability to overcome fear.  The more definitions I was able to write, the more empowered I felt.

Writing Imprints Help me Process My Sexual Abuse

Writing scenes between "Blaine," my abuser and Patricia, my younger self helped alleviate the undeserved shame that plagued me for years and allowed me to process, move forward and claim my voice.

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Portraying My Family in Imprints

I imagined what it must have been like for my brother Jeff to stay in the ICU, comforting my mother as they anxiously waited for me to wake up.

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Almost Telling My Brother I Was Abused

I remembered what it was like to be haunted by the secret of being sexual abused, and finally trying to tell my brother right before I fell into a coma:

Patricia:  tries again:  "Blaine...and I...are getting really close."

James: oblivious: Oh? You guys seem to have a really close relationship.  You must be learning a lot from him.

Patricia: Yeah...

How Should You Help a Survivor of Sexual Assault?

Finding the courage to speak up after being sexually abused can be overwhelming.  In my article for Huffington Post, Healing Through Our Voices: What to Say (and Not Say) to a Survivor of Sexual Assault, I list helpful phrases, tips and tools to help become a support system for those who have been assaulted.

Because speaking the words, "I was sexually abused" can be terrifying.

Repairing our Family

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My abuser not only traumatized me, he broke the trust of our entire family. When I almost lost my life and woke up in the ICU months later, in a way, it gave my family the space, the time and the close quarters to finally start to heal together, as they prayed for my life.

And when I finally woke up, and made a miraculous recovery, I could finally join my family and we could all heal together, stronger than ever before.

Having New Beginnings

And to think this all started as one stomach ache on Passover.  Passover is a very special holiday for me, filled with juicy metaphors and a roadmap for our own spiritual journey.  It is a time of new beginnings, finding redemption, freeing ourselves, and joy with our loved ones, and telling our stories.

Imprints is set on Passover: the night I was first rushed to the Emergency Room.  I've always found that symbolic: a holiday about that magic day when we can finally free ourselves from what binds us.

Summer Play IMG_0427

As I started to heal, I realized that just as on Passover, when we hope to free ourselves, each year, I hoped to be a bit freer in mind and body than the year before:

"Now this all makes so much sense - the Passover connection.  Every year we say next year in Jerusalem - will this be the year for me?  I am breaking free one trying moment at a time.  One day we'll get our seder back.  We'll all be around the kitchen table, like old times, eating, laughing, simple, happy..."

Expression Sets You Free

I invite you to pretend like you yourself are breaking free from whatever binds you, fleeing your own spiritual Egypt and finding refuge in the beautiful new beginnings -  the season of freedom.

Expression set me free, and this weekend, Imprints brought it all to fruition.

healstory

Imprints is a journey of discovery for the audience, the characters, and the playwright herself, who is re-membering and discovering as she goes along.
How does expression sets you free?

 

All artwork was created by Amy on her detour. Read about "Imprints,"  learn about her speaking, or catch her touring Gutless & Grateful, her one woman musical, to theatres, colleges, conferences and organizations nationwide.   Learn about her mental health advocacy programs for students, and find out how to take part in the #LoveMyDetour movement, and learn about her upcoming book, My Beautiful Detour.

-- 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.

Against All Odds

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When she was 23 Barbara Thomas left her native Detroit and ventured to New York to try her luck in the Big Apple. One of the first things she did--out of naïveté or just plain chutzpah--was march up to the Guggenheim and ask that they put her work in their next show.

"I was told no," says Thomas, laughing now at the idea. "They said that they didn't show anyone 23 or younger."

Truth or lie? Who knows (probably the latter). But one thing's for sure: It seemed to stiffen her resolve to make it as a painter in New York.

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Photo by Jennifer Harrison



Thomas (above, with a young visitor to her studio) first started selling her paintings when she was 12. They were bought by jazz singers and musicians, who would then invite her over to their houses to watch her work being hung. "I was in awe of them," says Thomas, who also remembers the days of the original Motown music emanating from the Motor City. "They were encouraging and we talked about my work and how an artist could survive. They advised me to take part time jobs and think of myself as a full time artist. That I've done to this day."

So far it's paid off. Thomas has enjoyed one-woman shows in New York, Florida and California. She has also participated in more than a dozen group shows, most recently at Baruch College in New York. And she may be riding the crest of a wave--there is a growing demand for women-themed exhibitions in galleries and museums across the country.

But the road has not always been smooth. Thomas has worked to support herself and her art for more than 30 years, taking jobs as a flower arranger, waitress and substitute teacher. But always, the work came first, even if it meant lean times financially.

"It's taken her a long time to get where she is today," says close friend and independent curator Martha Henry. "It takes real talent and dedication."

In deed, the odds against making it as an artist in the highly competitive world of New York are daunting, especially for a woman. A recent survey found that women were still woefully underrepresented in major museums and galleries across the country. At the Museum of Modern Art in New York, only seven percent of the collections on display last year were by women, even though women make up more than half of all visual artists working today.

"The doors aren't open for a woman," says Thomas, echoing a common complaint. "Financially, you sit in the back seat. You can't make that kind of prejudice go away, but you can continuously try to push the door open."

And that's exactly what she's done, by working.

Thomas paints in series, often using her hand or a cloth to apply the paint to the canvas. It allows more freedom of movement than a brush, she says. Also, she will occasionally add sand to the paint which makes it thicker and gives it a different refraction in the light.

How to describe her work? "She's working with light and color," says Henry. "She's trying to explore how the perception of color changes constantly, how light permeates into color. It's something you can't see right away. It takes time. You've got to live with it."

When not painting her series, Thomas takes a break by creating works on paper with charcoal and pastels. They are much smaller than the bigger works, and they are delicate and beautiful.

Thirty years after being rejected by the Guggenheim, Thomas says she "isn't giving an inch--I'm still doing what I'm doing. I want to keep moving up, to get to a plateau and then move up again. I want to be known as a woman who is succeeding."

In terms of her work, she already is.

For more about Barbara Thomas and her work, go to http://www.barbarathomasbt.com

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After 30 Years Topping Charts, Gipsy Kings Still Amazed By Success

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From busking on the streets of southern France to winning Grammys and making Buzz Lightyear swing his spaceman hips, the Gipsy Kings have had an unbelievable story - and it's been unbelievable to no one more than them.

"We never anticipated that we could even do this for a living when we first started," said Tonino Baliardo, the group's lead guitarist. "We just continue to be amazed."

The group's roots begin with Baliardo's uncle, Jose Reyes, who had had a successful career singing flamenco and the more pop-ish rumba flamenco or Catalan rumba, which combined some of the stylistic touches of flamenco with danceable rhythms.

Two families of brothers and cousins joined together - initially with Jose Reyes and then on their own, playing wherever they could throughout their home base of southern France - at parties, on the street.

Suddenly, with a new producer and the release of their 1987 self-titled album, the band became an international phenomenon, taking a regional sound around the world. Despite some carping from flamenco purists and xenophobic rockers, the Gipsy Kings became the most-successful band of the burgeoning "world music" movement.

Asked if there were a particular moment when the members realized that they had landed in a place beyond their dreams, Baliardo said "It was when we were recognized by NARAS and our peers by receiving a Grammy. It was a monumental time for us as we never really thought about it until then. As I said, we have been amazed for 30 years."

While the group has tweaked their formula by adding untraditional elements and song choices, their basic sound has remained a recognizable constant: the rough, passionate flamenco-style singing, the powerful multi-guitar strumming and the "palmas" percussive clapping.

After the ubiquity of their initial hits "Bomboleo" and "Djobi Djoba," the Gipsy Kings continued to jump into the mainstream with unusual collaborations. They recorded songs with Ziggy Marley, Joan Baez and Bananarama; did a version of The Eagles "Hotel California" for the cult movie The Big Lebowski, and adapted Randy Newman's "You're Got a Friend in Me" for a memorable dance sequence in Toy Story 3.

The band has reportedly sold close to 20 million albums worldwide and won several Grammys and gold record designations over the years. Along with the personal rewards of stardom, the Gipsy Kings' rise also created a positive image for the Gypsy or Roma people, who have been the targets of pervasive prejudice and oppression across Europe to this day.

While the Gipsy Kings have not been overtly political, they are keenly aware of their unusual place in the history of the Roma in Europe and have been happy to be tacit goodwill ambassadors. "We believe that whatever we can get out to the world helps the Gypsy community in general, which we greatly care about."

While the band has had personnel changes over the years and has recently spun off another group, Baliardo said the family ties have kept the band together. "We are all family first and foremost, second, we are Gypsy and have always had to struggle to get where we were going, so we were prepared for the ups and downs. But really we cannot complain, we have been truly blessed."

