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Events

This weekend!

Friday, February 8th, 2008

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Head out to the I Made It! Mine craftshow this Saturday at the Union Project in Highland Park. As always you’ll find a wide assortment of crafts, clothing and household accessories and this time, you’ll also be able to check out the Union Project as well.

The Union Project involves an effort on the part of its members to bring together the surrounding neighborhoods and to promote creativity, diversity and togetherness. Their mission statement is as follows:

The Union Project serves as a highly visible catalyst for neighborhood redevelopment and historic preservation on a large scale – and will develop the hearts, minds and skills of community members along with the physical space. The Union Project represents the best of Pittsburgh’s creative thinking, action and investment. This community-supported project will only exponentially increase its impact as funds are raised and capital work is completed to transform and reuse this important building.

I’ve been wanting to check out this building/project for awhile now, so it looks like I just got my chance!

The Union Project is located at 801 N. Negley and I Made It! is from 12-5. For more information on the craftshow go here and for more information on the Union Project, visit their website here.

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This weekend also brings the Associated Artist show, which features 97 works from 66 artists from the area. It’s in celebration of Pittsburgh 250 and is being held at the Pittsburgh Center for the Arts in Shadyside. The reception is this Friday from 5:30-8pm, however future viewings will be possible up until March 9th.

The exhibit is located at the Marshall building which is at 6300 Fifth Avenue. For more information, visit the Associated Artist site here, as well as the Pittsburgh Galleries site for other local art events.

And if these two events don’t keep you busy this weekend, you can always go see the Vagina Monologues at the City Theater! For more information, visit last week’s post on the play here.

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A Wonderful Week for Theater

Monday, January 28th, 2008

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For those who are unfamiliar with the tale of the demon barber from Fleet Street, I’m not going to give anything away and will only say I highly recommend you see this play!

It’s only running for a short time between January 29-February 3rd, so buy those tickets immediately. I’ll be out of town or else I would definitely be there!

The schedule is as follows:

January 29-31: 7:30pm
February 1: 8pm
February 2: 2pm & 8pm
February 3: 1pm & 6:30pm

Ticket prices range from $22.50-64.00 and can be purchased online here or by calling 412-392-4900. The performance will be at Heinz Hall in the Cultural District, downtown.

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Also playing this week is Eve Ensler’s hit The Vagina Monologues, which is being held at the City Theatre until March 9th.

The schedule varies and is as follows:

Performance Schedule until Feb. 17

Tuesdays at 7 pm
Wednesdays, Thursdays & Fridays at 8 pm
Saturdays at 5:30 pm & 9 pm
Sundays at 2 pm

Performance Schedule from Feb. 20 until March 9
Wednesdays, Thursdays & Fridays at 8 pm
Saturdays at 5:30 pm & 9 pm
Sundays at 2 pm

Note: There will be no performance on Friday, Feb. 29 because the Hamburg Studio will be used to workshop a new musical.

Tickets are $35 Tuesdays-Thursdays, $40 Fridays & Saturdays and $5 off for City Theatre subscribers. There is also a limited number of tickets available to students for $15.

There will also be special performance nights, such as Bring a Man in for Free Night (Feb. 13th), as well as discussions, shopping and girl’s night outs, sound off Sundays and more which can be viewed here.

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Also playing at the City Theatre is the 13th of Paris, Mat Smart’s romantic comedy about a man who runs off to Paris and discovers the meaning of true love.

Opening night is January 30th at 8pm and the regular schedule is as follows:

Tuesdays at 7 pm
Wednesdays thru Fridays at 8 pm
Saturdays at 5:30 & 9 pm
Sundays at 2 pm

Tickets are between $15-46 dollars, with discounts for attendees aged 25 and under, students and senior citizens.

City Theatre is located at 1300 Bingham Street in the South Side. For more information visit the City Theatre’s website here or by calling 412.431.CITY.

Hope everyone had a chance to make it out the Gallery Crawl Friday! Hopefully the next one will have a tad warmer weather. :)

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Gallery Crawl and Artist’s Workshop!

Thursday, January 24th, 2008

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This Friday the 25th is the Gallery Crawl, taking place as usual in the Cultural District. As always there will be free admission to downtown galleries, as well as complimentary drinks and snacks. The Gallery Crawl is between 5:30 and 9pm, followed by an after party at Olive or Twist and at Verve Wellness.

Some highlights of the evening include:

Urban Living at the Wood Street Galleries
With numerous construction projects underway, Pittsburgh’s new downtown residents look forward to many options for shaping their domestic, professional and social lives. “Urban Living” offers perspectives and propositions spanning technological and environmental issues that impact and energize urban culture.

