FOLIO Spring 2016 - Pasadena Arts Council
Transcription
FOLIO Spring 2016 - Pasadena Arts Council
Spring 2016 Volume 10 Issue 1 Pasadena | City of Art and Science The Publication of Pasadena Arts Council Pasadena Arts Council (PAC) is a nongovernmental, not-for-profit organization that provides resources, programs and services to artists, arts and cultural organizations, audiences, young people and visitors to Pasadena. The agency offers an independent voice for promoting a vibrant cultural community by facilitating, empowering and advocating for the arts. pasadenaartscouncil.org • Find information about cultural events • Subscribe to our e-bulletin • Learn more about the intersection of art and science • Track EMERGE projects • Discover resources for artists, organazations, audiences and visitors Robert Crouch, Executive & Artistic Director Yann Novak, Manager of Online Services Holly Witham, Finance & Accounting Winona Bechtle, EMERGE Program Coordinator Knowledges Awarded $35,000 Award From Mike Kelley Foundation For The Arts Channing Hansen, Quantum Painting 42 yarn and wood, 84” x 160”, 2014 Knowledges, a project of PAC’s EMERGE program, was recently awarded $35,000 from the Mike Kelley Foundation for the Arts. Led by Project Director and Curator Christina Ondrus, Knowledges is an artist-organized initiative whose mission is to foster dialogue between contemporary art and unique geographic locations of under-examined cultural influence by organizing site-specific explorations and events. In 2017, Knowledges will invite artists to develop site-specific temporary installations at the Mount Wilson Observatory located 33 miles from Downtown in the Angeles National Forest. Working directly with Observatory staff during special-access tours of the complex, artists Scott Benzel, Jeff Cain, Krysten Cunningham, Erik Frydenborg, Channing Hansen, Gregory Michael Hernandez, Alice Könitz/Los Angeles Museum of Art, Karen Lofgren, Rosha Yaghmai, and Margaret Wertheim/Institute for Figuring will spend a year developing works in various media for sites throughout the Observatory grounds. The public will access the installations over a full weekend in June 2017. Along with programs, performances, lectures, screenings, tours of the Observatory, and telescope viewing sessions, the event will offer a rare opportunity for both artists and the public to experience this historic site in depth. Cover: Food writer Jonathan Gold with Kogi’s Roy Choi Photograph by Rick Gough KCHUNG Radio Receives Creative Capital Award KCHUNG Radio in residence at the Hammer Museum, 2014 KCHUNG Radio, a project of PAC’s EMERGE program, recently received funding from Creative Capital to produce News Body, a site for mobile, roving broadcast that brings live interviews and reporting as well as production training to any site, event and community in southern California. Operated by KCHUNG collective members, News Body creates a moveable signal, a hyper-local live radio transmission for listeners within a one-mile radius of the vehicle. In addition, News Body will make KCHUNG’s sitespecific programming accessible to a worldwide audience through online audio streaming, on-location and in real time, as well as by producing in-depth news programs and building a searchable online archive of past programming. News Body will create opportunities for spectacle, performance and live engagement that imagine new uses and definitions for news in our communities. 3 A literary stroll in the Playhouse District: LitFest Pasadena’s fifth birthday By Larry Wilson The Vroman’s Paseo • Photograph by Rick Gough LitFest Pasadena, celebrating our fifth anniversary on Saturday, June 4, was born out of obsession -- as which of the small arts organizations sponsored by the EMERGE program of the Pasadena Arts Council wasn’t? Who lights up such a pipe dream without obsession? No one’s in it for the money, and though we might be in it at first for grand glory, that notion is quickly enough quashed by the day-today. But small glories -- they abound. Our obsession started with the idea hatched by local writers Jervey Tervalon and Jonathan Gold that literary festivals should be fun, most especially for the authors. If they are, they’ll be fun for the audience, too. They shouldn’t be overshadowed by the bureaucracy of it all. There should be a place to gather for food and drink. The panels should be finely curated. And it should all feel like it’s from a place rather than from mere anyplace. 