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Arts Festivals and Obama Bake Sales

Saturday, June 21st, 2008

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It’s already the final weekend of the Arts Festival, so I thought I’d highlight some of the events being held today and tomorrow.

Saturday, June 21
-Pittsburgh Playworks: Professionally staged readings of plays by Pittsburgh playwrights; 1pm at 937 Liberty Avenue
-panPittsburgh: Steel drums @ the Community Stage, 2-4pm
-Opek, Good Brother Earl and the Avett Brothers will be performing at 6, 6:30, 7:30 respectively

Sunday, June 22
-Pittsburgh Rocks! Battle of the Bands @ the Market Square stage from 2-5pm
-Dreams of Hope: a gay/straight performing arts group @ the Community Stage, 5:15
-Mystic Knights and Alejandro Escovedo closing out the night at the Main Stage, 5pm and 6pm

Come check out all of the amazing artwork and goods for sale in the artists market, as well as the exhibits located around downtown. I recommend visiting the Contained exhibit on Forbes Avenue by Market Square, especially the Zen Room, which was a peaceful way to spend my day volunteering at the Festival.

For more informations, visit their website here.

I also wanted to mention the Barack Obama bake sale at Zombo Gallery in Lawrenceville that’s taking place tomorrow from noon-4pm. Zombo will be djing and the proceeds will go to moveon.org’s Obama presidential fund.

While you’re there, you can also check out their Attack of the Pittsburgh Tattoo Artists exhibit, where Pittsburgh’s finest tattoo artists have displayed their wildest works of art. Objects include skateboards, paintings, sculptures and more. The show closes on June 29th, so hurry this is the perfect opportunity to see it while it lasts!

Zombo Gallery is located at 4900 Hatfield Street in Lawrenceville.

Check out my previous post for other going-ons at the Arts Festival I left out in this post.

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From Violence to Vision exhibit

Wednesday, June 18th, 2008

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Manchester Craftsmen’s Guild Youth and Arts is presenting an interesting exhibit, titled “From Violence to Vision.” The exhibit features the work of the guild’s first group of Arts Leadership and Public Service interns (more about the guild below).

The exhibit focuses on an important social issue and according to their press release, one of eight ALPS interns with work in the exhibition, Adriane Hairston, a rising senior at CAPA high school, is excited to participate in activism through art for her first time: “As a group, we [ALPS interns] decided to address violence through this exhibition because it is an issue that has affected all of us, despite our various backgrounds and experiences.

The press release also described the work done by the MCG Youth and Arts:

In collaboration with the Pittsburgh Public Schools (PPS) and with support from various grants, foundations and individual donations, MCG Youth & Arts is a center for arts and learning that serves approximately 2,000 unique students in grades K–12 annually. Students may participate in courses in various media including ceramics, photography, design and digital arts; career and college exposure activities; and workshops with internationally renowned artists who also exhibit work at MCG’s galleries. Additionally, MCG Youth & Arts hosts a number of educational opportunities for principals, teachers and the community, and offers public access to its two galleries at no cost. All programs are implemented by professional working artists, and maintain an 8:1 student:teacher ratio in order to provide students the attention they need to succeed. MCG is a subsidiary of Manchester Bidwell Corporation.

“From Violence to Vision” is on view through July 6th at MCG’s satellite gallery at 800 Penn Avenue. There is also a silent auction of exhibition pieces and the sale of student-designed advocacy pins. There is a free reception this Friday the 20th, from 5:30-8pm at the gallery.

A portion of all proceeds made during the exhibition will go to the Center for Victims of Violence and Crime (CVVC). Supported by a grant from the New York-based Surdna Foundation, the ALPS internship is part of MCG’s Apprenticeship Training Program after-school arts courses.

Through nationally recognized and acclaimed year-round programs, MCG Youth & Arts strives to educate, inspire and promote continuance to higher education by engaging students in learning through the arts.

For more information on the Manchester Guild visit their website here or contact Brittany Colatrella, Communications Coordinator, MCG Youth & Arts, 412-322-1773 Ext. 378.

Don’t forget the Arts Festival is still going on until this Sunday. Visit my previous post to see what you’ve been missing!