Artists include: Pascal Glissmann & Martina Hofflin, Informationlab, Sabrina Raaf, Roman Kirschner, France Cadet

820 Liberty
Define: How To Post It!

A juried Neighborhood Gallery Invitational, presented by Articulate. Demonstrations will include hands-on posting of artwork on-line for galleries and artists and how viewers can purchase artwork online. Presented by Art-iculate; Pittsburgh Creative Network.

Three Rivers Arts Festival Gallery
Deliciously Disposable Earth

Deliciously Disposable Earth will be a Salon style international multimedia exhibition that explores the contemporary implications of mining industries across the world. What minerals are being mined? What are we using them for? Who is profiting and who is sweating? How does it fit into our contemporary world of corporate and globalized interests? What new ways of corporate colonialism are being developed by mining industries?

709 Penn Gallery
Celebrations of Life and Death in West Africa

Photo exhibit by musician/photographer, Colter Harper, taken on his journeys through various regions of West Africa

Live West African traditional and popular music.

All descriptions were taken from the Pittsburgh Arts website and for more information, visit their website here or call 412-456-6666 for more information.

Workshop for Working Artists
And then on Saturday the 26th, feel free to attend the Working Artist’s Workshop held at the Fe Gallery in Lawrenceville, which starts a tad early in the morning so don’t drink too much at the Crawl!

Their press release:

Please join us for the first in a series of informal yet informative discussions with prominent members from the art community: Michael Olijnyk, curator of the Mattress Factory; Kurt Shaw, art critic for the Tribune Review; and Renee Piechocki, artist and public art consultant. The workshop is designed to create a forum for discussing the nuts and bolts of exhibiting and gaining exposure as a mature working artist - not to mention the balancing act that we must master in the process.

Brunch and Q & A Discussion Begins at 11AM
Reserve your seat by emailing: BuyArtToday@MindSpring.com
$5 Donation encouraged
Students Welcome

Fe gallery
4102 Butler Street, Pgh
(Lawrenceville) 15201
412.860.6028

Sounds like a fun-filled weekend to me!

If you’re still in need of entertainment, check out Mosley’s post on Pittsburgh drivers here.

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“Let us not wallow in the valley of despair.”

Monday, January 21st, 2008

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Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech, December 10, 1964 Oslo, Norway.

I accept the Nobel Prize for Peace at a moment when twenty-two million Negroes of the United States of America are engaged in a creative battle to end the long night of racial injustice. I accept this award in behalf of a civil rights movement which is moving with determination and a majestic scorn for risk and danger to establish a reign of freedom and a rule of justice.

I am mindful that only yesterday in Birmingham, Alabama, our children, crying out for brotherhood, were answered with fire hoses, snarling dogs and even death. I am mindful that only yesterday in Philadelphia, Mississippi, young people seeing to secure the right to vote were brutalized and murdered. And only yesterday more than 40 houses of worship in the State of Mississippi alone were bombed or burned because they offered a sanctuary to those who would not accept segregation.

I am mindful that debilitating and grinding poverty afflicts my people and chains them to the lowest rung of the economic ladder.

Therefore, I must ask why this prize is awarded to a movement which is beleaguered and committed to unrelenting struggle; to a movement which has not won the very peace and brotherhood which is the essence of the Nobel Prize.

After contemplation, I conclude that this award which I receive on behalf of that movement is profound recognition that nonviolence is the answer to the crucial political and moral question of our time — the need for man to overcome oppression and violence without resorting to violence and oppression.

If this is to be achieved, man must evolve for all human conflict a method which rejects revenge, aggression and retaliation. The foundation of such a method is love. The tortuous road which has led from Montgomery, Alabama, to Oslo bears witness to this truth. This is a road over which millions of Negroes are travelling to find a new sense of dignity.

This same road has opened for all Americans a new ear of progress and hope. It has led to a new Civil Rights bill, and it will, I am convinced, be widened and lengthened into a superhighway of justice as Negro and white men in increasing numbers create alliances to overcome their common problems.

I accept this award today with an abiding faith in America and an audacious faith in the future of mankind. I refuse to accept despair as the final response to the ambiguities of history. I refuse to accept the idea that the “isness” of man’s present nature makes him morally incapable of reaching up for the eternal “oughtness” that forever confronts him.

I refuse to accept the idea that man is mere flotsom and jetsom in the river of life unable to influence the unfolding events which surround him. I refuse to accept the view that mankind is so tragically bound to the starless midnight of racism and war that the bright daybreak of peace and brotherhood can never become a reality.

