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Page 2 GALA News & Reviews THE Halloween Party See page 7 to make your reservation for “A Night Under the Stars” Page 3 September/October, 2012 Gala News & Reviews is a publication of 1060 Palm Street San Luis Obispo, CA 93401 805.541.4252 Web site: www.ccgala.org Advertising: 805.541.4252 Email: [email protected] In This Issue Page 2 Halloween Party Page 4 In The Community - Morgan Bowen Page 6 Notes from the Library - Jim Kunkler Page 7 Barbara Strauss Remembered - Lorelei Monet Page 7 Waiters’ Dinner Order Form Editor: Lorelei Monet Page 8 Remembering Clifford Chapman - Clayton Marsh Proofreader: Gina Whitaker Cover: Thomas Moxham Page 8 Poem, Clifford - Mark Swack Copyright © 2012 GALA Page 9 Prop 8 Update - Lorelei Monet GALA'S MISSION Page 9 Senior Advocacy - Tauria Linala Through education, support, recreation, advocacy, and partnerships, we will promote the well-being of our GLBT community. GALA brings people together. VISION Page 10 Calendar Page 11 Gatherings Page 12 Art at the Center - Paul LaRiviere Page 14 “8” The Play - Kris Gottlieb To have a healthy GLBT community that is respected, embraced by, and of value to, the broader Central Coast community. 2012 GALA BOARD OF DIRECTORS Will Russell, Bill Tomasini, Adaire Salome Fred Augsburger, David Burbank, Chris Cothard, Jeff Edwards Kim Hildreth, Sandy Schneider Permission is granted to reproduce this newsletter, provided the GALA copyright is included. The opinions expressed are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the GALA Board of Directors. GALA does not endorse products, services, or political candidates advertised within this newsletter. The appearance of articles, ads, announcements, etc., does not indicate the sexual orientation of the author or the advertiser. Please submit articles and ads to [email protected] GALA assumes First North American Serial rights to all submissions. If GALA fails to publish the submission within 4 months, those rights are returned to the author. For ad specifications and prices, call the GALA Center at 805-541-4252. Next Issue Deadline: October 6, 2012 Advertising in the News & Reviews is inexpensive, lets people know that yours is an LGBT friendly business, and helps to support this newsletter. Ads should be formatted to the correct size and sent to [email protected]. Payment should be sent to GALA at 1060 Palm Street, San Luis Obispo CA 93401 Page 4 In The Community Getting Personal About Adrienne Rich By Morgan Bowen March 27, 2012, the day I found out Adrienne Rich died, was like any ordinary day for me at work. I took a break to check the news and there was her obituary. A deep sadness and weight in my stomach indicated the loss I felt and the importance of Rich in my life. She was only 82, but died from complications of rheumatoid arthritis. Her career spanned seven decades. Rich will go down in history as a master poet, with many accomplishments and accolades; just Google her to find out. The New York Times’ Margalit Fox summarized it this way: “(Rich was) a poet of towering reputation and towering rage, whose work— distinguished by an unswerving progressive vision and a dazzling, empathic ferocity—brought the oppression of women and lesbians to the forefront of poetic discourse and kept it there for nearly a halfcentury.” I am here to witness the power of Adrienne Rich in individual women’s lives, in my life. That motto: “the personal is political” rings true here. Many of her works are very personal and intimate, speaking important truths. Rich will forever be a part of my personal coming out history. In college at Cal Poly I had been struggling with my own identity and feelings for women which I began to expose GALA News & Reviews and explore in short stories in my being a lesbian in our society. As creative writing class. A friend in these lines from poem “XIX” that class came out to me as a express: bisexual and gave me the book The If I could let you know— Fact of a Doorframe by Adrienne two women together is a Rich. I devoured the book. work Needless to say Carla’s friendship, nothing in civilization has as well as Adrienne’s words, made simple, supported me through tough times. two people together is a Many of the lines in her poems work have such force. One favorite of heroic in its ordinariness, mine was a few stanzas from Here are a few lines, from love “Photograph of the Unmade Bed:” poem “III” which I appreciate more In a flash I understand as I get older and as I say goodbye how poems are unlike to a beloved poet in my life: photographs At twenty, yes: we thought (the one saying This could we'd live forever. be At