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The Arts Festival!

Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

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It’s already the second week of the festival, so I figured now is as good as time as any to talk about this great event. The festival is still being held downtown around the Gateway Plaza/PPG Plaza/Market Square area and runs until June 22nd. Here’s just some of the highlights of this weekend’s events:

Friday, June 13th
-Maceo Parker! The legendary jazz singer is presenting on the Main Stage at 7:30pm
-Take Me Out, Richard Greenberg’s Tony-winning play @ Navarra, 131 7th Street, 8pm, $10
-The Unintended, a play exposing the present situation of Afghani refugees in Pakistan @ 937 Liberty Avenue, 8pm, $5
-Omega Love is playing at Market Square @ 9:30pm

Saturday, June 14th
-Magarac Attack opening and artist party in Market Square; a folk-themed celebration with participating artists, 4-6 pm
-The Curve Ball @ Navarra, 6pm, $35; exclusive cocktail reception and admission to the 8pm performance of Take Me Out for Pittsburgh’s gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender community
-Phoebe Snow and special guest Gemini @ the Main Stage, 6:30pm

Sunday, June 15th
-Celtic Spirit Highland Dancers of Pittsburgh @ Community Stage, 12:30pm
-Attack Theatre’s The Heist @ the Contained Exhibition (Forbes Avenue), 5:30pm
-NY Dolls! with special guest the Takeover UK @ the Main Stage, 6:30pm

I’ve been volunteering at the festival since last week and I can say that so far, there’s been a really good turnout, great artists and some amazing music, so come on out!

For more information on performances, scheduling and more, check out their website here.

And if you can’t make it out to the festival this weekend, maybe you can catch the Life on Mars exhibit I previously talked about that’s happening at the Carnegie Museum.

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Life on Mars

Tuesday, May 20th, 2008

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The Carnegie Museum presents a new exhibit, “Life on Mars,” which asks some difficult questions, while remaining a thoughtful and entertaining discussion. The exhibit debuted May 3rd and will run until January 11th, 2009. Here is some information on the exhibit straight from the blog the exhibit has been maintaining:

Life on Mars, the 2008 Carnegie International, explores the important, yet continually perplexing, question of what it means to be human in the world today. Each artist brings a unique outlook to the question of humanity’s response to a world in which global events challenge and seem to threaten our everyday existence. Included in the exhibition will be some 200 works in diverse media, from painting, sculpture, and drawing to animation, film, installation, and performance.

“For the first time in 112 years the exhibition has a title other than Carnegie International,” said Fogle. “Life on Mars is very much a poetic gesture in terms of thinking about our place in the universe as humans. Are we alone in the universe? Do aliens exist? Or are we, ourselves, the strangers in our own worlds? To me contemporary art is as much about coming to terms with our own world as it is about creating a set of worlds parallel to those that we walk in everyday. The thematic premise behind the show has to do with the idea of the intimate moments in our daily life that we miss by walking through our worlds and not seeing what is right in front of us. It also has to do with the more infinite sense of being part of the larger universe and finding ourselves on the inside and looking out. All of the artists participating in the 2008 Carnegie International have been chosen because their work conveys this sensibility.”

The exhibit features the work of 40 artists representing 17 countries all with their own interpretation of the world we live in today.

The Carnegie Museum is located at 4400 Forbes Avenue in Oakland.

Visit the exhibit’s website to learn more about times, ticket prices and artists involved in the show.

I hope everyone enjoyed their weekends and enjoyed some of the events I posted last week.

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This Saturday…

Thursday, May 15th, 2008

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For those of you not local to or frequent visitors of Oakland, now is your chance to further explore this great little area of Pittsburgh.

This Saturday come out to experience A Taste of Oakland; for only $5 you can tour more than 20 businesses, as well as sample local food and refreshments.

Participating restaurants include Dave and Andy’s, Hemingway’s, Mad Mex, Spice Cafe, Starbucks and more! There is also free parking at the UPMC lot on Meyran, free entry into the Carnegie Museum and free carousel rides in Schenley Plaza. You can also receive $5 off any performance of Pittsburgh Irish and Classical Theatre’s production of an Ideal Husband or Wilde Tales.