I refuse to accept the cynical notion that nation after nation must spiral down a militaristic stairway into the hell of thermonuclear destruction. I believe that unarmed truth and unconditional love will have the final word in reality. This is why right temporarily defeated is stronger than evil triumphant.

I believe that even amid today’s motor bursts and whining bullets, there is still hope for a brighter tomorrow. I believe that wounded justice, lying prostrate on the blood-flowing streets of our nations, can be lifted from this dust of shame to reign supreme among the children of men.

I have the audacity to believe that peoples everywhere can have three meals a day for their bodies, education and culture for their minds, and dignity, equality and freedom for their spirits. I believe that what self-centered men have torn down, men other-centered can build up. I still believe that one day mankind will bow before the altars of God and be crowned triumphant over war and bloodshed, and nonviolent redemptive goodwill will proclaim the rule of the land.

“And the lion and the lamb shall lie down together and every man shall sit under his own vine and fig tree and none shall be afraid.”

I still believe that we shall overcome.

This faith can give us courage to face the uncertainties of the future. It will give our tired feet new strength as we continue our forward stride toward the city of freedom. When our days become dreary with low-hovering clouds and our nights become darker than a thousand midnights, we will know that we are living in the creative turmoil of a genuine civilization struggling to be born.

Today I come to Oslo as a trustee, inspired and with renewed dedication to humanity. I accept this prize on behalf of all men who love peace and brotherhood. I say I come as a trustee, for in the depths of my heart I am aware that this prize is much more than an honor to me personally.

Every time I take a flight I am always mindful of the man people who make a successful journey possible — the known pilots and the unknown ground crew.

So you honor the dedicated pilots of our struggle who have sat at the controls as the freedom movement soared into orbit. You honor, once again, Chief (Albert) Luthuli of South Africa, whose struggles with and for his people, are still met with the most brutal expression of man’s inhumanity to man.

You honor the ground crew without whose labor and sacrifices the jet flights to freedom could never have left the earth.

Most of these people will never make the headlines and their names will not appear in Who’s Who. Yet when years have rolled past and when the blazing light of truth is focused on this marvelous age in which we live — men and women will know and children will be taught that we have a finer land, a better people, a more noble civilization — because these humble children of God were willing to suffer for righteousness’ sake.

I think Alfred Nobel would know what I mean when I say that I accept this award in the spirit of a curator of some precious heirloom which he holds in trust for its true owners — all those to whom beauty is truth and truth beauty — and in whose eyes the beauty of genuine brotherhood and peace is more precious than diamonds or silver or gold.

For photos of this event and to read other speeches, follow the link here.

Even though I don’t have work off today, I know many of you do, so please check out Carnegie Mellon University’s celebration of Martin Luther King Jr. Day. The schedule is as follows:

12:30-4:30 p.m.: Ongoing Exhibits and Activities; Artwork by fourth-grade students at Linden Academy will be on display in the University Center Art Gallery. Documentary films will play in the first and second floor lobby areas of the University Center, and Martin Luther King Jr. books will be available at the University Store and on the first floor of Hunt Library.

12:30-4:30 p.m.: Martin Luther King Jr. Day of Service Projects, McKenna Peter Wright Room

1:30-2:30 p.m.: Martin Luther King Jr. Writing Awards Presentation and Readings, Rangos Hall; Local high school students and Carnegie Mellon students will read personal narratives about racial difference and discrimination. The awards are sponsored by Carnegie Mellon’s Creative Writing Program, the Office of Student Affairs and the Office of the President.

2:00-3:00 p.m.: Children’s Programs, Art Gallery, First Floor; Scott Kuechenmeister-Hall of Carnegie Mellon’s Interfaith Council will present a puppet show.

2:30-3:40 p.m.: Community Conversation: Environmental Justice In Pittsburgh, McConomy Auditorium; Panelists representing a variety of Pittsburgh-based organizations will discuss environmental justice issues within the region.

4:30-5:00 p.m.: Candlelight Procession, begins in the Purnell Center lobby: Join members of the community to honor the work of Dr. King with a symbolic march for Civil Rights against racial segregation.

5:00-6:30 p.m.: Martin Luther King for the 21st Century: Hip Hop, Environmental Justice and The State of Black America, Keynote address and reception with Michael Eric Dyson, followed by student speaker Ashley Renee Brown, Rangos Ballroom; Michael Eric Dyson is an ordained Baptist minister and author of 15 books, including “Come Hell or High Water: Hurricane Katrina and the Color of Disaster” and “The True Martin Luther King Jr.” Dyson also is a University Professor at Georgetown University, where he teaches theology, English and African-American studies.

For more information, visit CMU’s site here.

And to see what other cities are doing in honor of MLK, Jr Day visit the Arlington, Texas city blog.