forty-five, I want to know the other This was even our limits. I touch you knowing we The image weren't born tomorrow, isn't responsible and somehow, each of us for our uses of it will help the other live, It is intentionless and somewhere, each of us must help the other die. A long strand of dark hair in the washbasin And if reading her poems weren’t enough, I was lucky to see and hear is innocent and yet such things have done harm Adrienne Rich twice in my life: first, in my early-twenties, prior to And still to this day, her “Twentycoming out, and later in my lateOne Love Poems” that are tucked in thirties. My first encounter with her the middle of The Doorframe was extremely significant because collection, are some of my most it was in the context of my process cherished of her poems. In my of coming out. In 1986, a lesbian twenties, I found “The Floating professor, whom I had admired and Poem, Unnumbered” like you find learned from, had invited me to sit the inside of a woman and become with her and her partner at the closer to yourself and your reality reading. Petrified and exhilarated as a lesbian: simultaneously, I sat in a room mostly filled with women and most Whatever happens with us, likely mostly lesbians and feminists. your body I couldn’t believe it. I had thought I will haunt mine—tender, was the only one struggling with delicate this and suddenly, I was among [...] sisters. After that night, I went Many of these love poems express home and wrote some 30 pages the delight and the difficulty of Page 5 September/October, 2012 double-sided of thoughts about being gay and later showed it to my professor. She looked up and said to me, “What do you want to know?” I quickly replied, “When did you first know you were a lesbian?” In this moment began a wonderful and supportive friendship. felt joy, comfort, and reverence that evening. I have gifted Rich’s The Fact of a Doorframe to several lesbians over the years when I thought perhaps, her words might strike a chord with them, as her words did in my life, and “each of us will help the other live.” At Cal Poly in the 2001, I went to hear Adrienne Rich read from her Here are a few of my favorite latest book, The Fox. She seemed a collections of Rich’s poetry and bit frailer, but just as powerful with prose. Read one for yourself and her words as I remembered. This prepare to be challenged and time my thrill was going to the transformed. after party at a professor friend’s house and sitting next to Adrienne. The Fact of a Doorframe: Poems Selected and New, 1950-1984, We made some small talk, but Norton (New York, NY), 1984. mostly, I just sat there in her presence silently listening as Blood, Bread and Poetry: Selected people approached her. It was Prose, 1979-1986, Norton (New enough to simply be with her. Her York, NY), 1986. partner asked me to get Adrienne a Of Woman Born: Motherhood As glass of wine, and I did. Really, I Experience and Institution, Norton had no words, nor questions for (New York, NY), 1976, 10th her. She had been there for me, anniversary edition with a revised and it was almost like I imagined it introduction, 1986. would be to meet the Dali Lama. I On Lies, Secrets, and Silence: Selected Prose, 1966-1978, Norton (New York, NY), 1979. GALA News & Reviews Page 6 Library because they did not have sex, preferring to pay pretty, young men for anonymous sexual Notes from the Library By Jim Kunkler Gore Vidal, novelist, essayist, play write, occasional actor and full time provocateur, died yesterday (July 31, 2012) at his home in the Hollywood hills, after a long bout with pneumonia. He was 86. I am not going to go into a long obituary here, as I have written about Vidal in a previous column. I will say that I have had numerous arguments with other gay men as to Vidal’s significance in the advancement of gay rights in this country. While he always spoke in favor of doing away with all laws criminalizing homosexuality, he detested the term “gay,” maintaining that all persons are inherently bi-sexual and that “sex is not something you are, it is something you do.” Vidal insisted that his relationship with Howard Austen lasted for over thirty years encounters with no possibility of emotional attachment. He supported a person’s right to marry anyone they wanted to, regardless of their sex, but he had no use for marriage personally. And while his attitude regarding sex was more in line with Caesarian Rome than contemporary America, his writing always reflected a fearlessness and sense of humor that helped me to come to terms with who I was as a gay man and learn to confront and let go of the negativity of others. He was an American original