Arts Alive - Greene County Council on the Arts
Transcription
Arts Alive - Greene County Council on the Arts
ALBANY ALBAN ALB Y, NY PERMIT #486 Published by the Greene County Council on the Arts, 398 Main St., Catskill, NY 12414 • Issue 108 • January/February 2016 Coxsackie Artist Ruby Silvious “Went Viral” Internationally for the Recycled Teabags Now on View at GCCA Tea & Alchemy Mixed media paintings on teabags from the series 363 Days of Tea, Ruby Silvious. Top Left: Woman in Tub; Top Right: Woman Washing Hair; Above: Repartee, Ruby Silvious; On Right: Four Shirts. “363 Days of Tea,” a project by Ruby Silvious that has garnered instantaneous international attention from the social media world this fall, will be on view in “Tea and Alchemy,” her Solo Show at Greene County Council on the Arts this January. Silvious has been exhibiting in the Hudson Valley and Capital Region since 1986. Recently, her hard work has been paying off in spades; her mixed-media paintings on used teabags went viral at the end of October on blogs and publications including The Guardian, Metro Russia, Viral Nova, Bored Panda, Design Taxi and Art Exhibeo. “Tea and Alchemy” will be on view from January 16 through February 27, 2016 with an opening reception on Saturday, January 23, immediately following GCCA’s Annual Membership Meeting at 4pm. Greene County Council on the Arts is located at 398 Main Street, Catskill, NY. Silvious was born in Tacloban City, Philippines and currently lives in Coxsackie. Her award winning work has been exhibited internationally and is included in institutional and private collections. She won the “People’s Choice Award” at GCCA’s 40th Anniversary Party at the unveiling of the “40 Years/40 Artists” Collection. Her winning submission is from her series “363 Days of Tea” where she draws, paints and collages moody, evocative and cheerful daily scenes in a diaristic, tea-stained travel journal on dried, used teabag paper. Silvious has always been creative, but did not identify as an “artist” until she moved upstate in 1986. She studied architecture and fine arts in the Philippines and joined her family in New York City in 1977. For a number of years, she attended $2 figure drawing classes at the Art Students’ League while working in an administrative capacity at Bergdorf Goodman. In 1986, she moved to Athens to join her then-husband and worked as an architectural draftsman for firms in Albany. Her employers funded her Continued on page 8 40 Years / 40 Artists Competition Ten Artists: One Group Show Below and clockwise: William and Robert by Lauren Simkin Berke, 2015. Acrylic & photocopy transfer, 7 x 5 inches; Thomas Cole’s Grindr by Jim Krewson, 2015. Sharpie on paper, 7 x 5 inches; Hazelnuts by Amy Silberkleit. Graphite, 5 x 7 inches; Tai Chi by Giselle Potter. Gouache, 7 x 5 inches. The Greene County Council on the Arts is proud to present work by ten stellar artists in a group show called “Ten Artists: One Group Show.” The show is the next in a series of events to commemorate GCCA’s 40th Anniversary. Artists Richard Armstrong, Lauren Simkin Berke, Dot Chast, Allen Grindle, Eva Melas, Giselle Potter, Kate Hamilton, Jim Krewson, Amy Siberkleit, and Jersey Walz were selected by a jury for this exhibition opportunity and to reproduce one piece each as a fine art print edition of five. The show will be on view from January 16 through February 27, 2016 with an opening reception on Saturday, January 23, immediately following GCCA’s Annual Membership Meeting at 4pm. Greene County Council on the Arts Catskill Gallery is located at 398 Main Street in Catskill, NY. These artists were selected from over eighty other submissions of landscapes, contemporary abstractions, photographs, portraits, and whimsical illustrations by GCCA members. Jurors Julie Lohnes and Tony Iadicicco chose a cross-section of their favorite pieces from each of the genres that were submitted. Lohnes, the Curator of Art Collections and Exhibitions at Union College, and Iadicicco, the Executive Director of Albany Center Gallery, are both artists and arts leaders in the Capital Region. Forty chosen works were produced into a set of postcards called the “40 Years/40 Artists” collection. Proceeds from the postcard set and the 10/10 artist prints will benefit GCCA’s Visual Art Program. To purchase a postcard set ($30) or print ($30 unframed/$40 framed), please call GCCA at 519-943-3400 or go to www.greenearts.org/40-40/ The ten chosen artworks for “One Group Show” feature still, transitory moments: a woman shifting into a Tai Chi position in Presenting Cultural Events & Opportunities for the Twin Counties. www.greenearts.org Giselle Potter’s goauche; Allen Grindle’s antlered figure stepping forward with the left foot; two people facing each other with mouths closed, as though awaiting the next statement in a conversation in Lauren Simkin Berke’s mixed media painting. Jim Krewson’s illustration depicts Thomas Cole’s imagined Grindr profile, as if Cole were alive today and still living in the area. Grindr is a dating website for gay men, and Cole is depicted as “Paintrbttm,” stoically staring off into space, only 1.2 miles away from the viewer. This playful site specific reference to the art history of the Hudson Valley suggests that Cole is waiting for someone special. Inanimate objects stand waiting as well, an open safety pin ready to be used drawn by Kate Hamilton, a paper coffee cup covered in careful calligraphy by Eva Melas: These objects are defined by their ability to hold things for a short period of time. Several artists employ the repetitive build up of line work found in illustrations. The emphasis on draftsmanship carries the eye through the calm, Continued on page 9 Page 2 ALIVE January/February 2016 GREENE COUNTY COUNCIL ON THE ARTS BOARD OF DIRECTORS David Slutzky, President Bill Deane, 1st Vice President Jeff Friedman, Treasurer Paul Poplock, Assistant Treasurer Lawrence Krajeski, Secretary Kico Govantes Liz Kirkhus Nancey Rosensweig Laura Segall John Sowle Sheila Trautman BOARD OF ADVISORS Karl T. Anis Jared Aswegan June Battisti Susan Beecher Dick Brooks Frank Cuthbert Louise Hughes Ronnie McCue Kim McLean Patrick D. Milbourn Patti Morrow James Parrish Ruth Sachs Robert Sheridan Michael Smith Reginald Willcocks STAFF Kay Stamer Executive Director Sharon Shepherd Assistant to the Director; Membership Coordinator; Arts Alive Editor Sara Pruiksma-Rizzo Community Arts Grant Coordinator Renee Nied Coordinator Community Arts Grants, Schoharie Molly Stinchfield Visual Arts Director Lex Grey, Ruth Leonard & Tara Van Roy “Sprouts” Program Co-Directors Patricia Britton Bookkeeper Carrie Dashow Grants Consultant Will Barnds Catskill Gallery Reception, courtesy of Experience Works CONSULTANTS Fawn Potash Masters on Main Consultant Anthony Rago Apogee Webmaster YAMA Industrials, Inc. Computer Technology Sprouts 2016 Program Update GCCA Welcomes Three Familiar Teachers as the New Co-Directors! Ruth Leonard returns to the GCCA Sprouts Program as a Co-Director along with familiar program teachers Lex Grey and Tara Van Roy. Ruth led the Sprouts Program for 18 years before taking the last two seasons off as director to be an art teacher in the program. Lex Grey, known to so many in our community as the front lady in the popular bluesy-rock band “Lex Grey and the Urban Pioneers” and as the Sprouts teacher with “all that energy,” taught music and theatre workshops in the Sprouts Program for many years. Tara Van Roy, also a longtime Sprouts teacher, led dance workshops and is the proprietor of Petite Productions Dance Studio in Catskill. As Co-Director of Sprouts, Ruth, Lex and Tara bring scores of years of teaching experience to Sprouts. Former Co-Directors Donna Trunzo and Dale Loughran have passed the torch back to Ruth who will “light the way” along with Lex and Tara. We shall miss Donna and Dale in their capacity as Sprouts Co-Directors and wish them the very best as they develop their individual careers in education. Along with these familiar faces comes facebook! Like and watch for Sprouts news and important updates on facebook at Sprouts GCCA and at www.greenearts.org/youth-arts/. Registration for the 2016 Sprouts Program will begin in early May. facebook! Sprouts students combined their experience in art, music, theater and dance for an end of the week performance portraying the virtues of eating healthy snacks versus candy! 2016 marks 30 years for Sprouts, the Greene County Council on the Arts’ free summer arts program for children ages 3 to 7. The program uses the arts as an avenue to develop creativity and problem solving skills. Through creative play, cooperative learning, and an atmosphere that is fun and encouraging, children have the opportunity to work with professional artists and teachers in a safe and welcoming environment. Sprouts offers two separate programs for children to choose from, one in Art & Music and the other in Theater & Dance. Both programs run Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 11:45 a.m., with a healthy snack break between sessions. Sprouts limits the two 45-minute classes to 15 children each, allowing for lots of individual attention. The 2016 workshops will be held throughout Greene County with locations and dates in July and early August to be announced. The Sprouts Program is made possible through the generosity of Greene County Legislature and the Greene County Youth Bureau through the Office of Children & Families, Greene County municipalities, foundations, corporate and many private contributions. To make a contribution to this very important program for young people please visit www.greenearts.org/donate or call 518-943-3400. Thank you! GCCA 2016 Annual Membership Meeting Please join us on Saturday, January 23, 2016 at our Catskill Gallery in Catskill, NY for the Annual Membership Meeting of the Greene County Council on the Arts, now celebrating its 40th anniversary of service to the community. The official meeting will take place at 4 p.m. just before the opening reception (5-7 p.m.) for the first exhibits of 2016 “Ten Artists: One Group Show” and Ruby Silvious’ solo show, “Tea and Alchemy, 363 Days of Tea”, in the upstairs gallery. Stay after the meeting and meet the ten artists who were selected by jurors from the 40 Years / 40 Artists competition at GCCA 40th Anniversary Party celebrated in October 2015. In addition Ruby Silvious received the “People’s Choice Award” at the party. Join your fellow GCCA members while viewing their artwork, too. All current members possessing a valid GCCA membership are urged to attend. If your membership has lapsed, come and renew it. For those interested in becoming a member for the first time, this meeting will introduce you to the Council’s work. Currently our Board of Directors is composed of 11 members who will be elected to another 2-year term through 2017. Our by-laws call for a maximum of 21 members – 40 percent of whom must be artists representing as many different art forms as possible. In addition to a strong affinity to the arts, candidates should represent various geographic areas of the county which are defined as (1) the Mountaintop, (2) the River towns, and (3) the Foothills. Potential Board members should be willing to make a clear commitment of time, attend monthly Board meetings, actively participate in fund raising and income producing activities and be a visible advocate for the Arts Council and its mission. Your suggestions or nominations are encouraged. To nominate an individual, please make Kate Boyer Design & Layout – Arts Alive Ruby Silvious 40th Anniversary Logo Design VOLUNTEER GALLERY & OFFICE Dara Young Editor, Calendar & Opportunities Jeanne Heiberg & Wayne Sheridan Arts Alive Contributors William Carbone, Flo Hayle, Erika Klein, Pat Lemmon, Dara Trahan, David Hopkins Andrea Porrazo-Nangle CATSKILL GALLERY COMMITTEE & VOLUNTEERS Deborah Artman, Will Barnds, Jill Skupin Burkholder, Kico Govantes, Ashley Hopkins-Benton, Carol Swierzowski, Richard Talcott Now on sure you have their consent. Prior to the annual meeting, all new candidates should contact Kay Stamer at 518-943-3400 or via email at gcca@ greenearts.org for a briefing on duties and responsibilities of Board members. Continuing Board members to be elected to serve through 2017 are as follows: David Slutzky, President (Hunter, artist); Bill Deane, 1st Vice President (Windham, artist); Jeff Friedman, Treasurer (Catskill), Paul Poplock, Assistant Treasurer (Catskill); Larry Krajeski, Secretary (Durham); Kico Govantes (Catskill, artist); Liz Kirkhus (Catskill, artist); Nancey Rosensweig, (Catskill, Midwife/ GYN, former choreographer & dancer); Laura Segall (Cairo); John Sowle (Catskill, theatre artist); and Sheila Trautman (Jewett, artist). At the Annual Meeting, two new people will be nominated to the Board to serve two year terms through 2017 and elected to the Board at our regular meeting on January 28, 2016. They are Gretchen Mallory (Catskill, former Board Member, creator of Sprouts), and Maggie Fine (Catskill/Athens, theatre artist). Additional nominees are especially sought from the Coxsackie/Athens and Greenville/ Freehold area, so do let us hear from you about your ideas and/or willingness to serve. We wish to thank Brenda Taylor for her past service on our Board of Directors and wish her well in her current endeavors. 4 See "GCCA's DEC Arts Education program" article on page 3. . . . and a host of people like you! A vibrant school of art here at home. COLUMBIA COUNTY COUNCIL ON THE ARTS BOARD OF TRUSTEES Frances Heaney, President John Cooley, Vice President Jeff Levin, Treasurer Arlene Boehm, Secretary Deborah Davis, Gerald Cooley, Daniel Region STAFF Cynthia Mulvaney, Executive Director Renee Schermerhorn, Bookkeeper Indian Ridge Accounting/ Barbara Beers, CCCA Certified Public Accountants Mark Greenberg, Greenberg & Greenberg, CCCA Counselor at Law PROGR AMS IN... Fine Arts Computer Design And classes in 3D graphics and animation. In fact, there’s a whole world to discover at C-GCC, with more than 41 dynamic programs, including teacher education, environmental studies, and classes in writing, literature, local history, and much more. Call us today to learn more. Route 23 | Hudson, NY 518-828-4181 MyCommunityCollege.com /ColumbiaGreeneCC @ColGreeneCC TOMORROW, TODAY. 398 Main Street, PO Box 463, Catskill, NY 12414 • 518-943-3400 Arts Alive is published by the Greene County Council on the Arts for members and others interested in the arts. Deadline for submission of materials for arƟcles, arƟst opportuniƟes and calendar lisƟngs is February 6, 2016 for publicaƟon in the March/April 2016 issue. Please email submissions to: [email protected], AƩ: Arts Alive. Business and individuals interested in adverƟsing in Arts Alive should call 518-943-3400, or email: [email protected]. AD DEADLINE for the March/April 2016 issue is: February 6, 2016 Sharon Shepherd, Editor Kate Boyer, Heron & Earth Design, Layout Page 3 2016 January/February ALIVE The Ski Hills Will Be Alive With the Sounds of Music This Winter Catskill Mountain Foundation Presents Bluegrass, Folk, Blues, Rock & Roll, Gospel, Jazz & Soul Music Right: International Recording Artist’s The Alexis P. Sutter Band brings a powerful concert of Gospel, Soul and Jazz to Catskill Mountain Foundation’s OPAC in Tannersville on February 13, 2016. Far Left: Tony Trishka, considered to be the consummate banjo artist and perhaps the most influential banjo player in the roots music world joins Walt Michael & Company, Professor Louie & the Cromatix and Greg Dayton in Catskill Mountain Foundation’s Common Ground on the Mountain on January 16, 2016. Left: Walt Michael & Company performs folk, bluegrass and Celtic music to the CMF’s Orpheum Film and Performing Arts Center on January 16 at 8 p.m. As snowflakes swirl through the Catskill Mountains and skiers flock to the slopes, an exciting program featuring a wide array of music will be underway at the Catskill Mountain Foundation’s Orpheum Film and Performing Arts Center in Tannersville, New York. After a day of skiing and snowboarding, or for non-skiers, exploring the shops, restaurants and museums of the alluring Catskills towns, nothing could be more enjoyable than an evening of great music. On Saturday, January 16, 2016 at 8 p.m. Catskill Mountain Foundation hosts Common Ground on the Mountain showcasing the best of distinctively American music featuring Walt Michael & Company, Tony Trishka, Professor Louie & the Cromatix and Greg Dayton. Grammy nominated Professor Louis & the Crowmatix have been inducted into the International Blues Hall of Fame and Canada South Blues Hall of Fame. According to the Village Voice, his group brings “a tasty mix of rhythm, blues and rock & roll. Americana at its best.” Guitarist Greg Dayton has performed in New York’s Madison Square Garden, Blue Note and music festivals around the world for 25 years. Tony Trishka, is considered to be the consummate banjo artist and perhaps the most influential banjo player in the roots music world. For over 45 years, his stylings have inspired bluegrass and acoustic musicians with the many voices he brings out of the instrument. Walt Michael & Company performs folk, bluegrass and Celtic music. A musician, composer, string instrumentalist and vocalist for over 35 years, Walt Michael’s performances span the coal camps of Appalachia to the White House to the Closing Ceremonies of the 13th Olympic Winter Games. Considered to be a virtuoso of tremendous influence in the revival of the hammered dulcimer, Walt’s wide repertoire ranges from old-time Southern Appalachian, to Celtic, to breathtaking original compositions. As a vocalist and multi-instrumentalist and he has recorded fourteen albums and instructional videos, appeared at the Lincoln Center, the Kennedy Center and toured extensively throughout the US, Canada, Europe and the UK. His music has been heard on ABC-TV, NBC’s Tonight Show, Broadway, BBC, TNN, CBC, OLN and PBS. Next in the CMF 2016 program line up on Saturday, February 13, 2016, International Recording Artist’s The Alexis P. Sutter Band brings a powerful concert of Gospel, Soul and Jazz to OPAC. This acclaimed five piece ensemble is fronted by a vocalist who transcends styles and genres. When the great B.B. King first heard Alexis Sutter sing her opening set for him, he shook his head in wonder in his characteristic way and said, “It’s a rare thing to share the stage with a great talent like that young lady.” This performance takes place at 8 p.m. The Orpheum Film & Performing Arts Center is located at 6050 Main Street in Tannersville, NY. The Catskill Mountain Foundation has already confirmed several exciting programs for the rest of 2016 including: Enchantment Theater performing “Peter Rabbit” on May 7, 2016; “Cinderella” danced by the New York Theatre Ballet as well as an enthralling series of Concerts and Conversations at the Piano Performance Museum, the only museum of playable historic pianos dating from the 1700’s in the U.S. For more tickets to these events call 518-263-2063 or visit the Catskill Mountain Foundation at www.catskillmtn.org for more information, programs and 2016 events. Many of the CMF’s past seasons were made possible in part with Public Funds from the Greene County Legislature through the Cultural Fund administered in Greene County by the Greene County Council on the Arts. Catskill Mountain Foundation is currently in review to receive funds for their 2016 season. GCCA COMMUNITY ARTS GRANT PROGRAMMING NEWS FARMS, FIELDS AND FORESTS Plant Growth in our Community and their Uses DEC Arts Education Partnership Ruth Leonard and Catskill Elementary 4th grade students, in partnership with the Catskill Elementary School, will create three murals entitled: Farms, Fields and Forests- Plant Growth in our Community and their Uses. Students based their research for the mural project with two days of field trips, learning and sketching onsite, at Story’s Farm in Catskill, Story’s Nursery in Freehold and the Cornell Cooperative Extension’s Agroforestry Resource Center in Acra. Leonard was awarded funds to support this project through the Arts Education Community Arts Grant program administered by Greene County Council on the Arts with funding provided by the New York State Council on the Arts Decentralization Program. At Story’s Farms, staff presented information on plant growth for food with tours of Story’s fields and farm stand. At Story’s Nursery students toured the greenhouses and outdoor plants, shrub and tree yards to collect information for the mural depicting plants for beautification. Students made sketches of various tree species at the Agroforestry Center in the Suislaw Model Forest. The Agroforestry staff set up learning stations on seed dispersal, invasive species, tree and mushroom growth. Ruth Leonard then combined the student sketches digitally and manually into compositions which the students will use to paint the three large scale murals. This year’s murals will be displayed in the Catskill Elementary School library, the perfect showcase for their research and artwork, where CES faculty, employees, young students and their families have viewed other mural projects from previous years. Did You Hear the People Sing? Two of Us Productions receive more TANYS Awards DEC Community Arts Grants in Columbia County ROVING ACTORS REPERTORY THEATRE Over 800 audience members “heard the people sing” as they enjoyed award winning performances of Jesus Christ Superstar and next to normal in the Columbia County. Both of these full-orchestra shows were presented by The Two of Us Productions using the facilities at The Performing Arts Center at Taconic Hills. Two of these audience members, Frances Ruoff and Paul Nelson, were adjudicators from the Theatre Association of New York State (TANYS). Frances recognized The Two of Us Productions with six awards for Jesus Christ Superstar. Paul recognized their efforts with two awards of excellence for their powerful production of next to normal. Jesus Christ Superstar is the ground-breaking rock opera created by Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber. It highlights political and interpersonal struggles between Jesus, Judas, the Zealots and the Priests while suffocating under the Roman occupation. The opera follows Jesus during the last few weeks of his life, beginning with the preparation for his arrival in Jerusalem and ending with his crucifixion. Winner of three 2009 Tony awards and a prestigious Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 2010, next to normal is widely acclaimed for its sensitive and true to life narrative of the Goodman family’s struggle to have a life “at least next to normal,” while dealing with the after effects of losing their firstborn child. For their 2015 productions, TANYS recognized The Two of Us Productions with multiple awards for both main-stage shows. These awards recognize the strong ensemble performances of the casts, and the tightly orchestrated performance of the casts, orchestras and technical teams. Jesus Christ Superstar received these awards for Outstanding Musical Direction and Conducting to Stephen Sanborn, Excellence in Acting to Constance Lopez as Judas Iscariot, Excellence in Acting to Betsy Rees as Mary Magdalene, Meritorious Vocal Direction to Daniel Galliher, Meritorious Singing to Joseph Alvarez as Jesus Christ and Meritorious Acting to Brian Yorck for his role as Herod. The Jesus Christ Superstar production was made possible, in part, with public funds from the Decentralization Program of the New York State Council on the Arts, administered through the Community Arts Grants Fund in Columbia County by the Greene County Council on the Arts. Next to normal was recognized with Excellence in Ensemble Performance to the Cast and Excellence in Direction to Stephen Sanborn. TANYS’ mission is to foster the contribution of theatre to the lives of the citizens of New York State "to promote high standards of theatre practice through education and example" to encourage exchanges of information and knowledge through people-topeople and theatre-to-theatre exchanges. Director/conductor, Stephen Sanborn and his Co-Producer/ choreographer Constance Lopez are well known throughout the Hudson Valley for presenting quality theater, both musicals and dramas. In conjunction with their talented vocal director, Dan Galliher, and technical director, Michael Rivenburg they brought together tightly knit ensembles of versatile area actors and musicians to create live theater experiences that had audience members talking about and returning to watch these powerful productions multiple times. The Two of Us Productions will be back on April 22 through May 1, 2016 with CHICAGO, The Musical! All performances will be at The Performing Arts Center at Taconic Hills Schools, located at 73 County Route 11A in Craryville NY. For more information or tickets visit www. TheTwoOfUsProductions.org Above - Appearing left to right: Connor Anderson, Connie Lopez, Shelly Ley, Jackie Salvatore and Diane Boice-Yorck in rehearsal for Jesus Christ Superstar. Photo Credit: Nicole Seipp. Page 4 ALIVE January/February 2016 How to Contact Your Lawmakers (For Columbia/Greene Counties) Governor Andrew Cuomo Executive Chamber, State Capitol, Albany, NY 12224 Tel: (518) 474-8390 Senator John J. Flanagan, Majority Leader Legislative Office Building, Rm. 805 Albany, NY 12247 Tel: (518) 455-2071 email: [email protected] Senator BeĴy LiĴle Chair Cultural Affairs, Tourism, Parks & Recreation 188 State St., Room 310, Legislative Office Bldg Albany, NY 12247 Tel: (518) 455-2811 email: li [email protected] Senator Kathleen Marchione (District 43 – Columbia) 188 State Street Legislative Office Building - Room 918 Albany, NY 12247 Tel: (518) 455-2381 email: [email protected] Senator George A. Amedore, Jr. (District 46 – Greene) 802 Legislative Office Building Albany, NY 12247 Tel: (518) 455-2350 Fax: (518) 426-6751 email: [email protected] Assemblyman Carl E. Heastie Speaker 932 Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12248 Tel: (518) 