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Photography & Poetry this Saturday!

Thursday, January 17th, 2008

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Bellevue, PA, January 2nd, 2008 — Lights! is a photographic exploration featuring photographic work from local photographers. From natural to controlled, light is all around us from the source of the sun to the simplicity of a light bulb, but there are many and various sources of light around us from day to day. This show puts photographers in a world of never ending light sources to capture their best representation of light. So join in on the fun for an event featuring the works of John E. Bodnar, Sarah Higgins, Chris Maverick, Dawn Zacharias, Sarah Hindman, Lucinda Wiebe, Michelle Mitchell, Michael Flaherty, Dustin McGrew, John Altdorfer, Tamara Barker, Christina Labrise, Jeff Zoet, and Marta Heberle.

Music provided by Andrew James formerly of Dodging August, the Shutouts , the Jim Dandies, and the Dream Intended.

When: January 19, 2008
Time: 7:30PM to 12AM
Price: $5 at the Door, BYOB with Proper ID, All Ages
Food & Beverages:
Non-Alcoholic Drinks and Appetizers will be provided.

For more information, visit the Creative Treehouse’s website or email Jesse Hambley at info@CreativeTreeHousePgh.com.

The Creative Treehouse is located at 517 Lincoln Avenue in Bellevue, above Your Mom’s, a vintage clothing and record store.

Also going on this Saturday is a reception for a poetry and photography anthology titled Along These Rivers, being held at the Silver Eye Center in the South Side. The book features the work of 88 poets and photographers and celebrates the talent found in Pittsburgh and is part of the 250 celebrations this year.

The reception will be held from 2-5pm at 1015 E. Carson Street. If you can’t make it, you can still request poetry readings of the anthology by contacting Judith Robinson at 412-681-3018 or pghdazzler@aol.com, as well as Michael Wurster at 412-481-7636.

The book is also available for purchase without attending the reception for a very affordable price of $19.95 and can be purchased by mailing a check or money order to the address below.

Poets For Humanity
4712 Bayard Street
Pittsburgh, PA 15213

Along These Rivers also has a website here.

To see what else is going on for Pittsburgh’s 250th birthday, check out my previous post here.

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Let the Celebrations Begin!

Tuesday, January 8th, 2008

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Pittsburgh celebrates it semiquincentennial in November, but all year there are events planned to increase awareness of Pittsburgh’s awesomeness and reasons to visit our fine city.

There have even been plays and operas written to celebrate this occasion, including Second City’s Three Rivers Run Through It! and Squonk Opera’s Pittsburgh: The Opera.

Second City’s Three Rivers Run Through It! runs from January 8-13th, so catch it before it ends! It’s playing at Pittsburgh’s Public Theater on Penn Avenue in the Cultural District.

The Public Theater’s website describes the play: “Created especially for Pittsburgh Public Theater in celebration of the city’s 250th Birthday, comes a brand-new, laugh-out-loud-funny sketch & improv show from the phenomenal Second City. Picture Big Ben meeting Kenny Kangaroo for pierogies in Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood and you know what we’re talking about. If you love Pittsburgh and you love comedy, this is the show for you. Come and live it up!”

Ticket prices range from $25-45, with $15 pricing for theater goers age 26 and under, but you have to call 412.316.1600 for details.

For more information visit their website here.

Pittsburgh: The Opera is returning due to popular demand and will probably sell out like last year, so buy those tickets as soon as you can if you’re planning on going!

Showtimes:
Thursday, January 17 at 8 pm
Friday, January 18 at 8 pm
Saturday, January 19 at 8 pm
Sunday, January 20 at 3 pm

Tickets:
$12 in advance
$15 at door general admission
$8 students, seniors
$10 groups of 10 or more (all group sales must be in advance)

Available at the door or from ProArts Tickets via telephone at 412.394.3353 or secure website www.proartstickets.org.

The opera will be performed at the Kelly-Strayhorn Theater in East Liberty and for more details, visit their website.

To see what other exciting projects are going on in Pittsburgh, check out yesterday’s post here. I tend to post events/articles that are related to the arts and music, so if you find this site lacking in other departments, please send me your events and project info so I can post that as well. Being an art and literary editor, I am constantly communicating with and trying to promote these areas I’m interested in.

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Art DIY-style!

Monday, January 7th, 2008

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I declare 2008 the year of creativity, as a personal goal for myself and hopefully for the city as a whole. There have been so many attempts in the past year to publicize and push forward the local arts scene and I really think excellent progress is going to be made this year.