The event takes place from 12-3pm Saturday and tickets can be purchased that day at Eureka Bank at 3455 Forbes and the Public Parklet at the corner of Forbes and S. Bouquet.

For more information, visit Only in Oakland’s website here.

Also on Saturday is the Good vs. Evil photography show at the Creative Treehouse.

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The photography show will feature the work of local photographers each depicting one end of the broad spectrum of good and evil representations. There will photos for sale, as well as food and entertainment all for $5. The show is 18+ due to subject matter and will be hosted at the Creative Treehouse in Bellevue.

For more information on the photography show, please visit the Treehouse’s website here.

And if you can still find the time, don’t forget to check out the Silk Screen Film Festival. Details can be viewed in my previous post here.

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Silk Screen: Asian American Film Festival

Thursday, May 8th, 2008

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The Silk Screen Film Festival is back in Pittsburgh from May 9th through the 18th. The festival showcases the cinematic achievements of filmmakers from all over the world, exploring the depths of the Asian-American experience.

The films will be shown at the Harris Theater, Melwood Screening Room, Regent Square Theater and at the Warhol. A complete film schedule can be found here, but I’d like to highlight a couple I think would be interesting.

Getting Home: Based on a true story. In Zhang Yang’s quasi-philosophical road comedy, working-class stiff Zhao (the famous Chinese comedian Zhao Benshan) is shocked when his drinking buddy and co-worker drops dead during a routine night out. Zhoa owes it to his long-time friend to transport his corpse to its final resting place. Director Zhang Yang also made the critically acclaimed Shower.

Tie a Yellow Ribbon
: In her first feature film, director Joy Deitrich paints a nuanced portrait of a female Korean adoptee who must confront her damaged past. Estranged from her family due to a childhood indiscretion with her white brother, Jenny Mason seeks to regain a sense of home by exploring ties with the Asian Americans she meets in her new apartment building, until suddenly, her brother shows up at the door, stirring up long lost feelings that she has tried to bury.

Ploy: Director Pen-Ek Ratanaruang’s psychological drama wherein three strangers are locked inside one hotel room. It starts with subtle suspicions and builds up to jealousy, as the appearance of a young woman triggers devastating consequences for a married couple.

In addition to providing thoughtful and memorable films to the Pittsburgh region, Silk Screen also has these goals in mind:

* Educate communities – Asian American and mainstream, local and national - about Asian and Asian American history, culture, experiences and issues;
* Bring Asian cultural education experiences to area schools and universities;
* Support ongoing development of Asian and Asian American independent cinema;
* Foster understanding across lines of race, ethnicity, religion, age, and region by bringing together the various Asian communities and the population at large within the Pittsburgh region;
* Sustain growth and encourage excellence in Asian American culture and Pittsburgh’s place within it. As the Festival grows, to become a full celebration of Asian heritage, build a more dynamic and multicultural community, and make Silk Screen a traveling event across the Commonwealth.

Neat!

For more information on showtimes, ticket prices, etc visit Silk Screen’s website here.

Don’t forget to visit Zombo Gallery this weekend to check out Ian Green’s exhibition!

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Ian Green Studios Vs. BINKY FON

Monday, May 5th, 2008

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The latest Zombo Gallery show opened this past Friday, so I’m sorry I didn’t mention it earlier. It involves the artistic talent of Ian Green, a Pittsburgh native.

Who is Ian Green and why you have to see his art.

Ian Green was born and raised in Pittsburgh, PA. As a kid, he played mostly in the woods that edged Carrick. This was the 70’s and no one talked about green space, so the woods back when were basically considered a dumping ground for many and most roads that ended there were punctuated by many a lazy slob’s garbage. For a parent, this was surely a safety concern, but for little Ian, it was awesome! A seemingly endless supply of discarded and fading plastics, gems of broken glass, rusted metal and peeling painted wood mixed with lush vegetation and weeds offered forms and colors and textures that no clean playground could. Ian was into it.