and I will miss his wise (and often petulant) comments on society at large and his ability to cut though the crap…so to speak. Rest in peace, Gore Vidal. Alan Shayne, (a friend and contemporary of Vidal’s) together with his partner, artist Norman Sunshine, has written a Page 7 September/October, 2012 memoir that reflects a very different view of the gay experience in America. Double Life: A Love Story from Broadway to Hollywood tells the remarkable story of two gay men who fell in love in the middle of Joseph McCarthy’s paranoid 1950s. They have maintained a monogamous, committed relationship for over fifty years now, recently taking advantage of the new laws in Massachusetts and actually getting married. I could not put this book down. In addition to talking about the complexities of a long term gay relationship in very candid detail, it also introduces us to two fascinating and talented men. Shayne began work as an actor in New York, and then moved behind the scenes to become a casting director for stage, screen and television, and finally a producer. Sunshine started out as a commercial artist and had a very successful career in advertising before focusing on fine art as a painter. Their lives together have played out in and around various arenas of the entertainment industry, rubbing elbows with and befriending a number of famous persons, both in and out of the closet. This book offers a look at how gay men lived their lives from 1950’s, on through the millennium, hiding in plain sight and dealing with the charade of having female escorts, when all of their close friends knew of their commitment to each other. They were witness to the beginnings of post-Stonewall gay rights movement, survived the worst of the AIDS epidemic, and watched opinions and attitudes change, all the while staying together, loving and supporting each other. In reviewing this book, Candace Bushnell, author of Sex in the City, called it “a fascinating, frank and page-turning memoir about the lifelong love affair of two extraordinary men;” writer and gay activist, Larry Kramer remarked that “Alan Shayne and Norman Sunshine have written a valuable document to show the world that yes, we can do it too.” Double Life: A Love Story from Broadway to Hollywood is now available here at the Hatler Library, along with various works of fiction and non-fiction by the late Gore Vidal. Come in and enjoy! Barbara Strauss By Lorelei Monet Reverend Barbara Strauss, 68, passed away Tuesday, July 31, 2012. She and her life partner of 35 years, Carroll Leslie, moved to Los Osos 22 years ago where they own the Volumes of Pleasure Books and Gifts and have had an incredible outreach to our community. Volumes of Pleasure has been a supporter of this newsletter and GALA for many years. They have donated many books to GALA’s Hatler Memorial Library as well as their entire VHS collection. We offer our condolences to Carroll. Barbara’s passing leaves an empty spot in our community. She will be missed. Waiters’ Dinner To reserve your place at “A Night Under the Stars”, the annual Waiters’ Dinner, please fill out the card below and mail with your payment to GALA at 1060 Palm Street, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401. If you would prefer to make your reservation over phone, using your credit card, just call the GALA Center at 805-541-4252 GALA News & Reviews Page 8 Clifford Chapman model to be followed in his civic involvement. There were only a couple of things that Clifford disliked other people The Clifford Chapman I Knew doing, but he was too much of a gentleman to ever take anyone to By Clayton Marsh task for having done them. One was the use of his middle name -I was lucky enough to meet Clifford Wayne. The other was when people and Don in 1999, during one of the addressed him as "Cliff" instead of "Clifford." He knew that most people charity events of that year held were trying to use it as a term of here on these grounds (Chapman endearment rather than untoward Estate). When I think of how to describe Clifford, I'm overwhelmed familiarity. Clifford told me more than once that he enjoyed having by words that could be used to parties and large gatherings, and delineate the many facets of how the house seemed to come Clifford's personali ty: intelligent, congenial, quick-witted, gregarious, alive when groups of people were present. This generosity extended humorous, spiritual, to cooking and serving meals to compassionate, curious, forgiving, the homeless in San Luis Obispo. wise, and loving. Like Will Rogers, Also, he was known to take food to Clifford never seemed to meet his friends when they were ill. anyone he did not like. However, we