Their last album, Savor Flamenco, was released in 2013 was their first that was made up solely of songs they wrote and produced themselves. Baliardo said the band would be releasing a new album in 2017, but added that there would be "some surprises" this summer. They are ending the first leg of a U.S. tour, then go to Europe and return to North America later this year.

"We are now bringing our sons out to the front line," the guitarist continued, "who bring a whole new vitality to what we do. They are happy and hungry to make their mark. They bring a positive life force to us, which continues to grow and make us very happy."

The Kings perform their initial hit "Bombeleo" on Dancing With The Stars


Gipsy Kings take on Pixar in Toy Story 3

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Seven Mile Music Inspires Disadvantaged Motown Kids

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In what may be America's roughest neighborhood, where many kids feel forgotten and hope is thin, Seven Mile Music shines a light of humanity.

Seven Mile Music offers free music instruction to kids in Detroit's impoverished Brightmoor neighborhood.

"This is Motown," said Rev. Sammeal Thomas of City Covenant Church. "You would think you could go anywhere and find music. You can't."


A community built in the 1920s to house auto workers, Brightmoor declined in parallel with Detroit's auto industry. Today's Brightmoor children, and their parents, never knew the Detroit that was a worldwide example of modernity, according to Thomas. The pastor's church aligns with Mission: City community center and Seven Mile Music to bring neighborhood children the chance to learn and grow through the joy of music.

Brightmoor's children face extreme challenges in their daily life, said Thomas. He pointed out that half of the community's 7,000 youth live 150 percent below the federal poverty line. The Detroit Public School's epic budget problems magnify the level of adversity many Motown kids experience. Arts education has long been abandoned.

Thomas admits he didn't originally view arts cuts as a major issue.

"When you don't have police and fire (protection) who needs arts?" he said. "I had no idea about the connection between arts and academics."


That was until Seven Mile Music entered the picture. Founded by University of Michigan student Sam Saunders, the K-12 program offers Brightmoor kids free weekly music lessons throughout the academic year and a free summer music and art camp.

Saunders launched the organization following his freshman year after learning of the elimination of Detroit school arts programs.

"These were the children most in need of music," he said.


The pianist from Charleston, West Virginia, knows music's transformative power first-hand. Saunders was a teen at risk for not graduating from high school until he realized music could provide a positive focus for his life.

In 2012, Saunders set out to find a home for his idea to bring together underserved youth with university student musicians. It was an uphill battle. He found Detroit's disadvantaged communities had little Internet presence for facilitating contacts. Saunders had no option but to hit the streets to find people willing to support his plan.

"I started driving down Seven Mile Road, one of the notorious marks of inner city Detroit," he said. "I stopped at every community center and church along the way."


After weeks of pounding the pavement, he found Mission: City.

"Sam didn't come here thinking he was going to fix us," said Thomas. "He came to see what he could do alongside us. It was the perfect fit."


The depth of cultural poverty Brightmoor children experience still stuns Saunders.

"A lot of the children between six and ten years old have never heard of a violin," he said.


Many lack the concept that instruments produce music, Saunders added. Despite the Brightmoor youngsters' narrow education, they easily tap into their affinity for music.

"We have talented, sweet kids that are illiterate, but they pick up the instruments so quickly," he said.


As the nonprofit organization's executive director, Saunders developed a corps of student instructors, plus a trio of Brightmoor volunteer musicians. The group raised funds and built a modest collection of teaching instruments including violins, guitars, pianos, cellos and drum pads. They created a musical bridge between the privileged university world and a world plagued by poverty.

University musicians previously reluctant to step foot in inner city Detroit, joined the Seven Mile Music entourage throughout the school year for the 30-mile trip from campus to Brightmoor. Three weekly sessions engage 50 neighborhood kids during the academic year.

"Aside from the education, it's humanizing," said Saunders. "We saw that the kids are not really much different than we were at the same age - they're normal, fun-loving kids."


Thomas credits the university students for opening themselves to the experience.

"You can get caught up in yourself," he said. "Sometimes you need to see there is another world."


While marked by poverty, the community has a strong spirit, Saunders noted.

"There are well-spoken, powerful people who have spent their life in Brightmoor," he said. "The university students get to learn more by speaking to these people than they learn in a semester at university."


Saunders graduated in May. He relocated to Brightmoor where he will devote the next year to building the music program.

"I'm moving into the only house left on the street - by the church," he said.


From his new base, Saunders will oversee the Seven Mile Music and Mission: City's second annual free summer camp. Camp runs weekdays from mid-July through August. Kids receive a free breakfast and lunch, art and music lessons. About 60 youngsters are expected to attend.

Thomas attributes the music instruction, along with Mission: City tutoring and mentoring efforts, to a marked increase in student grades. Program success is also measured in less tangible ways. It shows on the young faces when they conquer a piece of music, said Saunders. In an environment where few doors open for kids, Seven Mile Music shows kids the how to achieve results through hard work.

The student-driven program founded on the tenacity of one musician contributes to a growing optimism for a better future for Motown's children.

"It's a tremendous season for us," said Thomas. "Because Detroit is rebounding."

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The Art of Revitalization

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"Art washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life." - Pablo Picasso

Beauty has the ability to change a life and redeem a soul. From the fresh flowers, to the fountain out front, the abundant light and world-class art inside, every detail about the design of the Bidwell Training Center in the inner-city Pittsburg neighborhood of Manchester is deliberate and intentional.

"It turns out that we may need beauty to survive, in the same way we need oxygen and water," explains community activist, Bill Strickland in an NPR TED Radio Talk. Strickland believes that the best things life has to offer - delicious food, the finest art, the latest technology, are for everyone in life to enjoy. These things help people understand that they have value, no matter what life has told them. Whether it is exposing children to throwing clay, incredible jazz, creating culinary delights or something as simple as sunshine and orchids; he believes that when people see beauty on a regular basis, it becomes part of their vocabulary, and their behavior and contributions to the world will rise to the same level. He created the center in the neighborhood where he grew up and serves the community in need. The successful Manchester training center has been replicated in other cities, including San Francisco, California; Cincinnati and Michigan, Ohio; and has affiliate programs in Cleveland, Ohio; New Haven, Connecticut; Brockway, Pennsylvania; Boston, Massachusetts; and Buffalo, New York.

Everyone yearns for a safe place to live, learn, work, and play; and the arts are widely regarded as a cure for a variety of related issues. A creative community can revitalize a neighborhood and improve quality of life outcomes for its community members. A Princeton University working paper, on the impact of arts on community, explains "The arts revitalize neighborhoods and promote economic prosperity. Participation in the arts improves physical and psychological well-being. The arts provide a catalyst for the creation of social capital and the attainment of important community goals." These bold claims are supported by research and real life examples can be found in cities across the country.

Wynwood, Miami

Tony Goldman, founder of Goldman Properties, viewed himself as a "long-term investor in the revitalization of historic neighborhoods" as opposed to a developer, successfully turned once-dilapidated neighborhoods into the hottest, most sought after locations; including New York City's SoHo, Miami Beach, and up and coming arts-focused Wynwood, among others. Tony coined the term "gentlefication," to refer to his and his company's values and commitment to allow for growth without pricing out original residents and preserving the original character of the area.

His daughter, Jessica Goldman Srebnick, who took the helm as Goldman Properties' CEO after his passing, explained, "He was truly inspired by the arts and wanted to share that with everyone. He really worked to ensure that he understood the DNA of a neighborhood and built upon the history already in place." The first sign of resurgence started in 1987, when a group of artists run out of Coconut Grove formed a nonprofit organization and purchased an abandoned bakery in the area, called the Bakehouse. The Wynwood Arts District Association was also instrumental in the growth of the area, creating the monthly art walks. However, before the Goldman family started buying up property in Wynwood in 2006, the community was mostly a deserted warehouse district.

"When you are trying to make life better, to improve the community, I have found that everyone wants to help - public sector, private sector, nonprofits, police, commissioners - that is a sign of success," says Goldman Srebnick. Gaining community buy in is instrumental in development efforts, under her leadership, Goldman Properties gives thoughtful consideration to maintaining a neighborhood's unique and vibrant feel through the use of incentives, rent agreements, and cross sector collaborations. Srebnick runs the company while being mindful of everyone involved; she strives to truly make a difference and build a stronger community through job creation and education.

Fast forward to the community today, and Wynwood Walls, an outdoor graffiti art exhibit that is a national draw "has seen over 50 artists representing 16 countries and...covered over 80,000 square feet of walls." Children take field trips and are exposed to world renowned artists. Curations are timed to Art Basel, bringing art to the masses and bringing people from all over the world to Wynwood to soak in its artistic vibes. The mural, graffiti-filled neighborhood buzzes with color, feeling, and imagery; and is filled with art studios and galleries, boutique storefronts, and several super hip mom and pop bars and restaurants, including Zak the Baker and recent Food and Wine Magazine's Best New Chef, Brad Kilgore's new restaurant, Alter.