Every so often, his family would go up to Mars, PA. to visit John and Louise Fox. John was a painter and antique dealer. Their warehouse was dark and ominous and filled to the rafters with John’s work and antique items ranging from nearly worthless to rare and exquisite – all
accompanied with a layer of dust the thickness of which bespoke either their newness or neglect. Wandering through this strange interior garden excited Ian the same way the junk did back home in the woods. He was hooked.

Skip ahead past the BFA from CCAD, the MFA in Painting from IU in Bloomington, and hit play in Pittsburgh 2000. Ian gets a studio in Homestead (where he is still working) but the world is very different now. He looks at people talking into their cell phones and they seem like plain-clothes extras rehearsing for a Star Trek episode, so he paints a broken branch in a dirty window with the light filtering through the dying leaves. Skip a little pass 911 to the ever-present terror we’re supposed to be feeling thanks to Fox News. No thanks – so Ian joins the Zany Umbrella Circus as an antidote to helplessness.

Now people talk to their invisible friends via little Borg attachments. Loud one-sided arguments from pissed off strangers drift up from the bus stop below his studio. Ian sees the billboards getting bigger and brighter and the people getting smaller and smaller and he’s seeing a lot more security cameras everywhere and yet people seem more afraid than ever. Pieces like “MacSanto’s Pizzarena”, and “Dave –n – Strikebusters” and “BINKY FON” stem from a growing suspicion—that our present humanity is sliding uneasily into a trap set for the future. This is what Ian calls “The Time of PIL”. Where good credit equals no worries and the billboards read you.

Closing Reception Friday May 23rd at 6pm
Gallery Hours.. Fridays from 5:00-7:30 and Saturdays Noon - 4pm
other times ..call 412-904-3703 appointments.

Zombo Gallery is located at 4900 Hatfield Street in Lawrenceville. Besides being an art gallery, Zombo sells custom t-shirts, dvds and cds, as well as recorded air checks of Zombo’s Record Show, heard on 88.3 FM. Definitely a neat place to check out!

If you can’t make it out to the gallery this weekend, you might want to practice your photography skills so you can submit work to the Good vs. Evil photography show that is going to be held May 17th at the Creative Treehouse in Bellevue. For more information, visit my previous post on the event here.

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Company Man: Takashi Murakami and the Art of ‘Business Art’

Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008

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COMPANY MAN: TAKASHI MURAKAMI AND THE ART OF ‘BUSINESS ART’

Wednesday, April 23 at 6-7:30pm in Kresge Hall (CFA), Carnegie Mellon University.

THE ART OF BUSINESS/BUSINESS AS ART:
A DISCUSSION ON BUSINESS AND ART WITH SCOTT ROTHKOPF, SENIOR EDITOR OF ARTFORUM

Delegation, agency, team production, monitoring, group entrepreneurship‹all these terms inform the division of labor in contemporary artistic production. The business of art is conducted much like any other commercial venture in which something is bought, sold, or traded, and yet a work of art is not a commodity in the ordinary sense. Its value can fluctuate radically in an instant, depending on the influence of collectors, dealers, curators, critics, or connoisseurs. What kinds of negotiations must an artist make in order to retain a critical and creative edge within a competitive art market? How have contemporary artists used “the market” as both a medium of art, as well as a place of profit and gain? Is there a difference between consumerist luxury items and the “products” that artists like Murakami (in particular, his Louis Vuitton purse replicas) and Maywa Denki (their Japanese high-end robotic toys) produce? What is the line between entrepreneurial innovation and artistic invention?

“Business art is the step that comes after Art,” Andy Warhol famously opined in 1975. Yet despite the recent explosion of the international art market and the crossover superstardom of figures such as Damien Hirst and Jeff Koons, perhaps only one artist has truly taken Warhol at his word: Takashi Murakami. This lecture will explore Murakami’s far-flung “business art” endeavors and their relationship to his painting and sculpture, within the context of precedents including Dalí, Warhol, and Haring. A household name in his native Japan, Murakami (b. 1963) first gained international celebrity in 2002 with his series of Louis Vuitton handbags, which grossed more than three-hundred million dollars in their first year of sales alone.