must remember that Clifford He liked and encouraged some also possessed a temperament that traditions and ceremonies, such as was inherited from his Spanish the railroad chimes that would be ancestors, and which, on occasion, sounded to call everyone into the could reveal itself. refectory, the singing of the "Amen" To me, Clifford was a true renaissance man: one with wideranging interests and talents. He had a deep sense of propriety and honor. Clifford was public in many of his philanthropic interests, but certain others were unique and personal to him and Don. Having served as a board member and in several officer positions with GALA in the past thirteen years, I can readily affirm that the generosity and encouragement extended to the organization by Clifford and Don is appreciated more than words can say. Clifford was a role before the meal, and the Buddhist prayer bell that he would ring at the dining table to obtain everyone's attention. He loved the chance to try out a new recipe on us before serving it to the prestigious executives and boards of directors of the various organizations in the area. In the past thirteen years, I have lost count of the wonderful meals that Clifford cooked and shared with us and our visiting out-of-town friends and family. Not only was Clifford a gracious host and a marvelous cook, he also mastered the art of baking delicious breads. Clifford disliked waste of any kind. The fruit of his orchard and the produce of his garden were canned as delicious jams or marmalades for later use. Both fresh produce and canned goods were shared with others. Clifford's compassionate side was evident in the manner in which he served as executor for the estates of others and the special bonds he built with the survivors. He was a guiding light upon which many depended. Clifford enjoyed surprises, although the invitations always read: "No gifts." He really enjoyed little gag gifts of no intrinsic value. I recall the fun we had on the field trips we took. Once we traveled to a mountain top ranch west of Paso Robles, another time we went to see the desert wildflowers on the Carrizo Plains, and on a trip to the Piedras Blancas lighthouse and Ragged Point for lunch. The biggest surprise of all was in 2007, when Clifford invited us to join him in a mystery trip for his birthday. We met here at the house, loaded into stretch limos, proceeded by a very circuitous route, and arrived at a pier in Morro Bay where we embarked on the Papagallo II for a dinner cruise that was most memorable and most enjoyable. Clifford was always mindful of his larger circle of friends that he had made over the years in business in San Luis Obispo County. He loved to do the annual Fourth of July barbeque, as well as the annual Christmas cocktail party as a gift to the community at large. "Good night, sweet prince. And flights of angels sing thee to thy rest.” To me Clifford was a legend He touched the lives of many. Known for his support of charity Patron of the arts and symphony The loss is deeply heartfelt By his partner and family. Missed by many dear friends In fact a whole community. So if a vision helps to heal Picture this along with me Clifford running on the beach Running strong and forever free. By Mark S. Swack Page 9 September/October, 2012 Prop 8 Update Prop 8 Update By Lorelei Monet On February 7, 2012, in a 2–1 decision, a Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals panel affirmed Judge Walker's decision declaring the Proposition 8 ban on same-sex marriage to be unconstitutional. The panel also unanimously affirmed Judge Ware's holding that Walker was not obligated to recuse himself from the case because he is gay. Still, the panel continued a stay on the ruling, barring any marriages from taking place pending further appeals. On June 5, 2012, a majority of the full Ninth Circuit denied a petition for rehearing en banc, and stayed the ruling pending appeal. The case was appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court on July 31, 2012. If the Supreme Court decides to hear the case, AFER attorneys Theodore B. Olson and David Boies will argue, once again, that marriage is a fundamental right guaranteed by the Constitution, and that denying gay and lesbian Americans that right is unfair and unlawful. If the Court decides not to hear the case, marriage equality will be restored in California, possibly as early as October 2012. GALA-SA Senior Advocacy Working to End Discrimination The Senior Advocacy Committee is looking to add a member or two. If you have a few hours a month and would like to keep the LGBT senior movement active, your participation could be vital. After the