455-4800 Fax: (518) 455-5103 email: [email protected] Assemblywoman Margaret Markey Chair Tourism, Parks Arts and Sports Development 712 Legislative Office Building Albany, NY 12248 Tel: (518) 455-4755 email: [email protected] Assemblyman Peter Lopez (District 102: all of Greene + Stuyvesant + Stockport in Columbia County; Rensselaerville, Westerlo & Coeymans in Albany County; Saugerties in Ulster County & all of Schoharie ) LOB 402, Albany, NY 12248 Tel: (518) 455-5363 Fax: (518) 455-5856 45 Five Mile Woods Road, Catskill, NY 12414 Tel: (518) 943-1371 email: [email protected] Assemblymember Didi BarreĴ (District 106: Ghent, Claverack, Greenport, Germantown, Livingston, Tachkanic, Copake, Clermont, Gallatin & Ancram in Columbia County) LOB 553, Albany, NY 12248 Tel: (518) 455-5177 Fax: (518) 455-5418 District Office: 751 Warren Street Hudson, NY 12534 Tel: (518) 828-5329 Fax: (518) 828-5329 email: barre [email protected] Assemblyman Steve McLaughlin (District 107: Kinderhook, Chatham, New Lebanon, Canaan, Austerli & Hillsdale in Columbia County) LOB 533, Albany, NY 12248 Tel: (518) 455-5777 (518) 455-5576 District Office: 258 Hoosick Street, Suite 109 Troy, NY 12180 Tel: (518) 272-6149 Fax: (518) 272-6313 email: [email protected] U.S. Congressman Chris Gibson (19th District: Columbia, Greene, Rensselaer) 2 Hudson Street, PO Box 775 Kinderhook, NY 12106 Tel: (518) 610-8133 Fax: (518) 610-8135 U.S. Senator Charles E. Schumer Leo O’Brien Federal Office Building, Room 420, Albany, NY 12207 Tel: (518) 431-4070 Fax: (518) 431-4076 U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand 478 Russell Senate Office Building, Washington, DC 20510 Tel: (202) 224-4451 Fax: (202) 228-0882 Five Trees by Richard Talcott, 2015, Acrylic and latex, is one of the original artworks of the 40 Years/40 Artists exhibit reproduced in to a postcard collection and limited to an edition of 250. The boxed set of 5 x 7 inch postcards is $30. To purchase a boxed set, visit greenearts.org call GCCA at 518-943-3400 or [email protected]. A Great New Year Planned At Catskill’s BRIDGE STREET THEATRE What a year it was at Bridge Street Theatre! During 2015, Catskill’s “Bridge to Anywhere” transported audiences to ancient Babylonia (The Epic of Gilgamesh) and war-torn Iraq (BOND: the story of a soldier and his dog), the Natchez Trace in 1809 (Grinder’s Stand), the depths of the Great Depression in the American South (Home Fires Burning), a rural cornfield somewhere in the Twilight Zone (Up From The Ground), and the farthest reaches of outer space (Superhero Clubhouse’s Jupiter). It helped let explore the PakistaniAmerican Muslim experience from a woman’s perspective (Dirty Paki Lingerie), do a swan dive into the heart of Goethe’s “Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship” (Sign Felt!), watch the face of America change through the eyes of three small-town Southern women (Lark Eden), and experience poignant and searing lesser-known works by William Inge (The Killing and The Love Death), and Tennessee Williams (Blue Horse Repertory Company’s Three by Tennessee). It hosted an astounding variety of musical performances (classical, cabaret, jazz, bluegrass, folk, indie rock), magic shows, art installations, film screenings, celebrity appearances, and community gatherings and events. A new marquee will provide the building with even greater visibility to travelers on the West Bridge Street corridor, improvements to the interior continue apace, and 2016 promises even more excitement at what one local reviewer has called the “ballsiest theater in the region”. While the space enjoys a short hiatus from production during the worst of the winter months, plans are well under way there for an ambitious new season of the kind of plays, music, and art events you won’t find anywhere else in the area. Things kick off in a BIG way on February 20th with a special benefit performance in BST’s intimate Speakeasy by internationally-renowned playwright and performer Charles Busch – a sneak preview of his new cabaret act, The Lady at the Mic, which will have its “official” premiere the following week as part of Lincoln Center’s Internationally-renowned playwright and performer Charles Busch. Photo Credit: David Rodgers American Songbook Series. In this show, Busch pays tribute to four cabaret legends (Elaine Stritch, Polly Bergen, Julie Wilson, and Mary Cleere Harran) as well as Joan Rivers, all of whom were close friends. He’ll be joined at the piano by his longtime musical director (and Catskill resident) Tom Judson. This gala evening – the very first public performance of this new show – will commence at 6 PM and will be followed by an intimate champagne meet-and-greet with the artists. Tickets are $40 per person and are available exclusively from BrownPaperTickets.com or by calling them at 1-800-838-3006. Seating is extremely limited and this show is sure to sell out, so be sure to make your reservations early. Also planned for the 2016 Season is a four-play subscription series produced by Kaliyuga Arts, Bridge Street’s resident theater company. Plays under consideration include The Tavern by George M. Cohan, the world premiere of Casse Noisette by Michael Whistler, Gidion’s Knot by Johnna Adams, The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-In-The-Moon Marigolds by Paul Zindel, Trevor Allen’s The Creature (an adaptation of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein), A Life in a Day: Lucky Lindy by Dick D. Zigun, I Am Barbie by Walton Beacham, Hysteria: or Fragments of an Analysis of an Obsessional Neurosis by Terry Johnson, Mikel Maher’s There is a Happiness that Morning Is, and Goblin Market or Bed and Sofa, both with music by Polly Pen. Discount tickets to the complete four show season should be available for purchase by late February, once final play selection has been completed. Bridge Street Theatre is also committed to presenting a diverse and eclectic mix of terrific outside artists to audiences here in Catskill. Some of the productions it’s currently hoping to import are Hi, Are You Single? by Ryan Haddad, Gray by Daniel Talbott, Aunt Nona by Anna Carol, Riding the Midnight Express by Billy Hayes, Fleeting Dreams of a Nightmare’s Reality by Bonita Jackson, My Unspeakable Confessions or Upon This Rock by Roxanne Fay, and an untitled (as yet) new work by Dirty Paki Lingerie’s Aizzah Fatima. A quarterly American Songbook cabaret series, curated by Tom Andersen, is presently in the works for the Speakeasy. Other musical possibilities include an evening with Eric Michael Gillett of songs by Craig Carnelia, a classical recital by baritone Robert Osborne, bluegrass from Taconic Ridge, Dixieland from Skip Parson’s Riverboat Jazz Band, and jazz pianist Armen Donelian, as well as a return of the Ramblin’ Jug Stompers. For fans of magic, there’s Caroline Ravn (from Sweden) and Christian Cagigal’s new show The Pandora Experiment. And given its enormous popularity over the past two years, look for a return of Nightmare on Bridge Street, an environmental Haunted House experience created by students from Catskill High School. Bridge Street Theatre is located at 44 West Bridge Street in the Village of Catskill. And, as always, all the latest news and information on what’s coming up can be found at BridgeSt.org or by calling 518-9433818. Bridge Street Theatre is a first time applicant and currently in review to receive funds for their 2016 season with Public Funds from the Greene County Legislature through the Cultural Fund administered in Greene County by the Greene County Council on the Arts. Thomas Cole National Historic Site Announces the 2016 Sunday Salons Each year during the months of January through April, the Thomas Cole National Historic Site offers lectures once per month on Sunday afternoons at 2 p.m., bringing engaging speakers who discuss topics related to the Hudson River School. Tickets are $9 for the public and $8 for TCNHS members and each talk is followed by a reception. This year, for the first time, the lectures will be held in the brand-new building, the New Studio, which Cole himself designed. To celebrate its rebirth, the 2016 Sunday Salons and the 2016 exhibition will address the topic of Cole as architect. Mark you calendar for the upcoming talks. Sunday, January 10, 2016 at 2 p.m. Francis Morrone Thomas Cole and 19th-Century American Architecture Why did America’s foremost landscape painter list himself in Longworth’s New-York City Directory as “Thomas Cole, architect, 520 Broome Street”? Join Francis Morrone – historian, writer and leading authority on the architectural history of New York City – as he examines how Cole depicted architecture in his paintings, his relationship to the American architectural scene during his life, and his own work as Thomas Cole, Architect, including Old St. Luke’s Church in Catskill, his New Studio, and a complex involvement in the design of the State Capitol in Columbus, Ohio. Mr. Morrone has a longstanding interest in the Hudson River School painters and their relation to the architectural and landscape design currents of their time. Sunday, February 7, 2016 at 2 p.m. Robert D. Loversidge, Jr., FAIA Thomas Cole and the Ohio Statehouse Is the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus, Ohio, Thomas Cole’s largest artwork? Although in the competition to choose its architect his entry won third prize, the finished building is widely credited as Cole’s design. But given the way architecture and construction were practiced in the first half of the 19th century, is “wanting” to be the designer (as documented by period correspondence) and actually “being” the designer (Cole, for instance, never visited the construction site) the same Thomas Cole, Front Elevation of Proposed Villa at Catskill, Detroit Institute of Arts, MI, 39.510 thing? Robert Loversidge, award-winning preservation design architect and President & CEO of Schooley Caldwell Associates, was principal-in-charge of the ten-year renovation/restoration/ addition project at Ohio’s National Historic Landmark Statehouse, where he has served as Architect of the Capitol since 1988. Sunday, March 13, 2016 at 2 p.m. William L. Coleman Thomas Cole’s Country Houses Country houses occupied a prominent and intriguing role in Thomas Cole’s wide-ranging engagement with architecture. His little-studied paintings of the grand estates of three different patrons and his writings about country life are eloquent documents of the formation of a domestic ideal that guided this painter-architect when it came time to design a country house of his own. Cole’s surviving drawings for a new Italianate villa on the Cedar Grove property tell a story of ambition, frustration, and resiliency in the face of professional setbacks. Join William Coleman, a postdoctoral fellow at Washington University in St. Louis, for an exploration of the insights the recently rebuilt New Studio offers into the artist’s notion of how best to inhabit the landscape. Sunday, April 10, 2016 at 2 p.m. Wanda M. Corn Artists’ Homes and Studios as Archive and Romance Join nationally renowned art historian Dr. Wanda M. Corn, Robert and Ruth Halperin Professor Emerita in Art History at Stanford University, as she explores American artists’ homes and studios that, like the Cole property, have been preserved and opened to the public. She asks what these special places can teach us about the creative process and the history of art. Dr. Corn, chair of the advisory council for the Historic Artists’ Homes & Studios program of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, is a scholar of late 19thand early 20th-century American art and photography. Active as a visiting curator and scholar, she has produced numerous books and exhibitions, including The Great American Thing: Modern Art and National Identity, 1915-1935. At the heart of the Thomas Cole National Historic Site are the 19th century spaces where Thomas Cole made history: the 1815 Main House, the 1839 Old Studio, and the gardens and views that surround them. One critical piece, however, has been missing for the last forty years – Thomas Cole’s New Studio. Built in 1846 according to Thomas Cole’s own design, the building stood about 75 yards from Cole’s home at Cedar Grove for 125 years. Tragically, it was torn down in 1973 after falling into disrepair. Now, after many years of research and a successful capital campaign, the building has been reconstructed and will open on May 1, 2016. The New Studio will enable the Thomas Cole National Historic Site to effectively serve as a catalyst for the burgeoning national and international interest in 19th century American landscape painting, an outstanding destination for visitors to and residents of the Hudson Valley, and a resource and inspiration for future generations of scholars, collectors and artists. The Thomas Cole National Historic Site is located at 218 Spring Street in Catskill, New York. Current programs and events can be found on the website at www.thomascole.org. Many of the TCNHS past seasons were made possible, in part, with Public Funds from the Greene County Legislature through the Cultural Fund administered in Greene County by the Greene County Council on the Arts. TCNHS is currently in review to receive funds for their 2016 season. Page 5 2016 January/February ALIVE GCCA Catskill Gallery Call for Exhibit Proposals & Artist Opportunities Mark Your Calendar for These GCCA Special Events Happening in January & February 2016 GCCA GALLERY: Exhibition Proposals wanted for GCCA Catskill Gallery 2016 Schedules. Send a paragraph describing your solo show, curated group exhibit, brainstorm for future programs with contact information, an image list, short bio or resume and up to 10 images (72 dpi, 5” jpeg or up to 8x10” photographs) to Molly Stinchfield, molly.gcca@gmail. com with subject line: 2016 VAP Review. Mail hard copy to Visual Arts Director, GCCA Catskill Gallery, PO Box 463, Catskill, NY 12414. Hand deliver proposals to the GCCA Catskill Gallery located at 398 Main Street, Catskill. Exhibition committee members are interested in local artists’ work, subjects of interest to local audiences, partnerships with other arts, culture and community organizations, daring, fun, high quality work. GCCA ARTFUL HAND BOUTIQUE: Fine crafts and art under $100 wanted for the GCCA’s Artful Hand Gallery Gift Shop. Send contact information, an image list, short bio and up to 10 images (72 dpi, 5” jpeg or up to 8x10” photographs) to Molly Stinchfield, [email protected] with subject line: Artful Hand New Inventory. Send hard copy to Visual Arts Director, GCCA Catskill Gallery, PO Box 463, Catskill NY 12414. Hand deliver to GCCA at 398 Main Street, Catskill, NY 12414. You must be a GCCA current member to participate in the Artful Hand Boutique. For questions, please call Molly Stinchfield, GCCA Visual Arts Director, at 518-943-3400. Molly is a part-time employer, so please call in advance to check on her availability. Thank you. TEA AND ALCHEMY: RUBY SILVIOUS SOLO SHOW Ruby Silvious won the “People’s Choice Award” at GCCA’s 40th Anniversary Party at the unveiling of the “40 Years/40 Artists” Collection. Her project “363 Days of Tea” will feature where she drew, painted and collaged moody, evocative and cheerful daily scenes on a tea-stained travel journal on dried, used teabag paper. Opening reception is Saturday, January 23rd, 5-7pm, following GCCA’s Annual Membership Meeting at 4 p.m. TEN ARTISTS: ONE GROUP SHOW The show also commemorate the GCCA’s 40th Anniversary. Artists Richard Armstrong, Lauren Simkin Berke, Dot Chast, Allen Grindle, Eva Melas, Giselle Potter, Kate Hamilton, Jim Krewson, Amy Siberkleit, and Jersey Walz were selected by a jury for this exhibition opportunity and to reproduce one piece each as a fine art print edition of five. Opening reception is Saturday, January 23rd, 5-7pm, following GCCA’s Annual Membership Meeting at 4 p.m. SATURDAY, JANUARY 23, 2016 GCCA’S ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP MEETING at 4 p.m. and the Opening Reception from 5-7 p.m. for “Tea and Alchemy: Ruby Silvious Solo Show” and “Ten Artists: One Group Show” The Annual Membership Meeting is open to all current members and those who wish to renew at the meeting. Meet Members on the Board of Directors, staff members and fellow members as a review of 2015 and goals for 2016 are presented. Stay after the meeting, meet the artists and view their work on display and enjoy light refreshments. GCCA Catskill Gallery is located at 398 Main Street, Catskill, NY. Gallery hours are Monday-Friday from 10-5, Saturday Noon to 5 PM. Visit www.greenearts.org or call 518-943-3400. 40 Years / 40 Artists Postcard collection GREENE COUNTY COUNCIL ON THE ARTS MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION I/We wish to become members of the Greene County Council on the Arts (GCCA) in the following category. Please Check one: New R Renewing R Member I/We wish to become members of the Columbia County Council on the Arts (CCCA) in the following category. Please Check one: New R Renewing R Member ❏ Student R Student/Senior $ $20 20. ❏ Senior $30 R Individual . ❏ Individual $45 R Dual/Family 0. ❏ Dual/ Family $60 R Not-for-Profit-Organization 50. ❏ Not-for Profit Organization $50 R Corporation 100. ❏ Corporation $100 ❏ Patron $100 R Patron 100. ❏ Curator $250 R Curator 250. ❏ Benefactor $500 R Benefactor 500. ❏ Medici $1000 R Other _____. ❏ Other _____ . R Reciprocal 10. ❏ ReciprocalGCCA to GCCA $10 R R R R R R R R R Senior/Student Individual Family Friend/Business/Organization Sponsor Supporting Patron Benefactor Reciprocal CCCA TOTAL MEMBERSHIP Building Fund Contribution J. Ruben Garcia Memorial Fund Endowment Fund TOTAL ENCLOSED Free Dumb by Claudia McNulty, 2015, Waterbased paint & metallic on wooden board , is one of the original artworks of the 40 Years/40 Artists exhibit reproduced in to a postcard collection and limited to an edition of 250. The boxed set of 5 x 7 inch postcards is $30. To purchase a boxed set, visit greenearts.org call GCCA at 518-943-3400 or [email protected]. $ $ $ $ $ $ 0. 5. 0. . 100. 250. 500. 1,000. 10. _________ _________ _________ _________ _________ Payment: Check R Cash R MasterCard R VISA R Amex R Card #: ______________________________ Expiration Date: _______________________ “Thank you!” Make your tax-deductible contribution payable to GCCA and return to the address listed below. City: __________________________________ State: _________________________________ Day Phone: _____________________________ Eve Phone: _____________________________ E-mail: _________________________________ Website: _______________________________ Are you an artist? Yes R No R Brief description of your work ______________ ______________________________________ ______________________________________ Lenora Freese 11 William St., Ste. 2 • Catskill, NY 12414 518 - 821- 6341 • 518 - 943 - 9520 “Thank you!” Make your tax-deductible contribution payable to CCCA and return to the address listed below. Address: _______________________________ City: __________________________________ State: _________________________________ Day Phone: _____________________________ Eve Phone: _____________________________ E-mail: _________________________________ Are you an artist? Yes R No R If yes, what is your discipline? ______________ Brief description of your work ______________ If yes, what is your discipline? ______________ Neuromuscular Massage Deep Tissue • Hot Rocks Swedish • Spor s • Thai Payment: Check R Cash R MasterCard R VISA R Card #: ______________________________ Expiration Date: _______________________ Name: _________________________________ Address: _______________________________ Licensed Massage Therapist Artists/Arts Organizations, do you wish to have your website linked to the GCCA website? Yes R No R ______________________________________ ______________________________________ ______________________________________ ______________________________________ ______________________________________ ______________________________________ Menberships are are for one Memberships for year. one year. Menberships are are for one Memberships for year. one year. You may be able to double your contribution if you work for, or are retired from, a company which has a matching gift program. To make your match, simply obtain a form from your company’s Matching Gift Coordinator and send it along with your contribution to: Greene County Council on the Arts P.O. Box 463, Catskill, NY 12414 (518 ) 943-3400 You may be able to double your contribution if you work for, or are retired from, a company which has a matching gift program. To make your match, simply obtain a form from your company’s Matching Gift Coordinator and send it along with your contribution to: Columbia County Council on the Arts 209 Warren Street, Hudson, NY 12534 (518 ) 671-6213 NEW FEATURE: Add only $10 to any level of GCCA membership chosen and receive a basic membership in the Columbia County Council on the Arts. NEW FEATURE: Add only $10 to any level of CCCA membership chosen and receive a basic membership in the Greene County Council on the Arts. Councils on the Arts Membership Benefits Greene County www.nbcoxsackie.com Be inspired with what NBC can do for you. Your independent, local bank since 1852 $ _________ $ _________ $ _________ Please fill out completely Please fill out completely Name: _________________________________ Revival on the Creek by Karen Rhodes, 2015, Watercolor, is one of the original artworks of the 40 Years/40 Artists exhibit reproduced in to a postcard collection and limited to an edition of 250. The boxed set of 5 x 7 inch postcards is $30. To purchase a boxed set, visit greenearts. org call GCCA at 518-943-3400 or [email protected]. TOTAL MEMBERSHIP Additional Donation TOTAL ENCLOSED Members at all levels receive the following: • Newspaper, “Arts Alive”, containing information for Greene and Columbia counties, grants & opportunities listings, cultural events calendar. • Advance program announcements & invitations to special events. All members can take advantage of the following: • Technical assistance, referrals, networking and information services; access to media & publicity resources; artist’s & arts organizations’ links to GCCA website. •• Discounts: Discounts: Gallery & Gift Boutiques Artfully Hill Health ♦ Gallery Yours, & ArtfulSummit Hand Boutique Club, Hudson Valley Magazine, The purchases Spotty Dog Books & Ale. ♦ Twomembers for One Membership withfree-of• Artist may submit Rivertide charge for Aikido group and curated exhibitions at both the Catskill and ♦ The Spottymay Dog Booksfree-of-charge &and Ale may • Artist members submit Mountaintop gallerues for group and curated exhibitions at the become part of our artists-resource Catskill gallery and may become part of file. our artists-resource file. • Arts organizations are eliible to receive bulk mail privileges • Arts Organization Members are eligible through membership. to receivewho privileges with GCCA Constant • Members function as a business, Contact e-mailfor service. may apply group purchasing • Members at the $250 level and above receive plans and Health Insurance. a gift certificate valid for a basic one-year membership for a friend or family member. Columbia County •• Group Advancehealth Program Announcements and disability insurance & Invites Updates, calendars and • Member • opportunities listings Artist Members submit free of charge for 6 annual at themed exhibits at CCCA • Discounts CCCA performances, Warren Street Gallery events, workshops, and businesses. to CCCA inevents •• Invitations Eligible for Participation Juried Art Show at and Hudson House, Olanareceive • Artists artsOpera organizations Paint Out, ArtsWalk, Soloincluding & Group job additional benefits, Shows at Chamber of Commerce, opportunities, referrals through the Seasonal Outdoor Tent Shows/Sales Artists’ Registry, promotion of • Membership Rewards Grants events, grants andProgram, funding &assistance Networkingand Resources, Publicity, lists exchange. Eblast Service & Artist Registry at • NEW! Artist registry page on www.artscolumbia.org www.artscolumbia.org • Workshops & Classes in conjunction with Art School of Columbia County • GCCA Arts Alive newsletter is delivered to CCCA. Grants, opportunities, cultural events listed. Page 6 ALIVE January/February 2016 23Arts Initiative Welcomes 2016 With Catskill Jazz Factory Lecture and Valentine’s Cabaret Athens Cultural Center Seeing It Through: Image Transfer Workshop with TINA CHADEN Image Transfer on Plastered Paper by Tina Chaden. Multi media artist, Tina Chaden, will lead a three hour Image Transfer workshop at ACC on January 23, 2016. Saxophonist Caleb Curtis will lead Catskill Jazz Factory’s Valentine’s Cabaret, Saturday, February 13, 2016 at the Deer Mountain Inn. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Caleb Curtis/Walking Distance The 23Arts Initiative kicks off the New Year with presenting partners at the Mountain Top Library and Deer Mountain Inn, bringing pianist Dan Tepfer and the Caleb Curtis Trio to the mountaintop this January and February. APA Cole Porter Fellow and master pianist Dan Tepfer comes to the Mountain Top Library & Learning Center on Thursday, January 28, 2016 to preview his dynamic new project ACOUSTIC INFORMATICS, which examines the possibilities of algorithms within live musical performance. Tepfer will discuss this project the night before a performance at Bard College Fisher Center, where he will be joined by members of the International Contemporary Ensemble (ICE). Acoustic Informatics uses the Disklavier in combination with iPhones and iPads to explore the intersection of live musical improvisation and computer-driven algorithms through acoustic sound. This lecture is free and open to the public and takes place at 7p.m. The Mountain Top Library is located at 6093 Main Street, Tannersville, NY. The New York Times says of Tepfer: “Brilliant... A young pianist of exceptional poise who is drawn to the deeper currents of melody... Combines superb technique with a complex set of impulses: he’s a deeply rational improviser drawn to the unknown." Following a centennial tribute performance to Billy Strayhorn at the Bard College Fisher Center, saxophonist and Catskill Jazz Factory all-star Caleb Curtis will lead a chamber jazz trio for the SCHOHARIE SPOTLIGHT second annual VALENTINE’S CABARET at the Deer Mountain Inn. Curtis’ group will perform a mixture of love songs, jazz standards from the Great American Songbook, and romantic repertoire from Billy Strayhorn, Duke Ellington’s most long-standing musical collaborator and friend. This intimate performance takes place on Saturday, February 13, 2016 and will include a three-course dinner beginning at 6 p.m. followed by the performance at 8 p.m., $60 per person. Reservations are required and can be made by calling Deer Mountain Inn at 518-589-6268. The Deer Mountain Inn is located at 790 County Road 25, Tannersville, NY. These 23Arts Initiative events are in conjunction with the JAZZ AT BARD spring concert series, a collaboration between 23Arts’ program Catskill Jazz Factory and The Fisher Center for the Performing Arts at Bard College. For information and tickets to the JAZZ AT BARD series, visit fishercentertickets.bard.edu or call the Fisher Center box office at 845-758-7900. The 23Arts Initiative’s 2016 season anticipates over fifty events including a library sessions series, nine artist-led mountaintop jazz residencies, a free church chamber series, three guest jazz series with co-presenting organizations, and year-round educational visits with nearly ten regional schools. For more information and a full list of upcoming spring events, visit www.23Arts.org and www.catskilljazzfactory.org. Image transfer is an amazing technique enabling an artist to layer one transparent image over another creating a collage of richness and depth. The Athens Cultural Center, located at 24 Second Street, in Athens, NY is pleased to sponsor a three hour workshop led by Tina Chaden on Saturday, January 23, 2016 from 1-4 p.m. In this workshop students will learn to combine painting and collage methods with basic image transfer techniques. Students ages 13 through adult, at all levels of art-making experience, are encouraged to attend. Materials will be supplied and every student will take home a finished original work of art. The workshop is free for teens, however there is a $25 materials fee for adults. This special workshop is limited to eight participants so pre-registration is mandatory. Please call 518-945-2136 or email [email protected] to register. Tina Chaden is an award-winning multi-media artist and leading designer of art work for the home decor marketplace. Her work has appeared in galleries and museums across the country. In addition to her work in the fine arts, Ms. Chaden is also a graphic designer, photographer and 3-dimensional illustrator whose clients have included major magazines such as Discover, Better Homes and Gardens and Time. Visit www.athensculturalcenter. org for more information on workshops, exhibits and events. LOCAL INSPIRATIONS GCCA Longtime Friend WILLIAM A. CARBONE Solo Exhibit at C-GCC Old Country Barn Cluster by William A. Carbone, Watercolor “Local Inspirations” a collection of watercolors and drawing by artist William A. Carbone will be on exhibit in the Kaaterskill Gallery at Columbia-Greene Community College. Carbone’s show will be on display from January 2-30, 2016 with an opening reception of Wednesday, January 6 from 3-5 p.m. Known as “Bill” to his many friends and students; he has exhibited widely and maintains a long-time association with both the Greene Council on the Arts and Columbia Council on the Arts. One can find Bill teaching watercolor workshops most Wednesday mornings at the Washington Irving Senior Citizen Center in Catskill. An inspiration himself, Bill’s students will follow him across the Rip Van Winkle Bridge to the Kaaterskill Gallery at C-GCC with a group exhibit during the month of February 2016. Though primarily self-taught, Bill has been painting, drawing and providing watercolor workshops for over 20 years. He studied at the Art Students League, Riley School of Design, Fordham University and the University of New Mexico. Carbone also participated in the Motion Picture Scenic Artists (NYC) Apprentice Program and created display work for the Pepsi-Cola Pavilion World’s Fair (NYC). “Challenge is part of the process”. Bill states, “My work is somewhat conventional, leaning towards realism, while trying to convey a feeling, emotion or mood of my subject. Sometimes, I am even satisfied!” Meet and greet Bill at his opening reception and spend some time viewing his watercolor works inspired by the local land and streetscapes on both sides of the mighty Hudson River. With every work he has a story! Columbia-Greene Community College is located at 4400 Route 23 in Hudson, NY. Peace Train organizer Sharon Katz offered a Q&A following the film “When Voices Meet” at the Middleburgh Library in December 2015. The event was funded, in part, by the NYSCA Decentralization Community Arts Grant Program. Submitted by Renee Nied, Schoharie County Grant Coordinator Having regranted over $23,000 in 2015, residents and artists in Schoharie County were given the opportunity to experience diverse offerings like The West Fulton Puppet Festival, Irish song, story and dance workshops for youth sponsored by the Schoharie Colonial Heritage Association, and folk, jazz and blues concerts at the historic Bunn Mill (Richmondville Historical Society) in Richmondville, NY. While most events occur during the summer months, the Middleburgh Library, as part of the “Not So Quiet Music Series” produced by Sonny Ochs, hosted a very special two-day event this past December. When Nelson Mandela was finally released from prison, courageous South African musicians broke through Apartheid’s barriers to form a 500-voice, multiracial children’s choir. Threatened with bombs and thwarted at every turn, they prevailed and railroaded across the country aboard The Peace Train founded by Sharon Katz. Singing their way into the hearts, minds and soul of a divided nation amidst a civil war, they promoted a peaceful transition to democracy and went on to become Mandela’s face of the new rainbow nation. “When Voices Meet” documents the trials, tribulations and triumphs of those musician activists and young choir members. They performed together for seven years; never lost touch with one another; and then reunited 20 years later. SWAMP ANGEL ANTIQUES This award winning documentary was accepted at over 20 film festivals worldwide and, on Tuesday, December 15, 2015 the film was shown with organizer Sharon Katz offering a Q&A following the film. Sharon Katz and her group gave a concert on December 16, 2015. Both events were held at the Middleburgh Library to very receptive and grateful audiences. Without funding from the NY Decentralization Community Arts Grants, these events and more would not be possible. By press time, the 2016 grants should be under review by the Greene County Council on the Arts Board of Directors and we look forward to their decision as well as to another season of excellent programming and opportunity for all of us here in Schoharie County. No one likes to pay taxes (at least I don’t know anyone who does), but when events like those above (and more) are funded, in part, by taxpayer monies, well, it does help take some of the sting out of it. And speaking of stinging, and bees, and bugs... Spring is not that far off, right? (I hope.) For more information on the NYSCA Decentralization Community Arts Grant Program contact Renee Nied, Schoharie County Grant Coordinator at [email protected]. 845 - 246 - 7875 2 Village Drive, Saugerties, NY 12477 Facial • Waxing • Make Up • Pedicures • Manicures Heron & Earth GRAPHIC DESIGN AT DAY & HOLT 349 Main Street, Catskill, NY 12414 518.943.2650 Fax 518.943.4824 Pat & Stephanie Walsh [email protected] www.heronandearth.com Page 7 2016 January/February ALIVE New Artists’ Opportunities N E A R Ajkun Ballet Theatre Call For Dancers To Perform In “Giselle” Ajkun Ballet Theatre is looking for enthusiastic young dancers, pre-K to young teens, for its summer production of Giselle, staged and performed in the month of August 2016 at The Egg in Albany, NY. Ajkun Ballet Theatre is committed to prepare children to meet the demands necessary for their success by providing them with a broader knowledge and insight of the dance world, and to empower them to become the leaders of tomorrow by inviting them to participate in professional productions suitable for their age group. Our program allows young participants to experience real theater surroundings and to observe ongoing company rehearsals, thus enhancing the child’s cognitive development in its creative process, imagination, and appreciation of the Arts. Our Artists mentor participants to develop their creativity, self-esteem, respect and empower their mind and body in a fun and nurturing environment with techniques based on Federal and NYS Standards. Ajkun Ballet Theatre company features 35 professional dancers performing for a 48 week Season MUSIC OMI RESIDENCY Announces 2016 Call for Applications Application Deadline: Monday, February 1, 2016 2016 Residency Dates: August 11 - 28, 2016 Omi International Arts Center announces it is now accepting applications for the collaborative Music Omi musicians’ residency program, taking place from August 11 - August 28, 2016. The Music Omi application portal can be accessed at www.omiartscenter. org/music. Applications will be accepted through February 1, 2016. The application is free, as is attending the program, and residency slots will be offered to 12-15 musicians, composers, and performers from around the globe. Every summer, Music Omi invites 12-15 musicians-composers and performers from around the world-to come together for two and a half weeks in a unique collaborative music making residency program located at Omi International Arts Center in Ghent, NY. Hudson Valley music makers are particularly encouraged to apply–not only will a local Music Omi fellow show off the incredible riches of our local arts community, but she or he will leave the program with international connections and will likely continue to collaborate with musicians at Omi in New York City, Westchester County and during annual Tours to Australia, Europe and throughout the United States. The Egg Center for the Performing Arts has been the Company’s Summer Residency since the year 2001, offering the opportunity to local audiences and dancers to experience the wealth of treasured ballets from the repertory produced and performed locally and earning AjkunBT the reputation of “An International Reality, attentive to its Local Community” Rehearsals for the production of Giselle will commence on August 1, 2016 and conclude with performances in Albany on August 3 and 13, 2016. Participants will have the option to join the Company in their New York City performances the following week. Dance Students, aged 14 and above, of IntermediateAdvanced thru Professional level may audition by DVD or in person to join the Company’s New York State summer performance tour. Information about the Company may be found at www.ajkunbt. org, facebook.com/AjkunBT or by emailing [email protected]. Performance Excerpts are available on YouTube.com/AjkunBT. Clockwise from standing: Music Omi Residents Tatiana Heuman, Reuben Derrick, Carl Ludwig Hübsch. Photo Credit: Ross Willows. invited from around the world. Jeffrey Lependorf, Director of Music Omi, has created the program to encourage participants to share ideas, perform each other’s works, and write music for one another, while exploring their own musical vision and broadening their artistic and cultural horizons. Lependorf, a composer of operas and chamber music, is also a certified master of the shakuhachi, a traditional Japanese bamboo flute. About the Music Omi program he says, “Music Omi offers an annual intensive experiment in artistic collaboration ‘without a net’ for musicians of incredibly diverse backgrounds-it’s never failed to be an exceptional experience for all involved.” The Music Omi experience also includes free public performances during and at the conclusion of the residency for invited fellows to share some of their collaborative work with the public. The musicians will first appear before the public in “guerilla improvising chamber groups” during the first weekend of the program, and the summer session will culminate with an outdoor performance set amongst the grounds of Omi’s 120 acre sculpture park. Since its founding, the Omi International Arts Center has been guided by the principle that artistic expression transcends economic, political, and cultural boundaries. Music Omi reflects that commitment, as do Omi’s other residency programs for writers, visual artists and dancers. You can learn more at www.omiartscenter. org. Omi International Arts Center is located at 1405 County Route 22 in Ghent, NY 12075. THE DANCE OMI INTERNATIONAL DANCE COLLECTIVE Is Accepting Applications for its Summer 2016 Residency Application Deadline: January 4, 2016 Residency Dates: July 19 - August 8, 2016 The Dance Omi International Dance Collective is now accepting applications for its 12th Annual Dance Residency. Each summer, Dance Omi invites ten international dancer / choreographers to upstate New York for three weeks of artistic and cultural exchange. This year’s residency will take place July 19 - August 8, 2016 at the Omi International Arts Center in Ghent, New York. Under the direction of Dance Omi Director Christopher K. Morgan and the 2016 Guest Mentor, Stephanie Miracle (Dance Omi alumna from 2012, from the USA but currently living in Germany), the selected group of ten highly accomplished, diverse dance artists will experiment, create, and collaborate in a facilitated, supportive setting. Although the Residency will include informal showings, it does not emphasize the creation of a final performance product; instead, it Photo Credit: Ross Willows emphasizes the process of experimentation and collaboration. Applicants active as both dancers AND choreographers, who work within any style of dance, are encouraged to apply. It is recommended that applicants do not come with specific projects in mind, but that they are open to working with others on jointly conceived projects. Applicants must have a genuine openness to collaborating with multi-national artists of diverse cultural, socio-political, and linguistic and dance backgrounds. All awarded fellows must commit to staying for the entire residency and receive full room and board during their stay at Omi. Please note that Dance Omi is unable to provide travel funds. More information, guidelines and the online application for the 2016 Dance Omi International Dance Collective can be found at: http://www. artomi.org/dance. The deadline to submit applications for the Summer 2016 Residency is January 4, 2016. Notification will take place by March 2, 2016. Dance Omi is a unique opportunity for a collection of international dance artists to explore the process of collaboration through dance. The Residency consists of three weeks of artistic process and sharing. Uninterrupted by the constraints of lack of space, time, or other artists with whom to work, the richness of this residency is that it is an exploration of movement. Residents are encouraged to collaborate with each other, without the pressure of having to create a performance product. It is a model for artistic process and international community building. Art Omi is located at 1405 County Route 22 in Ghent, NY 12075. The Chenango Arts Council - Request for Proposals from New York State Artists The Chenango Arts Council (CAC) is pleased to announce the acceptance of Request for Proposals from New York State artists for exhibition in the Mariea Brown and Raymond Loft Galleries, located in CAC facilities at 27 West Main Street, Norwich, NY. The proposal deadline is January 6, 2016, with a jurying process occurring mid-January for exhibition in the following year. There is no fee for submission, and CAC staff is available for technical assistance with the application process. The mission of the CAC’s Visual Arts Program is to exhibit a wide range of high quality contemporary art exhibits by emerging and professional artists, and to introduce the general public visitor to a greater understanding of the visual arts. Our high quality exhibition space enables the CAC to create an experience and atmosphere that assists artists with enhancing their portfolios, while offering greater exposure and access to their work for rural patrons of the visual arts. Visit www.ChenangoArts.org/gallery/portfolio.html or call the office at (607)336-2787/ARTS for more information on this artist opportunity. Millbrook School - Call for Exhibit Proposals – Art in the Natural World Millbrook School is a small co-educational boarding school located in Millbrook (Dutchess County), NY. The arts department at Millbrook is currently scheduling its 2016-2017 gallery season, which will focus on art interested in the natural world. Their understanding of this theme is extremely broad, including, but not limited to, art about animals, conservation, pollution, environmental racism, zoos, botany and political advocacy around the environment. Artists are invited to send their links to work relevant to this genre that could be explored in a traditional gallery space. Gallery directors at Millbrook are motivated to show work by artists who are living and making work today. Please send questions and images or links to relevant to this call for work to Sarah MacWright [email protected] and Bill Hardy [email protected]. A N D F A R Call for Artists for LA VOZ 2016 COVERS Deadline 1/15/2016 About the Call for Artists: Local visual artists who live in any of the counties where La Voz is distributed, and who have some connection to the Latino world, are encouraged to apply to this call for artists to have their artwork featured on one of the La Voz covers. The art can take any form – for example, photography, drawing, or painting. Please read below for more information about this opportunity. Every month, from March to December 2016, the cover of La Voz magazine will feature the work of an artist who has a connection with the Hudson Valley. This call for artists is to determine who will have their work shown in La Voz. The artists featured in 2015 were, in order of publication: Tona Wilson, Pablo Shine, Franc Palaia, Melanie Hall, Priska Wenger, Sasha Bush, David López, Andrés Chamorro, Gerardo Castro, Néstor Madalengoitía and Mercedes Cecilia. Once selected by a selection committee composed of four members (Mariel Fiori, Fawn Potash, Pilar Roca and Pablo Shine), Mariel Fiori, the managing editor of La Voz, will give each artist a list of topics/ themes being discussed in the specific issue that they will be working on. Themes will range from social and environmental issues (paid maternity leave, prison stories, LGBTQ, human trafficking) to other cultural aspects (Mexican La Guelaguetza Festival, Spanish Spelling Bee, Hispanic Heritage month, etc.). Given a time frame of 15 to 30 days, the artists will then find or create an image (drawing, painting, photography, etc.) that reflects one of those topics and keeps with the square shape of La Voz (8.5 x 8.5 inches). They will then send the image to Mariel Fiori in a digital format. La Voz only requires a digital copy (not the original) of the image created for the cover. Each artist will have their profile in La Voz under the section “La tapa del mes” (The Cover of the Month), with a short bio and a description of how the image was conceived. The artist and the cover art will also be featured in La Voz Facebook page, monthly electronic newsletter, and website. About La Voz: La Voz, cultura y noticias hispanas del Valle de Hudson (The Voice, Hispanic Culture and News from the Hudson Valley), is an award-winning free Spanish language magazine serving the 120,000 Latinos living in the Hudson Valley. Thanks mostly to volunteers, this magazine, that was founded in 2004 as a TLS student project at Bard College by Emily Schmall and Mariel Fiori, is a highly respected local publication, winning awards for its overall design and cultural content from the New York Community Media Alliance and from the Dutchess County Executive. Today,La Voz prints and distribute 5,000 copies each month throughout Dutchess, Ulster, Orange and Columbia counties for an estimated 20,000 readers and, in this way, Spanish-speaking readers of the region will be exposed to the work of Hudson Valley artists. Additionally, the selected artists will gain increased THE TWO OF US PRODUCTIONS publicity for their work. More can be found at www.lavoz.bard.edu/ quienes_somos/ About the Cover of La Voz: La Voz magazine has been in print since 2004. Its cover has always been a subject of interest because of its ability to attract readers through the display of original and visually attractive imagery. Although the cover was originally printed in black and white, thanks to an advertiser we have been printing our cover in color since June 2014. For the majority of the magazine’s life, most contributions and all of the visuals were donated by those invested in the magazine’s continuation. Thanks to a project grant from the DCAC (now Arts Mid-Hudson), in 2013, 2014, and 2015, La Voz was able to compensate ten artists per year to create outstanding covers for La Voz. In 2016, we hope to continue to bring visual arts to the Latino immigrant communities living in the Mid-Hudson Valley region. This year, we also hope to widen the pool of contributors through a formal selection process. Each of the ten featured artists (one per month, throughout the course of the year) will be paid an honorarium for their work (between $100 to $150 per piece). About the Selection Process: In order to participate in the call for artists, you must submit samples of your work (no fewer than 3, no more than 10). The samples serve two purposes: (1) they will be used to assess your ability to create an appropriate cover for the magazine and (2) they will be evaluated themselves to see if any of them fit a theme we already have for La Voz and could be used for a cover. This call for artist submissions will be curated by Mariel Fiori, La Voz managing Editor, Fawn Potash, Program Manager, Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts at Bard College, Pilar Roca, La Voz graphic designer and illustrator, and Pablo Shine, artist and professor of drawing and painting. You can see La Voz covers from 2015 at www. lavoz.bard.edu/archivo/index.php?year=2015. The deadline for submissions is January 15, 2016. There is no application fee. Guidelines to Participate: 1. Explain briefly why you should be considered for an assignment (optional) 2. Submit no less than 3 and no more than 10 samples of your work. 3. Submit your resume. Visual artists who have some connection to the Latino world are encouraged to apply to this call for artists to have their work featured as a commissioned cover for La Voz (The Voice), the award winning, free monthly Spanish language magazine of Hispanic culture and news distributed throughout the Hudson Valley. Submit 3-10 digital images, resume and optional short statement on why your work should be considered for this assignment. Deadline January 15, 2016. More info at www. lavozmagazine.submittable.com/ submit CALL FOR AUDITIONS for Chicago, The Musical The Two Of Us Productions, the award winning production company based in Copake NY, is pleased to announce auditions for their upcoming production of Chicago, The Musical. With book by Fred Ebb and Bob Fosse, and with music by John Kander, this show is a raucous, tuneful comedy with an edge! “In roaring twenties Chicago, chorine Roxie Hart murders a faithless lover and convinces her hapless husband Amos to take the rap...until he finds out he’s been duped and turns on Roxie. Convicted and sent to death row, Roxie and another “Merry Murderess” Velma Kelly, vie for the spotlight and the headlines, ultimately joining forces in search of the “American Dream”: fame, fortune and acquittal. This sharp edged satire features a dazzling score that sparked immortal staging by Bob Fosse.” Cast auditions will be held on: Wednesday January 13, 2016 at 7pm, Saturday January 16, 2016 at 10am and Sunday January 17, 2016 at 2pm. All auditions will be held at the Dutch Reformed Church located at 88 Rt. 9H, in Claverack NY. An accompanist will be provided, a capella auditioning is strongly discouraged! Songs from the show or other appropriate songs are welcome. If from another show please bring a copy of the sheet music for the accompanist and clearly mark the 32 bar section you wish to use for auditioning. Please come prepared to sing and dance, so wear appropriate clothing for dancing. Performances are planned for April 22 through May 1, 2016 at the Performing Arts Center at Taconic Hills Central School located on County Route 11A in Craryville, NY. Musicians interested in playing this exciting score are also encouraged to call or write. For additional information about this production, or about The Two Of Us Productions please email us via www.TheTwoOfUsProductions. org or call the director at 518-329-6293. Page 8 ALIVE January/February 2016 Tea & Alchemy Continued from page 1 Mixed media paintings on teabags from the series 363 Days of Tea, Ruby Silvious. next two degrees: AS Business Administration from Columbia Greene Community College and BS Marketing Management from Siena College. She joined Greene County Arts and Crafts Guild in the early 1980s, exhibiting alongside Regina Petrosky and Dot Chast. In Albany, she joined the Colonie Art League, Upstate Artists Guild and Albany Center Gallery for more exhibition opportunities. Looking back, she considers two group shows to be her artistic turning point: one at Albany Center Gallery in 2012 and another at Atlantic Gallery in Chelsea, NY last year. These shows