4 So that’s what we did. Along with cofounders Tom Coston of the Lightbringer Project and the Doo Dah Parade, still our field marshal; Kat Ward, our first managing director; and Phoebe Wilson, our creative director, we went deep into our obsession. We raised big money at complex fundraisers thanks to dozens of highly generous Pasadenans, and went after grants. We rented Pasadena’s Central Park, not an inexpensive proposition what with the fire marshal inspections and the police officers on duty for the whole day. Riot at the literary bash! Poets gone bad! Send in the National Guard! We rented tents and massive stages that we named after three late great Pasadena writers: Octavia Butler, Harriet Doerr and Julia Child. A trio of superb prose stylists unmatched by any town in the state! How could we go wrong? We then rented out, at below cost, dozens of covered booths to small publishers and bookstores and assorted nonprofits. We established award ceremonies, including the ongoing Pasadena Prize in Prose for the best short story by a local high school student. We set a date: March 17. St. Patrick’s Day fell on a Saturday that year, a perfect choice for a day of revelry. A tremendous amount of work forged in committee meetings over pizzas and beer in the Athenaeum’s Hayman Lounge created what looked to be a plan, with many dozens of authors set to read and yak. And then as the day approached, I became obsessed with the weather. It was driving me crazy, the predictions of one of the largest rainstorms in years in Pasadena for our coming inaugural go. Soon enough I was quite mad. The show must go on, right? Maybe rain would be a good thing -- maybe it would make it all more ... fun. Outdoors. In a grassy park. In the mud. But the great food writer Jeanne Kelley, then just getting famous in the Southland for her urban farm-to-table books and recipes, was all set to make Guinness floats in celebration of all things Irish! Ice cream and beer -- what could be better? The authors were booked -- and a thousand other packages were boxed, the bows tied. But there was the weatherman, plus the way the wind was blowing. By Wednesday of that week my colleagues had finally talked me down. The coming storm was real. We wouldn’t cancel -- we would postpone. We alerted the media. We picked a happy date in May. On that St. Patrick’s Day, we gathered anyway in the evening at Sumi Chang’s Europane to celebrate what might have been. She kept her place open late for a party, and catered it with her usual genius. We had Irish whiskey after the wine and beer. Toasts were made. It had poured like nobody’s business all day long and if I had been allowed to carry on it would have been a disaster. It went great in May, with hundreds of book lovers and authors gathering. Same the next year, only bigger. The year after that the moveable fest headed for the Playhouse District, beginning at Vroman’s Bookstore with a huge crowd in the outdoor plaza for the debut of former Gourmet Editor Ruth Reichl’s first novel, “Delicious!,” in conversation with the L.A. Times’ Laurie Ochoa, with free fancy food from Robert Simon’s Bistro 45 in honor of Ruth giving him his first, career-making review, and grand wines from Everson Royce. Free wine? Free is what LitFest Pasadena is all about. Then to further events and readings at the Pasadena Playhouse, Zona Rosa and other storefronts down El Molino Avenue. Wrapped it all up over margaritas at El Portal. The Playhouse District is our literary hub, and with LitFest Pasadena ensonced now each late spring, it is even more so. Won’t you join us again on Saturday, June 4 2016 to toast year five? Jonathan will be talking about the documentary made about his Southern California food life, “City of Gold.” Novelist Janet Fitch (“White Oleander,” “Paint it Black”) will lead an audienceinteractive event on flash writing. We’ll be panelizing on Writing in the Time of Black Lives Matter, Humor Writing in