retirement of two key members in the past year the current committee is consists of Rusty Cook, Sandy Schneider, Steve Click, Don Shealy, and chairperson Tauria Linala. Monthly Socials are being held the 4th Wednesday of each month from 4-6 PM at the GALA Center. Thank you to all who attend and participate. Big hugs and thanks to By Tauria Linala GALA Senior Advocacy contributors. Would you like to help LGBT seniors We enjoy seeing you at our events and look forward to working to in long-term care facilities to further LGBT Senior Advocacy in receive excellent care and avoid the months and years ahead. discrimination? GALA Senior Advocacy needs your skills and For information or to get involved, input on our ongoing development contact GALA Senior Advocacy at of cultural competency training for 805 541-4252. care providers. The training committee meets monthly and could use your participation. GALA News & Reviews Page 10 Calendar S M T W T F S 1 September 2 3 4 GALA Board Meeting Labor Day 5 6 10 Walt Whitman Book Club 11 7 Art After Dark 8 14 15 GALA at Farmers’ Market Move to Amend 9 Q Youth 12 13 Q Youth GALA at Farmers’ Market TranzCentral Coast Supoport & Social Athiests United 16 17 18 Q Youth 21 GALA at Farmers’ Lez Mingle Market TCC Steering Cmt 19 20 26 LGBT Senior 27 Move to Amend 23 24 Community of John XXIII 25 Social PFLAG Walt Whitman Movie Night Q Youth GALA at Farmers’ Market 28 22 29 Athiests United 30 Listings on this calendar represent activities by GALA and other organizations that take place at the GALA Center as well as GALA events held anywhere.. There are many other activities on the Central Coast. Check the Gatherings listing on the next page for details. S M 1 October T 2 W T 3 4 10 11 Q Youth Q Youth GALA at Farmers’ Market GALA Board Meeting F 5 Art After Dark S 6 Move to Amend 7 8 Walt Whitman 9 12 13 19 20 GALA at Farmers’ Market Columbus Day Book Club Athiests United 14 15 16 17 18 Q Youth GALA at Farmers’ Market Move to Amend Lez Mingle TranzCentral Coast Supoport & Social TCC Steering Cmt 21 22 Walt Whitman Movie Night 23 PFLAG 24 LGBT Senior Social Athiests United 28 Community of John XXIII 29 30 31 Halloween 25 Q Youth GALA at Farmers’ Market 26 27 Page 11 September/October, 2012 Gatherings This is a local proect aimed at building a supportive and positive environment for young gay, bi, and curios men, ages 18-29. Athiests United Atheists United of SLO is a positive Fusion Coffee Night Thursdays, atheist community that fosters a 8:00 pm at Linnaea’s Café supportive environment for members and a welcoming attitude GALA Board Meeting Start Time: 6:30 PM on the 1st toward guests. Meets on the 2nd Tuesday of the month. Monthly and 4th Mondays of the month, at meeting of the GALA Board of 5:30 PM at the GALA Center. All Directors open to the public. are welcome. Cal Poly SPECTRUM Spectrum strives to provide a system of support for the SLO gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, intersex, questioning, queer, and genderqueer communities, as well as straight allies. www.calpoly.edu/~glbclub/ GALA at SLO Farmer’s Market Thursday evening’s from 6 - 9. GALA’s booth at Downtown San Luis Obispo’s Farmers Market located in front of NOVO restaurant. GALA Q Youth Group (SLO) Start Time: 6:00 PM This group serves Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender youth between ages 13 and 20. They meet downtown SLO at the GALA Center, 1060 Palm Street. Call 5414252 for more information. Camping Women Camping Women, Inc. is a national non-profit service organization and has a local chapter with many ongoing events such as camping, backpacking and hiking. All women GALA SENIOR SOCIAL are welcome. website: Meets every 4th Wednesday of the http://campingwomen.org month from 4:00-6:00 PM at the GALA Center This program is open Central Coast Men's Dinner to all lgbt seniors. Group 6:00 PM This is an informal group of gay men that meet for dinner, at GAY NIGHT at Vieni Vai Trattoria Wednesdays 4pm- Close, any card a different restaurant on the first Wednesday of every month at 6 PM. holding member of GALA can present their membership card and We order from the standard menu, and each person is responsible for receive 50% off any pasta dish. his own check and gratuity. Please Offer valid Wednesday Nights only. join us for dinner. You are always 9pm- Close, Vieni Vai will set aside welcome! its regular business routine and Contact phone is 903-2111 become a place for the Gay and Lesbian Community to gather. Central Coast Men’s Potluck Drink specials, a great new sound For information, send an “add-mesystem, a beautiful back patio and to-the-list” email to: mailto:[email protected] a