inspired her to expand her artistic discipline. On January 3, 2015, she committed herself to post a tea-themed art piece on social media every day. “At first,” Silvious recalls, “ten likes per day was a really big deal.” She noticed that people responded most strongly to the paintings on recycled teabags. The excitement was encouraging; she began sending out more applications to shows and residencies. She mailed in a few images and a statement about her project to ArtistsInspireArtists.com, and within a week of being featured on their website, the teabags were picked up by a variety of web and print publications. The number of followers on her Facebook, Instagram and Tumblr pages has increased exponentially. Some of her fans send her photos of their artwork on recycled teabags. When people ask her questions about her techniques and materials, she shares her best practices and failed experiments. “I’m not discouraging anyone,” she says. “Go ahead, try it! Everyone should try it!” Her enthusiasm about the project is visible in the images. They are fun, optimistic, colorful, dark and visceral. Viewers can see the fibers of her many careers and interests in the images: fashion, architecture, delicious meals, everyday scenes, figures of family and friends and her recent trips to France and Italy are all a part of the series. “There are endless possibilities in what you can do on this small, discarded canvas.” Please join us to applaud our new local art celebrity at her reception for “Tea and Alchemy” on Saturday, January 23, 2016 from 5 to 7p.m. at Greene County Council on the Arts at 398 Main Street, Catskill, NY. All of us in Greene County can say we knew her when… Visit www.greenearts.org for more information on exhibits, programs and events. Gallery Hours are Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday noon to 5 p.m. Admission to the Gallery is free. 40 Years / 40 Artists Postcard collection A Little Falls in the Clove by Patti Ferrara, 2015, Watercolor, is one of the original artworks of the 40 Years/40 Artists exhibit reproduced in to a postcard collection and limited to an edition of 250. The boxed set of 5 x 7 inch postcards is $30. To purchase a boxed set, visit greenearts.org call GCCA at 518-943-3400 or [email protected]. South Street Market by Tom Sardo, 2006, Photograph¸ is one of the original artworks of the 40 Years/40 Artists exhibit reproduced in to a postcard collection and limited to an edition of 250. The boxed set of 5 x 7 inch postcards is $30. To purchase a boxed set, visit greenearts.org call GCCA at 518-943-3400 or [email protected]. Page 9 2016 January/February ALIVE 40 Years / 40 Artists Competition Ten Artists:One Group Show Continued from page 1 The ten artists chosen by the jury from the 40 Years / 40 Artists exhibit (in October 2015) for a group at GCCA in January 2016 include Richard Armstrong, Lauren Simkin Berke, Dot Chast, Allen Grindle, Eva Melas, Giselle Potter, Kate Hamilton, Jim Krewson, Amy Siberkleit, and Jersey Walz. Fine art archival prints, in an edition of five and reproduced by Woodstock Graphics, for each of the ten selected artists are available for purchase for $30 unframed and $40 framed. Some prints are different from the winning post card image. Richard Armstrong’s prints have already sold out! Proceeds from the postcard set and the prints will benefit GCCA’s Visual Art Program. Purchases may be made by calling GCCA at 518-943-3400 or online www. greenearts.org. g graphic scenes. Dot Chast and Amy Silberkleit detail the texture A of tree bark and tree leaves with o ccare. Pattern and attention to detail are another common d ttheme: even the photographs have a repetitive line quality: the strong vvertical lines in the architecture iin Jersey Walz’s photograph pull our eye downward, emphasizing o tthe light stand, which casts a ggentle light on the back of a cat aapproaching the camera out of tthe darkness. In the collage made ffrom photographs by Richard Armstrong, we see bathing suit A cclad bodies lounging on a pool deck made from an irregular grid d of white stones. o Richard Armstrong A has achieved significant acclaim h iin both of the art forms he practtices: visual and performing art. IIn addition to his vibrant and hyper-real paintings and collages, h he is also an internationally h ssought-after performance coach. His life’s work is the subject of H “The Voice Teacher”, a feature llength documentary film to be rreleased in late 2016. Lauren Simkin Berke iis an American artist and iillustrator. Starting in 2005, he has made one ink drawing per h day from found photographs, d yyielding a collection of thousands of source drawings which he o ttransforms into paintings, assemblages, mixed media collages, b books and illustrations. His b work has been published in The w New York Times, The Advocate, N aand O Magazine, among others. “Regardless of scale or media,” Berke writes, “my interest is in B ccombining intuitive play with the sstudy of how people document ttheir lives in photographs and eephemera, as expressed in line.” Dot Chast has been active in the Hudson Valley art scene since the 1970s, when she started making prints at the Greene County Arts and Crafts Guild. Her work is a staple in many juried shows in the area. Her career has included fifteen solo shows in venues such as the Greene County Council on the Arts, Prattsville Museum, Tivoli Artists Gallery, Columbia Greene Community College, Congregation Ashe Emeth, and the Cornell Cooperative Extension Center. She has been a long time member of Greene County Council on the Arts and an active member of the Woodstock Artist Association and Museum (WAAM) for more than thirty five years Allen Grindle’s CV is long, and his artist statement is short. He concisely notes, “I want my images and methods to be basic, direct, and uncluttered.” One look at his impactful austere prints confirms that he has realized this objective. He has exhibited worldwide in Serbia, Canada, Czechoslovakia, Finland, Ireland, Italy, China, Spain, the Republic of Macedonia, Poland, and Germany. His work has also been in group and solo shows across the country, including several impressive printmaking collections. Eva Melas is primarily a ceramic artist that uses other unconventional mediums such as paper coffee cups, found cigarette packs, and buttons to comment on themes recently involving environmentalism and feminism. She has exhibited at a number of venues including the John Michael Kohler Arts Center, The Westchester Arts Exchange, and the Armory SOFA show. An installation was shown in the NY times Art section in June 2015. Her work appears in, Art/Industry Collaboration Revelation (Ruth De and Young Kohler), Confrontational Ceramics ( Judith Schwartz), TedXGowanus Talk 2013, and the NY Times (Westchester) review 2008. Using equal measures of whimsy and desolation, Giselle Potter creates an illustrated world of magical realism as nuanced as the unabridged Grimm’s Fairytales. A boy with tears streaming down his face holds a box of chocolates while his disconcerted dog looks on helplessly in one image. In another titled “Witch,” a woman is facing away from a row of frowning figures in animal masks with their paws raised at attention. Her inventive imagery allows space for a viewer to fill in the details of the tale, activating imagination. Potter has published over 25 children’s books and illustrations in The New Yorker, National Geographic and exhibited at the Society of Illustrators in New York and Los Angeles, the Katonah museum, the Eric Carle Museum and Storyopolis in LA. Kate Hamilton is a sculptor, costumer, and designer who works in the mid-Hudson Valley and New York City. Her practice explores the architectural details and the experience of clothing through pieces ranging in scale from miniature to room-sized. Hamilton’s ephemeral sculptural work has been shown around the US, and her costuming has appeared in art performances, operas, and theatre in New York, Berlin, and Zurich. Jim Krewson Jersey Walz is a multimedia artist with an out scale sense of humor and ability to make the mundane profane. Although airbrush paintings on canvas are his main focus, he has also been a professional Bluegrass musician, Erotic Cake maker, and regular illustrator for early issues of Vice magazine. His work has been shown mainly with Gavin Brown’s Enterprise and he has been a frequent participant in Rob Pruitt’s Flea Market. He makes the kind of work he wants to see, and writes, “often my work is a reaction to boring, annoying and/or stifling art trends and memes.” As the artistic director of The Rod & The Rose Puppet Theatre, was born in New York Cityy and raised in Rome, Italy. Her photographs reveal a masteryy of composition with heightened sensitivity to both architecture and the human figure. She captures her subjects in stark, under sung moments, elevating quotidian gestures to fine art portraiture. She received a BFA A from Purchase College, has exhibited work in numerous group shows in New York City, and has been published in the World of Interiors, I-D, and SOMA A magazines. She currently works at Bard College and resides and photographs in the Hudson Valley. Five of the artists, Richard Armstrong, Lauren Simkin Berke, Allen Grindle, Eva Melas and Giselle Potter, were selected by the jury to be featured in our 40th anniversary advertisement campaign. A professional photographer will photograph each of them in their studios for a multi-platform print and social media campaign. For updates on the 40 Years/40 Artists collection, please visit www.greenearts.org/40-40/. To purchase a boxed set or fine art print, please contact 518-9433400. Join the artists at the reception for “Ten Artists: One Group Show” on Saturday, Januaryy 23, 2016 immediately following GCCA’s Annual Membership Meeting at 4pm. Greene Countyy Council on the Arts is located at 398 Main Street in Catskill, NY. Gallery Hours are Mondayy through Friday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday noon to 5 p.m. Admission to the Gallery is free. Amy Silberkleit began her career acting, writing scripts and making puppets and sets. She has fabricated 20-foottall rod puppets by commission and smaller puppets to show in several galleries in New York, ACC craft shows in Dallas and Atlanta, and the WBAI craft fair at Columbia University. Recently, she has begun representing the natural world in rapt detail, creating panels and shadow boxes using fabric and thread. These have exhibited at highly-competitive craft shows, including Philadelphia Crafts show, Crafts at Lincoln Center and at various Artrider shows and in galleries in Hunter and Hudson. Amy is currently working on a botanical art illustration certificate at the NY Botanical Garden in the Bronx. Page 10 ALIVE January/February 2016 Free Painting & Drawing Workshop Series for Pre-teens and Teens at Athens Cultural Center Teen Sarah Smith painting “Buttercup” in class 2015 at Athens Cultural Center. The Athens Cultural Center is pleased to start off 2016 with a five week painting and drawing workshop series for teens and pre-teens ages 10-19. The series will begin Sunday, January 10, 2016 and run five Sundays through February 7, 2016, from noon to 4 p.m. The Athens Cultural Center is located at 24 Second Street in Athens, NY. These instructional workshops will be led by Robert Lahm, an accomplished and award winning landscape and wildlife painter who worked as a commercial illustrator for more than 35 years. This workshop is FREE class and Lahm teaches Agroforestry Resource Center Exhibit Beauty in Nature by Rita Buttiker A painting depicting the vast beauty found in nature by Rita Buttiker. Her solo exhibition will be on display at the Agroforestry Center through February 24, 2016. an understanding of the elements of drawing – form, perspective, values, shading and composition. The essential role drawing plays in other mediums and the importance of mastering this art form is stressed. When the drawing is finished, the student will transfer the artwork to canvas using a modified grid system. An underpainting technique (using white and brown) will be used to paint the subject on canvas, stressing the values. This is followed by glazing the colors. Personal, individual instruction allows each student to move at their own pace, assuring an understanding of the techniques offered. All materials are supplied. For more information or to register please email the Athens Cultural Center at [email protected] or call 518-945-2136. This program is made possible by support from United Way of Greene and Columbia Counties, The Milton and Sally Avery Arts Foundation, Stewart’s Shops, the Bank of Greene County Charitable Foundation, Athens Community Foundation, Inc., Greene County Youth Bureau, Greene County Legislature and memberships. The Agroforestry Resource Center presents Rita Buttiker and her solo exhibition “Beauty in Nature” from January 1 through February 24, 2016. An opening reception will be held on Saturday, January 16 from 2-4 p.m. Born and educated in Switzerland and later living in Canada and New York, Rita’s landscapes recorded the natural beauty she observed. Because she possesses an eye for accurate detail, she loves to explore the beauty in nature, hence her exhibit title “Beauty in Nature”. Her landscapes reflect the many views Rita has observed and captured on canvas for others to enjoy. Throughout her career Rita studied art courses at the Sacchi, Florence, Italy, State University of New York in Albany, Albany Junior College and the Malden Bridge School of Art. She participated in special art studies with Franklin Alexander, from Woodstock and in studies with the renowned Stanley Maltzman. Rita has won numerous prizes for her work and has exhibited in many places locally, as well as in Kent, CT and Felspoint in Baltimore, MD. Her works are included in many private collections in the Untied States, Switzerland and Spain. The Agroforestry Resource Center, located at 6055 Route 23 in Acra, NY, is an educational facility for Cornell Cooperative Extension so when planning to visit the exhibit, please call ahead to ensure accessibility to the conference room 518-622-9820 x 0. Seventh Annual Washington Irving Senior Citizen Center Watercolor Workshop Exhibit at C-GCC Painting by Marge Henderson. Watercolor paintings from the Washington Irving Senior Center Watercolor Workshop group will be on display from February 1 through the 29, 2016 at C-GCC. Most Wednesday mornings a diverse group of local artists, mostly seniors, meet and participate in a watercolor workshop at The Washington Irving Senior Center in Catskill with instructor William “Bill” Carbone. This group of artists will soon cross the Rip Van Winkle Bridge to show their original works at the Blue Hill Gallery at Columbia-Greene Community College during the Seventh Annual Washington Irving Senior Citizen Center Watercolor Workshop Art Exhibit. As artists, they have many different interests, a range of styles of painting and experience in participating in solo and group exhibitions. As individuals, they have the desire to band together and paint with watercolor. Over 100 pieces will be on display at the Blue Hill Gallery at C-GCC the entire month of February. Meet these kindred watercolorist spirits at the artists’ reception on Thursday, February 4, from 3-5 p.m. The group exhibition includes work by artists from Greene, Columbia and Albany Counties. Call more information call 518-828-4181. Columbia-Greene Community College is located on 4400 Route 23, Hudson, NY. WAYNE’S WHORL, A slant on the Arts. (copyright 2015 Wayne Sheridan) The “Art” of the Art Opening Or, Can’t Tell the Palate from a Picasso? No Problem. Are you hesitant to attend an “Art Opening” at a local gallery, or at some other intimidating venue? Perhaps you’ve seen the ads in a local newspaper. Or, on occasion, a friend has invited you. Maybe, once, in some absentminded mood you put your name and address on some Arts mailing list, and the invitations never cease. In this latter case, you may have been enticed by the chance to win a “free professional framing” of your favorite piece. And, then you thought, you really do need to do something about Aunt Tilly’s paint-by-the-numbers number she laid on you last Christmas. In any event, the time has finally come. You’re steeling yourself to make the first momentous step across that gallery threshold. You only wish you had some real, practical guidance. Well, even if you can’t tell the palate from a Picasso, there’s really no problem that can’t be overcome, if you just remember some simple points. (Yes, just a few years ago my buddy Arnold thought a “framed picture” was what the D.A. used to nail his Uncle Guido and send him away for ten years. But, today, after following these easy steps, Arnold has become an appreciated regular at virtually every art opening within 100 miles of Albany. And you must be more sophisticated than Arnold, right? ) The first point to remember, and perhaps the most important, is that an “art opening” has absolutely nothing to do with art. Yes, there are paintings, or perhaps photos (or, in many cases, “things no one can readily identify”) hanging, standing, or propped up in some strange way, everywhere. There is someone, and sometimes more than one someone, standing near the center of the gallery, wearing a flower, or some such, that everyone seems to want to say something to, and occasionally, some do. Yes, this is the artist, or artists, as the case may be. (You probably guessed this fact already, so you are already catching on rapidly.) Then there is one or more large poster-like pieces, printed, or perhaps in some odd calligraphy, telling you about the artist and his work. Yes, there are smaller cards next to each hung, standing or propped piece telling you some details about that particular work. (But, sometimes there are just numbers on these small cards. The “dreaded numbers,” I call them, which compel someone wanting to know more about a particular piece to search across the gallery for some adhoc book, find that number in the book, and then read what should have been on the wall next to the piece in first place, including the price of the work.) Of course, all of this is irrelevant to the core of the art-opening experience. And this fact should be comforting to you, as much of the above can intimidate the novice. Therefore, the second point to remember is that most of what you see (and hear, for that matter) at an art opening is irrelevant to the real experience. So, if an art opening is not about art, and much of what you see and hear there is irrelevant to the experience, why go to an art opening? To party, of course. You’re skeptical. How can an art opening be a party? Do you not see people milling around, some seeming to know each other, others strangers trying to “fit in.” Many will be holding glasses of Chardonnay, a few Merlot or Caberne Or Pinot Noirt, and of course there’s the standard quota of tea-totalers. Do you not see the small plates with fancy colored, delicious looking tidbits some will be carrying? Did you not notice the buffet table, probably towards the back of the gallery, occasionally right in the middle? Then, of course, there’s the wine and drinks bar, usually selfserve, occasionally tended. Now, what is all this? Of course: It’s a Party! Or, you might think of it as the “Happy Hour” at your favorite hangout. In any case, it’s nothing intimidating or foreign to your experience. This is the third point to remember, and a point equal to, if not more important than the first. An art opening is really a party. With “party” (or “happy hour”) in mind you can walk past that gallery threshold with the same insouciance as when you enter The Inn at Leeds, or go to The Riverside. You feel better already, don’t you? Now, get that term “art-opening” out of your mind. Just think “party, party, party.” But, you ask, won’t you have to do something more than eat and drink at the art opening? Will you not have to look at something other than the baked Brie with almonds, perhaps study something other than the labels on the wine bottles? And, will you not have to say something, something seemingly intelligent, to someone? Well, yes. And, no. Of course, it usually does no permanent harm to your eyes, or to your psyche, to actually look at the objects hung, standing or propped throughout the gallery, which are the ostensible purpose of the party. In fact, it is bad form to enter the gallery and head straight for the buffet or the drinks bar. I recommend you wend your way to your destination by looking briefly at most, if not all, the objects standing between you and the buffet and bar. While looking, an occasional nod, or perhaps what might be interpreted as an appreciative sigh, will establish you as one worthy of being there and partying with all the rest. But, please, if you do feel eyestrain, or your mind begins to wander back to that awful class on Existentialism you took in college, or some such mental torture, it is time to stop looking at these pieces. You say, looking you can handle, but what do you say? Preferably, nothing. Silence in these venues is often interpreted as a sign of profundity. Besides it’s hard to eat all those hor’s d’ouevres and drink that wine while talking. So, silence serves the dual purposes of letting you eat and drink more, while establishing yourself as a deep thinker. O.K., occasionally, more rare than you might think, you will be trapped into a situation in which you will have to say something about something, probably one of the “works” displayed, or, perhaps even the whole “oeuvre” of the artist on display. Yes, the term “oeuvre” is related to those tidbits you’ve been gorging on; so, if you speak about your appreciation of those morsels, and others think you are talking about the artist’s work, so what? As long as you’re not too specific, no one will know the difference. If talking about the hor’s d’ouevres as if you were talking about the artwork seems not to be working (this is rare, it works all the time for me), you may have to actually start mouthing some that at least appear to be “real art terms”. Now, remember, your purpose here is not to engage in any real conversation, which can really spoil the party, but to divert conversation, preferably to switch the person you are talking to into a monologue mode (not very hard, as most people would rather hear themselves talk than listen to you). Then, as that other person monologues, you can appear to listen attentively, but continue to eat and drink as before. Terms to use that may not only further establish you as a profound person, but switch virtually any art-opening attendee into monologue mode, and more important, help you get quickly back to partying, include such words as these: “”Impressionistic.” “Real passion in those strokes.” “Bold use of color.” But the sure-fire winner is: “Post-Modern.” That term is everywhere. No one has a clue as to what it means, but anyone with any pretence to having an intellect, likes to talk about it. So, mumble something about PostModernism, and you’re sure to accomplish your goal. Party on! (By the way, there is no real harm in actually liking some of the objects hung, standing or propped around the gallery. If you don’t have to take out a second mortgage, or sell your car, you might consider purchasing one or two. In fact, this helps assure the parties will continue. My wife, the children’s book writer and artist Sandra Dutton, and I have come home with a half-dozen such works, usually on the low end of the price scale, for our own appreciation, or to give as gifts, over the last few years.) Page 11 2016 January/February ALIVE ASCC Announces ARTalks 2016 Dates and Topics Graphic Design by Arlene Boehm. Columbia County Council on the Arts The Art School of Columbia County will hold a series of three panel discussions and pop-up exhibits, continuing its popular ARTalks series this coming spring. The themes for 2016 are Art as Surroundings, Story, and Self. Held Sunday afternoons at the Art School (1198 Rt 21 C Ghent NY) from 2-4 pm, each ARTalk will have three invited regional artists exploring a given theme in a guided panel discussion along with a special exhibit of their work. Art as Surroundings is March 20, 2016 featuring Jerry Freedner and Draga Šušanj (both ASCC faculty) and Berkshires-based artist Melody Mason. Art as Story is April 3, 2016 featuring Fern Apfel, Nancy Kohler, and Maria KolodziejZincio. Art as Self will be explored April 17, 2016 featuring the work of Tim Ebneth and Gary Finelli, both ASCC faculty. For more information, please see: artschoolofcolumbiacounty.org. The Art School of Columbia County is located in the green schoolhouse at 1198 (County) Route 21C in Ghent, NY 12075 just up the road from Hawthorne Valley Farm Store. Call 518-672-7140 or visit artschoolofcolumbiacounty.org A B S T R A C T I O N S The Columbia County Council on the Arts, now celebrating its 50th Anniversary, is kicking off the New Year with a dynamic show of non-representational/non-objective art inspired by anything and everything. The group exhibit showcases the opportunity to show one’s personalized interpretation of subject matter through emotion, form and color not limited to any particular medium. The only boundaries are one’s imagination. Abstractions will be on exhibit from January 13 through February 24, 2016 at the CCCA Gallery located at 209 Warren Street in Hudson, NY. Meet the artists at the opening reception on Saturday, January 16, from 5-7 p.m. Regionally known and respected juror Valerie Hoffmann selected the works included in Abstraction. Hoffmann received her education at Pratt Institute in New York as an architectural and Interior Design major and a minor in Fine Arts and Illustration. After a career in architecture and interior design she re-entered the world of fine art and joined the Art Students League in New York City to study under its renowned artists/instructors including the notable abstract expressionist, Larry Poons. Breaking away from the more representational interpretations, she worked in various techniques of mixed mediums in a more abstract approach. Elements of nature are a continuing theme punctuating her work. Color and texture are used to convey a link to its organic origins. Occasionally natural materials, photo images or text are embedded to indicate bits of reality. She has shown her work at several galleries and venues in New York City as well as solo shows and regional shows in Columbia and Greene Counties. Hoffman now resides in nearby West Taghkanic, NY. To view works by Valerie Hoffmann visit her website www.valeriehoffmann. weebly.com. For further information on this exhibit, upcoming shows, special events and other CCCA programs call 518-671-6213, email [email protected] or visit www.artscolumbia.org. CCCA Gallery is located at 209 Warren Street in Hudson, NY. Gallery hours are Wednesday, Thursday and Friday from 11a.m. to 3 p.m. and Saturday 1-5PM. Closed Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. Columbia County Council on the Arts is proud to be celebrating its 50th year of its service promoting the arts! “Surrender” by Melody Mason, image courtesy of the artist. Visit melodymasonphotography.com How the World Was Won: Man, Nature, Progress Free, Interactive Lecture at C-GCC Columbia-Greene Community College Professor Nicole Strevell-Childrose will present a free, interactive lecture entitled “How the World Was Won: Man, Nature, Progress” on Thursday, February 11, 2016 at 7 p.m. at the Greenport campus. Strevell Childrose will engage the audience as she travels back in time to the late 19th and early 20th centuries. She will explore World’s Fairs, cultural artifacts, photography and literature that shed light on the imperial culture that shaped and carved the modern world. “As we adventure into the past,” said Strevell-Childrose, “the story of humans’ interaction with the world will unfold. Unraveling events and ideas from a historical and social lens will allow the audience to make connections between then and now.