Although this corporate collaboration may be his most well-known foray into the world of commerce, it is but one point in a constellation of activities that dwarfs his gallery-bound paintings and sculpture in administrative scope and market reach. In addition to churning out finely crafted artworks coveted by collectors, he is busy producing related mass-market merchandise; running his own art fair; managing the careers of young Japanese artists; planning group exhibitions; hosting a radio show; and pursuing commercial “collaborations” in the form of advertising and branding projects with the likes of rapper Kanye West all under the auspices of his own multinational corporation, Kaikai Kiki, Co., Ltd., a “business art” venture unlike any before it. Indeed, if Warhol provided the model, Murakami has broken the mold.

Scott Rothkopf is a senior editor of Artforum, as well as an art historian and critic. He has been a guest curator at Harvard University’s Fogg Art Museum, where he most recently co-organized “This Is Not a Time for Dreaming” (2004), a site-specific installation and film by the French artist Pierre Huyghe made in response to Le Corbusier’s only North American building, the Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts. At the Fogg, he was also curator and catalogue author for the exhibition “Mel Bochner Photographs 1966¬1969″ (2002), which traveled to the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh. As a frequent contributor to Artforum, Rothkopf has written on major exhibitions, including the Venice and Whitney biennials, and on artists such as Jeff Koons, Ed Ruscha, Sol LeWitt, Diller+Scofidio, Carroll Dunham, Josiah McElheny, T. J. Willcox, and Karen Kilimnik, who was the subject of his 2007 book, Period Eye: Karen Kilimnik’s Fancy Pictures, co-authored with Meredith Martin. His other museum and gallery catalogue contributions include monographic essays on Wade Guyton, Eva Hesse, Jasper Johns, Roy Lichtenstein, Kelley Walker, and Terry Winters, as well as text on Takashi Murakami for his current traveling retrospective, organized by the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles.

Sponsored by the Office of the Provost, The School of Art, and the New Minor in Innovation, Entrepreneurship, and Economic Development.

For more information, contact Melissa Ragona, Assistant Professor of Art, School of Art, Carnegie Mellon University at mragona@andrew.cmu.edu.
Tel: (412) 779-9257

To read about other art events sponsored by Carnegie Mellon, check out my previous post here.

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Art & PNC Park

Tuesday, April 15th, 2008

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The two subjects don’t normally coincide with each other, but they will tonight at PNC Park.

Here’s the official press release on this interesting combination:

Eight works of art are now on display on Pittsburgh-area billboards as a result of a collaboration between School of Art students at Carnegie Mellon University and Lamar Outdoor Advertising. This is the second time in as many years that School of Art students have had the opportunity to make their art visible to tens of thousands of people around Pittsburgh every day.

“Lamar Outdoor Advertising is providing a unique opportunity to our students,” said Visiting Assistant Professor Christopher Sperandio. “No other art students in the country are making new artworks as billboards, and certainly not on a scale like this.”

The project began last year, when Sperandio contacted Lamar Outdoor Advertising about using billboards as a way to train students in creating new graphic artwork for a general public. Lamar provided four 11′ by 24′ billboards in locations around Pittsburgh. This year, Lamar doubled its contribution to eight billboards, and Sperandio, along with School of Art associate professors Ayanah Moor and Kim Beck, have engaged their sophomore printmaking students in the task of making new artworks for billboards.

“The School of Art is really lucky to have the support of Lamar Outdoor. It’s not only an opportunity for our students to think about art-making beyond the traditional definitions, but a great way for them to experience corporate generosity first hand,” Beck said.

For the billboards, students designed new art specifically for a Pittsburgh audience. Forty students competed for the eight billboards. The winners were chosen by Elizabeth Thomas, the Phyllis Wattis MATRIX Curator in Berkeley, California.

“Carnegie Mellon has a long history of fostering the inter-relationship of art and public life. These collected works, which take advantage of scale, visibility and conventions of commerce, will no doubt provide Pittsburgh drivers with fodder for reflection, amusement and engagement,” said Thomas, former associate curator of contemporary art at the Carnegie Museum of Art and a guest curator at The Andy Warhol Museum.