welcoming staff to serve you. Cuesta Squares Start Time: 7:00 PM. This is a Central Coast gay square dance club that has been around for 6+ years. Beginners are always welcome. Contact: [email protected] or call Thom at 489-6687. Fusion GAY NIGHT at NOVO Thursdays from 10PM-1AM 'Thursday Night's are for the Grown and Sexy! in this weeks addition of Novo After Dark at Novo Lounge! Come hang OUT for the freshest drink specials and dance your face off! Come OUT and support LGBTQ friendly nightlife! GLOW!' GLBT AA Meeting Start Time: 7:00 PM This gay AA meeting occurs every Friday at 7:00 PM at 134 Nelson St in Arroyo Grande. GLBT AA Meeting Start Time: 7:30 PM This gay AA group meets on Wednesdays at St. Stephens Episcopal Church, corner of Pismo & Nipomo in SLO. GLBT AA Meeting Start Time: 7:00 PM This gay AA group meets on Sundays at St. Stephens Episcopal Church, corner of Pismo & Nipomo in SLO. GLBT AA Meeting Start Time: 6:30 PM This gay AA group meets on Tuesdays at the Calvary Church, 480 Monterey, (at the church office in back), in Morro Bay. Great Outdoors of Santa Barbara This group meets on the 2nd Wednesday of the month. Core Group meets at 5:45 - 6:45 pm just prior to the monthly meetings at Rusty 's Pizza Lighthouse, at 15 E. Cabrillo Boulevard, in downtown Santa Barbara. Contact Brian Miller at 805-407-9001 for more information. Hospice 544-2266 or 434-1164 Ladies' Second Saturday Club Start Time: 5:00 PM. This group meets on the 2nd Saturday of each month at La Mexicana Restaurant, 7495 El Camino Real in Atascadero. For information or to RSVP, contact Bernie at 460-9163 or [email protected] Lez Mingle Start Time: 6:30 PM. The third Friday of every month. Location: GALA Center, 1060 Palm St., SLO. Our mission is to provide a safe and encouraging environment, to meet new people, share in discussions, films, and social events, promoting a positive acceptance of lesbians in all our facets and forms. All ages welcome GALA News & Reviews Page 12 Gatherings cont. Move to Amend Move to Amend of SLO County is a local affiliate of the national Move to Amend organization. The goal is to overturn the doctrine of “corporate personhood.” They meet at 7:00 pm on the 1st and 3rd Tuesdays of the month at the GALA Center. TranzCentralCoast Partners of Transgender Individuals This Support group meets monthly, where each date is determined by the current members availability. Please call 805-762-4398. We do need more members in order to continue. and September 7th from 6 to 9 PM. Kate’s receptions will be on October 5th and November 2nd from 6 to 9 pm. Refreshments will be served. These art exhibits reflect the experiences, ethics, and sensibilities of the community at large and the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender The Walt Whitman Gay Men’s community of the Central Coast, a Book Club This club meets at the GALA Center unique population living in and contributing to our society on the 2nd Monday of each month at 7:00 pm for discussion of books embracing diversity in all its forms. The works in these shows embrace PFLAG of SLO County and on the 4th Monday of each subtle and gentle artistic PFLAG (Parents Families and month for a movie. They read and expressions through thoughtful Friends of Lesbians and Gays) study books and films chosen by encaustic painting, fanciful Chinese meets on the fourth Tuesday of the the group which relate to their lives style brushwork and skillful month. Start Times: Board Meeting as gay men. All are welcome. interpretations of the human form : 5:30- 7:00 PM / Support Group: Please call 720-4528 for though drawing techniques. 7:00 -8:30 PM at the GALA Center, information. 1060 Palm Street, SLO. Cell Phone Paul LaRiviere curates the exhibits (10am-9pm) 805-801-2186. 549Help Wanted at the GALA Center. Paul is a 8989 SLO Hotline. Downtown San Luis Obispo’s member of the GALA Pride pflagcentralcoastchapter.net committee and the Central Coast Farmers’ Market GALA’s booth at Farmers’ Market Printmakers of the SLO Art Museum. The Closet With the help of his husband, Jim Start time: 8:30 pm, every needs volunteers. Lipsett, he has been organizing Thursday. Meets at Call Lorelei Monet At the GALA and hanging the art shows at GALA Blackhorse/Uptown Espresso, 1065 for over seven years. Center 805-541-4252 Higuera Street, SLO. The Closet is an informal organization Bob Dodge associated with the Cal Poly Pride Art At The Center Center that serves as a social Bob has made art all his life, networking group for (but not studying with numerous artists limited to) lesbian, bisexual, starting with his father. He has transgendered women ages 18-29 painted mostly landscapes, GALA