Last year we had Jesse Hambley’s Creative Treehouse kick off, which is a shared creative space, as well as a common meeting place for like-minded individuals and a really nice place to have events, like art shows and art tutorials. Last year there were numerous shows, including two Creative Marathons where participants had twenty-four hours to create a work of art and present it in the show the following day, as well as two Doughnuts and Arts and some other art and photography shows. The Treehouse is located only 5 miles from Downtown Pittsburgh in Bellevue, so it’s a convenient place to commute to as well.

Then there was the launch of the Pittsburgh Galleries website, which is a comprehensive listing of art shows, as well as local artists and photographers.

This year I was alerted to the presence of a new project/collective called the Factory Artists and Factory Photographers, which is gathering local talent in an effort to promote them nationally and to get Pittsburgh on more than a local arts scene. They will be debuting their work and progress in an art show in April of this year at the Rex Theater, which is definitely going to be exciting.

Also, Fun a Day has started in the month of January for Pittsburgh, which in case you’re not aware of, is an attempt to beat the winter blahs by creating something every day in January and then showing everyone’s efforts in an art show in February. The idea originated in Philadelphia and projects have included everything from a photo a day to a poem a day and everything in between. I will definitely post more details about the show when it gets closer. In the meantime, despite it being seven days into the project, you can hurry and catch up and join if you’re interested. A link will be posted below.

And lastly, Zombo Gallery is opening up its gallery to anyone interested in hanging up their own work for a special show that will debut January 12th between 5:30-11pm. Each artist is allowed to bring two pieces of art and must arrive between 5-7:30pm to hang it up, obviously space permitting. For more details, it’s best to call this number 330-806-7813.

Creative Treehouse: http://www.creativetreehousepgh.com/
Doughnuts and Art: http://doughnutsandart.com/
Pittsburgh Galleries: http://www.pghgalleries.com/
Factory Artists: www.myspace.com/factoryartists
Factory Photographers: www.myspace.com/burkephotography
Fun a Day: http://funadaypgh.blogspot.com/
Zombo Gallery: www.myspace.com/rockabilly_circus

Even if you don’t have enough time to do the Fun a Day, I think it would be a really neat idea if everyone tried to incorporate art into their lives a little bit more…whether it’s creating your own or just visiting an art show and supporting the local arts scene. Pittsburgh really needs it and it’s not like we don’t have the talent to back it up!

I would love to see more local talent in my literary/art magazine, Debris…if you’re interested please contact me! Visit my previous post for further details or visit the website here.

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Linear!!

Friday, December 28th, 2007

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This Saturday, the 29th, at the Palisades is going to come a night you will not forget! 70’s style meets intergalactic! With a great lineup of djs and a dance floor that claims to be the biggest in Southwestern Pennsylvania, come dressed up in your finest space age/disco gear and get ready to dance all night!

In case you can’t read the print, here’s the lineup:

9-10: Kevin James
10-11: Craig Kavasia
11-12: Transender
12-1: DJ Donkey Punch
1-2: Mikey Shanley (formerly DJ Sirius)
2-3: Jae Illa and MC Akira
3-4: Dave Breakwell
4-5: Naoko
5-6: DVS

The Palisades
501 Water Street, McKeesport PA 15132
9pm
$20 admission

For more information visit www.myspace.com/ivankilowatt

According to the site: We’re gonna send you to outer space, to find another race! That’s right…the return of the theme party! So girls and boys, get that duct tape and tin foil ready, ’cause it’s an OUTER SPACE party!!!

MASSIVE SOUND ! 12 Stacks for 50,000 Watts of Aural Satisfaction! Enough Bass to be heard for miles!!! This event is thrown as a going away party for a resident Pittsburgh Sound Engineer that was born and raised here in Pittsburgh who is pursuing his professional recording debut.

And since I’m also a fan of Rumi and they quoted him, here ya go:

Dance, when you’re broken up.
Dance, if you’ve torn the bandage off.
Dance in the middle of the fighting.
Dance in your blood.
Dance, when you’re perfectly free.
-Rumi-

And while I’m on the subject of good music, check out the Indie Music Chatter blog here.

Although I probably won’t go in costume, hope to see you at Linear tomorrow!!

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The Holidays are Here!

Friday, December 7th, 2007

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I Made It! is having their next craft show just in time for the holiday season. This Saturday from 2-8pm at the Homestead Owls Club, you can check out some of the best locally made crafts around. There are going to be approximately 50 vendors selling unique holidays gifts, including jewelry, clothing, household items, accessories and more!

For more information visit their Myspace page here. Or for more information on becoming a vendor yourself or to be put on their mailing list, email them at imadeitpgh@gmail.com

The Owl’s Club is located at 108 W. 8th Avenue in Homestead.