the Time of Donald Trump. Octavia Butler and her legacy of Afro-Futurism and artful comics creator Jaime Hernandez of “Love and Rockets” fame will be given the LitFest Pasadena Award for lifetime achievement in the arts. Three local high school students will be presented with a Pasadena Prize in Prose. A dozen more events are in the offing. Check it out at LitFestPasadena.org Come see what we’ve made of ours and then go follow your own obsession. Larry Wilson is artistic director of LitFest Pasadena. Write him at [email protected]. Novelist Shanna Mahin and memoirist Jillian Lauren • Photograph by Rick Gough 5 Poems by Ron Koertge Drawings by Debbie Thornhill Death Comes Home from a business trip. He’s been gone for days. All he wants to do is sit in the bathtub with a glass of bourbon. He likes the cat to come in and peer at the water. Maybe test it with one black paw. Otherwise he wants to be alone. Pretty soon he feels better. The cat is old, so he carries it into the kitchen. His wife has sent the children to her mother’s. She asks, “How was it?” “Awful.” “Poor baby. Well, I’m making cornbread.” He watches her fill a square pan and slip it into the oven with such tenderness that he whimpers a little. Cornbread and beans. If he could die and had a last request, that is what he would ask for. Car Wash in Echo Park Just me, the kid, and random vatos hosing down our precious autos. A carvac hiccups, coughs and whines. With hard work, fenders almost shine. A single boom box emits notes, and from our unsuspecting throats the dark blue of a song we know rises like a u.f.o. Sky-Vu Drive In We belt it out. Then almost blush, lean harder on the worn scrub brush. First you’re 16 making out in the back row. I call my kid who says good-bye to other kids who don’t reply. Then you’re married sitting up close so you can watch your kids swing and slide, sprawl and cry. We drive away, as cool as ice. She taps my hand. “You guys sang nice.” Before you know it, you’re in an Electra two rows behind the snack bar with the dog asleep on a blanket in the back. Stars dangle just out of reach – those famous eyes, the silvery rivers of their famous breath, their famous lips. 6 Flashback Rich people open their carved doors. I eat the unicorn soigne then read some poems. I’m signing a few books when I notice cameras in every room and I’m reminded of my short career as a thief. I fondled the books while the tough guys I ran with plundered and swore. “Hurry up, stupid! Get the silver.” I liked the feel of those first editions. I liked the alarms going off, the sprint to the car, the getaway. Ron Koertge of South Pasadena, who taught English and poetry at PCC for 35 years, is the author of many celebrated novels, including Stoner & Spaz, Strays, and The Brimstone Journals, all American Library Association Best Books for Young Adults; Shakespeare Bats Cleanup, an American Library Association Top Ten Sports Books for Youth Selection; and The Arizona Kid, an American Library Association pick for “one of the ten funniest books of the year.” A two-time winner of the PEN Literary Award for Children’s Literature, Ron’s poetry is published by Pasadena’s Red Hen Press. But with a couple of priors, I was looking at time on the river. So I split. Moved to L.A. Cleaned up my act. Debbie Thornhill of Northridge has studied at L.A. Academy of Figurative Art, 3 Kicks Studio and the Animation Institute, and is never without her sketchbook. I tell this story to my hostess. “Really!” she says clutching the triple strand of pearls at her neck, pearls I happen to know aren’t real. Poetry and artwork courtesy of the artists and LitFest Pasadena 7 The following generous individuals, corporations, foundations and government agencies have supported Pasadena Arts Council this year. Thank you! $50,000+ Peter and Rebecca Knell Anne Rothenberg Steven and Kelly McLeod Family Foundation/The Gamble House $25,000 - $49,999 California Arts Council Los Angeles County Arts Commission National Endowment for the Arts $10,000 - $24,999 Jet Propulsion Laboratory Lefkowitz Family Foundation Scheidemantle Law Group P.C. $5,000 - $9,000 John Bryson Dan Bane City of Pasadena Cultural Affairs Division and Pasadena Arts & Culture