A sample of the billboard art descriptions by the artists themselves:

“My Secret” by sophomore Alissa Osial
“The work looks like a partially destroyed billboard. The viewer can read ‘My secret is I like…’ but the rest of the message has been ripped away. The viewer is able to interact with this piece by creating their own message, letting them imagine what the secret is. I am not telling the viewer what I am hiding, or what the meaning is. I want to leave it up to them to decide that.”

“Chaos” by sophomore Robin Scheines
“My billboard is a drawing of a seated man, and all around him is a chaotic cityscape. This work is about the viewer and their relationship to the urban environment. The seated man surrounded by the bustling city is meant to invite viewers to pause for a moment, and listen to their environment. To enjoy the present even in so much chaos and movement.”

“Popular” by junior Terry Boyd
“My billboard is a fake graffiti tag on an existing billboard. By creating this image in the comfort of my studio and superimposing it digitally on an existing billboard image, I have eliminated the danger and risk associated with vandalism. I’m trying to buy street cred by defacing a modest advertisement with an image of wealth and hedonism.”

“Sprawl” by junior Ryan Woodring
“For my billboard design, I wanted the flooded suburbs to leak back out on to the highways. It would be interesting to see an entire neighborhood of these images all projecting themselves out on to the street. By eliminating the role of perceived space within the image, the billboard hopefully reads more like the facade of a house and less like a copied image.”

“Say Something” by sophomore Jessica Jackson
“My billboard features brightly colored demonstrators holding up signs that read: ‘Say something, anything.’ I made it to show my respect for those of us who put ourselves out there and tell people what they think. I want viewers to be reminded that they have the right, and really the responsibility to voice their opinions about their concerns.”

The event is free and open to the public. The Warhol will host an after party from 9 to 11 p.m. at the museum.

“PNC Park is a unique venue for video art. You don’t typically expect to see art at the baseball stadium, but it’s an amazing experience,” said Jill Kraus Visiting Assistant Professor of Art Christopher Sperandio. As far as we know, no other art school in the country is using an 85” x 35” high-definition screen as a venue for student and faculty art work.

For more information, visit CMU’s website here.

And speaking of art, check out one of my previous posts here on submitting work to various local projects.

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Hideous Kinky Part II

Friday, April 11th, 2008

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Hideous Kinky Part Deux: A Speak Easy Cabaret is happening this Saturday at the Grey Box Theater in Lawrenceville. The event will feature music and dancing of course!

Hideous Kinky is hosted by the Zafira Dance Company, a combined belly dancing, contemporary and ethnic style dance troupe, which won the coveted Troupe of the Year 2007 award given by Zaghareet Magazine. The troupe will be performing, as well as Mira Betz of Barbary Coast Shakedown, West African Dance Sensations Balafon, Midge Cricket, as well as the combined musical talents of Buddy Nutt and Ukulady as Ukulucky.

According to their website, Zafira is donating a portion of the proceeds to V-Day, an organization that brings the issue of violence against women and girls front and center in the culture and the community. On April 12th, V-day is hosting in New Orleans,- V TO THE TENTH - featuring international performances of The Vagina Monologues, musical guests, V-Day activists from across the globe including Kenya, Afghanistan, Iraq, The Philippines, Democratic Republic of Congo, Eastern Europe , men standing up for women and much more.

The show begins at 8pm with doors opening at 7:30pm. Tickets cost $10 in advance and $15 at the door. Tickets can be purchased via the Zafira Dance Company’s website here. The Grey Box Theater is located at 3595 Butler Street in Lawrenceville and can be reached at 412-586-7744.

In addition to this event, Zafira Dance Company offers belly dancing classes around the Pittsburgh area at Breathe Yoga Studio in the South Side, Body Empowered in Bellevue and Bodiography Dance Studio in Squirrel Hill. I suggest checking out the schedule on their website to see available classes, times, locations, etc.

Also going on this night is 412 Tag and the “Hips, Rum and Rock and Roll” exhibit. Check out my previous posts for more information.

Have a nice weekend everybody!

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The Jewish-Israeli Film Festival

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

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I have to apologize for not posting the film schedule earlier, but better late than never right?