“ She will demonstrate ways that evolving history and culture have shaped society, politics, environmental issues and today’s world. During the evening’s presentation, she will discuss answers to the questions: What is pro- gress? How can we envision a more just, compassionate world? In what ways could an understanding of social history better inform our decisions and conversations? The free, hour-long lecture will be held in the Professional Academic Center on campus. Columbia-Greene Community College is located at 4400 Route 23 in Hudson, NY. C-GCC Professor Nicole StrevellChildrose will present a free lecture on World’s Fairs, cultural artifacts, photography and literature that shed light on the imperial culture that shaped and carved the modern world. Swallows After the Storm by Maria Kolodziej-Zincio, 2015, Encaustic beeswax and pigmented oils, is one of the original artworks of the 40 Years/40 Artists exhibit reproduced in to a postcard collection and limited to an edition of 250. The boxed set of 5 x 7 inch postcards is $30. To purchase a boxed set, visit greenearts.org call GCCA at 518943-3400 or [email protected]. PORTRAITS by Gerald Cooley www.marlenevidibor.com Perception Columbia–Greene Community College Join Gerald Cooley in celebrating the New Year with some of his favorite paintings depicting people he has admired and enjoyed over the years. His art exhibition “Perception” features over 20 large originals. The show runs through January 2016 at Columbia Greene Community College. Meet Gerry at the opening reception on Wednesday, January 20, from 4-6 pm. Exclusive to the reception there will be many additional drawings, renderings and prints on display also available for purchase. Great conversation guaranteed along with light refreshments served. For more information on the artist visit Gerry’s website at www.stateofmindart.com or call 518-610-4732. Columbia-Greene Community College is located at 4400 Route 23 in Hudson, NY. just google “wildbraidart” bead art, jewelry, fiber art, accessories, watercolor/collage handmade poetry books Use your to see their Appreciate the Arts to the fullest...call for your appointment today Dr. Christine M. Scrodanus - Optometrist 518-943-3691 - 383 Main St., Catskill, NY WOOD-FIRED STONEWARE POTTERY www.susanbeecherpottery.com Perfect gifts for all occasions, in all price ranges Open weekends by appointment or by chance Call Susan at (917) 658-5288 2070 Route 23C, East Jewitt, NY 12424 Page 12 ALIVE January/February 2016 The Bindlestiff FamilY Cirkus Art School of Columbia County Offers Performances, Classes, and Fitness Training as an Alternative to the Winter Blahs! FREE PORTFOLIO REVIEW PROGRAM Philomena Bindlestiff Opens the Show! For the fifth year, Helsinki Hudson presents The Bindlesitff Family Cirkus’ Cabin Fever Cabaret with three night-time, grown-up shows for adults only on three Saturdays; January 16, February 20, and March 19, 2016 at 9 p.m. And, a family-friendly 3 p.m. matinee on Sunday, March 20, 2016 featuring a pre-show by Bindlestiff ’s Cirkus After School program participants. For tickets and information, visit www.helsinkihudson.com, or call Helsinki Hudson to make your (strongly recommended) reservations at 518-828-4800. Each month’s cast will feature a fresh lineup of acrobats, aerialists, physical comedians, unique novelty acts, burlesque artistes, jugglers, contortionists, and always featuring live musical accompaniment by one of our favorite composers. Bindlestiff ’s Cirkus After School is a program offering non-competitive, creative exploration of circus skills for youth ages 8-18. We use juggling, stilt walking, partner acrobatics, aerial skills, physcial comedy and clowning, unicycling, and other unique skills as a bridge to self-confidence, healthy communication, positive self-expression, and physical well-being. Classes are now running at the Hudson’s Department of Youth and at Chatham’s Morris Memorial through January, 2016. Spring sessions are open for enrollment now! Each program is building toward a free, public show for friends and families at the end of our Spring session. Bindlestiff ’s Conditioning and Fitness for Aerial Arts is a weekly 90-minute training session for anyone age 13 and up who wants to learn safe stretching, conditioning, and skills on static trapeze. We build strength, flexibility, and balance on and below the trapeze bar and in the ropes of the apparatus. Tuition discounts for students and siblings available. Bindlestiff Family Cirkus offers fun ways to beat the winter blahs! Hudson Juggling Club is another free and fun way to move this winter! Open to any and all youth and adults with an interest in the manipulative arts of juggling, flow, and other circus skills. Bindlestiff provides equipment for use, and peer mentorship is free flowing in an open, skill-sharing environment. Juggling clubs, balls, scarves, spinning plates, diabolos, and unicycles are just some of the items we share. The Juggling Club meets on Mondays from 6 – 8 p.m. at Montgomery Smith Intermediate School located at 102 Harry Howard Avenue in Mirror Visions Ensemble Presents Flights of Fantasy at the Roe Jan Library The Mirror Visions Ensemble returns to the Roeliff Jansen Community Library to perform a new program entitled Flights of Fantasy on Saturday January 23, 2016 at 5 p.m. as part of the library’s Adventures in Music series. Soprano Vira Slywotzky, tenor Scott Murphree and baritone Jesse Blumberg are joined by pianist Grant Wenaus for this performance of vocal chamber music in which composers, poets and historical figures are illustrated through music and explored not only through their published works, but also through correspondence and other anecdotes. The program features deities, beasts, charms and lullabies in works by Beethoven, Debussy, Ives, Mendelssohn, Medtner, Saint-Saëns, Sibelius, Stenhammar and Vaughan Williams as well as three Mirror Visions commissions, one of which is a world premier. Flights of Fancy features deities, beasts, charms and lullabies in works by Beethoven, Debussy, Ives, Mendelssohn, Medtner, Saint-Saëns, Sibelius, Stenhammar and Vaughan Williams. The program’s major highlight is the world premiere of a Mirror Visions commission: Scales and Tales by Gilda Lyons. This historical account of mythological beasts delves into the fantastic world of dragons, unicorns, winged serpents and sea snakes. Two additional MVE commissions round out the program: Christopher Berg’s setting of excerpts from Canto #2 of Dante’s Inferno entitled “Incominciam,” and Russell Platt’s “Sketch” from Noon to Starry Night, a cantata based on the poetry of Walt Whitman. The New York Times says, “Mirror Visions’ programs are shaped with an ear to the poetry of song texts.” The initial interest of the ensemble was the backto-back performance of multiple settings of a single text. Led by Artistic Director and co-founder Tobé Malawista, the ensemble has commissioned more than 85 vocal chamber music works from 24 composers, including Christopher Berg, Tom Cipullo, Hudson, NY. Enter through the back doors, bus entrance to the 2nd Floor Gymnasium. For registration and more information about any of these programs, email stephanie@ bindlestiff.org, or call 518-8287470, and visit the Facebook page for Bindlestiff ’s Cirkus After School! It’s got detailed program descriptions and schedules for all. Peruse www.bindlestiff. org for more information about Bindlestiff ’s offerings in the Twin Counties, the Hudson Valley, New York City, and beyond. Find The Bindlestiff Family Cirkus on Facebook, and seek out The Bindlestiffs, our web series documenting life in the Cirkus. Bindlestiff ’s free programs in the Twin Counties are made possible by funding from The Galvan Foundation; The Berkshire Taconic Foundation; The Rhinestrom Hill Community Foundation; The Stewarts Foundation, Operation Unite New York, The Hudson Opera House; The City of Hudson Common Council Committee on Arts and Entertainment and private donors. Bindlestiff Family Cirkus also thanks their valued partners, The Hudson City School District; The City of Hudson Department of Youth; The Morris Memorial and The Mental Health Association of Columbia and Greene Counties. for Students ages 15-24 The Art School of Columbia County announces its new Portfolio Review program, free to students ages 15-24, and $18 for students age 25 and up. Students may schedule 30 minute individual appointments with ASCC’s staff. Students will receive an individualized, encouraging and supportive review of their needs as a new, growing, or just-needing-a-new-perspective artist. Suggestions on presenting art, developing a portfolio, or techniques of internet presentation are all topics that can be covered, customized to students’ needs. The fee for Portfolio Review may be applied towards the tuition for a winter or spring 2016 class at ASCC. In its third year of offering high-quality art classes to the community, the Art School of Columbia County is a non-profit organization with a vision of “imagining art for everyone.” ASCC is located at 1198 Route 21c in Harlemville, NYat the intersection of Harlemville Road and Route 21C, next to the Hawthorne Valley Farm Store. To register for Portfolio Review, go to artschoolofcolumbiacounty.org. For more information, email info@ artschoolofcolumbiacounty.org or call 518-672-7140. The WeirSomewhere on Ireland’s Northwest Coast… The Ghent Playhouse Neal Berntson to play Jim in The Weir. Photo by Dan Region The Ghent Playhouse stage is transformed into an Irish Pub called the Weir somewhere on Ireland’s Northwest coast as the Playhouse continues its 41st Season with Conor McPherson’s award winning The Weir. The play will open on Friday, January 22, 2016 and run through Sunday, February 7, 2016 with performances Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sunday afternoons at 2 p.m. In the intimate pub setting, as Brendon tends bar on a foggy evening, locals Jack, Jim and Finbar tell spellbinding stories of ghost lore, Irish Gentle Folk and a haunted house built over a fairy road to Valerie, the newcomer in the village. As the libations flow and the evening progresses, the stories that hit the most haunting chord are those that tell of the ghosts that inhabit the shadows of our own minds and taunt of what might have been if only… The cast consists of Donald Dolan as Jack, Jerry Greene as Brendan, Neal Berntson as Jim, John Wallace as Finbar and Monica Brady as Valerie. This production is directed by Aaron Holbritter who is “thrilled to be making my Ghent Playhouse premiere with it (The Weir).” Gabrielle Smachetti is the Assistant Director and Stage Manager. Cathy Lee-Visscher is the Producer and set design is by Robert Walker. Tickets are $20 each, $17 for Friends of the Playhouse and $10 for Students with ID. Tickets may be reserved by calling 1-800838-3006 or going to the website at www.ghentplayhouse.org. Call 518-392-6264 for more information about the Ghent Playhouse. The Ghent Playhouse is located along State Route 66 at 6 Town Hall Place in Ghent, NY 12075. The Mirror Visions Ensemble, soprano Vira Slywotzky, tenor Scott Murphree and baritone Jesse Blumberg, will perform a new program, Flights of Fancy at the Roe Jan Community Library in Hillsdale, NY on Saturday January 23, 2016 at 5 p.m. Richard Lalli, Gilda Lyons, Russell Platt, Richard Pearson Thomas, Francine Trester, Scott Wheeler and Yehudi Wyner. Past seasons include performances at Carnegie Hall’s Weill Recital Hall, Merkin Hall, Bargemusic, SubCulture, (Le) Poisson Rouge, Lincoln Center’s Library for the Performing Arts, New York University’s Frederick Loewe Theatre, and Bard College’s Longy School of Music, as well as frequent appearances in Paris at the American University of Paris, the American Church in Paris, Musée Carnavalet, Musée Nissim de Camondo and Musée des Arts Décoratifs. Roeliff Jansen Community Library, which is chartered to serve Ancram, Copake and Hillsdale, is located at 9091 Route 22, approximately one mile south of the light at the intersection of Routes 22 and 23 in Hillsdale. For information on hours and events call 518-325-4101 or visit the library’s website at www. roejanlibrary.org. RUTH SACHS CERAMICS www.ruthsachs.us 630 County Rt 17, Jewett, NY 12442 1 Treeview Drive, Melville, NY 11747 ONE OF A KIND CERAMICS 516-443-2847 Fax 631-659-3174 [email protected] Page 13 2016 January/February ALIVE 2016 January-February ART CLASSES Art School of Columbia County Winter days are a great time to spend time renewing your creative energies, and a class at the Art School of Columbia County is a great way to do so. In its third year of offering highquality art classes to the community, ASCC, a non-profit organization with a vision of “imagining art for everyone” presents this series of all new classes this January and February. Full class descriptions with winter snow dates, plus information about ASCC’s scholarship program are on the school’s website. Robin Guthridge offers Light & Shadow in the Landscape on Saturday. January 16, 2016 from 10 a.m. – 3 p.m. Students are invited to work in any media to learn how to create a sense of time and place in a landscape using contrast and value. Jerry Freedner teaches the Art of Photography Thursday, January 21, 2016 from 6-9 p.m., and explores the question “what transforms a snapshot into art?” Student will learn how to create better images using the many features of digital cameras. ASCC also presents two classes with a creative approach to color theory: E S DeSanna teaches Opposites Attract: Color Theory with Pastel on Sunday, January 24, 2016 from 1-4 p.m. Students will learn how to express moods with color, and explore saturation, value relationships and mixing using this direct medium. Tim Ebneth leads students in exploring our dynamic regional landscape, drawing on Milton Avery’s approach to color, in a one-evening course Color through Abstracted Landscape held on Monday, February 29, 2016 from 6-9 p.m. Ebneth also offers Mixed Media: Drawing as a way for Details of works in pastel by E S DeSanna, courtesy of the artist. students to explore drawing in a freeing, exploratory manner, including using nontraditional materials from the winter landscape such as pinecones and twigs. The class is offered three Monday evenings from 6-9 p.m. starting January 25, 2016. Sculptor Draga Šušanj will lead students in exploring the connections between environment and space in Art & Environment: Mixed Media Sculpture on Saturday, January 3, 2016 from 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Students will learn mixed media techniques for interpreting the winter landscape in sculptural form. Gary Finelli uses drawing to explore design issues such as contrast, value, balance, and movement in a series of fun exercises in Seeing with an Artist’s Eye: Principles of Design on Saturday, February 20, 2016 from 9 a.m. to noon. Students of all levels have found Mira Fink’s approach to teaching inspirational. She teaches a Watercolor Workshop on Sunday, February 28, 2016 from 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. ASCC’s small class sizes make this a perfect choice for both those new to watercolor or those wanting Prominent Adirondack Artist and Art Center, in company with Alice Neel and Chuck Close, among others. His work was recently exhibited in New York City at D. Wigmore Fine Art, and in 2010, his work was included in the National Academy of Design’s 185th Annual Invitational Exhibition of Contemporary American Art, in New York City. He has been reviewed in The New York Times, Art News, Arts, The New Yorker, Art International, and many other publications and is included in all major fine arts reference volumes in the United States and abroad, including Who’s Who in American Art. Describing Wynn’s Deer Season, acrylic on paper, Neumann Fine Art owner Jeffrey L. Neumann said “Wynn’s distillation of forms to their essence is balanced by his complex handling of paint. The artist has wrestled his subject into existence with great emotion and beauty. The painting is personal and also iconic, its narrative steeped in deep tradition.” The gallery is planning a solo exhibition of Wynn’s work for summer 2016. Neumann Fine Art is located (just west of the State Routes 23 and 22 intersections) at 65 Cold Water Street, Hillsdale, NY. Hours are Thursday - Sunday 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. More information on Jeff Neumann and Neumann Fine Art may be found at www.neumannfineart.com. Grants… Offering financial, administrative assistance to individual artists’ special projects, help develop collaborative projects, assist locating venues for presentation, sponsor for public presentations. Carol Parkinson, Dir., Harvestworks, 596 Broadway, Ste 602, New York, NY 10012 . 212-431-1130 www.harvestworks.org Ongoing 02/15 Film, Video and Electronic Grants… provides fees for independent media artists (film, video, new media, sonic arts) to appear in-person to exhibit work. The Experimental Television Center, 109 Lower Fairfield Road, Oswego, NY 13811. 607-687-4341. www.experimentaltvcenter.org . Applications reviewed monthly. 02/15 Grant… $1,000 to $2,500 for emerging artists: art, music, theater, dance, photography, literature, works, due to their genre and/or social philosophy, might be difficult being aired. For an application send a SASE to Gladys Miller-Rosenstein, Executive Director, Puffin Foundation, 20 Puffin Way, Teaneck, NJ 07666-4111. 201-836-8923 www.puffinfoundation.org 02/15 Film Grants… Eight grants yearly in many categories except commercial projects. Send a SASE to Bill Creston, with description, inspiration, source material, resume, approx. dates of use, experience, and media to eMediaLoft, 55 Bethune St., A-628, New York, NY 10014. 212-924-4893, email [email protected] website: www.emedialoft.org/ Ongoing 02/15 Grants… Communities, small/mid-sized, culturally-specific, community-based arts institutions. Programs showing issues, experiences of underrepresented social justice issues, community concerns of national or multi-state impact: residencies; new performing art, or visual art, cross cultural, multi state collaborations, dissemination of existing works affecting communities. Nathan Cummings Foundation, 475 Tenth Ave., 14th Fl., New York, NY 10018, 212-787-7300, 787-7377. [email protected] www.nathancummings.org 02/15 Film Grant... Independent documentary filmmakers may apply. We produce, distribute and promote quality ethnographic, documentary and non-fiction films from around the world. Send brief description, one page budget. Cynthia Close, Exec. Dir., Documentary Educational Resources, 101 Morse St., Watertown, MA 02472. Fax - 617-926-9519, email [email protected] web site www.der.org/ 800-5696621. Ongoing 02/15 DON WYNN Signs with Neumann Fine Art Deer Season by Don Wynn, 2013. Acrylic on paper, 18” x 24”. Neumann Fine Art announces the addition of Don Wynn to its stable of artists. Wynn’s artistic range is currently featured at the gallery with an oil painting, an acrylic on paper, and two wood block prints on display. Born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1942, Don Wynn has a BFA from Pratt Institute and an MFA from Indiana University. He has been a Visiting Artist at many universities and institutions, including Yale University and the Art Institute of Chicago, and has received awards from the Elizabeth T. Greenshields Memorial Foundation, Montreal; the Fine Arts Work Center, Provincetown; and the New York State CAPS Program. Wynn’s active and diverse exhibition career began with the first of numerous New York City solo shows in 1964. In 1970, his work first received international recognition in the Whitney Museum’s landmark Twenty-Two Realists exhibition. ART SCHOOL OF COLUMBIA COUNTY www.artschoolofcolumbiacounty.org imagining art for everyone drawing • painting • photography • printing sculpture • bookbinding classes year-round • programs for adults & children $30 PUTS YOUR AD HERE! Call GCCA at (518) 943-3400 or email: [email protected] Deadline for the March/April 2016 issue is February 6, 2016 In 1978, he was the first living artist to be given a solo exhibition at the Adirondack Museum. In 1995, the Metropolitan Museum of Art acquired one of his oils for its Twentieth Century Collection (the first Adirondack resident artist so honored since Rockwell Kent). Wynn was included in the recent Vermont group exhibitions Picasso to Warhol: Paintings from the Sixties and Seventies, at the Elizabeth C. Wilson Museum, Manchester, and in As Others See Us, at the Brattleboro Museum Opportunities for Artists CALL FOR FINE CRAFTS: The GCCA is looking for fine crafts to be sold at the GCCA’s Artful Hand Gallery Gift Shop. Those interested should submit 4” X 6” color photos or jpgs (email to gcca@ greenearts.org) of items they want to sell to the GCCA Visual Arts Director, 398 Main St., Catskill, NY 12414. 518-943-3400. There’s a need for your special talents and skills on the volunteer roster at the Greene County Council on the Arts galleries and offices in Catskill. There are immediate openings on the front desk and exhibit installation staffs, but many other opportunities exist - gallery maintenance, information distribution, and much, much more. What are you interested in? Chances are... we need you! Volunteers can exchange time and efforts for a GCCA membership, network within the arts community, learn and teach valuable skills... and volunteering can be a lot of fun! Call GCCA Catskill Office, 518-943-3400. NEW! The Art School of Columbia County, centrally located in Columbia County in Harlemville NY is a not-for-profit [501(c)3] art school dedicated to “art for everyone.” ASCC is seeking applications for the following positions: developing and teaching art programs for children, art therapy and teaching art to adults. Please send your resume/CV with educational background, exhibitions (if applicable), and teaching experience with your contact information to: [email protected] Subject Line: application. Please mention in the body of the email in which position(s) you are interested. 8/15 Other Opportunities Volunteers...Greene County Community College, Elderhostel Institute Network affiliate programs: local art scene, artist slide lectures, instruction. Class leadership is voluntary, offers wide exposure to interested audience. Adult Learning Institute, Box 1000, Hudson, NY 12453. 518-828-4181 x3431. Volunteers… To help spread the news about Thomas Cole, father of American landscape painting and founder of the Hudson River School at his newly restored home, Cedar Grove, a National Historic Site in Catskill, NY. Call 518943-7465. [email protected] Volunteers…Docents to lead tours of exhibitions & other museum volunteer opportunities. Amy Morrison, Development Assistant, (518) 463-4478, ext. 408 or morrisona@ albanyinstitute.org for more information. Albany Institute of History & Art, 125 Washington Ave., Albany, NY 12210 www.albanyinstitute.org 02/15 Grants Local Grants…Support for family friendly, soundly managed organizations that enhance the communities where the funder has a presence. Price Chopper’s Golub Foundation. PO Box 1074, Schenectady, NY 12301. Does not fund film & video projects or individuals. No deadline. 02/15 Ceramic Grants…awards from $200 -$5,000 for original research in ceramics history, be based on primary source materials. Susan Detweiler, ACC Grants Chairman. Suite 12, 8200 Flourtwon Avenue, Wundmoor, PA 19038 [email protected] www.amercercir.org 02/15 Dance Grants…Administers a variety of grantmaking programs. The Harkness Foundation for Dance, Inc. 145 E. 48th St, Ste. 26C, NY, NY 10017-1259. Contact: Theodore S. Bartwick, Treas. 