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Wynwood Walls, Photo credit: Andrew Meade

Jessica and her team work under the belief that the revitalization effort is a marathon, not a sprint; and strive for organic, slow, sustainable growth centering around the idea that the elements of our lives should be integrated - creativity, interesting architecture, food, music. All of these elements contribute to a thriving community.

Bronzeville, Chicago

Bronzeville, a Chicago neighborhood with a strong African American cultural allure and rich history, has been undergoing a gradual revitalization for quite some time; the main real estate developer behind the efforts is Quad Communities Development Corporation. Past residents of the neighborhood include civil rights activist Ida B. Wells, Pulitzer Prize winning poet Gwendolyn Brooks, singer Lou Rawls, and legendary jazz trumpet player Louis Armstrong. Revitalization efforts focus on bringing in local mixed-use shops, and making sure they align with the overall vision of the community.

One cornerstones of the neighborhood is nonprofit Little Black Pearl Art & Design Center, a thriving arts-based nonprofit serving youth in Chicago's south side neighborhoods. Little Black Pearl provides a safe environment, positive role models, with arts programs and skill development opportunities for urban youth. Offerings include afterschool arts education classes with a focus on the "business of art," project-based art allowing students the opportunity to honor community members who have lost loved ones to violence, a high school, and a tech center; participants are also offered nourishing meals.

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Photo used with permission from Little Black Pearl

Monica Haslip, founder of Little Black Pearl, explains that they are a positive and anchoring presence in the community in a number of ways. "Little Black Pearl utilizes the arts to bring people together around the needs of the community. We also provide a physical place for people to congregate that is culturally and creatively driven. That is really important," says Haslip.

Cultural nonprofits play an important role in marrying revitalization and growth with social inclusion.

Art Engaging With The Community

The McColl Center for Art + Innovation in Uptown Charlotte, North Carolina, is a "nationally acclaimed contemporary art center dedicated to connecting art and artists with the community." The center is a mixture of studio and gallery space and allows the artists to engage with the community through various opportunities.

Suzanne Fetscher, President and CEO of the McColl Center says, "One of McColl Center's core beliefs is that artists are catalysts for positive change. McColl Center for Art + Innovation builds connections between artists and communities, empowering each to benefit from the creative process and collaborative problem-solving. Through our programs, we give artists the space, resources, and access to partnerships that help them address and shape issues in the community and impact lives."

Robert Karimi, Knight Foundation Artist in Residence, is a dynamic example of how an artist can engage with the community. Viva la Cook is the larger than life character he created as part of The People's Cook Project and his goal is to use food to allow individuals to honor creative concepts and culture at the same time. Karimi rides his bike, complete with a large food cooler in front, around Charlotte neighborhoods and hosts interactive cooking demos. Calling himself an experience designer, he feeds the minds and bodies of more than 40,000 people through his community-based projects that aim to improve health and access. Food can truly unite people but it is Karimi's artistic delivery and approach that is making all the difference.

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Robert Karimi in his studio during his 2015 art residency at McColl Center for Art + Innovation in Charlotte, NC
Photo credit: Ben Premeaux for McColl Center for Art + Innovation



The power of art can lift people up, bring them together, teach them their own value, and revive an entire community. Karimi, Strickland, Srebnick, and Little Black Pearl are among those who recognize the importance of the arts and how, when combined with the entrepreneurial energy of passionate local residents, communities can thrive. One of the founders of community development driven ShoreBank, Mary Houghton, says, "The key to community development really is to unleash entrepreneurial energy, and facilitate and support their work."

"Don't be afraid to be the pioneer. Embrace that opportunity," says Goldman Srebnick of paving the way for more communities to reap the rewards of having happy and healthy places to live, work, learn, and play. Community is a vital part of the lives of all of us and such an interconnected piece.

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Ed Moses at 90, Still Kicking Ass

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Ed Moses, one of the best-known LA artists, celebrates his 90th birthday. People who had the chance to get to know him will agree he is a feisty man. The same can be said about his wonderful paintings, which continue to deliver an artistic punch expected from artists a third his age... You really must see Moses' birthday exhibitions at Bergamot Station, on display in the William Turner Gallery and in the former Santa Monica Museum of Art space.

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As a special tribute to Ed, I want to share with you some excerpts from a "take no prisoners" essay he wrote a few years ago for The Buzz and the Beat: Inside the LA Art World (2009):

"I grew up in Long Beach and spent summers in Hawaii with my dad... In 1943, when I was seventeen, I decided to join the Navy. I got into the medical corps, and received about a year of training to be a surgical technician. When I was 22 I got out of the service... I enrolled in pre-med, but could never memorize anything. For three years I got D's, F's and C's... I couldn't get into any medical school...

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A friend of mine told me about an eccentric art teacher, Pedro Miller. [He] brought in reproductions of Braque and Cezanne and Picasso, and everybody laughed at their work. Norman Rockwell was the hero of the day, but Pedro hated Norman Rockwell. [Pedro] would say, "Let's see what you guys can do." I didn't know what to do. I took one brush and put it in the red, put another in the white, and marked up my board. That wasn't any good, so out of desperation I put my fingers in the paint jars and scratched over the board. I was going to get my ass kicked. [Pedro] looked at me... picked up my work... and said, "Now, here's a real artist." Changed my life right then and there.

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I transferred to UCLA. It had a sh**** art department and I hated it... I decided I wanted to be a movie director. I got a job [at Twentieth Century-Fox] as a messenger. [Then I] decided to go up to Carmel. There I got a job on a sardine clipper ship... I got so sick I wanted to die.

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In 1952... I met a girl at a tea dance... It was love at first sight. She was going through a trial separation. Her husband found us in bed and wanted to kill me with his 45. I sweet-talked him, and he took me to the bus station and bought me a bus ticket. She went back to him. I went back to UCLA... The faculty was old-fashioned and [I] used to laugh at them all the time, right in their faces.

When Walter Hopps started Ferus [Gallery in 1957] I was one of the original artists. In 1959 I moved to New York [and later] to San Francisco. I hung out at the Cedar Tavern and met Franz Kline, de Kooning, Rothko. I was just one of the punks.

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In 1970 I was lined up to have the inaugural show at Sonnabend Gallery in New York. A week before the opening, she sends me a contract. I didn't feel comfortable with the idea of a contract. That was the end of that. No show. Because I have a big mouth and I'm impulsive, I spoiled my so-called career so many times that I can't even remember.

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The curator of MOMA... bought for the museum a painting of mine I didn't like. I said, "You can have... a much better painting." He said, "No, I'm satisfied with the one I picked out. I think it's terrific" [I] said, "I'm flying [to New York] next week. If that painting is still on the wall, I'm going to take a razor blade and cut it off the wall." Since that time I haven't had any contact with the Modern. My life is checkered with those kinds of experiences.

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Once I went to Spain and my children almost died of food poisoning. Someone said to me, "We have lots of children here because if one dies, we will have others to help us out." Hearing that changed the way I paint. I used to work on one painting at a time... until it revealed itself or I murdered it. Today I work on eight to ten canvases at once, many of which I throw out. People say I am always changing the way I paint, but I don't change, the paintings mutate. I'm painting to bring about that kind of magic. A good painting is like turning the rock over and over. It's the result of relentless pursuit and chance."

So once again, happy birthday to you, Ed, you're the best.


To learn about Edward's Fine Art of Art Collecting Classes, please visit his website. You can also read The New York Times article about his classes here, or an Artillery Magazine article about Edward and his classes here.

___________


Edward Goldman is an art critic and the host of Art Talk, a program on art and culture for NPR affiliate KCRW 89.9 FM. To listen to the complete show and hear Edward's charming Russian accent, click here.

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How Do You Get to Carnegie Hall? If You're a Kid, Call Ben Zander

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You're a kid.

You've been playing violin, or oboe, or flute, or whatever, since third grade.

Somehow, you enter the orbit of a conductor named Ben Zander.

And everything changes.

I mean, everything.

Ben Zander, 77 years young, conducts the Boston Philharmonic Orchestra and the Boston Youth Philharmonic Orchestra, the latter of which is preparing for a two-night stand at Carnegie Hall and then a six-concert voyage to Spain.

If you're one of the 127 kids lucky enough, or crazy enough, to fall under Maestro Zander's spell, you are learning so much music right now that you probably don't have time to think straight.
When most orchestras travel, they typically perform crowd pleasers -- familiar works of Beethoven or Rimsky-Korsakov that the orchestra can play on autopilot, the conductor can conduct in his sleep, and the audience finds hummable, if not exactly breathtaking.