Commission Cynthia Bennett Nancy Hytone Leb Wayne Hunt Jerry & Terri Kohl Family Foundation Dianne M. Magee Mondriaan Fund Stephen Nowlin Southern California Edison Wells Fargo Foundation $2,500 - $4,999 CicLAvia Inc. Michael Greene Paul and Heather Haaga Pasadena Convention & Visitors Bureau Steve Roden Typecraft $1,000 - $2,499 Olin and Ann Barrett MaryLou Boone Sigrid Burton and Max Brennan 8 $1,000 - $2,499 (continued) Brack and Betty Duker Jim and Gail Ellis Georgianna Erskine Sydney and Ray Feeney Kathie Foley-Meyer and Irving Meyer Simon and Charlotte Harrison Harvey and Ellen Knell Pete and Becky Kutzer Pasadena Arts League Pasadena Showcase House for the Arts J.C. and Pamela Massar Pasadena Arts League Wendy Munger and Leonard Gumport Peggy Phelps Susan Roden Fritz and Susan Seitz John and Andrea Van de Kamp $500 - $999 Bill and Claire Bogaard Frederick Fisher & Partners Architects Roger and Eden Gillott Adelaide Hixon The James Irvine Foundation Tom and Laney Techentin Betsey Tyler Under $500 Joan Aarestad The Amgen Foundation Ted Bosley John and Louise Brinsley John and Susan Caldwell Julie D. Clayton Walter and Zan Cochran-Bond Michael and Diane Cornwell Marguerite Cummings Jennifer Fleming DeVoll Jim and Kitty Dillavou Dave Doody David and Rebecca Ebershoff Ciara Ennis Christine Franke Under $500 (continued) Mary L. Gerke Elizabeth Greenberg James Griffith and Susanna Dadd Shoghig Halajian and Johanna Breiding Ann Hassett and Bob Niemack James Hayes and Catherine Keig Celia Hunt Brenda Hurst Eugene and Jane Imai Patricia Ketchum Dr. Alice J. Key Donna Stein and Henry Korn Joan Leb Bonnie Ledyard Greta Mandell Elana Mann Kerry and Vicki McCluggage Jane and Barry McCullough Annamarie V. Mitchell Jeannette Muirhead Susan Olsen Catherine Partridge Katie Poole Clifford J. Present Fred and Jeanne Register Arthur Rieman Sarah Russin Fran Scoble Dorothy Scully Michael Seel Sara B. and Walter T. Shatford Rosemary Simmons Patsy J. Smith David Spiro Ben and Robin Stafford Gretel Stephens Robin Stever and Ricardo Barrantes Barton and Pamela Wald Crown City Symphony Lawrence and Phoebe Wilson Zuriani Zonneveld Gifts received 2015 – 2016 SAVE THE DATE 2016 AxS Gold Crown Award September 19, 2016 The Cold Water Reef, by the IFF Core Reef Crafters. Photo courtesy of the Institute for Figuring (IFF). Since 1965, Pasadena Arts Council’s Gold Crown Award has honored individuals and organizations for exceptional achievement in the visual, performing, and literary arts. The award recognizes the great importance of these contributions to the cultural fabric of Pasadena, promoting a more effective, inclusive and thriving arts community. The AxS Award celebrates the allied importance of both the arts and the sciences to the dynamic tenor of our time. It commemorates, in Pasadena, a textured conversation between the sciences and the arts that has long been emblematic of the city’s history, and is equally fused with its future. PAC is excited to announce our 2016 Honorees: William J. and Brenda L. Galloway (2016 Gold Crown Award) Supervisor Michael D. Antonovich (2016 Gold Crown Award) The Institute for Figuring (2016 AxS Award) Pasadena residents William and Brenda Galloway have a deep commitment to the arts, both locally and nationally. In 1999 the Galloway’s made a major gift to Pasadena City College’s Sculpture Garden Plaza, which now bears their name. It was an historic contribution to PCC, elevating the profile of the sculpture garden as a venue for world-class sculpture. The Galloway’s are major contributors to the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C., and in 2015 William was elected to the Board of Regents of The Smithsonian Institution. Los Angeles County Supervisor Michael Antonovich, a native of Los Angeles County, has served the two million residents of the County’s Fifth Supervisorial District since 1980. In 1984, Supervisor Antonovich and Caroline Ahmanson established the Los Angeles County High School for the Arts Foundation, and under his leadership the Foundation worked with Assemblywoman Teresa Hughes to sponsor Bill AB851, establishing Los Angeles County High School for the Arts as a specialized secondary school in 1985. The