212-755-5540 3/14 specific feedback on more advanced techniques. Classes are held at the Old Schoolhouse, 1198 Route 21c in Harlemville, at the intersection of Harlemville Road and Route 21C. Next to the Hawthorne Valley Farm Store, the building is centrally located within Columbia County, a ten minute drive from Chatham, and one mile from the Taconic Parkway, at the Route 21c exit. To register for classes online, go to artschoolofcolumbiacounty. org. For more information, email info@artschoolofcolumbiacounty. org or call 518-672-7140. Grants… Municipalities, non profits -$15,000. Public buildings; historic landscape or municipal parks, cultural resource of downtowns, residential neighborhoods. Emily Curtis, Program Coordinator, Preservation League of New York State, 44 Central Ave., Albany, NY 12206. 518-4625658, 462-5684, [email protected], www.preservenys. org 02/15 Grants... $500 for age under 30 creating new project, continue existing project. Specific issue, show concrete action plan, budget, adequate supervision, accountability. Give weekly grants to young people in US, Canada. Do Something, 24-32 Union Square East, 4th Fl. South, New York, NY 10003 [email protected]. www.dosomething.org Updated 02/15 Grant… Newman’s Own Charitable Giving Program. Areas of giving include: arts, education, children, elderly groups, environmental causes, affordable housing, disaster relief, hunger relief. Newman’s Own Charitable Giving Program, 246 Post Road East, Westport, CT 06880. www.newmansown.com 02/15 Film/Video/Radio Grants…for pre-production & distribution of media focusing on political & social issues. Paul Robeson Fund for Independent Media, administered by the Funding Exchange. Through our innovative, activist-led grantmaking strategies, we support the systemic change work of both experienced and developing grassroots organizations within the broad movement for social justice. 212-529-5300, [email protected] www.fex.org 02/15 Film/Video & Theater Grants… Free updated bimonthly Funding Newsletters distributed via email by The Fund for Women Artists. WomenArts 3739 Balboa Street #181 San Francisco, CA 94121 (415) 751-2202 info@womenarts. org www.WomenArts.org 02/15 Film, Video Grants... Average $25,000 to support international documentary films and videos: current, significant issues in human rights, expression, liberties, social justice. Diane Weyermann, Dir. of Soros Documentary Fund, Open Society Institute, 400 W. 59th St., New York NY, 10019 Info. 212-548-0657, Fax 212-548-4679 [email protected] www.soros.org/sdf. Ongoing 02/15 Film, Video Grants... Seeking projects on contemporary issues of human rights, civil liberties, freedom of expression, social justice. Up to $15,000 production funds of up to $50,000. Sundance Documentary Fund, Sundance Institute, 8857 West Olympic Boulevard, Beverly Hills, CA 90211. www.sundance.org . Ongoing 02/15 *International Artists…Trust for Mutual Understanding funds travel & per diem expenses of professional exchanges, visual & performing arts. Collaborations, curatorial research, performances, lectures. Exchanges relating to Russia, Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Slovak Republic & Ukraine, limited funds for others. Funds individuals. www.tmuny.org. Deadlines, August 1, Feb 1. 02/15 Literary Grants...Contemporary Literature and Non-Fiction. Black Lawrence Press seeks to publish intriguing books of literature and creative non-fiction: novels, memoirs, short story collections, poetry, biographies, cultural studies, and translations from the German and French. The St. Lawrence Book Award is open to any writer who has not yet published a full-length collection of short stories or poems. The winner of this contest will receive book publication, a $1,000 cash award, and 10 copies of the book. Annual Deadline: August 31. submissions@ blacklawrencepress.com Updated 02/15 Literary Grants… Children’s Books. General Work-InProgress grant. $1,500 through Society of Children’s Book Writers & Illustrators. All genres. SCBWI, 8271 Beverly Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90048. www.scbwi.org 02/15 Literary Grant … $12,000 annually for women, editions of 125. Additional $1,000 for 500 copies of promotional brochure; $1,000 travel to Library Fellows’ annual meeting present completed. Collaborations allowed. New books only. Library Fellows Program, Library and Research Center, National Museum of Women in the Arts, 1250 New York Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20005. www.nmwa.org 202-783-7365 Deadline: Annual Recurring January 31 Updated 02/15 Music Grants…International Voice Competition in Canada, USA. Altamura/Caruso Study Grants Audition. $30,000 cash grant prizes. Performances with orchestra. Requirements: 5 (five) arias in the original key and language. One aria will be chosen by the contestant and a second aria by the jury. Aria with cabaletta must be presented in its entirety. One chamber literature work of contestant’s choice. Contestant must be ready to sing a full recital upon 24-hour notice. Information and application www.altocanto.org. Sponsored by Inter-Cities Performing Arts, Inc. 4000 Bergenline Ave, Union City, NJ 07087. Info. (201) 863-8724 Fax (201)866-3566 icpainc@optonline. net Updated 02/15 Music Grants… Fostering of musical ideas, new projects promoting original programming & new performers, rather than supporting performances, tickets or tuition.. www.sparkplugfoundation.org. Sparkplug, 877-866-8285. Spring & Fall deadlines. Updated 02/15 Music Grant… DeLucia Award for Innovation in Music Education in genres, instruments, methods, other aspects of music education that can be duplicated. The Mockingbird Foundation, c/o Lemery Greiser, LLC, Attn: Jack Leibowitz, Esq., 10 Railroad Place, Ste.1502, Saratoga Springs, NY 12866-3033. Ongoing Music Grant... Supporting young composers of classical or chamber music. The BMI Foundation, Inc., Carlos Surinach Fund and Boudleaux Bryant Fund. 212-830-2520. [email protected] Ongoing. 02/15 Music Grant… Meet the Composer’s Commissioning Music/USA Program for not-for-profit performing and presenting organizations commissioning new works. Support composer, librettist fees, copying, range, support services. Rotating basis. www.randallgiles.org/commissioning.html Eddie Fiklin, Senior program Manager. 212-645-6949 x102. 75 Ninth Ave., 3R Suite C, New York, NY 10011. Updated 02/15 Music Grant…Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors’ New York State Music Fund supports exemplary contemporary music, all genres created by today’s composer, musicians in written compositions, jazz, around world based living classical, folk, experimental, noncommercial popular music: alternative rock, country, hip hop, others. Supports school, community educational programs. RPA to hold meets to explain process. www.rockpa. org/music. (212) 812-4337 [email protected]. Updated 02/15 *Music Grant…Music Alive with Meet the Composer supports residencies with professional youth orchestras. Short Term Residencies 2-8 weeks, one season; Extended Residencies multi-year, full-season-3 years. Available: composer fees, travel, musician fees, some related activities. $7,000$28,000, Short Term, $30,000-$100,000 year. www.meetthecomposer. org/musicalive/ Updated 02/15 Music Grant…Global Connections Program with Meet the Composer supports living composers in sharing their work with a global community. For US based composers to travel to performance venues or to bring international artists to the US. Grants range from $500 - $5,000. www. meetthecomposer.org 02/15 Performing Arts Production Fund… Program of Creative Capital, for original new work, all disciplines, traditions in live performing arts, to assist artist exploring, challenging dynamics. Special focus on projects bringing insight, critique to cultural difference in class, gender, generation, ethnicity or tradition. Awards range from $10,000-$40,000. www.creative-capital. org. Updated 02/15 Performing Arts Grants for developing and producing work in the musical theatre. Cheryl Kemper, Gilman & Gonzalez-Falla Theatre Foundation, Inc., 109 E. 64th St., NY, NY 10021. www.ggftheater.org 02/15 Performing Arts Grants… To individuals in theater arts, opera, theater stage, set and costume design projects are eligible. Tobin Foundation, PO Box 91019, San Antonio, TX, 78209. 21-828-9736 tobinart@mindspring. com www.manta.com/c/mmcqn8p/tobin-foundation-for-theatre 02/15 Photography Grant…Alexia Foundation award for individual professional photographer to produce a substantial picture story that furthers the foundation’s goals of promoting world peace & cultural understanding. Alexia Foundation, 116 Oceanport Ave., Little Silver, NJ 07739. www. alexiafoundation.org Updated 02/15 Photography Grant... Given annually to a U.S. photographer who aspires to perpetuate the spirit and dedication that characterized Smith’s work. Grants for specific project. Add’l grants awarded. W. Eugene Smith Memorial Fund, International Center of Photography, 1130 5th Ave., NY, NY 10028. www.smithfund.org Updated 02/15 Textile Grants...Awards for research, education, documentation & experimentation in the field of quilt making. National Quilting Association, PO Box 12190, Columbus, OH 43212. www.nqaquilts.org grants@ nqaquilts.org 02/15 *Youth Grants… Focusing on arts and education. Strives to contribute to the ability of young people to explore their own identity, their relationship to creative process, with high-impact, long-term experience with accomplished professionals. Surdna Foundation, 330 Madison Ave, 3rd fl., New York, NY 10017. 212-557-0010, www.surdna.org [email protected] Application deadlines vary by program. 02/15 *Youth Grants… Creative residencies for teens from writers, artist’s colonies, communities working with young people. For developing summer retreat teens residing communities, be mentored by high standard professionals. Artist colony must be operating 5 years to be eligible. The Surdna Foundation 330 Madison Ave., 3rd fl, New York, NY 10017. (212) 557-0010 www.surdna.org [email protected] 02/15 Visual Artist Grants…Virginia A.Groot Foundation to ceramic and/or sculpture artists to devote a substantial period of time to the development of their work. Three grants up to $35,000, $10,000, $5,000. Virginia A. Groot Foundation, P.O. Box 1050, Evanston, IL 60204-1050. Postmarked by March 1 each year. www.virginiagrootfoundation.org Updated 02/15 Visual Artist Grants… based on artistic merit, financial need for painters, sculptors, print-makers, and artists who work on paper are eligible. The Pollack-Krasner Foundation 863 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10021. (212) 517-5400 [email protected] www.pkf.org Ongoing. 02/15 Relief Funds, Financial Assistance New! - Emergency Resources… Superstorm Sandy. NYFA has a list of art specific resources available for artists affected by Sandy and needing recovery assistance. See: http://www.nyfa.org/source/content/content/ disasterresources/disasterresources.aspx? Relief Fund... To help professional craft artists sustain their livelihood. Services include access to information, resources, business development support and emergency relief with loans, grants, and in-kind services. Craft Emergency Relief Fund, Box 838, Montpelier, VT 05601. 802-229-2306. www.craftemergency.org 02/15 Financial Assistance…to help pay medical or dental costs for artists nationwide. Prescriptions, eyeglasses, wheelchairs, surgery, cancer treatments, etc. Funds paid directly to your medical providers. The Artists Charitable Fund. Judy Archibald 970-577-0509. [email protected] or www. artistcharitablefund.org. 02/15 Financial Assistance... Relief, fine artists grant for professional painters, graphic artists, sculptors and their families in times of emergency, disability, or bereavement. Artist Fellowship, Inc., 47 Fifth Avenue, NY, NY 10003 212-255-7740 (Salmagundi Club) dial ext. #216. www. artistsfellowship.com/ 02/15 Financial Assistance… Emergency grants to visual artists of color. Eligible are Native American, African American, Asian American, Latino 21+, living in tri-state greater New York City area to help meet urgent financial needs. The Wheeler Foundation, P.O. Box 300507, Brooklyn, NY 11230. 718-9510581. www.nyfa.org Updated 02/15 Financial Assistance... To provide artist emergency assistance to qualified artists whose needs are unforeseen, catastrophic incident, who lack resources to meet situation. One time for specific emergency: fire, flood, medical. Adolph and Esther Gottlieb Foundation, 380 West Broadway, New York, NY 10013. www.gottliebfoundation.org Ongoing. Updated 02/15 Financial Assistance... Up to $5,000 grants for writers and playwrights with AIDS. Candidates must be published. Fund for Writers and Editors with AIDS, PEN American Center, 568 Broadway, New York, NY 10012. 212-255-7740 [email protected] www.salmagundi.org 02/15 Relief Fund... Funding artists experiencing serious illness, crisis, or bereavement. SASE: Artists Fellowship Inc., Emergency Aid, c/o Salmagundi Club, 47 Fifth Ave., NY, NY 10003. 212-255-7740 [email protected] www.salmagundi.org 02/15 Financial and Management Services... NYFA’s new Works and Management Services offer assistance to individual artists and small arts groups. New York Foundation for the Arts, 20 Jay Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201. (212) 366-6900 x 225 or 230.FAX (212) 366-1778 www.nyfa.org 02/15 Financial Assistance... For artists in need of emergency aid to avoid eviction, cover medical expenses, unpaid utility bills, other. Submit description, copies of bills or eviction notice, resume, two letters of recommendation: Change Inc., PO Box 705, Cooper Station, NY 10276. 212-473-3742. innercity.org/columbiaheights/agencys/change.html Ongoing. Updated 02/15 Photography... Critical Needs Fund for Photographers with AIDS. Initial requests by phone: 212-929-7190. Ongoing. Internships GCCA Internships…Greene County Council on the Arts is looking for an intern to assist with design, social media and exhibitions. The ideal candidate has experience in graphic design, writing, and social media. An ability to work both independently and closely with the Visual Arts Director on creating graphics and posters for exhibitions, managing media deadlines and installing shows is highly valued. Please email Molly Stinchfield, Visual Arts Director at [email protected] with a resume and cover letter outlining skills and interests. Go to www.greenearts.org for more information on Greene County Council on the Arts. ongoing Internships…Freehold Art Exchange is looking for an intern to assist with fundraising, web development, organic gardening and barn renovations. The ideal candidate has experience with web design, social media campaigns, fundraising, gardening and/or carpentry. Freehold Art Exchange is an artist residency program for visual and interdisciplinary artists invested in social justice, environmental sustainability, and community engagement. Our facility is on 57 acres of land in the Catskill Mountains of NY, including a vegetable garden and hiking trails. We are looking for someone dependable, able to work alone and collaborate, and not afraid to get dirty! Please email Molly Stinchfield, Co-Founder and Director, at [email protected] with a resume and cover letter outlining skills and interest. Go to www.freeholdartexchange.org for more information on Freehold Art Exchange. Updated 02/15 Internships... Women’s Studio Workshop, a visual arts organization with specialized studios in printmaking, hand papermaking, ceramics, letterpress printing , photography and book arts. PO Box 489, Rosendale, NY 12472. 845-658-9133. wsworkshop.org Updated 02/15 Internships… Arts Administration in exchange for housing on the studio complex four miles from beaches of central Florida. Award-winning studios: resource library, painting, sculpture, music, dance, writer’s studios, black box theater, digital computer lab. Atlantic Center for the Arts or Harris House of Atlantic Center for the Arts, Internship Form: Program Dept., Atlantic Center for the Arts, 1414 Art Center Avenue, New Smyrna Beach, FL 32168. (386) 423-1753 www.atlanticcenterforthearts.org. Ongoing 02/15 Internships... High school seniors, college students; Flex-time. Programs in publishing and literary presenting business. Marketing, database maintenance, Literary Curators website, writing, sending press releases, Workshops for Kids program, poetry for radio shorts, video production. Bertha Rogers, Ex. Dir., Bright Hill Press, POB 193, Treadwell, NY 13846. 607-746-7306. [email protected] www.brighthillpress.org Ongoing. Updated 02/15 Speakers, Professional Services, Mentoring Speakers... Speakers in the Humanities, a program of New York State Council for the Humanities: for a nominal fee, non-profit NYS organizations may book distinguished scholars to lecture on a variety of topics. Applications eight weeks prior to proposed lecture. For catalog, application contact: New York Council for the Humanities, 150 Broadway, Ste. 1700, New York, NY 10038. 212-233-1131, [email protected]; www. nyhumanities.org 02/15 Scholarships & Residencies New! - Residency… Byrdcliffe Art Colony Artist in Residence Program (AiR). Application deadline: March 15. $40 application fee. Uninterrupted time and creative space for visual artists, writers and composers at Byrdcliffe Art Colony in Woodstock. Fee schedule and more info, including fellowships, available on line at byrdcliffe.org/artist-in-residence. Residents chosen by committee of professionals. 02/15 Scholarships, apprenticeships & fellowships. Support for emerging artists in theater, dance, film in performing arts, playwriting & film. Deadlines vary depending on program. Princess Grace Awards. 150 East 58h Street, 25 fl. NY, NY 10155 (212) 317-1470 [email protected] www.pgfusa. org Updated 02/15 New! Fellowships… The New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) online application for 2015 Artist Fellowships is now open. Please go to nyfa.org to apply and review application guidelines. The following categories will be reviewed: Choreography, Music/Sound, Architecture/Environmental Structures/Design, Playwriting/Screenwriting and Photography. See the website for important deadlines and fellowship details. Updated 02/15 Residencies.... One month for writers, visual artists and composers creating original work at country estate of poet Edna Vincent Millay. April-November program. Fee, $30/10 slides, tape or DVD for video artists/ filmmakers; $50. Submit: project proposal; relevant supporting materials etc. The Millay Colony for the Arts, Box 3, Austerlitz, NY 12017 518-3923103. [email protected]., www.milllaycolony.org. Deadline, October 1 each year for following year. 02/15 Residencies…. No application needed. Organization to preserve land, create space to recognized, emerging artists. 104 acres in Cazenovia. Sculpture strives to show relationship between humans and nature. Workspace, stipend, housing for professional sculptors. Artistic resume, 20 slides, proposal of intent. SASE to return slides. Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, 3883 Stone Quarry Road, Box 251, Cazenovia, NY 13035. SQHAP@ aol.com. 315-655-5742. Ongoing. Updated 02/15 with orchestra. Requirements: 5 (five) arias in the original key and language. One aria will be chosen by the contestant and a second aria by the jury. Aria with cabaletta must be presented in its entirety. One chamber literature work of contestant’s choice. Contestant must be ready to sing a full recital upon 24-hour notice. Information & application: www.altocanto. org. Sponsored by Inter-Cities Performing Arts, Inc. 4000 Bergenline Ave, Union City, NJ 07087. Info. (201) 863-8724 Fax (201)866-3566 icpainc@ optonline.net Music…Capital Area Flute Club for flutists of all abilities, wide variety of music played to expand opportunities for ensemble playing. Monthly meetings, Delmar NY. 518-383-6480, 518-580-1206. www.facebook.com/ pages/Capital-Area-Flute-Club Updated 02/15 Music... Programming sought by Society for New Music, professional organization in Upstate New York dedicated to performing and commissioning the music of today’s composers. Fees range from $1000 to $4000 depending on the concert and number of performers. Society for New Music, 438 Brookford Rd., Syracuse, NY 13224. 315-446-5733, Npilgrim@ aol.com www.societyfornewmusic.org Ongoing. Updated 02/15 Music... Information Hotline for grants, auditions, competitions, seminars, health, tax info and more. Contact: The American Guild of Musical Artists, 1430 Broadway, 14th Fl., New York, NY 10018, 212-247-0247 agma@ musicalartists.org, www.musicalartists.org Updated 02/15 Performing Arts Performing Arts… Dance classes for children, teens, adults. The Hudson Valley Academy of Performing Arts features a distinguished faculty of professionally and academically accomplished instructors. HVAPA, 957 Route 82, West Taghkanic, NY 12502. Call 518-851-5501. www.HVAPA. com. Updated 02/15 Performing Arts... Always seeking new actors for future performances and volunteers to help each production, throughout year in Columbia County. Watch for audition notices: Ghent Playhouse, Town Hall Rd, POB 64, Ghent, NY 12075. 518-392-6264, [email protected], www. ghentplayhouse.org . Ongoing. 02/15 Performing Arts... Private classes available in Dance and Music. Dance studio available for rent, 518-851-5150, [email protected], www. abblappen.com. Updated 02/15 Residencies... For photographers or related media. One month, $2,000 stipend, apartment, private darkroom, 24-hour facility access. Send resume, artist statement, letter of intent, slides, proofs or prints of recent work. Light Work Artist-in-Residence Program, 316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse, NY 13244. [email protected], www.lightwork.org Ongoing. 02/15 Performing and Visual Arts… Deep listening programs, and in the gallery, painting, sculpture and workshops. For schedule: The Pauline Oliveros Foundation, POB 1958, Kingston, NY 12402, 845-338-5984. Fax: 845338-5958. www.artwire.org/pof, [email protected]. Updated 02/15 Residencies... Self-directed for research, experimentation and production of visual, television, new media arts. Banff Centre for the Arts, Office of Registrar, Box 1020, Stn. 28, 107 Tunnel Mtn. Dr., Banff, Alberta, Canada TOL OCO. 403-762-6114/6302. [email protected] , [email protected] . www.banffcentre.ca Ongoing. 02/15 Visual Arts Residencies... Ranging from 2 weeks to 2 months for screenwriters and film/video makers October to May. Yaddo, Box 395, Saratoga Springs, NY 12866-0395. www.yaddo.org 518-584-0746. Deadlines, August 1 and January 15 each year. 02/15 Residencies... Year-round, in photography, painting, ceramics, textiles, etc. Contact: Nantucket Island School of Design and Arts. 508-228-9248. [email protected], www.nisda.org 02/15 Residencies... Two-month residencies year round for professional sculpture artists. Stipends available. SASE: Gina Murtagh, Sculpture Space, 12 Gates St., Utica, NY 13502. 315-724-8381. [email protected]. www. sculpturespace.org Ongoing. Updated 02/15 Residencies...Cooperative residencies/retreats for emerging or established artists in drawing, painting, sculpture, writing, poetry. Year-round. Private living space, modern art studio, reasonable fee includes some mentoring assistance. SASE #10 to High Studios, RR1 Box 108N, Bolton Landing, NY 12814. Ongoing. Updated 02/15 Visual Arts…Art Instructors Needed. The Art School of Columbia County, centrally located in Columbia County in Harlemville NY (a 20 minute drive from Hudson), is a not-for-profit [501(c)(3)] art school dedicated to “art for everyone.” ASCC is seeking applications for the developing and teaching art programs for children or seniors, art therapy and teaching art to adults. Send your resume/CV with educational background, exhibitions (if applicable), and teaching experience with your contact information to [email protected] Subject Line: application. Please mention in the body of the email in which position(s) you are interested. (Ongoing) VA… Life Drawing... weekly sessions of life drawing with model at the Hudson Opera House. Artists work independently in a disciplined environment; No instructor or specific method is followed. $15 per session. Offered throughout the year on Sundays from 10am to 1pm, check hudsonoperahouse.org for current session dates. Hudson Opera House, 327 Warren St., Hudson, NY 12534. 518-822-1438. hudsonoperahouse. org, [email protected] . Updated 02/15 VA… Looking for sculptors, painters and photographers who would like to exhibit their work year round in Palenville, NY. Very reasonable commission. Contact Al or Kathy at 518-678-3110 or www.catskillmtlodge. com 02/15 Residencies… Retreat, stipend $1,250 for writers in their work; $25 per diem, $500 travel. Gell Writers Center of the Finger Lakes, Writers & Books, 740 University Ave., Rochester, NY 14607. 585-473-2590 www. wab.org. Gell Center Director of Operations [email protected] Ongoing. 02/15 VA… Indoor and Outdoor Art… Unison Arts Center in New Paltz seeks proposals from artists to exhibit their wall-hung artwork in our gallery at Unison and also from artists to exhibit their sculpture in our outdoor sculpture garden. Call Unison at 845-255-1559. www.unisonarts.org or the Exec. Dir. Christine Crawfis at [email protected]. Updated 02/15 Residencies… Established and emerging artists of all disciplines may create, present, and exhibit experimental work involving sound and technology, with the option of integrating any combination of other disciplines including visual and/or performance art. Artists work with staff audio engineer. Jack Straw Media Gallery, www.jackstraw.org., Steve Peters, [email protected]. Updated 02/15 VA… Columbia County Chamber of Commerce is establishing a rack of post cards and/or note cards by artists and photographers of images of Columbia County points of interest and historic sites. Artist is responsible for production of cards. Pricing between $2 and $5 each with artist receiving 70% of the proceeds. Put contact information (i.e. web address) on back of card for purchaser to access and view more work for possible sale directly from the artist. Call (518) 828-4417 or visit www.columbiachamber-ny.com Updated 02/15 Residencies… The Platte Clove program provides a retreat for artists from June through October. Painters, sculptors, writers, and composers are invited to apply for residency. Artist interested in applying should download the application from the Catskill Center website,www.catskillcenter.org Inverna Lockpez, Director, [email protected]. Updated 02/15 Residencies… The National Park Service offers residency programs to artists working in various disciplines. Contact the specific site for further info: Amistad National Recreation Area in Texas, Badlands National Park in South Dakota, Bearlodge Writers’ Devils Tower Residencies in Wyoming, Joshua Tree National, Klondike Gold Rush National Park in Alaska, Mammoth Cave National Park, Peters Valley Craft Education Center’s Delaware Water Gap Residencies in New Jersey, Saint Gaudens National Historic Site in New, Sapelo Barrier Island in Georgia, Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore, Weir Farm National Historic Site. www. nps.gov/archive/volunteer/air.htm Updated 02/15 Workshops, Seminars Jurying for all media... For new members. Application, guidelines. SASE: The National Association of Women Artists, 80 Fifth Avenue, Ste. 14045, New York, NY 10011. 