That's not how things work in Zander World.

First, the Carnegie Hall gig is two nights, not just one. The programs are different each night. And they are exceptionally demanding, even for adults.

On Monday, June 6th, the kids will stare from the stage of a packed Stern Auditorium at Carnegie Hall and prepare to play Glinka's Ruslan and Ludmilla (at breakneck speed), Stravinsky's violin concerto, Debussy's La Mer, and Tchaikovsky's fifth symphony.

The next night, as if that wasn't enough music, or hard enough music, the kids will return to play Debussy, Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune, Stravinsky's Rite of Spring, and Mahler's first symphony.

"When I tell people about the programs I have chosen for the young people," Zander laughs, "they accuse me of child abuse."

They are not far wrong. These are long, difficult, demanding pieces. So why does Zander ask so much from kids?

"Because I know they'll come through," he says happily.

Zander is a force of nature, practically single-handedly shouldering the responsibility to select, audition, and conduct a large orchestral force made up of kids who might otherwise be playing Madden Mobile or hanging out at the mall.

Did I mention that Zander needs to raise nearly a million dollars -- $400,000 for the two nights at Carnegie Hall and another half million for Spain?

Did I mention that the tickets to both Carnegie Hall concerts are free, so that 5,600 people who don't normally get to attend classical concerts at Carnegie Hall will be able to do so?

That's how Zander rolls.

Or more accurately, that's how he navigates, taking a few moments on his new boat, on an afternoon when he could have been recovering from a cross-continental red eye flight, to discuss the upcoming concerts.

"I do all this because I like seeing the light going on in the eyes of young people," Zander asserts, as he steers around the shells of Harvard and MIT rowing teams.

"I ask so much of them because I know they can do it. It's also a lot of music for me to master."

Zander is particularly proud of the fact that a recent Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra performance was described as the best classical concert of the entire Boston season.

"I think this is the best year of my life," Zander said.

Of this new boat, which he employs as a stress-buster, he says, "According to the actuarial tables, I will only be buying one more boat in my lifetime. My old boat was getting run down. So I thought, why not now?"

Those words, "Why not now?" sum up Zander's approach to music as an educational tool. He's not looking only to bring out the best in terms of his young charges' playing. He also wants to open their minds to the greater possibilities life offers.

Zander gives his young orchestra members weekly assignments unrelated to music that put them in touch with the whole idea of being alive -- what it all means, what one can expect, who one can truly be.

The growth the young people in the BYPO experience comes as much from Zander's pushing them to explore their inner worlds as it does from the music they make.

Do the kids feel overwhelmed by Carnegie Hall?

Zander dismisses the thought.

"I think acoustically, Symphony Hall is just as good as Carnegie Hall," Zander says, a touch of Boston chauvinism in his otherwise mellifluous English tone.

"You do think of the history when you first sit on that stage, but once you start playing, you forget where you are."

The young members of the Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra will never forget where they were on the night of June 6th and June 7th, when Maestro Zander will lift the baton and launch them into those two challenging and compelling programs. Nor will they forget their Spanish excursion to follow.

"I just received $10,000 from the Madrid telephone company this morning," Zander adds with delight.

Ben Zander is raising a lot more than money. He's raising 127 young people to find out what they are capable of, with an instrument in their hands and with the even more powerful instrument that is their minds.

And if that doesn't bring down the house, nothing will.

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"Art Imitating Life" Coming Alive

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Catchphrases are used so often that sometimes their genesis gets lost or they become just a cliche. But sometimes the catchphrase's meaning comes alive and is even transformed through new events.

One such catchphrase is "art imitating life." But what happens when art not only imitates life but then that life again imitates art? There is a perfect and uplifting example of this alchemy in the new play Cul de Sac being presented from June 3 to 12 by Encore Stage & Studio (Encore)("Theater by Kids for Kids!").

This production captures the heart of what is conveyed by "art imitating life imitating art" on multiple levels.

The name Cul de Sac will likely resonate for many people. It's the name of acclaimed cartoonist Richard Thompson's nationally syndicated strip that ran for over five years in 150 newspapers. Cul de Sac debuted in 2007 in The Washington Post Magazine. The "art imitating life" comes from Mr. Thompson's inspiration for the stories. He drew on incidents from his own childhood as well as those of his family's daily suburban life in Arlington, Virginia where they've lived since 1992. In fact, the strip's family name -- Otterloop--reflects Mr. Thompson's whimsy as it's a play on the ubiquitous Outer Loop of the Beltway.

His cartoonist colleagues honored Mr. Thompson in 2010 with the Reuben Award, the highest honor given by the National Cartoonists Society. His talents were praised from colleagues such as Bill Watterson (creator of Calvin and Hobbes), Pete Docter (Pixar director of films including Inside Out), and Mo Willems (author of children's books including Knuffle Bunny).

Sadly, Mr. Thompson was compelled to retire and cease creating new strips in September 2012, three years after he was diagnosed with Parkinson's Disease. It seemed as if his loving, truthful and hilarious views on suburban life would live on only as treasured memories by his many fans.

And now for the magical alchemy when "art imitating life" becomes "art imitating life imitating art."

Over the years, Mr. Thompson has received and turned down numerous requests from other writers who wanted to adapt his strip for the stage. The only writer whom he had encouraged to do so was his wife Amy. In a marvelous convergence, Ms. Thompson has been associated with Encore for many years as a drama teacher and director.

Encore approached Ms. Thompson to see if she'd be interested in writing an original play for them as part of the 2015 DC Women's Voices Theater Festival. Agreeing to do so, she drew on a world she loves and knows so well --- she has brought the comic strip world of the Otterloops to life in Cul de Sac, the play. Encore moved the play's debut to the close of its 2015-2016 season.

The play follows four year old Alice Otterloop and her older brother, 8-year-old Petey as they learn about friendship and the importance of being yourself. With the help of their parents, teachers, old and new friends, Alice and Petey just might be able to learn something from each other as well.

Mr. Thompson brought joy to countless readers through Cul de Sac. Now Ms. Thompson and Encore are helping bring that joy in a new three-dimensional form to new and old fans of all ages. It is so fitting that the Otterloops home town will be the debut venue for their new incarnation. And as part of giving back to Mr. Thompson, Encore will be holding a special fundraiser for the Michael J. Fox Foundation to support Parkinson's Disease research.

Cul de Sac will be presented at the Thomas Jefferson Community Theater located at 125 South Old Glebe Road, Arlington, Virginia. Information about performance times and the fundraiser can be found on their website (www.encorestageva.org).

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Wildfire Redux

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The headlines about the fires of northern Canada have disappeared. Nothing remains for the media but the charred houses and mangled swing sets of the residents of Fort McMurray, the oil boom town that serves the Tar Sands. These mines, where vast regions of the bitumen-saturated earth are excavated to extract the hydro-carbons to fuel our automobiles, resemble nothing so much as a biblical wasting of the earth, the scale and completeness of the devastation impossible to comprehend.

Tar Sands Upgrader ©J Henry Fair
Tar Sands Upgrader


In spite of the scale and ferocity of the fires that blazed across the media last week, and knocked out a third of Canada's oil production, we read that operations will restart within a week. About 15% of the Fort McMurray was destroyed, which means the town, which has a chronic housing shortage, will undergo a mad building boom, and worker housing will be a problem.

Tar Sands Excavation ©J Henry Fair
Tar Sands Excavation


But there is nothing to burn in the tar sands. The operators need only move the equipment away from the edge of the mines, then reconnect the power lines and pipelines when the fire passes.

What one does not read about is the tragedy of the forests that burned, which is an essential chapter in the horrible story of this industry.

Peace-Athatbasca Delta  ©J Henry Fair
Peace-Athatbasca Delta


Fort McMurray and the Tar Sands mines are just south of Wood Buffalo National Park and surrounded by other wildlands. The tremendous volume of wastes from the mines leaches or is disgorged into the Athabasca River, which immediately flows into the Peace-Athabasca Delta.

Tar Sands Tailings Impoundment  ©J Henry Fair
Tar Sands Tailings Impoundment


This area, larger than Switzerland, is one of the most ecologically important regions of the world. The list of species that depend on it contains a frightening number of instances of the words "last" and "only". All four of the North American bird flyways converge there. The last flock of migratory whooping cranes nest there. It is home to one of the last free-roaming herds of wood bison in the world.

Peace Athabasca Delta Region  ©J Henry Fair
Peace Athabasca Delta Region


There is an irony at work here: the tar sands are Canada's largest source of greenhouse gas emissions. Climate change is causing a change in moisture patterns. These boreal forests and wetlands around the Tar Sands are verdant and moist most years. This year, they are dry, and so they burned, clearing the way for the mines.