The Jewish-Israeli Film Festival is back in Pittsburgh for its 15th year and is sure to capture the viewing attention of its audience as always. The festival is already in its second week of showing films, but I’d still like to present the film schedule below, as well as ways to buy tickets, showtimes, etc.

There is still time to see:

The First Basket @ SouthSide Works Cinema at 7pm on Tuesday
She’s Got It @ SouthSide Works Cinema at 7:30pm on Tuesday
Arranged @ SouthSide Works Cinema at 7pm on Wednesday

Two young women - an Orthodox Jew and a Muslim - meet and become friends as first-year teachers at a public school in Brooklyn. They soon learn that, despite their religious differences, they have much in common, not the least of which is that they are both going through arranged marriages.

Nina’s Home @ Westmoreland Mall (Greensburg) at 7pm on Thursday
Sixty Six @ SouthSide Works Cinema at 7:30pm on Thursday
The Band’s Visit @ Regent Square Theater at 9pm on Saturday
Nina’s Home @ SouthSide Works Cinema at 1pm on Sunday
Samuel Rosenberg: Pittsburgh’s Painter Laureate @ SouthSide Works Cinema at 4pm on Sunday
The Hope: Rick Recht Film and Concert @ Melwood Screening Room at 7pm on Sunday

I highly suggest you check out the Film Festival’s website to read about each film and see which one or ones you’d like to see.

Tickets may be purchased online up to a day before the screening at the UJF’s website here, except on weekends. Keep in mind that ticket orders are not processed on Saturday or Sundays, so plan accordingly. Tickets can also be purchased at each venue up to 30 minutes prior to the screening and are cash-only. Call ahead to 412-992-5203 to make sure your screening isn’t sold out already.

Ticket prices on opening nights are $35, cash only at the door, otherwise they are $8 for general admission, $7 ages 65 and over, $6 for groups of 12+ purchased in advance and $5 for students.

For more information on the Film Festival and Jewish culture, visit the United Jewish Federation of Pittsburgh’s website here.

The above picture credit is from the movie Love Dance.

Don’t forget to check out “Hips, Rum and Rock and Roll” this Saturday at Zombo Gallery! Check out yesterday’s post here for more info.

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Hips, Rum and Rock and Roll!

Monday, April 7th, 2008

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The “Hips, Rum and Rock and Roll” exhibit will debut this Saturday at Zombo Gallery, featuring the artwork of Eric Luden.

Luden is a Johnstown native and Pittsburgh based artist who specializes in digital illustrations and paintings and who seems like a very interesting guy. According to the press release, Luden’s work is inspired by retro design, pin-up art and Southern California beach culture.

His work very rarely features thin women and he has often been asked why, to which he has replied that he finds “it more enjoyable to draw a curve than a straight line.” That’s a good enough reason for me. He also says that he received his art education through studying issues of MAD magazine as a child.

After school in Johnstown, Eric moved to Chicago and worked as a staff illustrator at Cahners Publishing Company, where he was primarily responsible for technical illustrations. At the same time, Eric began drawing cartoons for Chicago underground publications. After nearly a decade in Chicago, he moved back to his home state and continued cartooning by designing show posters for local bands and events. He currently lives in the Pittsburgh area with his wife and two children. He still works with several Chicago based magazines and also does commissioned pieces and portraits.

Luden’s freelance work has been seen in various national magazine publications and around the region in promotional posters for local bands and events.

“Hips, Rum and Rock and Roll” opens Saturday, April 12th from 5:30pm until 11:30pm and runs until April 26th, so make sure you check it out!

Zombo Gallery is located at 4900 Hatfield Street in Lawrenceville.

Don’t forget to check out yesterday’s post for information on calls for artists, photographers and more.

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Call for artists, musicians, literary submissions and more!

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

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The Arts Festival has announced a call for artists, musicians and more for various events and exhibits. They are currently looking for musicians and bands to perform on their Market Square stage during the festival, as well as children’s performing groups to perform during their Family Festival, which features family friendly fun and games.

The festival is also looking for artists to be a part of their “Contained” exhibit. The exhibit is being held in partnership with the Associated Artists of Pittsburgh and involves installations in a 8′ x 40′ x 8′ space. According to the festival, the work can be in any medium and represent any subject. For more information on participating in the Three Rivers Arts Festival, visit their website here.