The Creative Treehouse’s Benefit for Big Brothers, Big Sisters Event

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Just in case you can’t read the print:

On Saturday, December 8th, the members of the Creative TreeHouse in Bellevue will put their talents to good use and hold a benefit for Big Brothers Big Sisters of Greater Pittsburgh. Professional holiday portraits will be taken at the Creative Treehouse, located at 517 Lincoln Ave (2nd Floor) Bellevue, PA 15202 from 10:00AM to 8:00PM for those who bring a toy donation for Big Brothers Big Sisters. Suggested donations are toys for boys and girls up to age thirteen and around the price range of $10. Family portraits are available for a donation of two gifts, one for a boy and one for a girl. Single portraits will be available for a donation of one gift. A holiday backdrop designed by Creative TreeHouse members will be available as will a normal studio backdrop for single and family portraits. The whole family is invited to spend time at the Creative TreeHouse while portraits are being taken. Portraits will be available to download online with a special code provided to each guest at the event.

Six different photographers will be shooting the portraits all day and if you’d like to see a sneak preview of some holiday photos, visit the Treehouse’s website here. This is a great event for a great cause and I encourage all of you to stop out on Saturday before or after the I Made It! event. I guarantee it will be way more fun than shopping at the mall all day.

Sticking with the holiday theme of this post, I’d like to say that books are a great gift idea, although it’s not easy to pick the right one. So I’d like to suggest for the global warming denier in your life, why don’t you check out Prof. Holly Fretwell’s book The Sky’s Not Falling: Why It’s Ok to Chill about Global Warming. The Fiction Scribe blog has interviewed the writer and you can check out what she has to say here.

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Vaudeville Carnivale II

Monday, November 19th, 2007

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The Vaudeville Carnivale is this Saturday at the Kelly-Strayhorn Theater and looks like a very interesting event!

The Carnivale will have food and drinks, dance performances, gypsy vendors, old time photos and more!

Doors open at 7pm and the show starts at 8pm.
Tickets are $15 in advance and $18 at the door. $10 will get you a ticket if you’re a senior or a student and $5 if you’re a child under 10.
To buy tickets in advance, visit the Pro Arts Ticket website or call 412-394-3353.

The Kelly-Strayhorn Theater is located at 5941 Penn Avenue in East Liberty and for further information, visit their website.

In addition to hosting the Vaudeville Carnivale, Zafira Dance Company teaches classes on belly dancing and performs in the Pittsburgh area. According to their website their performances “are opulent vignettes that combine Bellydance with contemporary and ethnic dance forms. The result is an ornate performance that blurs the boundary between old and new; performer and audience, earthy and elegant.”

Also according to their website, “Zafira Dance Company members work together as a collective. Christine Andrews, Maria Hamer, Jennifer Imashev, Tamara Nelson and Olivia Kissel have been teaching and performing together since 1996. Their friendship and love of dance shines through in each performance. Each member is a contributing artist and brings something unique to the company. This collective approach allows Zafira to offer a unique and powerful dance experience like no other.

Zafira teaches and performs regularly in venues that range from intimate café settings to full-scale theater productions in Pittsburgh and at dance festivals around the country.”

For more information about Zafira Dance Company and the Vaudeville Carnivale visit their website.

If you can’t make it out to the Carnivale, check out Mosley’s post on exhibits going on at the Science Center instead.

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To go or not to go…

Monday, November 12th, 2007

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…that is the question facing many Pittsburghers, as well as concerned patrons of museums worldwide.

Bodies…The Exhibition is a showcase of real human bodies, that have been dissected and preserved for your viewing pleasure! According to the Science Center, the exhibit will “enlighten, empower and inspire,” obviously directed to the visitor and not to the dead bodies being displayed.

According to the Science Center’s press release: Visitors in-and-around the Pittsburgh region will have a unique opportunity to come face-to-face with approximately 15 polymer-preserved human bodies, and 200 additional organs and partial specimens in a way they never have before. These meticulously dissected bodies are preserved through an innovative process called polymer preservation and are respectfully presented. Visitors will have the opportunity to view the beauty and complexity of their own organs and systems. This up-close look inside the skeletal, muscular, respiratory, and circulatory systems clearly shows how lifestyle choices directly affect our health.

However, there has been major controversy surrounding the way the bodies have been acquired and the question has been raised whether these bodies have been obtained in a conscientious and legal manner.

The controversy has prompted more than questions, in fact Elaine Catz, an eleven year employee of the Science Center has resigned over the issue. She says:

“We don’t know how these people died or why they died, and I don’t think Premier knows, either,” she said, referring to the company, Premier Exhibitions of Atlanta, that is presenting the show. “Before we put our stamp of approval on it, there should be a high burden of proof on Premier.”