Boreal Lakes  ©J Henry Fair
Boreal Lakes


Photographer J Henry Fair is finishing a new book, Industrial Scars: The Hidden Costs of Consumption, a story about how things are made and the consequences left behind. It is available for pre-sale on Kickstarter.

His website is jhenryfair.com

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First Nighter: Rupert Everett a Grand Oscar Wilde in David Hare's 'The Judas Kiss'

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David Hare, who turns his plays out one on top of the next, can be sly when he wants. The Judas Kiss--about Oscar Wilde on the day he's arrested (April 6, 1895) for indecency and then, in the second act, revisited sometime after he's been released from Reading Goal--doesn't begin with Wilde (Rupert Everett) and his notorious lover, Alfred, Lord Douglas, known as Bosie (Charlie Rowe).

When Rick Fisher's lights go up at the Brooklyn Academy of Music's Harvey, Hare presents a naked man and a naked woman caught in flagrante delicto on a hotel bed. The hotel is the Cadogan on London's Sloane Street, and the two emerging buck-naked and buff from under the covers are staff members Arthur Wellesley (Elliot Balchin) and Phoebe Cain (Jessie Hills) interrupted by a superior, Sandy Moffatt (Alister Cameron).

Will the latter fire the former pair? It seems like an obvious cause for dismissal, but he doesn't take that step. He merely chastises them, tells them to dress and to continue going about the business of preparing the room for its distinguished guests.

With praiseworthy subtlety, Hare establishes what may not be publicly acceptable in Victorian Great Britain but what's allowable if carried out behind closed doors. Hare has deftly put in place the hypocrisy underlying Wilde's perilous position as having brought national focus on his admitted homosexual activity at a time when the word "homosexual" hadn't yet been entered in the wider lexicon.

Only then do Wilde's companions Bosie and his former boyfriend/now attendant Robert Ross (Cal MacAninch) enter the tidy and unusually spacious environment set designer Dale Ferguson has created. The officious Bosie, feeling his oats as an aristocrat, and the concerned and measured Ross appear locked in a competition for Wilde's favor.

Which continues, even though, when Wilde at last enters in greatcoat and stylish suit (Sue Blane is the costume designer), they both agree on the choice Wilde, in great confusion, should make between two options he has for the immediate future: fleeing the country to avoid arrest and likely imprisonment or remaining where he is and facing the consequences.

Since the outcome is known, the first-act suspense doesn't rest on his decision but on the tenor of the arguments offered--on the passions with which Bosie and Ross press their points and the reaction Wilde, bewildered at how he foolishly allowed himself to land in his predicament, tries to gain emotional footing.

(For those who don't know the situation: Having been called a sodomite in a note from the Marquis of Queensberry, Bosie's furious father, Wilde sued for libel. In the trials that ensued, Wilde made the dreadful mistake of responding to a barrister's question about kissing a rent boy by dropping a misguided bon mot. He quipped that he wouldn't have kissed an ugly boy. That did in the defense.)

The high-class first-act bickering that results accounts for the drama's initial pull. An especially hot exchange occurs when Ross, still clearly enamored of his ex-lover, points out that Wilde would never have gotten in this pickle if Bosie weren't seizing on the scandal to get at his disapproving father--if, that is, Bosie weren't simply using Wilde for revenge.

To be sure, Wilde, being who he is, is rarely lost for words. Hare has him spout any number of Wilde-worthy epigrams. The only moment when he finds nothing to say--he actually breaks down--is after insisting that Rob tip Moffat, Arthur and Phoebe with money he can't afford to give away. But they refuse to take it, thanking him for his kindness and declaring they appreciate his being a gentleman when so many of their guests are not.

Incidentally, among Hare's other incisive observations is the frequency with which the upper class at the time fought among themselves in front of the serving class on the tacit understanding that one class was invisible to the other.

In the second act, Wilde, now more or less confined to a chair and out of money in a hotel outside Naples, is not only entertaining Bosie but also a boy called Galileo (Tom Colley), who speaks no English but is so stunningly handsome as he lolls around in the altogether that he doesn't need to.

The thrust of the act is that Wilde, who knows Bosie inside and out, realizes he's about to be abandoned by the self-absorbed lad. He may only be slightly more surprised when Rob, who's come to visit, is ready to do whatever he can for Wilde but is also concerned about his reputation being compromised by his lingering association with the once lionized but now ailing and disgraced playwright.

The rationales Bosie and Rob give for removing themselves are dismaying. Bosie claims he's never been a committed partisan of, in the phrase he coined, "the love that dare not speak its name." He says he's always planned to marry and raise children. (Subsequently, he did both.) Rob, who's already been hinted at as a mother's boy, confides that he can't bring shame on her.

The odd irony of the weaklings' pronouncements is that, as the act unfolds, Wilde increasingly acquires a melancholy dignity. Eventually left alone in the chair from which he's hardly risen throughout the act, he's a figure of despair, a victim of his own devices as well as of those prevalent in a forlornly repressed era.

There are those who say that with Wilde, Everett is giving the performance of his career. Perhaps he is, as directed by Neil Armfield, who had revived the play in Australia and caught Everett's attention. He's surely giving a performance different from the ones he's given over the years as an elegant leading man, a man who's made "suave" his middle name. (He's equally suave in his memoirs, Vanished Years, the most recent.)

His Wilde--in a hefty body suit, his hair long and wavy--is quite a shift from his Charles Condomine in Noel Coward's Blithe Spirit a year or two ago. It can be conceded, however, that Wilde is more psychologically complex than the men Everett is usually asked to play. (Maybe not the drug-addicted Nicky in Coward's The Vortex.)

This Wilde is a man too brilliant for his own good. He's a man only slowly coming to see how he's condemned himself in a society he's relentlessly mocked for its flaws but is now having its payback. It's difficult to keep your eyes off him, even as his supporting players are giving performances at his level--even as, in the second act, the taut Colley rearranges himself on the floor or when Armfield has him lean against a doorframe and stretch in the sun.

By the way, the Judas kiss of the title is bestowed, as might be guessed, by Bosie, and Wilde's reference to it underlines his position as sacrificial lamb already led to public slaughter in Hare's heart-breaking work.

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Uncomfortably Numb: Brittany Waters at the Thomas Ferreira Gallery

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You might go to someone's party and check out the host's book or music collection. If you're a little more curious, you might see what the hell's up in their medicine cabinet. I'm talking pills - analgesics, soporifics, psychotropics. Don't read the labels, examine the capsules' designs. Little Mondrians and Van Doesburgs, some butterscotch yellow or lime green monochromes. Innocuous, not a little pretty, right, like really minimal, hand painted, Minimalist sculptures? Well, especially if they're psychotropics, not that pretty. As with a painting's backstory, you have no idea of the context, the particulars of the condition for which these pills were prescribed. Often it's harrowing, if not downright grim.

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Brittany Waters' EXPOSED: Don't Let Them See the Damage, gives you that context. She makes you feel the emotional stakes for people that suffer from mental illness. It's timely (no matter how you look at it, we're an overprescribed nation) and timeless (how can we alleviate pain that doesn't have a physical cause?). The show reverberates because it makes us feel these stakes, to feel and care for those afflicted, even if we don't suffer from any such affliction ourselves.

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The setting floors you. The works are placed in a raw, claustrophobic room, like some long-abandoned Dust Bowl Depression-era asylum. You enter through a gauntlet of horizontal spikes so that, no matter what your pre-entrance frame of mind might have been, you don't enter unscathed. All this before you enter the gallery. When you leave, you know that you've been touched, like, really touched.

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One of the installations, the most touching, Prescribed Suffering, consists of eight medicine bottles, each colored that antiseptic orange, each covered with a ceramic lid made by the artist. Inside each bottle live nude, featureless, and anodyne clay figures that make you think of Edvard Munch's The Scream cast as an entropic sculpture. Their poses are contorted but their agony is passive. Though each figure's pain is obvious, it feels medicated and numb, under control but to what end? Part of an architecture of despair, each bottle sits on uneven pedestals so each figure feels compartmentalized and isolated, which appears to be the show's dominant state of mind, that is, the diagnosis the medication seeks to cure.

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The show prescribes a dilemma of damned if you do, damned if you don't. Don't take your meds? Then you're dead or dying, like the two figures outside of the bottles, one clawing to get in, one splatting on the ground. Take your meds? Then you're enervated and resigned, without a spark of vitality or spontaneity. Tough choice, to put it mildly.

The show raises more questions than it answers, the most prominent being What to do? It's this not knowing that drives the show, even if the narrative is one of drugged indifference. The show raises issues of contraindication, whether medication should even be used to treat mental disease; but at what cost, both emotionally and financially? Though the bottles are cylindrical and platonically perfect, the pills they house hardly solves the problems they set out to solve, which is why, metaphorically, the figures are shown to have become the medicine they ingest.