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I’d also like to announce that the fourth issue of the Pittsburgh-based Debris Magazine is out! The magazine is always looking for literary and artistic submissions, so please check out the guidelines and contact info at www.debrismagazine.com. For those of you who are not writers, artists or photographers, check out the Spring issue anyways! It features all new literary talent and a very talented Portuguese painter, as well as a photographer whose goal is to travel the world and capture it all on his camera. Exciting stuff, I promise!

And lastly, I’d like to remind everyone about the Good vs. Evil photography show that will be happening at the Creative Treehouse in Bellevue on May 17th. John Bodnar is still accepting photography submissions for the event, so if you’re interested please email him at jbodnar@gmail.com. For more information, visit my previous post on the upcoming event here.

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Closing Reception and Drinking While Drawing!

Monday, March 31st, 2008

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Just wanted to let everybody know that the Wee Beasties exhibit at Zombo is closing this Saturday. Nathan Mazur’s exhibit features over three dozen miniature paintings of various insects, worms and creepy (I say cute), bugs. What makes this event even more fun is the discounted pricing of the remaining beasties after 8pm. There’s also going to be music by the Jim Dandies so definitely check this out!

The closing reception begins at 6pm, with music at 8pm. The Wee Beasties exhibit is located in Lawrenceville at the Zombo Gallery, 4900 Hatfield Street.

If you’re not able to make the event, make sure you check out Mazur’s website to view the bugs anyways.

To read the press release on this exhibit, visit my previous post here.

I also wanted to let everyone know who didn’t, that the Brillobox has Drink and Draw drawing sessions every other Tuesday, with one occurring tomorrow.

Drink and Draw is a live model drawing session, which meets on the second floor of Brillobox at 6pm and runs until 9pm. There is a $10 session fee, but it’s worth it with the various themes the models dress in for the session. According to their Myspace, Drink and Draw is a relaxed, inspiring atmosphere and I’m pretty sure you don’t have to be an expert artist to attend.

And for those of you who may get hungry during the session, downstairs has their Starving Artist Tuesdays with grilled cheese and tomato soup for only $2. Yum. If I didn’t work, I’d go just for that!

Future sessions land on April 1, 15, and the 29th. For more information, visit their Myspace or email Susan at brilloboxdrinkanddraw@yahoo.com.

Announcements/Reminders

Thursday, March 27th, 2008

Before I forget, there are a couple of announcements and reminders I wanted to make before I continued posting bios for Women’s History Month.

First off, the Mueck exhibit at the Andy Warhol Museum is closing this Sunday and I’ve heard it’s something you don’t want to miss.

image_mueckdefault.jpg

Ron Mueck is most known for his gigantic sculptures, which feature realistic looking people doing various things, but in enormous proportions. The exhibit at the Warhol includes, In Bed, Spooning Couple, A Girl, Wild Man, Man in a Boat, Mask II and Mask II. You can visit the Warhol’s website to see more detailed descriptions.

The Warhol’s hours are as follows:

Saturday & Sunday, Tuesday-Thursday: 10am-5pm
Friday: 10am-10pm
Closed Mondays

Admission:

Adults: $15
Senior Citizens: $9
Students & Children (3-18): $8
Good Fridays: Half price bet. 5-10pm

The Warhol Museum is located at 117 Sandusky Street on the North Shore.
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Also, I wanted to remind everyone that the City Salon deadline is tomorrow. I posted information on the project in the beginning the month here. For more information on the City Salon, visit the Academy of the South Side’s website.

There is also an arts and crafts expo going on this weekend at the Expo Mart in Monroeville featuring over 180 booths. Visit their website for more information on vendors, hours and more.

And last, but not least I wanted to let everyone know of a poetry reading that is taking place Friday at 7:30 at the ARTspace and Coffeehouse in Point Breeze. I learned of the poet Anita Gevauden Byerly on WYEP the other night and really enjoyed her poetry so I thought I’d pass the information along. Admission is free and there will be signings of her latest chapbook, October Light. I wish I could go!

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