212-675-1616 www.nawanet.org . Deadlines, Sept. 15, March 15 yearly. Updated 02/15 CALL FOR ENTRIES, ETC. Arts & Crafts/Folk Arts Arts & Crafts… Art Instructors Needed. The Art School of Columbia County, centrally located in Columbia County in Harlemville NY (a 20 minute drive from Hudson), is a not-for-profit [501(c)(3)] art school dedicated to “art for everyone.” ASCC is seeking applications for the developing and teaching art programs for children or seniors, art therapy and teaching art to adults. Send your resume/CV with educational background, exhibitions (if applicable), and teaching experience with your contact information to [email protected] Subject Line: application. Please mention in the body of the email in which position(s) you are interested. (Ongoing) Arts & Crafts… Columbia County Chamber of Commerce is establishing a rack of post cards and/or note cards by artists and photographers of images of Columbia County points of interest and historic sites. Artist is responsible for production of cards. Pricing between $2 and $5 each with artist receiving 70% of the proceeds. Put contact information (i.e. web address) on back of card for purchaser to access and view more work for possible sale directly from the artist. Call (518) 828-4417 or visit www. columbiachamber-ny.com Updated 02/15 Arts & Crafts... Greene County, NY craftspeople: Marketing Crafts and Other Products to Tourists, North Central Regional Extension Publications brochure #445, $1.50. Cornell Cooperative Extension of Greene Co., Greene County office building, Mountain Ave., Cairo, NY 12413. 518-6229820. [email protected], http://arc.cce.cornell.edu/ Query sent 02/15 Arts & Crafts… hive, owned and operated by Theresa Spinelli at 321 Main Street in Schoharie, is looking for artists (of all mediums) who wish to show and sell at this unique shop: a bit out of the ordinary, this up and coming venue offers an unusual mix of antiques, vintage, modern, industrial, organic, hand-crafted and local. hive supports local businesses and artists and strives to find American-made items and use recycled products. hive is a continuing work in progress and will begin a regular concert series in conjunction with their ongoing “Meet the Artist” events. hive offers opportunities to display, lecture and more. Contact Theresa Spinelli at www.hive321.com or email theresa@hive 321.com for details. 02/15 VA… Sunday Salons, Learn something new about Thomas Cole and the Hudson River School of art. Informal discussions once a month, $8. 2PM at Cedar Grove, Thomas Cole National Historic Site, 218 Spring Street, POB 426, Catskill, NY 12414. 518-943-7465. [email protected], www. thomascole.org. 02/15 VA… On-line art gallery NARtisticCreations.com. Funded by NAR Productions. Showcases work of Nick Roes and local artists. Will feature a Visiting Artist each quarter in separate room at no charge. Contact NancyBenett@ NARtisicCreations.com. VA… Seeking member artists, a few openings available for visual artists. Members staff the gallery, perform administrative duties. Art in all media welcome. Established mailing list of 1,300 asking to receive show notices. Interested? Susan Kotulak, New Member Coordinator, Tivoli Artists’ Co-op Gallery, 518-537-5888. [email protected]. VA… Publications: The Artist Workspace: A Guide for Artists; and The Artist Workspace Residency: A Guide for Organizations. (845) 658-9133, [email protected], www.nysawc.org. Updated 02/15 VA... Seeking proposals for exhibitions at Greenville Branch, The Bank of Greene County. All Arts Matter, POB 513, Greenville NY 12083. 518-9664038. VA… Seeking art work for exhibitions at the Agroforestry Resource Center (ARC) in Acra, NY. Original art work only. This will be a juried process. For more information, please contact Marilyn Wyman at the ARC and Cornell Cooperative Extension of Greene County at 518-622-9820 ext/36. www. agroforestrycenter.org Updated 02/15 VA... Paint outdoors in nature with state organization, New York Plein Air Painters Society. Will sponsor paint-outs, exhibitions around NYS. NYPAP, J.Baldini, P.O. Box 2332, Niagara Falls, NY 14302-2332. ipapmail@yahoo. com, http://ipap.homestead.com/ Updated 02/15 All Media All Media... Seeking admissions to slide viewing program. Possible inclusion in group exhibitions. Applications for membership and curated shows also considered. Slides, CV cover letter. The Painting Center, 51 Greene St., New York, NY 10013. 212-343-1060. Ongoing. All Media… The Sugar Maples Center for Arts and Education. Historic church for gatherings, readings, small musical performances, art studio. Art study vacation, stay in hotel room, dorms on property. Two to four week residencies include retreat for performing arts groups. Ellie Cashman, Dir., Catskill Mountain Foundation, 7967 Main St., Rte. 23A, POB 924, Hunter, NY, 12442. 518-263-4908. www.catskillmtn.org. cmf@catskillmtn. org. 02/15 All Media... Art Licensing 101: Selling Reproduction Rights for Profit. 224page book de-mystifies industry. Action plan in easy to read form. Author Michael Woodward has worked in industry for 25 years. Art Network, POB 1360, Nevada City, CA 95959. 800-383-0677. [email protected], www.artmarketing.com . Updated 02/15 All Media... Info hotline sponsored by American Council for the Arts has referral service, provides information on a wide variety of programs and services. Call Mon.-Fri, 2-5PM EST: 1-800-232-2789. Photography Poets... Seeking teen works for book. Love and affection, friendship, heartache, pressure, etc. as themes. SASE: June Cotner, Poems by Teens, Box 2765, Poulsbo, WA 98370. [email protected], www.junecotner. com 02/15 Photography…Nueva Luz, photographic journal of En Foco, Inc. ($45 membership) produces exhibitions, publications and events which support photographers of Latin/Am, African/Am, Asian, Pacific Islander and Native American heritage. View current issue before submitting portfolios of 20 unmounted prints or slides for consideration in future Nueva Luz. Subscription $30 USA. Membership, subscriptions, donations, all tax deductible. En Foco, Inc., 1738 Hone Ave, Bronx, NY 10461. 718-931-9311 FAX 718-409-6445 www.enfoco.org Updated 02/15 Writers… nth position is a free online magazine/e-zine with politics & opinion, travel writing, fiction & poetry, reviews & interviews, and some high weirdness. http://www.nthposition.com/links.php offers listings for calls for submissions to writers. Free to subscribe. 02/15 Photography… Salons monthly, preceded by a potluck meal, bring something to share. Conversations, sharing, seeing, discussions on photography. The Center for Photography at Woodstock, 59 Tinker St., Woodstock, NY 12498. 845-679-9957. [email protected] www.cpw.org Updated 02/15 Books... Catskill Mountain Foundation’s Village Square Bookstore & Literary Arts Center has over 10,000 titles in stock including books on the visual arts, crafts, film, poetry, drama, children’s storybooks, cooking, gardening and fiction and non-fiction. Visit them online at http://www.catskillmtn.org/ retail/bookstore.html to see their Schedule of Literary Events. 02/15 Photography… Seeking contemporary and traditional work by Native artists. American Indian Community House Gallery, 708 Broadway, New York, NY 10003. 212-598-0100. www.aich.org. 02/15 Literary, Folklore, Storytelling Writers... Seeking entries for Very Short Fiction Award. $1,200 and publication of work less than 3,000 words. Award granted twice a year with submission deadlines in January and July. Online submission page: Glimmer Train Press, 4763 SW Maplewood, PO Box 80430, Portland, OR 97280-1430. 503-221-0837. Online submission page: https://www. glimmertrainpress.com/writer/html/index2.asp Updated 02/15 Writers... Lists of contests, grants, fellowships for fiction, poetry, drama/ film, non-fiction, published bi-monthly. Awards for Writers, PO Box 437, Ithaca, NY 14851. www.ithaca.edu 02/15 Photography… Seeking curators to present exhibition/publication programs focusing on aesthetic issues. Proposals should include names of possible artists, program summary, curator’s resume. Kathleen Kenyon, 59 Tinker St., Woodstock, NY 12498. 914-679-9957. [email protected]. Photography… The Greene County Camera Club offers three opportunities each month for intermediate and advanced photographers: member competition, 6:30PM second Thursday of the month at Greenville Public Library Art Gallery; “Show and Tell” session, fourth Thursday in Greenville at 7PM; speakers, presentations and films, third Wednesday at 7PM, Athens Cultural Center, 24 Second Street, Athens. More info, Eileen Camuto at (518) 678-9044 or [email protected]; Nora Adelman (518) 945-2866 or [email protected] or www.gccameraclub.com. 02/15 2016 GCCA Calendar of Events GCCA Gallery Boutique - The Greene County Council on the Arts invites you to visit our gallery boutique, The Artful Hand, in Catskill. Open year-round, we offer fine arts and high quality crafts by local and regional artists, and books by area authors. Send boutique inquiries to: [email protected]. The GCCA Catskill Gallery, located at 398 Main Street, Catskill, NY. , is open Monday through Saturday, 10AM-5PM. For more information, contact 518-943-3400 or gcca@ greenearts.org. Museum: CATSKILL MOUNTAIN FOUNDATION PIANO MUSEUM. 18 beautiful examples of piano making from 1783 to the present, plus fascinating related ephemera, includes pianos from Liberace, Sir Roland Hanna’s and a rare Clementi that was played by the Maestro himself. Besides the Museum, the Doctorow Center includes 3 movie theaters and a performance space. Across the street is a newly revised restaurant, a fine Art and Craft gift gallery and an excellent Bookstore. Doctorow Center, Main Street, Hunter, NY. 518-263-2036. Hours: 12-4, Friday and Saturday, or by appointment. Groups welcome. 518263-4908. www.catskillmtn.org Ongoing Reading: TINY TOTS PROGRAM. Free and open to children ages birth to pre-K, along with their caregivers, Tuesdays, 1030-1130AM. Songs, fingerplays and rhymes, books, a simple craft, and free-play time. Come, have fun, and meet neighbors and friends, old and new! Palenville Branch Library, 3335 Route 23A, Palenville, NY. For more info: [email protected] http:// catskillpubliclibrary.org/ (518) 678-3357. Classes: BANNER HILL SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS AND WOODWORKING classes in woodworking, ceramics (wheel throwing, hand building), painting and more. For info, visit our website: BannerHillLLC.com; email: [email protected], or call (518) 929-7821. Classes: Art School of Columbia County. Arts program for adults and children. Classes are held at the Old Schoolhouse, 1198 Route 21c in Harlemville, at Harlemville Road & County Route 21, next to the Hawthorne Valley Farm Store, one mile from the Taconic Parkway, at the Harlemville/ Philmont/217/21c Exit. Call 518-672-7140 or visit www.artschoolofcolumbiacounty.org. Exhibition: FUNCTIONAL ART FOR THE HOME By local and regional Fine Crafts Artists. Custom orders, shopping services, gift-wrapping. Mon/Thurs/Fri 10-5, Sat 10-7, Sun 11-5, Closed Tues/Wed. Kaaterskill Fine Arts Gallery at Hunter Village Square, 7950 Main St., Hunter, NY. 518-263-2060, www.catskillmtn.org. Omi International Arts Center. PROGRAMS AND PUBLIC EVENTS. Outdoor Sculpture Park, Summer Camps. The Fields Sculpture Park, Architecture Omi, and Education Omi - Omi contributes to a vibrant arts culture locally, regionally, and internationally. For more information visit:www.omiartscenter.org 1405 County Route 20, Ghent NY 12075 Exhibit: SCULPTURE. More than 40 contemporary sculptures in landscape. Daylight hours all year, guided tours, children’s workshops. The Fields, Sculpture Park Art Omi International Arts Center, 1405 County Route 20, Ghent, NY 12075. 518-392-7656/392-2848. Film Program: SELECTED FILMS. Popular Hollywood, independent; foreign screenings. Lobby café: espresso, cappuccino, tea, desserts; light suppers Saturday, open 1/2 hour before show. Catskill Mountain Foundation Film and Performing Arts Center, Rt. 23A, Hunter, NY 12442. 518-263-4702 www.catskillmtn.org. Tours, lectures, programs: A living museum. Arts, local history, horticulture, botany, environment. Individual, group tours, plant sale. Change of landscape in four seasons. Photogenic woodland walk, native trees, plants. Call for calendar. The Mountain Top Arboretum, Maude Adams Road, POB 379, Tannersville, NY 12485. 518-589-3903. www.mtarbor.org Class: FOLLIES WITH BOBBY: Ballet and other smooth moves for women of a certain age and confident men. Saturdays, 10:30-11:30 AM and Mondays 6- 7 PM. Improve balance and flexibility and transform your body awareness using techniques from ballet, modern dance, jazz, soft shoe, and 4th grade Physical Education class. Taught by Bobby Lupone. Drop-ins welcome. Athens Cultural Center, 24 2nd Street, Athens, NY. [email protected] Classes: RIVERTIDE AIKIKAI, Martial Arts Instruction For All Ages. 3198 Old Kings Rd. just off of Rt. 23A in Catskill. Sunday: Adults: 5:00 – 6:00pm, Jo Class: 6:15 – 7:00pm, Monday: Teens: 13 -17 years old: 3:45 -4:45, Kids 4 -7 years old: 4:45 – 5:30pm, Adults: 6:00 – 7:15pm, Tuesday: Adults: 6 -7:15pm, Wednesday: Kids 8-12 years old: 4:45 – 5:30pm, Adults: 6:00 – 7:15pm, Thursday: Bokken Class: 6:00 – 6:45pm, Adults: 7:00 – 8:00pm, Friday: Adults: 7:30am - 8:30am, Rivertide Aikikai welcomes all visitors to the dojo to watch a class and ask questions. For membership info call 518-943-4000, email info@ rivertideaikikai.org or visit www.rivertideaikikai.org. Mondays Hudson Juggling Club: OPEN TO ANY AND ALL YOUTH AND ADULTS WITH AN INTEREST IN THE MANIPULATIVE ARTS OF JUGGLING, FLOW, AND OTHER CIRCUS SKILLS. Juggling clubs, balls, scarves, spinning plates, diabolos, and unicycles are just some of the items we share. FREE. 6-8pm, Montgomery Smith Intermediate School, 102 Harry Howard Avenue, Hudson NY. Email [email protected], or call 518-828-7470. Tuesdays Club: LEGO CLUB FOR ALL AGES, 4:00 PM every Tuesday. Come, explore the world of building with legos, and meet new friends at your library! Catskill Public Library, 1 Franklin St, Catskill NY. For more info: www. catskillpubliclibrary.org OR call (518) 943-4230. Photography… Offer of workshops with speakers, competitions, discounts on supplies and processing, newsletter. Greene County Camera Club, POB 711, Greenville, NY 12083. 518-797-3466, 518-966-4411. Workshop: KUUMBA LATIN FEVER FOR WOMEN: 6 to 7:45PM. A Latin dance fitness class for women with Elena Mosely of Kuumba Dance & Drum. Adults: $2. Hudson Opera House, 327 Warren Street, Hudson, NY. Call 828-3612 for more info. Music Sculpture Wednesdays New! Open Audition for Young Singers 8-18. St. Luke’s Episcopal Church at 50 William Street in Catskill, NY announces the formation of a Treble Choir for young people, male and female in the English cathedral tradition. This is an audition only choir under the direction of Ann Carter-Cox, M.F.A. In addition to weekly group instruction and practice, every young person accepted into the program will receive an additional half hour individualized voice lesson each week. The entire program is offered at no charge. Prior musical training or experience is not necessary in order to audition. Call 518-943-4180 or use the contact form on the church website www. stlukescatskill.org. Updated 02/15 Sculpture… Call for sculptors living within 150-mile radius of Albany for large-scale works appropriate for high traffic terminal. Prospectus, info: Sharon Bates, Director, Art& Culture Program, Administration Building Ste. 200, Albany International Airport, Albany, NY 12211-1057. 518-2422241 [email protected] Updated 02/15 Classes: RIVERTIDE AIKIKAI, Aiki Movement Drop-in Class, open to public for $10. Wear clothing appropriate for movement or exercise. 3198 Old Kings Rd. just off of Rt. 23A in Catskill. We welcome all visitors to the dojo to watch a class and ask questions. For info call 518-943-4000, email: info@rivertideaikikai. org or visit www.rivertideaikiai.org. New! Music…Music instructor needed for youth ages 7-18 years. 3-6 students per week. Must teach piano, other instruments welcome. Call: Elena Mosley 518 -828-3612. Updated 3/2014 Weekly Electronic Digest... New York Foundation for the Arts features news updates on social, economic, philosophical, political issues affecting arts and culture, job listings and opportunities for artists and organizations. Free on-line subscription: www.artswire.org Updated 02/15 Poets & Writers... Literary Horizons, new program is dedicated to professional development of writers at all stages of their careers. Poets & Writers, 72 Spring St., New York, NY 10012. 212-226-3586, fax 212-226-3963, www.pw.org. Updated 02/15 New! Music…Wanted Male Singers, Tenors, Basses for Male Chorus Volunteer Group. Call 518-943-2914. Updated 3/2014 Music… International Voice Competition in Canada, USA. Altamura/ Caruso Study Grants Audition. $30,000 cash grant prizes. Performances Miscellaneous New Website... The Whitney Museum of American Art has portal to Internet art and digital arts worldwide as an online gallery space. Details, scope: www.artport.whitney.org Updated 02/15 Rentals... Lighting and audio system packages. LSL Productions, Box 63 Windham, NY 12496-0063. 518-734-5117. Classes: SKETCH. Drop in Figure Drawing. SKETCH is hosting figure drawing sessions with instructor Amy Lavine. $15 per session. 7:30 – 9:30 PM. Hudson Opera House 327 Warren Street, Hudson, NY 12534 518-822-1438 Workshop: Watercolor workshops for adults with painter William A. Carbone, Washington Irving Senior Center, Catskill, NY, 10AM to Noon. Free. Bring own supplies or purchase through instructor. information call 518-828-3612. Hudson Opera House, 327 Warren Street in Hudson, NY. Call 518-822-1438 for more information or visit www.hudsonoperahouse. org. 3/2014 Orpheum Performing Arts center, Tannersville, NY. 8 p.m. Tickets and info at www.catskillmtn.org. Event: CREATIVE MUSIC & MOVEMENT FOR TODDLERS. Join local artist Abby Lappen for weekly fun for toddlers to explore creative arts including music and movement! Parent participation is encouraged. Ages 18 months and up. 10 AM. Free. Hudson Opera House 327 Warren Street, Hudson, NY 518-822-1438 Fourth Sunday Exhibit: TEA AND ALCHEMY: RUBY SILVIOUS SOLO SHOW. Opening Reception, Saturday January 23, 5-7pm, following GCCA’s Annual Membership Meeting at 4pm. GCCA Catskill Gallery, 398 Main Street, Catskill, NY. Gallery Hours: M-F 10-5, Sat. 12-5. FREE, www.greenearts.org, 518-943-3400. Workshop: HIP HOP DANCE. A dance workshop taught by Anthony Molina in collaboration with Operation Unite. An emerging artist, Anthony’s credits include 106 & Park, Bad Boys Comedy Show, he’s taken 1st place at the Apollo Theater, Senior Hip Hop Arnold Classic and Wildout Wednesday on BET. He was a semi-finalist on So You Think You Can Dance, and has performed with Vanaver Caravan and is a seasoned choreographer and dancer of Energy Dance Company of Kingston. Open to ages 6 & up. 5:15 – 6:15 PM. Hudson Opera House 327 Warren Street, Hudson, NY 12534 518-822-1438 Event: HUDSON COMMUNITY BOOK GROUP. In collaboration with Hudson City School District. students and their parents participate in a facilitated conversation about literature. Free. 6-7:30 PM. Hudson Opera House 327 Warren Street, Hudson, NY 12534 518-822-1438 Thursdays Gathering: AFTER-HOURS TEEN TIME, 5-7 PM every Thursday. Ages 12-17 welcome. Spend an hour on Academic and/or Creative pursuits followed by an hour of relaxed socializing, games, music, etc. Catskill Public Library, 1 Franklin St. Catskill NY. For more info: www.catskillpubliclibrary.org OR speak to Jesse at (518) 943-4230. Class: QI GONG FOR ADULTS. 11:30 AM. Free and open to the public. Palenville Branch Library, 3335 Route 23A, Palenville, NY. For more info: www. catskillpubliclibrary.org OR call (518) 678-3357. Chorus: ATHENS COMMUNITY CHORUS. Anyone who loves to sing is welcome to join the Athens Community Chorus. There are no auditions or membership dues. All that we require is a little bit of talent and a big appreciation for good music. We will get together once a month to share our talents and to sing a rich and diverse selection of vocal works, from classical to jazz standards, and Broadway to madrigals. FREE Drop-ins welcome. Athens Cultural Center, 24 2nd Street, Athens, NY. Email to be notified of class cancellations or changes. Third and Fourth Saturdays Art: ART CLUB FOR KIDS. Free and open to children of all ages. 11:30 AM – 12:30 PM. Come, have fun, and be creative! Palenville Branch Library, 3335 Route 23A, Palenville, NY. For more info: vdombrowski@ catskillpubliclibrary.org http://catskillpubliclibrary.org/ (518) 678-3357. Movies: SUBJECTS VARY. $8/6/4. Spencertown Academy, Rt. 203, POB 80, Spencertown, NY 12165. 518-392-3693. Exhibits, cinema: TIME AND SPACE. Exhibits, classical movies on weekends. Time and Space Warehouse Cultural Center. 434 Columbia St., Hudson, NY. 518-822-8448. www.timeandspace.org EVENTS 2016 Events noted (DEC) have been supported through a Decentralization grant from the NYS Council on the Arts through the Community Arts Program in Greene County or Columbia County. Events noted (CIP) have been supported through a grant from the County Initiative Program of the Greene County Council on the Arts with public funding from the Greene County Legislature. Fourth Thursday The Greene County Camera Club is a friendly group of intermediate and advanced photographers who meet twice monthly at the Greenville Library Art Gallery located at the intersection of routes 81 and 32 in Greenville. On the fourth Thursday, a competition and critique take place. Friendship and networking, occasional field trips, an e-Newsletter, member shows and exhibition opportunities and social gatherings are all benefits of membership. For more information: Eileen Camuto [email protected] or Nora Adelman [email protected]. Third Fridays Artist Community Potluck. Potluck Dinner and share artwork. Each artist has five minutes to project a PowerPoint of 20 slides the artist has prepared. Free. First Presbyterian Church, 369 Warren Street, Hudson, NY. Email [email protected] Teens & Adults: Kuumba African Dance & Drum. 10:30 am adult & teen drum, 11:30 am dance ages 7 - adult. Bring a drum or share one of ours. Adults, $5 each class; youth are free. For more Thank you to our Members & Donors As a not-for-profit, community-based organizations, the Greene County Council on the Arts depends upon the on-going support of our members to help us maintain our core programs through which we provide a variety of services. A continually growing membership is crucial to our efforts to deliver these services so that we may better serve our communities through all the arts. We at the GCCA would like to take this opportunity to thank those who, through their tax-deductible contributions, help to make our work possible. Government Support New York State Council on the Arts; Greene County Legislature Youth Fund Grant Program; County of Greene and the Greene County Legislature; Greene County Youth Bureau/NYS Office of Children & Family Services; Town of Ashland; Town of Athens; Town of Cairo; Town of Catskill; Town of Coxsackie; Town of Durham; Town of Greenville; Town of Hunter; Town of Jewett; Town of Lexington; Town of New Baltimore; Town of Prattsville; Town of Windham; Village of Catskill; Village of Hunter; Experience Works; New York State Department for the Aging/RSVP; Greene County Economic Development, Tourism and Planning. Foundation Support The Bank of Greene County Charitable Foundation; Christos N. Apostle Charitable Trust First Niagara Bank Foundation; The Nan Guterman Foundation; Golub Foundation; Home Depot Foundation; Hudson River Bank & Trust Company Foundation; The Marks Family Foundation; Peckham Family Foundation; Stewart’s Foundation; Target Foundation; United Way of Columbia & Greene Counties. Corporate, Business and Organization Members and Donors Al’s Gazebo’s; American Legion Post #983, Eleanor Alter, Rose & Ken Altreuter, Athens Cultural Center; Daniel Arshack; Evren & Asli Ay; The Bank of Greene County; Banner Hill School of Fine Arts & Woodworking; Baumann’s Brookside Inc.; BearFly Designs; Michelle Beuamont & Family; Beginner’s Mind Studio; Big Top Tent Rentals; Bindlestiff Family Cirkus; Brandywine Restaurant; Brooklyn Bridge; Anita Buyers; Cairo American Legion Auxillary-Mohican Unit 983; Cairo Durham Elks; Caleb Streets Inn; Janice Cammarato, Disability Advocate; Cardinale Electric; Catskill Collectibles; Catskill Dental Care PC; Catskill Elks Club; Catskill Garden Club; Catskill Golf Club; Catskill Lion’s Club; Catskill Mountain Foundation; Catskill Mountain Region Guide Magazine; Charlie’s Windham Mountain Ski Shop; Christman’s Windham House; Columbia-Greene Community College; Columbia Memorial Hospital; Coxsackie-Athens Rotary Club; Creekside Café; Crossroads Brewing Company; Daily Mail Newspapers; Dennis J. Dalton, Ltd., Dimensions North Ltd.; V. James DiPerna Photography; Dongan Antiques, Dr. Porkchop; Easy Street Builders; Jane Erlich; Far from the Sea Farm; Fingar Insurance; First Niagara Bank; Flowers by Kaylyn; The Fortnightly Club; Fotopic.com; Frameworks; free103point9; Freixenet, Functional Sculpture; Gerta of Austria; Goebel of North America; Gillaspie Gallery; GNH Lumber; Golden Touch Day Spa; Good Times Jazz Band; Greene County Historical Society; Greene Room Players; Jean Hamilton; Yehuda & Hannah Hanni; Kristine Hattersley; Peter Watson & Kathleen Heins; Helmedach & Young Inc.; Heron and Earth Design, Hillside Plastics; Hillcrest Press; Hinterland Design; Holcim; Steven Holl Architects; Home Depot; HRC Showcase Theatre; HSBC Bank USA, Huber Enterprises; Hudson River Graphics; Hudson Valley Newspapers; Hunter Civic Association; Hunter Mountain; Hunter Mt Sports Center; Hunter-Windham Real Estate; IBM, I. & O.A. Slutzky, Inc.; Isabella International; J. Myers Water Services, Inc.; J. Wase Construction Corp.; Jujamcyn Theatre; Just Leave it to Us; Kaliyuga Arts; Karen’s Flower Shoppe; Kelly Logging; Kirwan Enterprises LLC; Kiwanis Club of Catskill; Kosco/ Amos Post Div.; La Conca D’Oro; Larry Gambon, Inc; Last Chance Cheese & Performances: THE BINDLESITFF FAMILY CIRKUS’ CABIN FEVER CABARET with three night-time, grown-up shows for adults only. Saturdays at 9pm. Family-friendly 3pm matinee Sunday, March 20 featuring a pre-show by Bindlestiff ’s Cirkus After School program participants. Tickets and reservations at www.helsinkihudson.com or 518-828-4800. January 22 thru February 7 Theater: THE WEIR. Play by Conor McPherson’s. Performances Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sunday afternoons at 2 p.m. Tickets are $20 each, $17 for Friends of the Playhouse and $10 for Students with ID. Tickets may be reserved by calling 1-800-838-3006 or going to the website at www.ghentplayhouse.org. GCCA ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP MEETING. 