The figures don't fight their condition. They can't - they're too medicated. It's that passive struggle, which really isn't a struggle at all - that's the most moving part of the show. Writing of love, though he could just as easily have been writing about this exhibition, John Keats described it as being "awake forever in a sweet unrest."

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Tolokonnikova: 'Pavlensky is the Mind, Honor and the Balls of Our Epoch'

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Russian performance artist Petr Pavlensky said he was assaulted by detainee escort officers in the Moscow City Court.

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Petr Pavlensky by Lena Hades. Pencil and Hades' blood on paper. Photo credit: Lena Hades


"As I am writing these lines, I have a broken knee, a crack in my rib and internal bruising," Pavlensky wrote, calling the incident "the consequences of a usual transit [while escorting prisoners]," he said in a letter published by his partner and companion Oksana on Facebook Tuesday.

"The party is the mind, honor and conscience of our epoch" wrote Vladimir Lenin in his work Political Blackmail (1917) In 2015, on her Facebook, Pussy Riot member Nadezhda Tolokonnikova wrote about the artist Petr Pavlensky in aphoristic style of Lenin, "Pavlensky is the mind, honor and the balls of our epoch".

Political performance artist Petr Pavlensky sets fire set fire to the entrance of the headquarters of the FSB security service (the ex-KGB). Pavlensky called his performance "Threat". The fire was extinguished, and Pavlensky was detained on suspicion of hooliganism.

Via The Moscow Times:

Criminal charges against performance artist Pyotr Pavlensky -- who set fire to the entryway of the Federal Security Service -- have been reclassified from "vandalism" to "damaging a cultural heritage site," the Interfax news agency reported Tuesday.

Pavlensky's lawyer Dmitry Dinze told Interfax that Pavlensky, during a court hearing on Tuesday, said that the changes had been made "recently."

Under the new charges, Pavlensky may face up to six years in prison, while the maximum incarceration for "vandalism" under Russia's Criminal Code is only three.


Firstly Pavlensky became known for sewing his mouth shut in political protest against the incarceration of members of the Russian punk group Pussy Riot. His first performance was called Seam and was made by him on July 23, 2012, at Kazan Cathedral, St. Petersburg.

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Petr Pavlensky by Lena Hades. Pencil on paper. Photo credit: Lena Hades


At the same time, I conducted a 25-day hunger strike in support of Pussy Riot, drawing portraits Nadezhda Tolokonnikova and Maria Alyokhina using nothing but lipstick.

Pavlensky's art is political, but his art is much bigger than the Russian politics. Like any art it's deeper than any politics, it is an existential confrontation of the individual little person. Pavlensky art is sequential and logical: he sewed up his mouth, he naked wrapped in barbed wire, he nailed himself to Red Square, he showed us that the FSB headquarters are not protected... As an artist and a citizen Pavlensky says more than a thousand others, that over the years years criticized of the current regime. Because actions speal louder than words! You may recall the story of Jesus of Nazareth, who was also weird and did strange wonders. He was persecuted, ridiculed, judged and convicted. Pavlensky is truly free, a person who has been claiming victory of the will of a lonely weak person over the system, over an endless fear. Pavlensky's protest actions evoke strong feelings. All those who demand to punish him, to be imprisoned, to be put in a mental hospital, they are the ones who made him an artist, because every artist depends on the viewer's reaction. In a totalitarian society with a destruction of political freedoms, including the freedom of expression, any manifestation of the freedom of expression is valuable, it may be a rally, gathering signatures, a punk show or an art event, these manifestations of freedom are necessary, but they are meaningless at the same time, because they give the totalitarian authorities an excuse to tighten the screws, referring to the "protection of peaceful life" of the people. A symbol of the violence of the state over the individual in Russia is "Lubyanka" -- the Federal Security Service (ex-KGB) Headquarters. In the cellars of Lubyanka during the Great Purge tens of thousands of people were killed and tortured to death.

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Petr Pavlensky by Lena Hades. Pencil and Hades' blood on paper. Photo credit: Lena Hades


To set fire doors of the Lubyanka on fire, means to set on fire to the Gates of Hell.This is the true meaning put into action by a fearless artist Pavlensky - he burned down hell itself! Russian Politician, Member of the State Duma Dmitry Gudkov wrote about the artist "Pavlensky is a true artist, yes. Another thing is that such an enthusiasm towards Pavlensky's performance -- is a very alarming symptom for our authorities".

Moscow art dealer and cultural promoter Marat Guelman said about the Pavlensky performance, "The imagery of the doors of Lubyanka as the Gates to Hell, the source of evil, is very strong."

On November, 10, 2015, I started a series of Pavlensky portraits. He seems to me a kind of nietzschean overman, who "writes with blood", because "blood is spirit".

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Petr Pavlensky by Lena Hades. Pencil and akryl on paper. Photo credit: Lena Hades


Nietzsche wrote in his writing ECCE HOMO:
"Yes! I know whence I come!
Like a flame, unsatisfied
I glow and consume myself.
All that I touch, turns to light,
All that I leave behind, is coal:
Assuredly I am a flame"


In my opinion, this is one of the strongest Nietzsche's poems. And the last action of Pavlensky is just the embodiment of this poem. Pavlensky himself is a real flame.

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San Salvador, Street Artists, Food Insecurity And 'Conect-Arte'

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Six street artists took their social engagement a step further in El Salvador last month and taught youth some serious skills from the street.

Coming from Brazil, Australia, Ecuador, Mexico, New York and New Jersey, this international crew took the time to share and teach about painting, art, and how community can be built. The program Conect-Arte is a newly launched initiative by the United Nations World Food Programme, which as the name suggests, is also in the city to address a more core need to battle food insecurity. With Conect-Arte the goal is to meet youth in some communities and help with positive role models and options with an eye on transforming lives through developing art and related creative skills that can provide income and channel energy in ways productive to community.

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Vexta. Process shot. Conect-Arte. San Salvador. April 2016. (photo © Jamie Toll)


Together the artists worked on projects with 45 teens and younger kids over the course of the a week-long workshop in San Salvador, teaching street art techniques like stencil, lettering, mural painting, sculpture, even hot air balloon making. The goals are huge, like reducing violence, food insecurity, increasing access to economic opportunity. The tools here are art, the creative spirit, and strengthening relationships.

We bring you some images of the works that were made by the visiting artists and some of their observations and experiences during the Conect-Arte program.

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Vexta. Conect-Arte. San Salvador. April 2016. (photo © Yvette Vexta)


For her large mural project, street artist Vexta referenced the national bird, the Talapo, but creating two together in "Todos Estamos Conectados". She says it is a reflection mural of this now endangered species at the entrance of a nascent community center called Teatro Camara Roque Dalton. During her installation she worked with three students and they experimented with abstract painting techniques, washes, spray paint, stencils and colour theory.

Brooklyn Street Art: How can a project like this help people feel connected to their city and their neighbors?

Vexta: This is a great question. In San Salvador there are very physical divisions that are highly visible - tall concrete fences topped with razor wire and the favela type neighborhoods which are often gang controlled territories. So people are really disconnected.

Conect-Arte enabled two groups of young people to come together from two distinct neighborhood areas - The Historic Centre and San Jacinto. The young people in the workshops got to connect with other young people that they wouldn't have met otherwise, new friends were made and skills shared. This was super beautiful to see.

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Vexta. Workshop. Conect-Arte. San Salvador. April 2016. (photo © Yvette Vexta)


Its really hard for young people in San Salvador who live in poorer neighborhoods to move about the city. The threat of gang and police violence is very real. My group in particular made plans to stay in touch, to make more art together and start break-dancing together.

Whilst I was painting at Roque Dalton I had quite a few local people come to thank me for creating something beautiful in their neighborhood, and especially within the historic centre which is an area that is quite neglected, rundown and old. I think art in the streets can provide people with something they can feel proud of, a focal point or new memory site that is not an advertisement billboard or an architectural symbol - which is how we usually navigate modern cities.

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Vexta. Workshop. Conect-Arte. San Salvador. April 2016. (photo © Yvette Vexta)


This time they can say "I live near the twin birds that were painted for me" instead of "I live by the Mister Donut." I hope my piece can bring a sense of the joy for life in a place struggling to remember what the value of life is. To me when you are seeing people approach the building to spend time taking photos of themselves and their friends and family, actively engaging with the art, is proof of a very real connection occurring between people and their city.