I will rarely quote the Catholic Diocese, but I think they have a point here:

The cadavers come from China, a country with an atrocious record on human rights. Though the exhibition’s organizers have stated otherwise, it is difficult to determine satisfactorily whether the bodies are the result of human rights abuses.

Even if the cadavers were not victims of political repression, they would more than likely be from China’s poor. The right to dignity in the treatment of a deceased body is not waived because of poverty.

The exhibition has a website, which further discusses the exhibit, but not the controversy surrounding it.

Another one of the blogs in the 451 press commented on this exhibit as well, so check it out here.

And lastly, I honestly don’t know whether I’ll be visiting this exhibit or not. My fascination with anatomy and understanding things may outweigh the social and moral concerns surrounding the exhibit, but I don’t know. It’s going to be a tough call.

I just think it’s really sad how these bodies ended up on display for a bunch of people who never understood their lives or what they possibly had to go through to be in the place they’re in right now. I understand that they’re dead and it’s too late for them, but is there no dignity left for the imprisoned, the sick and abused even in death?

Ok I’ve made up my mind with that last thought. Unless I could know for sure whether these people consented to being put on display, I’m going to have to pass on going. It’s not worth understanding human anatomy in this way, no matter how mind-blowing the techniques may be. Although we try to understand human life through science, we shouldn’t hold that aim higher than holding our fellow human beings with respect.

But that’s just my opinion.

The exhibit is open daily from 10am-9pm.

The Carnegie Science Center is located at 1 Allegheny Ave, Pittsburgh PA 15212. Their hours and ticket information can be found here.

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The Three Rivers Film Festival

Friday, November 9th, 2007

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The 26th Annual Three Rivers Film Festival began this past Wednesday and is a great event that should not be missed! For those of you who are unfamiliar to the festival, it’s a film festival that shows independent, experimental and foreign films, documentaries, as well as some of the classics like Manhattan.

So here’s the schedule:

Friday Nov. 9
5:30 PF/PCA Member Show
Gallery opening includes a member screening. Melwood
7:00 The Nines
Editor Douglas Crise is scheduled to attend. Regent Square
7:00 The Rocket Harris
9:30 The Island Regent Square
9:30 Beauty In Trouble Harris
9:30 Double Feature, pt 1: Murder Party Melwood
11:00 Double Feature, pt 2: Blood Car Melwood

Sat. Nov. 10
2:00 Manual of Love Regent Square
2:00 The Rocket Harris
2:00 Rough Streets
reception at Melwood immediately following. Melwood
4:15 The Nines
Editor Douglas Crise is scheduled to attend. Regent Square
4:30 Times and Winds Harris
4:30 The Blue Eyed Six
Director Brian W. Kreider is scheduled to attend. Melwood
6:45 The Walker Regent Square
7:00 Kalkadoon Man with William Barton live
Reception at SPACE Gallery, immediately following.
Tickets – $10 available online. Harris
7:00 Mark McElhatten: Contemporary Cinema
Presented by the NYFF curator in person. Melwood
9:15 Persepolis Regent Square
9:15 Chronicle of an Escape Harris
9:30 Double Feature, pt 1Blood Car Melwood
11:00 Double Feature, pt 1Murder Party Melwood

Sunday Nov. 11
2:00 Chronicle of an Escape Harris
2:30 The Island Regent Square
3:00 Mark McElhatten: LaPore Tribute
Presented by the NYFF curator in person. Melwood
4:00 Times and Winds Harris
5:00 American Zombie Regent Square
5:00 The Blue Eyed Six
Director Brian W. Kreider is scheduled to attend. Melwood
6:30 Delirious Harris
7:00 Short Films Program A
Prizes announced and awarded. Melwood
7:30 The Band’s Visit Regent Square

Mon. Nov. 12
7:00 Manual of Love Regent Square
7:00 Chronicle of an Escape Harris
7:00 Guest curator: Adam Abrams Melwood
9:00 The Way I Spent the End of the World Regent Square
9:00 The Rocket Harris
9:15 Trigger Man Melwood

Tues. Nov. 13
7:00 The Way I Spent the End of the World Regent Square
7:00 Delirious Harris
8:00 Film Kitchen: Trailer Trash
Director Don Ramirez is scheduled to attend.
Reception at 7:00pm Melwood
9:00 Irina Palm Regent Square
9:00 Times and Winds Harris

Wed. Nov. 14
7:00 Irina Palm Regent Square
7:00 Trigger Man Melwood
7:30 Manhattan
reception immediately following. Harris
8:45 Short Films Program B
Prizes announced and awarded. Harris
9:00 American Zombie Regent Square

Thurs. Nov. 15
8:00 An Evening With Kenneth Anger
reception at Concept Art Gallery immediately following.
Tickets – $12 available online. Regent Square

The festival is put on by Pittsburgh Filmmakers and to see previous film festivals hosted by the organization, go to my post on the Janus Film Festival here.