mission of the Institute For Figuring is to contribute to the public understanding of scientific and mathematical themes through innovative programming that includes exhibitions, lectures, workshops, and community based projects. Founded in 2003, the IFF has developed projects for museums, galleries, colleges, and community groups around the world, including the Andy Warhol Museum, The Hayward, Art Center College of Design, and the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History. This year’s event will be held September 19 at Descanso Gardens. If you would like to make a gift in honor of our awardees, please call our offices at 626-793-8171, or send a check payable to Pasadena Arts Council to 65 S. Grand Avenue, Pasadena CA 91105. 9 The following cultural organizations and businesses are current members of Pasadena Arts Council. Thank you for your support! ORGANIZATIONAL MEMBERS $500+ Muse/Ique $250 Art Center College of Design Descanso Gardens Mayfield Senior School Pasadena Conservatory of Music $125 A Noise Within Altadena Academy of Music The Armory Center for the Arts Boston Court Performing Arts Center City of Pasadena Crown City Symphony The Gamble House Kidspace Children’s Museum Lanterman Foundation Light Bringer Project LitFest Pasadena Los Angeles Children’s Chorus Pasadena Arts League Pasadena Heritage Pasadena Museum of California Art Pasadena Playhouse Pasadena Presbyterian Church/Friends of Music Pasadena Showcase House for the Arts Pasadena Society of Artists Polytechnic School Shumei Arts Council of America, Inc. Theatre 360 BUSINESS MEMBERS $500+ Choctál Evie DiCiacciao Coaching & Consulting Scheidemantle Law Group P.C. $125 88 Keys Music Academy Studio Fuse EMERGE PROJECTS 3 Days Awake Absolute Theatre Actual Size Los Angeles Ammunition Theater Company EMERGE PROJECTS (continued) Anthem Argus Quartet ARID Journal The Art of Home Savings Barak Ballet Because China Arts Big City Forum Blue Milagro ...But Can She Play? Century Arts & Culture Project Curious Crossroads Dorn Dance Company Drawing From the Inside Out Ear Meal Webcast Eastside International ECHO Community Arts Emma Goldman: Love, Anarchy & Other Affairs Fallen Fruit ForYourArt+ Friends of the Rialto General Projects The Golden Dome School GuestHaus Residency HOCKET The Hope Chronicles homeLA IAMA Theater Company Install: LA KCHUNG Radio Kewa Civic Concerts Knowledges Laurel Doody Light on Shadow LitFest Pasadena Little Candle Productions Los Angeles College of Music Scholarship Fund Los Angeles Conducting Workshop Los Angeles International Student Film Festival Louder Than Words The Love House Project Lovely Bouquet of Flowers Marcus Eley Chamber Music Melinda Sullivan Dance Project The Mirror, Mirror Project The Mojave Project Monte Vista Projects Music Lifeboat Negation/Reception EMERGE PROJECTS (continued) Next Level Projects Olive Opera Posse Palomar Observatory Book Project Pasadena Opera Pasadena Schubertiade Pasadena Writing Project PasadenaPhotographyArts Piano Intensive Portraits of the Fallen Memorial ProMusicDB QueerFest Rwanda & Juliet SAIPRO Salastina Music Society SAPPA Savage Players Schubertiade of Los Angeles Sculpture For Peace Shades & Shadows Shed Research Institute SPArt Stage Raw Surrogate Gallery Projects Ten West Trailer Trash Project Trop Unconfirmed Makeshift Museum Vagabond Vicente Chamber Orchestra VOLUME Waking up Mary wasteLAnd Wayne Shorter: Zero Gravity What’s Next Ensemble Winter Light Wisdom Arts Laboratory Women’s Center for Creative Work BOARD OF TRUSTEES Nancy Hytone Leb, President Steve Roden, Vice-President Peter Knell, Treasurer Michael Greene Lena Kennedy Dianne Magee Stephen Nowlin Robert Crouch Executive & Artistic Director Members current through April 30, 2016 10 Discover a historic HIDDEN GEM in Southern California From scenic hiking to boutique downtown shopping to creative dining to perusing world-class museums, Pasadena embodies the California lifestyle that travelers who venture off the beaten path will experience. FOR MORE INSPIRATION, GO TO VISITPASADENA.COM 11 Non-profit Org. U.S. Postage PAID 65 South Grand Avenue Pasadena. CA 91105 Pasadena, CA Permit #146 626.793.8171 pasadenaartscouncil.org page 4 page 6 page 9