4 PM. GCCA Catskill Gallery, 398 Main Street, Catskill, NY. FREE, www.greenearts.org, 518-943-3400. January 23 January 23 Exhibit: GCCA SALON 2015. SMALL WORKS & HANDMADE HOLIDAYS. Fine Crafts. GCCA Annual Members Exhibition and Sale. Opening reception on November 21 from 5-7 pm. Hours Mon-Fri 10 am – 5 pm, Saturday Noon-5 pm. Greene County Council on the Arts Catskill Gallery, 398 Main Street in Catskill. Call 518-943-3400, [email protected], www. greenearts.org Concert: MIRROR VISIONS ENSEMBLE Presents Flights of Fantasy at the Roe Jan Library. 5 pm. Roeliff Jansen Community Library, 9091 Route 22, Hillsdale,NY. Call 518-325-4101. Visit www.roejanlibrary.org. January 10 (CIP) Sunday Salon: THOMAS COLE AND 19TH-CENTURY AMERICAN ARCHITECTURE with Francis Morrone. 2 p.m. Tickets are $9 or $8 for members, and each talk is followed by a reception. 218 Spring Street, Catskill, NY. Visit www.thomascole.org January13 thru February 24 Exhibit: ABSTRACTIONS. Non-representational or non-objective art. Opening Reception Saturday, January 16, 5-7 pm. Columbia County Council on the Arts Gallery, 209 Warren Street Hudson, NY. CCCA Gallery hours are Wednesday, Thursday and Friday from 11A to 3PM and Saturday 1-5PM. Closed Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. www.arts.columbia.org. January 22-24, 29-31 and February 5-7 Theater: THE WEIR. Written by Conor McPherson, Directed by Aaron Holbritter. The Ghent Playhouse, 6 Town Hall Place, Ghent NY. Fridays and Saturdays at 8pm and Sundays at 2 pm. Tickets are $20 each, $17 for Friends of the Playhouse and $10 for Students with ID. Tickets 800-838-3006 or www.ghentplayhouse.org. January 16 (CIP) Concert: COMMON GROUND ON THE MOUNTAIN showcases the best of distinctively American music featuring Walt Michael & Company, Tony Trishka, Professor Louie & the Cromatix and Greg Dayton. Antiques; Law Offices of Andrea Lowenthal; Greg Lebow, Esq.; Christoperh Leonard; Clay & Sue Lepola; Lex Grey & the Urban Pioneers; Lioness Club of Catskill; LOWE’S; Maggie’s Crooked Café; Paul Macko; Main Brothers Oil Company, Inc.; Main Care Energy; Mahogany Tables, Inc.; Management Advisory Groups of NY; Peter Margolius, Esq.; Mark Bronstein-Markertec; Marshall & Sterling Upstate, Inc; Massage ‘n Mind; Merko Motion Pictures, Inc.; Mental Health Association of Columbia-Greene Counties, Mid-Hudson Cablevision, Inc.; Millspaugh Camerato Funeral Home; M Gallery; MJQ Irish Cultural & Sports Center; Mountain Outfitters; Mountain T-Shirts; Mountain Top Historical Society; NBT of Greenville; NBT of Oak Hill; National Bank of Coxsackie; New Athens Generating Company; New York Foundation for the Arts; NY ZipLine Adventure Tours; The Open Studio; Alfred A. Parr; Planet Arts; Peckham Family Foundation; The Mountain Pennysaver; Petite Productions; Pioneer Lumber; Pollace’s Brooklyn House inc.; Pro Ski Shop; Poncho Villa; Port of Call Restaurant; Pro Ski & Ride; Radio 810 WGY; Jonathan Struthers & Mary Racine; Rip Van Winkle Realty; Robert Hoven Inc.; Roshkowska Galleries, Rotary Club of Cairo; Rotary Club of Catskill; Rotary Club of Coxsackie; Rotary Club of Greenville; Rotary Club of Windham; Ruby’s Hotel & Restaurant; Ruder-Finn; S.P. Productions; Saugerties Artists Studio Tour; Sawyer Chevrolet; Schoharie Creek Players; Scribner Hollow Lodge; Slater’s Great American; Smart Systems Group; Snap Fitness 24/7; Snow Bird Ski Shop; So What? Gallery; S.P. Productions; State Telephone Co.; Steven Kretchmer Designs; Stewart’s Shops; Summit Hill Athletic Club; Swamp Angel Antiques; Frank Swin a& Walter Shook; Target; Terra Books; The Wine Cellar; Thin Edge Films; Thomas Cole National Historic Site; Tip Top Furniture; Tonga Pictures; Traphagen Honey; Troy Savings Bank Charitable Foundation; Trustco Bank; UDU, Inc.; Ulla Darni, Inc.; Ulster Savings Bank; Urgent Medical Care PLLC; Vesuvio’s Reataurant; Village Bistro; Wal*Mart; Washington Irving Inn; Mari Warfel; Watershed Agricultural Council-Pure Catskill; Water Street Arts Studio; Barbara & Walter Weber; Whitbeck’s Service Station; Wheelock Whitney III; Williams Lumber & Home Supply; Randolph Wills; Windham Art & Photography; Windham Chamber Music Festival; Windham Country Club; Windham Mountain; Windham Mountain Outfitters; Windham Rotary Club; Windham Ski Shop; Windham Spa; Windham Woodworking & Signs; Winwood. Lifetime Members (for Distinguished Service) Deborah Allen; Karl T. Anis; Sue Bain, Stephan Bardfield; Athena Billias; Nettie Brink; Dot Chast; Wilbur Cross; Thomas Culp; Betty Cure; Ralph Davis; Teri Passaretti-Drumgold; Carolyn & Eric Egas; Peter Finn; Frank Giorgini; Magdalena Golczewski; Michel Goldberg; Judith Gomory; John Griffin; Robert Hervey; Eve Hines; Daniel J. Hogarty Jr.; Betsy Jacks; Anabar Jensis; Kathleen Johannesen; Pamela Jones; Kathy Kenny; David Kukle; Deborah Kulich; Keith A. Lampman; C.D. Lane Family; Ruth Leonard; Shirley & Menahem Lewin; Terez Limer, Frank & Trudy Litto; Ellen Mahnken; Stanley Maltzman; Robert Manno; Lisa Fox Martin; Clarence B. Moon; Linda Overbaugh; Purcell Palmer; Fawn Potash; Dorothy Rodgers; Vivian Ruoff; Enrico Scull; David Slutzky; Kay Stamer; Hudson Talbott; Robert Turan; Pam Weisberg; Bruce Whittaker. Patrons and Benefactors Alan Gosule & Nina Matis, Anne Miller & Stuart Breslow, Maya M. Farber, Lisa Fox Martin, James A. & Phyllis W. Parrish, Nancey Rosensweig & Daniel N. Arshack, Mr. & Mrs. Charles M. Royce, David & Jean Slutzky. Supporters Gilbert & Mary Ann Bagnell, Susan Law Dake-Stewarts Shops, Stephen & Jackie Dunn, Peter & Sarah D. Finn, Tom & Linda Gentalen, Michel Goldberg, Robert & Ann Hallock, Keith A. Lampman, Wayne D. & Veronika H. Marquoit, Charles Rosen & Duke Dang, Charles B. & Natasha Slutzky, Michael & Sandy Smith, Robin & Marty Smith, Robert & Judith Sheridan Sponsors Donna L. & William Barrett, Deborah Allen & Robert Hoch, June Faulkner Battisti, Susan Beecher, Tom Bellino-Planet Arts, Ernest & Naomi Blum, Marianne Lockwood & David Bury, Clesson & Jean Bush, Samantha Butts, Dina Bursztyn & Julie Chase, Kip Christie-Banner Hill School of Art, Richard & Rosalie Churchill, Frank Concert: Classic Jazz at its Best! WINDHAM CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL. The Renee Rosnes-George Mraz Duo. Tickets: General: $25, Seniors: $22, Contributors, $20, Students: $5. Windham Civic Centre Concert Hall. 5379 Main Street (Route 23) Windham, NY 12496. Reservations and Information: 518-734-3868 info@ windhammusic.com or www.windhammusic.com. Concert: THE ALEXIS P. SUTTER BAND International Recording Artist’s brings a powerful concert of Gospel, Soul and Jazz. Orpheum Performing Arts center, Tannersville, NY. 8 p.m. Tickets and info at www. catskillmtn.org. Dinner Cabaret: Catskill Jazz Factory VALENTINE’S CABARET. Saxophonist Caleb Curtis leads a trio in tribute to romance with repertoire including the Great American Songbook and works of Billy Strayhorn 6 pm dinner, 8 pm performance. Tickets $60. Reservations required! Deer Mountain Inn, 790 County Road 25, Tannersville, NY 12485. Call 518-589-6268. More information at [email protected] February 20 Cabaret: CHARLES BUSCH’S “THE LADY AT THE MIC” . 6 PM. Followed by an intimate champagne meet-and-greet with the artists. $40 through BrownPaperTickets.com or 1-800-838-3006. Bridge Street Theatre Speakeasy, 44 W. Bridge Street, Catskill, NY. March 6 January 23 Thru January 9 Saturdays Adult Ballet: ATHENS PRESQUE BALLET:Ballet and other smooth moves for women of a certain age and confident men. 10:30 -12 noon. Improve balance and flexibility and transform your body awareness using techniques from ballet, modern dance, jazz, soft shoe, and 4th grade Physical Education class. Taught by Bobby Lupone. FREE Drop-ins welcome. Athens Cultural Center, 24 Second Street, Athens, NY. Email to be notified of class cancellations or changes. January 16, February 20, and March 19 Exhibit: LOCAL INSPIRATIONS. William A. Carbone Solo Exhibit Opening reception January 6, 3 to 5 PM.Kaaterskill Gallery, Columbia Greene Community College, 4400 Route 23 Hudson, NY. January 2 thru January 30 (CIP) (CIP) Exhibit: TEA AND ALCHEMY: RUBY SILVIOUS SOLO SHOW. Opening Reception, Saturday January 23, 5-7pm, following GCCA’s Annual Membership Meeting at 4pm. GCCA Catskill Gallery, 398 Main Street, Catskill, NY. Gallery Hours: M-F 10-5, Sat. 12-5. FREE, www.greenearts.org, 518-943-3400. Opening Reception: TEA AND ALCHEMY: RUBY SILVIOUS SOLO SHOW AND TEN ARTISTS: ONE GROUP SHOW, Saturday January 23rd, 5-7pm, following GCCA’s Annual Membership Meeting at 4pm. GCCA Catskill Gallery, 398 Main Street, Catskill, NY. Gallery Hours: M-F 10-5, Sat. 12-5. FREE, www. greenearts.org, 518-943-3400. Second Thursday The Greene County Camera Club is a friendly group of intermediate and advanced photographers who meet twice monthly at the Greenville Library Art Gallery located at the intersection of routes 81 and 32 in Greenville. On the second Thursday, we hold a “digital critique” in which members submitting images in advance receive constructive feedback on their work. Friendship and networking, occasional field trips, an e-Newsletter, member shows and exhibition opportunities and social gatherings are all benefits of membership. For more information: Eileen Camuto [email protected] or Nora Adelman [email protected]. January 16 thru February 27 February 13 Workshop: SEEING IT THROUGH: IMAGE TRANSFER WORKSHOP with Tina Chaden. Free for teens and $25 materials fee for adults. 1-4 p.m. Athens Cultural Center, 24 Second Street, in Athens, NY Register at 518-945-2136 or info@athensculturalcenter. org. Visit www.athensculturalcenter.org January 28 Lecture: ACOUSTIC INFORMATICS. APA Cole Porter Fellow pianist DAN TEPFER delivers a lecture and demonstration prior to the debut of Acoustic Informatics at Bard College Fisher Center. 7-8 pm. FREE. Presented by 23Arts Initiative’s Catskill Jazz Factory. Mountain Top Library, 6093 Main Street, Tannersville, NY 12485. Call 518-589-5707 or [email protected] February 7 (CIP) Sunday Salon: THOMAS COLE AND THE OHIO STATEHOUSE with Robert D. Loversidge, Jr., FAIA. 2 p.m. Tickets are $9 or $8 for members, and each talk is followed by a reception. 218 Spring Street, Catskill, NY. Visit www.thomascole.org. February 11 Lecture: HOW THE WORLD WAS WON: NATURE, PROGRESS by Assistant Professor of History Nicole Strevell-Childrose. 7 p.m. Free. Room 614 PAC Building. Columbia-Greene Community College. 4400 Route 23, Hudson, NY. Advanced ticket sales at Columbia-Greene Community College and the following satellite sites: Chatham Bookstore and Greene County Council on the Arts, Catskill. Telephone Sales, weekdays: (518) 8284181 (all major credit cards accepted). Cuthbert, Bill Deane, Pat Doudna, Susan Ferris, Yechiam Gal, Ginnie Gardiner, Barry & Gloria Garfinkel, Tom & Di-Anne Gibson, Warren & Eden Hart, James Holl, Karen A. Hopkins, Ann Dee Burnham & Joe Kindred, Patricia Feinman & Arthur Klein, Eleanor B. Alter & Dr. Allan M. Lans, Paul & Cynthia LaPierre, Bob Laurie, Anna Contes & Doug Maguire, Ronnie McCue, Clarence B. Moon, Jennifer Houston & Lawrence Perl, Herman & Susan Reinhold, Joanne Schindelheim, Paul & Sheila Trautman, Guy and Dale Loughran & Donna Trunzo, Nancy Ursprung, Barbara L. Walter, Mary C. & Sheldon Warshow Friend/Business Robert Brooke, Laurie Butler, Samantha F. Butts, Hedy & Martin Feit, Elizabeth Gioja-Pine Rodge Farm LLC, Ana Sporer & Frank Giorgini, Arielle Herman-Rivertide Aikido, Leah Jacobs, Richard Philp, Chris & Jenny Post, Tom Sardo, Thomas & Joan Satterlee, Aleem Seechan, Steven Patterson & John Sowle-Kaliyuga Arts, Brent D. & Donna C. Wheat-Have Trumpet Will Travel Family/Non-Profit Organization Members Timothy & Elizabeth Albright Sr., Alfred J. & Audrey R. Bagnall, Linda Leeds & Jack Baran, Sarah Barker, Michelle Beaumont & Family, Terry Lamacchia & Tom Bellino, Scott & Tracy Berwick, Matina, Athena & Chris Billias, Mary & George Blenner, Beverly Burgtorf, Virginia Cantarella, Ian & Becky Corcoran, Walter Lee & Eleanor Coyle, Thomas Culp, Lawry Swidler & Ulla Darni, Bill and Helen Deane, Victor Deyglio & Lex Grey Deyglio, Nicole Lemelin & Terrance DePietro, Christine & Sean Doolan, Esq., Pamela Dreyfus-Smith, Lisa & Stephen Duffek, Carolyn & Eric Egas, Christina Plattner Evola, Dan & Lee Fenn, Marty Birnbaum & Patti Ferrara, Mark Larrison & Mary Finneran, Vera Gaidoch, Carli & Sasha Gazoorian, Janis Pforsich & Larry T. Gillaspie, Emanuel A. & Marie C. Greco, Greene County Historical Society, Nancy & Ted Hilscher, David Hopkins, Thomas Hotalen, Dawna M. Johnson, Carol Phillips & Joannah Jones, Galen Joseph-Hunter-Wave Farn, Joseph & Mary Pesez Kames, Loren & Anita Kashman, Tina A. Kiernan, Liz & Daniel M. Kirkhus, Lawrence J. & Pam Krajeski, Daniel K.& Susan Lalor, Millicent A. LeCount, Larry Tompkins & Mara Lehmann, Ashley Lester, Jeffrey Rovitz & Barbara Lubell, Stanley Maltzman, M. Golczewski & R. MannoWindham Chamber Music Festival, Cathy Morris & Daniel Marcus, Richard & Elizabeth Mason & Family, Daniel Nickolich & Robert McCue, M.D., Tony Rago & Claudia McNulty, Dennis Aquino & Richard Milstein, Stephanie Monseu, James and Michelle Moran, Patti & Richard Morrow, Elin Menzies & Debra Moskowitz, Joyce Lissandrello & Edward Nettleton, Linda & Charles Nicholls, Dennis & Judy O’Grady, Piers Playfair-23Arts Initiative, Paul & Cathy Poplock , Kenneth Tsukada & Cynthia A. Putorti, Sharon and John Quinn, Carolyn Bennett & Teresa Ratel, Charles & Ruth Sachs and Family, Schoharie Creek Players, Philip Pinckney & John T. Schuler, Enrico & Elaine Scull, Lucia Scull-Ennassef, Laura and Peter Segall, Carol Slutzky-Tenerowicz, Jeanette Fintz & D. Jack Solomon, David & Judy Spring, Joseph & Mary Ann Stanzione, Michael DeLellis & Matthew Talomie, Richard Perreault & Brenda Taylor, Tracy Huling & Thomas F. Teich, Mary Houston & Danielle Tiletnick, Jeoffrey, Dianne & J.D. Torrens, Marion Hunter & Uel Wade, Patrick & Stephanie Walsh, Cheryl Lickona & Chad Weckler, Richard & Lou Wengenroth, Reginald & Lois A. Willcocks, Leslie & Daniel Yolen, Cathryn & Richard Zega Senior, Student Individual Catherine Adams, Kyle Adams, Cindy R. Adams-Kornmeyer, Nora Adelman, Eunice Agar, Carol Allen, David Allen, Else M. Andersen, Theodore O. Anderson, Jr., Janet Angelis, Maureen & Steven Anshanslin, Guy Apicella, Richard Armstrong, J.H. Aronson, Deborah Artman, Deirdre Astin, Ritva Babcock, Sue Bain, Drew Baldomar, Francine Barbet, Stephan Bardfield, Paul Barton, Terrice Bassler, Kirsten Bates, Keith Batten, Winifred P. Behrendt, Pamela Belfor, Sue Bellinger, Dmitri Belyi, David Bernstein, Casey Biggs, Athena Billias, Lois Binetsky, Kristy Bishop, Mary Blinn, Jennifer Bock, Arlene Boehm, Lynne Bolwell, Tami Bone, Tom Bonville, Annie Borgenicht, Kelly Bortoluzzi, Kate Boyer, Charity K. Brauchler, Patricia Britton, Richard F. & Janet Brooks, Heather Brown, Allen Bryan, Ann Buchanan, Ross Burhouse, Alicia Burnett, Lawrence Butcher, Jr., Rita Buttiker, Jen Cannel, William EVENT: 35TH ANNUAL TOY & TRAIN SHOW, 10 a.m. – 3 p.m. Admission: $3; 6 & under, free. ColumbiaGreene Community College. 4400 Route 23, Hudson, NY. Advanced ticket sales at Columbia-Greene Community College and the following satellite sites: Chatham Bookstore and Greene County Council on the Arts, Catskill. Telephone Sales, weekdays: (518) 8284181 (all major credit cards accepted). March 12 Theater: CHOICES, by Donald Drake. Conjoined twins share a single heart that can support only one of them. The very religious Jewish parents debate whether it is a sin to sacrifice one twin to save the other. $15. 7:30pm at the First Reformed Church, 52 Green Street in Hudson, NY. A reception and talkback with the actors, playwright, and director follows. Call 518-851-2061. March 13 (CIP) Sunday Salon: THOMAS COLE’S COUNTRY HOUSES with William L. Coleman2 p.m. Tickets are $9 or $8 for members, and each talk is followed by a reception. 218 Spring Street, Catskill, NY. Visit www. thomascole.org. March 18 Lecture: IMPROV CUBED From Bach to Jazz. Brazilian pianist ANDRÉ MEHMARI delivers a lecture and demonstration prior to the debut of Improv Cubed at Bard College Fisher Center. Presented by 23Arts Initiative’s Catskill Jazz Factory. 7-8 pm. FREE. Mountain Top Library, 6093 Main Street, Tannersville, NY 12485. Call 518-589-5707 or [email protected] March 18-20, 25-26 and April 1-3 Theater: BOEING, BOEING Written by Marc Camoletti, Translated by Beverley Cross and Francis Evans, Directed by Cathy Lee-Visscher. The Ghent Playhouse, 6 Town Hall Place, Ghent NY. Performances are at 8pm on Fridays and Saturdays and 2 pm on Sundays. T Fridays and Saturdays at 8pm and Sundays at 2 pm. Tickets are $20 each, $17 for Friends of the Playhouse and $10 for Students with ID. Tickets 800-838-3006 or www.ghentplayhouse.org. March 20 Panel Discussion: ARTalks with Jerry Freedner and Draga Šušanj and Melody Mason. 2-4 pm. 518672-7140. Art School of Columbia County, 1198 Rt 21C Ghent NY 12075. artschoolofcolumbiacounty.org A. Carbone, Deborah Cashara, Helen Caunitz, Dot Chast, Anne Christman, Marie Cole, Theresa Corrigan, Thomas Cramer, Donn Critchell, Linda Cross, Louis Curshmann, Regina Daly, Gene DeBartolo, Janet DeFeo, John Delaney, Nancy Delaney, Tasha Depp, Bruno DeSantis, Thomas Dobbins, Gail Dorrance, Francis X. Driscoll, Sandra Dutton, Timothy Ebneth, Richard Edelman, Anne Emerman, Helen Exum, Patrick Farley, Kathleen Farrell, Olive Farrell, Lorri & Roger Field, Joan Fournier, Susan Fowler-Gallagher, Reidunn Fraas, Danielle M. Frederick, Erica Freick, David Fried, Jeff Friedman, John Galaskas, Dorothy Gambella, Suzanne Gardner, Jack C. & Lila Garfield, Laura Garramone, Page C. Ginns, Hope Morrow Glidden, Daniela Marino Goldberg, Mildred Goldberg, Phil Goldstein, Harry Gottlieb, Donna Gould, Enrique Govantes, Judith Graham, Jon G. Greene, Martin & Carolyn Gresack, Paul W. Gromadzki, Jane Guterman, Glenda Haas, Marilyn H. Hagberg, Sonia Hairabedian, Annette Hall, Jeannine Hanibal, Elizabeth Hansen, Florence Hayle, Peter Head, Charles & Estelle Heckheimer, Jeanne Heiberg, Mary Ann Heinzen, Anita Hermesdorf, Rebecca Hoff, Jean Hoglund, Kurt Holsapple, Jan Horton, Django Houston, Christine Hughes, Louise A. Hughes, Allan B. Hunter, Paige A. Ingalls, Joe Iraci, Nina Rosa Irwin, Ellen Jahoda, Annette Jaret, David Jeffery, Diane & Bill Johns, Judith Johnson, Ellen Jouret-Epstein, Albert Juergens, Theo Kamecke, Linda Karlsson, Scott Keidong, Peter Keitel, Hanna Kisiel, Erika M. Klein, Arthur Klussendorf, Paul Kmiotek, Werner L. Knudsen, Itoko Kobayashi, Maria Kolodziej-Zincio, Kathryn Kosto, Anna M. Kostro, Nancy Krawiecki, David Kreim, Stepan Kubicek, Kevin Kuhne, Susan Kukle, Mary Lackaff, Jene Laman, Rita J. Landy, Claudia Lane, Eleanor T. Lane, John Laurenzi, Meryl Learnihan, Louise LeBrun, John Lees & Ruth Leonard, Lisa Leone-Beers, Kay Levine, Ellen Levinson, Joan Blazis Levitt, Peter & Reggie Liman, Tammy Liu-Haller, Myra Lobel, Robert LuPone, Sally Lyon, Arlene Nashman Maben, Norman Mackey, Susan Martin Maffei, Norm Magnussen, Walter Maher, P.J. Maisano, Joe Mama-Nitzberg, Susan Mangam, Bonnie Marranca, Heather Martin, Al Massa, Eric Maurer, Margaret McCornock, Barbara McGeachen, Marcus McGregor, Donna Williams & Kim McLean, Jean Meadow, Susan Miiller, Alyson & Patrick Milbourn, Carol K. Miller, Kathleen Mock, Anthony Mondello, Donna Moran, Laura Morgan, Dennis Mower, Owen Mower, Mary Mundy, Art Murphy, Barbara Nadler, Cynthia E. Nelson, Elizabeth Nields, Terry O’Callaghan, Peter I. O’Hara, Yinka Orafidiya, Sandra Orris, Regina F. Packard, Tadeusz Parzygnat, Nancy Marie Payne, Catherine Penna, Ellen Perantoni, Nicholas Percoco, Regine Petrosky, Elissa Pignataro, Jason Pincous, Lynda Pisano, Alban Plotkin, Mary C. Pomerance, Andrea Porrazzo-Nangle, Sharon Poucher, Beverly Prest, Phillip Provataris, Robert Pulice, Christine Pushkarsh, Sandra Pysher, Carol Quackenbush, Joan Razickas, Daniel Region, Monica Restaino, Karen F. Rhodes, Leah Rhodes, Valerie Richmond, Patrick Rickson, Ruth Robbins, Katherina Renee Roberts, Nilda Rodriguez, Larry Russ, John Russell, Louise Ryder, Helen Sacco, Carol Sayle, Carol Schilansky, Beth Schneck, Paul Schneck, Julianne M. Schofield, Paul Schuchman, Brad Schwebler, Sam Sebren, Gary Charles Shankman, Ave Siecinski, Nina Silver, Bonnie Sims, Terry W. Sinsapaugh, Denis Sivack, Barbara Slutzky, Paul Smart, David Smyth, Cheryl Snyder, Kathryn L. Sorensen, Donna L. Speenburgh, Robin A. Stapley, Joan Starr, Jaroslawa Stasiuk, Richard J. Sternberg, Ron Stetkewicz II, Lynne Stone, Jeanne Strausman, Marc Swanson, Jacqueline Sweeney, Candy Systra, Hudson Talbott, Carol Swierzowski & Richard Talcott, Ken Tannenbaum, Beth Temple, Rosalind Tobias, Kristine Corso Tolmie, Kit Towlson, Marianne Tully, James Tynan, Willard Ulmer, Joanne Van Genderen, Tara M. Van Roy, Marlene Y. Vidibor, Marie Villavecchia, Karl J. Volk, Elaine N. Warfield, Jacqueline Weaver, Valerie A. White, Todd Whitley, Sherwin Wilk, Susan S. Williams, Shebar Windstone, Marcia Witte, Joy Wolf, Ilana Wolfe, David Woodin, Jonathan B. Woodin, Audrey Wyman, Arthur Yanoff, Joan Young, Eugenie Ytarte, John C. Zavala, Edna M. Zelasko, Jeannine Zwoboda THANK YOU ARTS ALIVE ANGEL: Marshall & Sterling Insurance Helping to underwrite production of this publication December 15 , 2015 Dear Friends, It’s our 40th Anniversary Ye ar! In just a few sh we will be ce ort months lebra ng Sprin g at the 28th An nual BEAUX ARTS BALL at Hunter Mou ntain. Plan to join us on April 2, 2016 for what has been billed “THE This year, as party of the ye part of the fes ar!” member from vi es, we will January 2004 ho no r Frank Cuthb through Janua also known to ert, a long me ry 2014. Frank many for his friend and va involvement in is an outstandin development lued Board the of Catskill’s Ma g in Street in the community since the early musician and composer, wh Frank hosted o is several fundra 1990’s when he spearhead isers for the Gr revitaliza on of historic bu and arts advo ed the ild ee ing cate, Frank, wi ne County Co s. As the ow th the Dis ng uished Service uncil on the Arts. We salute ner of Brik Gallery, award! our dear friend The Beaux Ar , ar st varied programs ts Ball is the Arts Council’ s primary fun we provide thr d rai our communi ou es as well as dra ghout the year. We con nu sing event, suppor ng the ally strive to ke many diverse proud of our acc w a en on to and ep the important omplishments contribu on of the arts alive and meaning over the past ful in 40 years! the arts in Gree ne County. We Please conside are r purchasing a fundraiser of benefactor cke the year. By ge t or table of 10 nerously supp educa onal an . Remember, or ng us at a d community thi s is the benefactor lev Arts Council’s resource progra uncertain eco el, you are supp major nomic mes, ms offered by or ng the ind we need your the Greene Co ispensable support more unty Council tha on n ev the er Ar to Please let us ts. In these keep the arts hear from yo alive in Greene program. As a u by January County. benefactor, yo u will also be pro 22nd to be listed in the inv bi monthly ne ita on as we minently recog wspaper, Arts ll as in the ev Alive. In addi nized in all ou guests. Should en r promo onal on, we yo materials includ ing ’s Council on the u have any ques ons, please will provide guaranteed pre ing our Arts at 518-943 fer co nta red ct sea Kay Stamer, Exe ng for you an -3400 or via em cu d your ve Director of ail at gcca@gre the Greene Co enearts.org. Thank you for unty your support. We look forwa rd to gree ng With warmest you on Saturda regards, y, April 2nd. David and Jea n Slutzky Honorary Hosts 28th Beaux Ar ts Ball 2015 Beaux Beau Arts Ball at Hunter Mountain All portrait photos by Ron Shannon at www.foto www.fotopic.com AR RTS ALIVE ANGEL Contributions from the following donor is helping to underwrite the cost of producing our bi-monthly newspaper Arts Alive. As production costs escalate, we owe our continued ability to publish to the advertisers you see on these pages and to the generous support of our Angels. To become an ARTS ALIVE ANGEL, contact Kay Stamer at 518-943-3400 or email: [email protected].