For more information on movie descriptions, check out this weeks City Paper or visit the Film Festival’s website here.

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Art Against Genocide @ CMU

Wednesday, November 7th, 2007

Art Against Genocide is debuting November 9th at 8pm at Carnegie Mellon University’s The Frame art gallery!

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Art Against Genocide is an ongoing art collaboration in which individual artists use everything from visual to written to musical arts to explore the ideas surrounding genocide and genocide-like actions. Most people know about the genocide in Darfur, but how many imagine what it would be like to live through genocide? Moreover, genocide-like events are happening in Zimbabwe, Iraq, North Korea, China, and Burma too. The art gives a background on the different situations, promotes hope of reconciliation, and suggests what normal people can do by showing what is being done already.

Dinner will be provided opening night by the Neville Co-op. Opening night will feature live performances by For Greater Consciousness, Annika Rosenvinge, Adam Rauf, and Robert Wallace, as well as readings of written works. Recordings will be made and played back on other days. Video, visual arts and written pieces will also be present. The show will close November 12th at 5pm. Future displays are pending.

The Frame is located at the corner of Forbes Ave and Margaret Morrison St in Pittsburgh, PA.

For more info, or to submit a piece for the art collaboration, contact Benjamin Saalbach-Walsh at bemisawa(AT)gmail(DOT)com.

This looks this is going to be an event I will have to check out. Music, food, and art…I don’t think I could ask for anything more. If I am allowed to take pictures I will and should post them soon after. I am still waiting on some pictures from Halloween event but they should be up soon too.

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Diesel Wants to “Light Up Carson”

Tuesday, November 6th, 2007

I have only been to Diesel once, but the time that I was there I thought it was nice. It reminded me of an 80’s dance club with its giant lighted wall. So I guess Diesel wants its lights to spill out onto the street this holiday season.

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Diesel Club Lounge with the support of the South Side Chamber of Commerce and other local South Side Businesses will hold its first Annual “Light up Carson” Event on Wednesday, November 7th from 7pm-9pm. Due to this year’s lack of funds, Diesel Club Lounge has pledged to donate the $5,000.00 balance of the $7,000.00 total cost to install the holiday lights on East Carson Street this year. Diesel has also pledged that all sales and door donations during the event will be used to set up a fund for a Holiday Light installation every year.

The event will also serve as the kick-off night for the South Side’s “Cans & Coats” Charity Drive benefiting the South Side Food Pantry and the Salvation Army. Patrons and residents can bring gently used coats and canned good items to Diesel throughout the Holiday Season to benefit the needy.

“Light Up Carson” will feature performances by a local artist, a Chinese Auction featuring donations from local businesses, as well as hors d’douevres served by South Side Restaurants.

For more information call 412-431-8800 or email info@dieselpgh.com

Wednesday the 7th of November 2007 7:00pm to 9:00pm - dieselpgh.com

Note: I will be posting pictures from the Halloween Event by the end of this week.

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The Pittsburgh Blog is Still Alive!

Friday, November 2nd, 2007

Just like Frankenstein the Pittsburgh blog has gotten a jolt of electricity. This means you’re going to start seeing a lot more posting going on. I know this week I have been slacking, but I have been really busy with my day job.

itsalive.jpg

To kick off this new jolt of life I am going to head out to the Creative Treehouse at 517 Lincoln Ave., 2nd floor in Bellevue, for one last reason to wear my Halloween Costume. Here is a quick rundown of the Hounted Treehouse event. It starts at 7:30pm Saturday, Nov. 3rd. It will include a pumpkin carving competition, with giveaways for the most creative pumpkin, in addition to a Halloween-themed art gallery. Costumes are encouraged, with a cover charge of $3 with costume, or $5 without. Treats and nonalcoholic beverages will be provided. BYOB is welcomed by anyone 21 and over. There will also be live music. Just check out this post or creativetreehousepgh.com for more information.

Next week I am going to have Election coverage and hopefully some photos from the Haunted Treehouse event.

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About Pittsburgh, PA

On About-PittsburghPA.com you will read about the latest events, restaurant and bar reviews, and local music. If you have a local topic that you would like to bring to this blog's attention just contact Mosley

Pittsburgh, PA Author(s)
    » Jason-Mosley
    » Emily-Bennett

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