Art Show in the San Luis Obispo area. seascapes, and abstracts. His work By Paul LaRiviere has been selected for exhibition by The Gay and Lesbian Alliance of the prominent jurors and exhibited in TranzCentralCoast Central Coast is proud to show Transgender Support and Social galleries and art centers up and works by Bob Dodge, Michael Group down the Pacific coast, in Texas, and Wenger (July 28-September 29) and in Illinois, and is held in private Start Time: 7:00-9:00 PM TCC Kate Moldauer (September 29Presentation & Social--presenter to collections from Nice, France to December 1). Artists’ receptions, be announced--open to all TCC Tokyo, Japan. part of Art After Dark, for Bob and members and SOFFA's It meets His current work is encaustic every 3rd Saturday of the month at Michael will be held August 3rd painting, also known as hot wax the GALA Center. TranzCentralCoast Therapist-led Support Group Start Time: 5:30-7:30 on the 2nd Friday of the month in the Library. Support for all transgender community members. A screening interview is required before participating in the group. Please call 805-242-3821. Page 13 September/October, 2012 painting. Encaustic painting involves “My art runs the gamut from using heated beeswax and damar primitive cave paintings to the resin to which colored pigments are post modern, influenced by added. The liquid/paste is then traditional Asian brushwork, applied to a prepared surface such modern painters and New Yorker as wood or canvas. Because wax is cartoons, doodles to bizarre. Its used as the pigment binder, subject matter is meditation, encaustics can be sculpted as well sports, politics, social as painted. Other materials can be conventions, puns, fashion—in encased or collaged into the surface, short, everything that crosses my or layered, using the encaustic brush/mind. My inkling-creations medium to adhere it to the surface. are brought to life by ink, paper, brush and thin air. The secret of “My work is an abstract response to the work is in each stroke of the the natural world, especially its brush.” topography. My notion of topography includes not only Michael has published several landforms, but also fluid movements books including 49 Fingers, a and architectural forms that collection of modern American compliment nature. Much of my koans, one of the innovative work reflects an Asian aesthetic, for expressions of Chinese which I developed an affinity while Buddhism. They are collections living and traveling in Japan, and of stories, statements and during the study of Zen Buddhism.” interchanges, which illustrate and embody some living truth. Bob was raised in Illinois and now Koan literally means “public case,” lives on the Central Coast of or precedent or example to be California. He is a member of several studied. His brushwork at the artist organizations, including the GALA Center certainly requires San Luis Obispo Museum of Art and more than just a casual the International Encaustic Artists. observation by the viewer. Michael Wenger Born in Brooklyn in the heart of modernity, Michael was a loner who kept his own counsel. He was drawn to athletics, psychology, artistic expression (writing, painting, and music), and finally meditation unlimited by concepts. He has practiced Zen for 47 years, 40 of them at San Francisco Zen Center. At the age of 64 he is taking a big leap and starting his own temple emphasizing Zazen, brush painting and classes. Courage, compassion and creativity are his touchstones. Dragons Leap, founded by Michael, is a new center offering zazen, brushworks and dharma groups. It comes out of the Buddhist Soto Zen tradition yet it is not limited to it. It is a place where creativity and compassion are cultivated, where one will deepen inherent connection to each other and intimacy with what is. For more information visit the website at www.dragonsleap.com KATHERINE MOLDAUER Katherine has spent a lifetime pursuing the soul within figurative art. Her passion for the figure has taken her study to the Academy of Art University, San Francisco. Much in the timehonored tradition of Leonardo, she worked with medical cadavers to understand the human forms on live models. After Katherine’s studies and degree, she was asked to teach Anatomy for Artists at the Academy of Art. Katherine’s personal work has included classical life-size figurative sculpture and figurative drawings. Now living on the Central Coast, Katherine expresses her passion for the figure using numerous mediums. One of her favorite mediums, charcoal and pastels, blends what she describes as “the spontaneity of drawing with the buttery colors of pastel.” “It’s exciting to see a