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Vexta. Workshop. Conect-Arte. San Salvador. April 2016. (photo © Yvette Vexta)


brooklyn

Vexta. Conect-Arte. San Salvador. April 2016. (photo © Yvette Vexta)


LNY (Lunar New Year) says that he and students created a work based upon a poem by Javier Zamora entitled "Instrucciones Para Mi Entierro" (Instructions For My Funeral)

Brooklyn Street Art: Is it difficult to try to represent poetry visually?

LNY: It could be difficult yes but to me it became a matter of reacting to the poetry as opposed to try to represent it literally - which is the same way that I approach making context-sensitive art or murals. The poem was a starting point for our conversation and it helped inspire ideas, images, a mood and an internal narrative for the mural. We reacted to the poem the way dancing is a reaction to music, but we were not bound by a literal representation of the poem.

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LNY. Conect-Arte. San Salvador. April 2016. (photo © Yvette Vexta)


An average person can encounter a mural or a poem and, without context, have an interpretation that is very different from what the author intended. Do you ever feel like you want to leave an explanation near your artwork so a passerby can understand it better?

Art has the power and range of a self contained language, one that works just like a written one but benefits from not being attached to a particular official language, nation or culture. See, I find myself traveling to lands where I do not speak the local language, be it literally or the proper vernacular, but by making art I get to bridge that gap and communicate regardless - the universal language of art allows me to communicate beyond English or Spanish or what have you.

So that's one thing, art can fully explain itself as a visual language. Then you have the problem of interpretation which I, as an artist, will never fully control so let's not go there. Lastly, and what I think becomes really interesting, is the idea of audience as far as an explanation would go.

My answer was to somehow take an interpretation of a poem and turn it into something new and visual that you can now read as a mural, as its own thing, as an experience with its own language -- as a new and self contained visual poem.

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LNY. Conect-Arte. San Salvador. April 2016. (photo © Yvette Vexta)


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LNY. Conect-Arte. San Salvador. April 2016. (photo © Yvette Vexta)


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LNY. Detail. Conect-Arte. San Salvador. April 2016. (photo © Yvette Vexta)


In descriptions of the project the subject of safety in San Salvador comes up frequently, with stories of youth and families restricted to safe zones behind walls, fences, barbed wire for fear of violence from gangs and heavy handed authorities. Mexican Street Artist Paola Delfin created her piece entitled "Tu eres yo¨/ ¨You are me" in one of these protected neighborhoods.

She says in the group's press release " This wall is inspired by many factors, after finding out a bit about the area where the wall is situated -- a neighborhood consider safe in San Salvador. El Salvador is a country that a lot of people think of as a really wild place, but you can also find so many pretty things and beautiful people, this wall for example is the facade of ¨La Casa Tomada¨ a really inspiring place where many young people get together to create and learn from each other about art, music, media and many things."

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Paola Delfin. Process shot. Conect-Arte. San Salvador. April 2016. (photo © Yvette Vexta)


Brooklyn Street Art: Does San Salvador have a particular personality on the street? How does an artist effectively speak to that audience on the street with their work?

Paola Delfin: Unfortunately I didn't have much time to check out a lot of places around San Salvador, but I felt really related to it. I felt it looks pretty similar to Mexico, and I think the contrasts you can find there are pretty similar as well.

I think not only the Salvadorian audience but a lot of people from nearby countries (even my own) expect to communicate their thoughts and concerns about a lot of situations that are happening. I guess that we as artists have to find the way to share their thoughts and try to focus on the impact that our own thoughts could have on the people who see our work.

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Paola Delfin. Conect-Arte. San Salvador. April 2016. (photo © Yvette Vexta)


Street Artist Mr Toll created a number of food related sculptural pieces in reference to the food scarcity issue in his work with the youth. Twisting the name of his project, he literally was making "Street Food" (Comida Callejera). He is quoted in the group's press release saying, "One of the major concerns in San Salvador is Food Security. This inspired my workshop and subsequent Street Sculpture collaborations with the students. During the workshops we focused on the healthy everyday foods the youth come in contact with, we discussed different issues while preparing the sculptures and then brought them together on the street as food face collages," obviously injecting a brand of comedy that the kids could appreciate.

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Mr. Toll. Conect-Arte. San Salvador. April 2016. (photo © Jamie Toll)



"The opportunity of working directly on the street as a group gave the youth the freedom to play, experiment and feel safe in a public domain which generally they don't have access too," he says. "They face many restrictions due to gang activity and a heavy handed police presence in San Salvador. It was important for me to help to bring a little fun and humor in a creative way to their lives in a city faced with many difficulties."

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Mr. Toll. Conect-Arte. San Salvador. April 2016. (photo © Jamie Toll)


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Mr. Toll. Conect-Arte. San Salvador. April 2016. (photo © Jamie Toll)


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Mr. Toll. Workshop. Conect-Arte. San Salvador. April 2016. (photo © Jamie Toll)


Adapted from the original Chinese hot air balloons, artesian balloons have had many cultures artistic influences in the last century. Brazilian Street Artist Claudio Ethos and members of the Sao Paulo based graffiti crew called 14 B.I.S crew (Sao Paulo) had a workshop promoting the art form by teaching how to make them. Called locally by the name of Globos, the project involved elements of mathematics, physics and geometry as well as a very necessary requirement of collaboration.

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ETHOS. Conect-Arte. San Salvador. April 2016. (photo © Yvette Vexta)


Globo Lokos was the project name and working together with the youth was especially rewarding because of the airborne result of their collaborative efforts. "The focus," says Ethos, "was start to finish object making, where the young people had the opportunity to show their city, where they live, that they can make art and be artists. We helped the youth to make the balloons drawn with art to send their prays and wishes to the sky, Then they launched their works of art into the sky, which is a very powerful action," according to the press release.

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ETHOS. Conect-Arte. San Salvador. April 2016. (photo © Yvette Vexta)


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ETHOS. Conect-Arte. San Salvador. April 2016. (photo © Yvette Vexta)


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ETHOS. Conect-Arte. San Salvador. April 2016. (photo © WFP USA Charles Fromm)


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ETHOS. Conect-Arte. San Salvador. April 2016. (photo © WFP USA Charles Fromm)


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Group shot at Casa Tomada. Conect-Arte. San Salvador. April 2016. (photo © Jamie Toll)




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Omari Banks: Former Cricketer Turned Reggae Rocker Is Making Waves

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At six foot five, dark and handsome, with long dreadlocks and a cool Caribbean style, you can't help but be drawn to Omari Banks. I meet up with Omari at Café Mediterraneo at Cuisinart Golf Resort & Spa in Anguilla, which is conveniently located next door to the famous Dune Preserve that just finished hosting its 26th annual Moonsplash festival. As we head to our table, we can't walk but two feet without Omari exchanging warm greetings with another passerby, almost like an unofficial ambassador of Anguilla. We eventually sit down at a table in the back of the restaurant and, after ordering identical chopped salads with seared tuna, launch right into chatting about his life.

I ask about his shirt which says 'get stoned naturally'. It turns out that he doesn't smoke, never has, and drinks minimally. "I've always been very structured in things that I've done" he says, "and in sports I liked to be in control. I take that same kind of mentality towards my music."

As we talk, it becomes clear that his passion for life is undeniable. And, with that, there is an intensity and drive to succeed. First, he harnessed that energy at a young age to learn cricket. By age 12, he was traveling with a team of 17 year olds who took him under their wing. He was, as he put it, "obsessed with cricket - the same way I am with my music now," and persevered to become the first Anguillan to play Test Cricket. By the age of 27 years old, he had played cricket professionally, all over the Caribbean and in England, and had become jaded with the politics of the industry and disappointed when he wasn't selected for certain teams. As frustration set in, he turned to what had always come naturally, music.

"When I decided to do music, I had the same drive for it as I did for cricket" he says. "Because music was such a part of me from two or three years old, I would dare to say I have even a stronger talent for music." Indeed, Omari had been surrounded by music his entire life (his father is legendary reggae singer Bankie Banx), and he would travel with his dad abroad, singing onstage with his dad at the young age of five years old. Music was also a constant source of enjoyment and relaxation, and when he was touring with cricket, he would carry his guitar with him and write songs. He had a confidence from sports of "if I put my mind to something and dedicate my time and practice it, something can be achieved."

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Once he set his mind to starting a music career, there was no turning back. His laser focus on refining his voice, working on his songwriting, and improving his instrument playing skills (he plays the base, guitar and drums) culminated in his debut album Move On, aptly titled to express his sentiments of moving on from his cricket career. The album is full of moving tracks, including a collaboration with Grammy-winning artist Peetah Morgan on the song No Point To Prove, the song Somaya dedicated to his sweet 4 year old daughter, and the powerful title track Move On. His music is dynamic and has many influences. "Folk music resonates with me because I'm a storyteller, blues music because it touches the soul, and jazz music for its complexity. My music is a fusion of all of them, with the base being reggae music."