drawing in progress as each artist looks at their subject and interprets how line will convey form and meaning. Drawing has been the artists’ most direct route to creation and is often the most rewarding. A well-drawn piece not only catches our attention, but also brings us into the process of the artist.” Katherine doesn’t see her fascination or study into the human figure ending anytime soon, “Sunsets are lost on me, but a look in someone’s eye, a hand gesture, non-verbal body language, all haunt me as I try to recreate the essence of the human spirit, the underlying form that allows us to endure a lifetime, no matter how hard or easy. Katherine continues to teach anatomy several times a year and accepts private students. GALA-SA SENIOR SOCIAL 4th Wednesdays 4-6 PM at the GALA Center GALA News & Reviews Page 14 “8” ONE NIGHT ONLY! A READING OF 8 THE PLAY BY DUSTIN LANCE BLACK By Kris Gottlieb reading on the Central Coast and the only reading between Los Angeles and San Francisco to date. As an advocacy group, our greatest hope is that this reading will help to spur action, dialogue and understanding in our community. “People need to witness what The Central Coast Chapter of PFLAG, happened in the Proposition 8 trial, if for no other reason than to see with license from the American inequality and discrimination Foundation for unequivocally rejected in a court of Equal Rights (AFER) and Broadway law where truth and facts matter,” Impact, is proud to announce a said AFER Founding Board Member one-night-only Dustin Lance Black. “The goal of 8 is to show the world that marriage staged reading of 8, a play equality is a basic constitutional chronicling the historic trial in the right. The facts are on our side and federal constitutional challenge truth always finds the light. AFER to California’s Proposition 8, and Broadway Impact are doing all written by Academy Award-winning we can to help speed that process screenwriter and along.” AFER Founding Board Member Throughout 2012, AFER and Dustin Lance Black. Broadway Impact are licensing 8 for 8 is an unprecedented account of free to colleges and community the Federal District Court trial in theatres nationwide. Most Perry v. Schwarzenegger (now Perry productions will be followed by a v. Brown), the case filed by AFER to talkback where cast and audience overturn Proposition 8, which members can discuss the issues stripped gay and lesbian presented in the Perry v. Californians of the fundamental Schwarzenegger trial. freedom to marry. Jessica Cresci, a PFLAG volunteer Black, who penned the Academy and assistant producer of the Award-winning feature film Milk reading, said that “Prop. 8 was and the film J. Edgar, based 8 on passed in San Luis Obispo county the actual words of the trial by less than 2% [according to the transcripts, first-hand observations Tribune]. I feel like this community of the courtroom drama and deserves the chance to experience interviews with the plaintiffs and the trial on a more personal level.” their families. As an advocacy group, our greatest PFLAG, in collaboration with the Cal hope is that this reading will help to spur action, dialogue and Poly Pride Center, is bringing 8 to the Alex & Faye Spanos Theater on understanding in our community. October 18th, at 7pm. It is the first We are thrilled to bring this opportunity with the help of our generous sponsors, including the Central Coast’s Gay And Lesbian Alliance (GALA) and the Liberal Arts & Engineering Studies department at Cal Poly. The story for 8 is framed by the trial’s historic closing arguments in June 2010, and features the best arguments and testimony from both sides. Scenes include flashbacks to some of the more jaw-dropping moments of trial, such as the admission by the Proposition 8 supporters’ star witness, David Blankenhorn, that “we would be more American on the day we permitted same-sex marriage than we were on the day before.” To purchase tickets, go to www.pacslo.org For more information and the most recent updates on the production, please visit www.pflagcentralcoastchapter.net. For information on how your local theater can produce 8, visit: www.8theplay.com Follow 8 on Twitter: @8theplay or on Facebook. GALA Q YOUTH THURSDAYS, 6-8 pm at the GALA Center This group provides a fun, safe environment for all LGBTQA youth between the ages of 13-20 to interact with and learn with peers in the community. Page 15 September/October, 2012 Kate Moldaur Bob Dodge Michael Wenger Kate Moldaur Kate Moldaur NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION U.S. POSTAGE PAID SAN LUIS OBISPO, CA PERMIT NO. 29 1060 PALM STREET SAN LUIS OBISPO CA 93401 RETURN SERVICE REQUESTED