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Although he's frequently traveling for work (he most recently performed in the SXSW Music Festival in Austin, Texas), he is now back in Anguilla after just performing at Moonsplash, where he played both current hits and new songs. A memorable moment of the night included a duet with his father Bankie where they gave a soulful tribute to Prince with a beautiful rendition of the song Purple Rain. I spoke to Bankie, and he couldn't be more proud of his son. "He's a great singer-songwriter," says Bankie, "and he's working very hard and is very brave."

The feeling is mutual. Omari has great respect for his father and, although they both have strong personalities and sometimes clash, he is close with his father and views him as a role model, as he does his mother, who instilled in him the values of perseverance and hard work and encouraged him to read motivational self-help books as he was growing up. "I have to give my mom, who was a big disciplinarian, a lot of credit for molding me into who I am. I'm not the kind of person to be complacent."

Those values have helped him on his musical journey as Omari acknowledges that the road hasn't always been easy. "It's a lot of hard work. You have to constantly practice to be able to express yourself onstage. And you have to have a plan and work towards it. My overall outlook is that you take each day for what it is and grow piece by piece. There are ten million ways to do the same thing; I have to feel comfortable that, as Frank Sinatra says, 'I did it my way'."

As far as Omari's advice for future artists, "Work hard and be independent by learning to play instruments because it opens up so many doors. That way, you can make money by playing without relying on others. Read. Have discipline. Have fun because it's easy to forget that the emotional connection to the music needs to be real in order to connect with people. When you are having fun, people will pick up on that vibe."

He is currently working on his next album (which is expected to drop later this year) and just released a new single, System Set. I ask him what we can expect to hear on the upcoming album. "I have a better idea of what I want my music to sound like now. This new album will be more refined in terms of my vocal ability. I will collaborate with other producers, and it will be marketed even better as I have more contacts to make things happen. People recognize me better for my music now; I've gotten over that hump of them recognizing me for my cricketer status."

And with that, we say goodbye, as it was time for Omari to move on.

Find out more about Omari Banks by clicking here.

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Donald Trump's Universal Grammar

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There has been a lot of talk about Donald Trump and why he appeals to people, but more specifically why he gets to say things that would ruin another politicians career, like the comment about Carly Fiorina's face, or Megyn Kelly's period, about "lyin Ted", or "Crooked Hillary." He loves soubriquets, but Trump's appeal might actually be in the language. For the disenfranchised voter that Trump appeals to the assaultive language is an ineradicable bond that places Trump on the wrong side of the tracks and in cahoots against the establishment with his would be constituents. It's like the kind of self-mutilation that motorcycle gang members practice with their tattoos and piercing and anti-social antics. Trump is constantly proving himself to the Hell's Angels both literally (since they represent his demographic of poor whites) and metaphorically. He says what we think since there's racism, sexism and bigotry in all of us. We all want to put up walls (psychic as well as physical). We all want to demean people we disagree with and even keep them out of our communities. In the process of evolution, we gradually learn to do away with these tribal impulses. Trying to be Trump is a big mistake. You can't be Trump unless you're Andrew Dice Clay, or Howard Stern or someone who excels at shock jockery and it's not something that can be taught. You are born with the genes or not. Noam Chomsky theorized about a universal grammar, a biological trait of humans, underlying the acquisition of all language. But Trump possesses a mutation of universal grammar, which allows him to speak to the pathological part of all of us. In a review the late Andrew Sarris commented, "there's a little Hitler in all of us" ("The Controversial Das Experiment: Is There Some Hitler in All of Us?" Observer, 9/30/02)













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

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My Love Affair With Museums

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It's International Museum Day and I'm thinking how lucky I was growing up in Manhattan. My parents took me to art museums there on a regular basis from when I was very young. My first museum memory is of crawling through the legs of a huge throng at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1961 to get to the front and see the newly purchased Rembrandt, "Aristotle with a Bust of Homer."

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I remember feeling very still before that majestic canvas. But my real love at The Met was the galleries of Greek and Roman statuary and the halls of armor. Ancient Rome and feudal Europe were two of my early reading passions and I could idle there for hours.

The Guggenheim was also on my parents' cultural map, and so was The Museum of Modern Art where I fell in love with two paintings that couldn't be more different: Van Gogh's "Starry Night," and Picasso's "Guernica." I'd visit them first thing whenever I went, as if they were old friends. And then there was The Cloisters up in Ft. Tryon Park, not far from where we lived, an awe-inspiring setting for medieval art.

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Later on I'd discover The Frick on my own, and The Museum of the City of New York with my brother.

All my early experiences of delighted museum-going laid the foundation for new loves when I began to travel to Europe: the Tate Modern and the Wallace Collection in London, The Cluny, The Picasso Museum, and the Rodin Museum in Paris, the Glypothek in Munich, Amsterdam's Rijksmuseum. I can spend hours in any of them the way book lovers can get lost in bookstores.

I'm grateful to my parents for introducing me to so much art and so many artists at an early age.

I don't travel abroad as much as I used to, but one of my favorite domestic trips is a weekend built around an exhibition, and my favorite moments at any museum are those times where you get to stand or sit alone in front of a work you're just discovering, as I did in London not so long ago, with Epstein's astonishing "Jacob and the Angel."

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The work is mammoth, mysterious, and it swept me away. I'd never even heard of it before, and saw it at the end of a long gallery, felt drawn to it as if by magnetism, and was luckily there early enough to be alone with the work and my impression.

Those times of reverie and revelation keep coming as I explore new museums and new exhibitions.

Lev Raphael is the author of The Vampyre of Gotham and 24 other books in genres from mystery to memoir that you can find on Amazon.

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Chad Brannon Stars in the West Coast Production of Blood From A Stone

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If you're lucky enough to be in the Los Angeles area until May 22nd, you can catch the running theatrical production of Blood From A Stone, starring Emmy Award winning actor, Chad Brannon, along with Dramalogue Award winner, Joanne Baron. Written by Tommy Nohilly, this semi-autobiographical play explores a dysfunctional, disconsolate blue-collar family in the midst of their unexpected reunion, and all the baggage that comes with being, well, genuinely unhappy.

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In this tragic, but comedic play, Chad Brannon stars as the main character, Travis, the PTSD-stricken, aggressive former Marine, dropping in on his family for an unexpected stay. Chock full of thick tension, brooding family dynamic, and ultimately absurd situations, Blood From A Stone is a wild and violent ride.

Brannon has starred in television shows, films and plays of all caliber, since high school. He has had roles on The Bling Ring, General Hospital, Friday Night Lights, CSI, Hamlet, Macbeth, amongst many others. In his Texas high school, the football-playing-jock was dared by a friend to audition for the school play. Not only did Brannon get the lead on his first audition, his love for the spotlight grew exponentially, and he wound up auditioning and starring in every performance. With encouragement from his high school theatre director, Brannon took the leap and moved to Los Angeles with an eager attitude. "I would have lived in my car, if I had to," Brannon comments. "Fortunately, I landed five guest spots my first year in LA, one being on General Hospital which went from a six-week role to a four-year contract. My first year there, I won a Newcomer of the Year award, then after my run on General Hospital, I was awarded my first Emmy. Needless to say, it was an incredible start to my career."

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Maybe it's his brawny jawline or the characters of his resume catching up with themselves, but Brannon seems to be often granted the dishonorable, malignant role. In regard to character preparation, he states:

I usually find that my characters are down on their luck, that they are clouded in judgement. Some of my previous roles have been pure evil, others seem corrupt but have good intentions. To prepare for these roles, I dissect the character. I work to find the center of my character, what moves him. Then I start from a place of motivation. For example, my character Travis in Blood From a Stone, I try to draw from past experience, although I am fortunate to have a better family life than he does. But I can see through his eyes, I can see the beauty of life that he sees, even with such a tragic family. That role hits a deeply emotional place and the factor of imagination comes into play: "What would I do? How can his history correlate with mine?" I dig into the emotion, hope and possibility of what my character would feel and how I would feel in his place. In regard to takes, it is often very different with plays than TV and film. During a theatrical performance, there is no turning back. Everything is live and you cannot "edit" or adjust. With a play, especially Blood From a Stone, those "in the moment" skills are honed in on, my focus is sharpened and I rehearse like a madman.


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A small-town-dwelling, adventure-seeking, passionate Travis, is the binding factor in this family drama. As he works to portray a character that resonates through you the entire play, actor Chad Brannon is clearly appreciative, passionate and perceptive when it comes to every character he plays, no matter how tarnished.

You can check out Brannon's site by visiting http://chadbrannon.com/. Blood From A Stone will run until May 22nd 2016 at Electric Lodge theatre in Venice, CA. You can buy tickets here.

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