Nov/Dec 2003
Transcription
Nov/Dec 2003
A r ts Council of Placer County Ar ts Newsmagazine & Calendar of Events N ove m b e r / D e c e m b e r 2 0 0 3 Fabric Artist Polly Roberts Big Idea Theatre Company InnerRhythms Dance Theatre Watercolorist Imi LehmbrockHirschinger & Photographer James Hirschinger Volume 9, Number 6 5 In the Abstract An artistic Loomis couple share a passion for abstraction by Janis Dice X. 8 They’ve Got Rhythm A North Tahoe dance company makes its debut by Persia Woolley 10 Conquering the Darkness Courage characterizes a blind artist by Shirley M. Pooley “The Wind Always Strikes the Highest Mountain,” color photo by Randy Snook. 12 What’s the Big Idea? Big plans afoot for Roseville’s newest theatre company by Arlene Evans 14 Arts News 16 Arts Leap Arts in Placer County schools by Carolyn Taylor 19 Arts Calendar Galleries, Music & Dance, Museums, Events & Festivals, Trips, Film, Theatre, Classes, Arts for Children, Calls to Artists An InnerRhythms dancer struts her stuff in a recent production. 30 End Paper An Audience of One: Memorizing Poetry by Susan Rushton “Cold Forest Moon,” watercolor, acrylic and ink painting by Jennifer Egan About the artist: Artist and illustrator Jennifer Egan studied illustration and graphic design at San Jose State University, where she received, among other honors, a Society of Illustrators Award, in 1992. A Tahoe City resident, Egan has created many logos for local businesses and festivals. Her whimsical artwork, depicting animals, nature, and adventures, always tells a story from her dream-like imagination. Each scene is filled with lively color and personal symbols. The artist also creates hand-painted, one-of-a-kind functional ceramics. Starting in December, Egan’s ceramic works will be shown at the Keoki Flagg Gallery, a new gallery located in the Village at Squaw Valley. 2 November/December 2003 Perspectives About the cover: Many moonlight-guided cross country ski trips helped to inspire the creation of “Cold Forest Moon.” Perhaps the most memorable one began as the Sierra alpenglow fired the sky with brilliant shades of orange and violet. I skied through forests into large, open meadows to meet a group of friends celebrating New Year’s Eve. We watched the sky change and fade as the Tahoe temperature dropped to 10 degrees. Stars twinkled in the distance; snowflakes floated gently down. People hooted and hollered; dogs barked and pranced with joy. Then all was quiet except for the crunch and glide of skis on frozen snow as we wound our way home to find warmth and a New Year. —J. Egan We’re off to find the Wizard… F or those of you who are subscribers and consistent readers of Perspectives, you may have marveled at last issue’s four-color format, featuring the Tenth Annual Autumn Art Studios Tour map. Yes, by virtue of a merger of two meager program budgets, we were able to accomplish the special four-color issue. Except now, like Dorothy and Toto, we are back in Kansas — and back to a black and white print format. While the substance of Perspectives is outstanding, thanks to the editorship of Sandra Reeves and fine Placer County writers, our graphic designer is ready and rearing to promote the faces of the arts in Placer County — in living color. So, we are off to find the wizard, one or more major donors who will underwrite four-color costs for this great publication! By the power vested in me, by the Arts Council Board of Trustees, I invite you to call us at (530) 885-5670 x 15, if you or someone you know would take us back to Oz. Food for thought… Please join us on Saturday, November 15, 2003, from 7 – 9 p.m. for BREAD of LIFE: Food for the Ancestors. This will be a unique community celebration of culture and thanksgiving. The event will center on the feast of breads from all cultures. What is it that sustains a community? Imagine a ceremonial celebration sharing whole wheat and rye bread, bagels, tortillas, cornbread. We can renew our community by expressing a creative gratitude. This is at the heart of this celebration. In August 2003, through an open-space, community decision-making process, the Arts Council was awarded a grant by the Mother Lode Foundation to foster creative thinking, celebrate cultural diversity, and help create community dialogue. This event will begin a year-long series of events to fulfill that goal. Stan Padilla will serve as the mentor artist for the project. Your participation is actively sought. Please join us in this “potluck feast” by attending with your family and friends and by bringing with you as an offering, the “bread” of your culture. Awendes, a Native American Women’s Drum Group, will join us to help celebrate this special event. The future is now… As we near the end of the calendar year 2003, I wish to again congratulate all of those who have been a part of what is now the 20-year-old Arts Council of Placer County. Born of grassroots endeavors, the agency, which began as ARTcetera, has continued to succeed in its mission as catalyst for the arts and humanities thanks to those involved over the years -- the founders, the many board trustees, dedicated staff members, artists and cultural groups of many disciplines, and our members, patrons and donors; committed public officials, and the visiting public. As Stan Padilla recently said at the annual Arties Recognition event, “we [in the arts] must not let anything stop us.” The commitment begins with each individual. We each have the opportunity to support artists, to enable cultural expression, and to ensure that our children and grandchildren may live in a society which supports a diversity of cultural traditions, makes room for artistic expression, and provides access to all arts to all people, all the time. Artist Stan Padilla at the recent Arties Recognition event. I sincerely hope to meet you at the BREAD of LIFE celebration on November 15 at the Arts Building, 808 Lincoln Way in Auburn. ■ — Angela Juliano Tahti, Executive Director Arts Council of Placer County Perspectives November/December 2003 3 Perspectives is a bi-monthly publication of the Arts Council of Placer County and the City of Roseville. Its purpose is to create a forum for communication for artists and arts organizations in Placer County and to increase awareness of activities and programs related to arts and culture in the area. MISSION STATEMENT The Arts Council of Placer County is the catalyst for the arts in Placer County. ARTS COUNCIL OF PLACER COUNTY Contributors Shirley M. Pooley (“Conquering the Darkness,” pg. 10) is a retired psychiatric social worker who now does freelance writing for newspapers and magazines in the region. She has written a book on addictive behavior as a soul sickness, Can’t Stop Overeating, Drinking, Working or Using Prescription Drugs, released in 1993. Writer Janis Dice (“In the Abstract”, pg. 5) is a frequent contributor to Comstock’s Business magazine and the Discover magazines published by the Sacramento Bee. Her Community Profiles and Home and Garden feature articles appear weekly in the Auburn Journal. She is a regular features contributor to Perspectives. Executive Committee April Maynard, Chair Susan Dupre, Vice-chair Bob Hagmann, Secretary Dave Imgrund, Treasurer Anthony Folcarelli, District 1 Board of Trustees Supervisorial District Members District 1 Anthony Folcarelli, Roseville District 2 vacant District 3 Debbie Dragon, Auburn District 4 Elizabeth Bushnell, Granite Bay District 5 Joan Stockbridge, Colfax Carolyn Taylor (Arts Leap, pg. 16) regularly contributes to Perspectives’ Arts Leap section. She is the Education/Community Relations Project Manager for the Placer County Office of Education. Persia Woolley (“They’ve Got Rhythm,” pg. 8) is the author of a trilogy Members at Large Susan Dupre, Christian Valley Lauraine Bacon, Colfax Jan White, Penryn April Maynard, Auburn Bob Hagmann, Roseville Dave Imgrund, Auburn of historical fiction books and two non-fiction books. Persia writes regularly for the Auburn Sentinel and is a Perspectives mainstay writer. Arlene Evans (“What’s the Big Idea?” page 12) edits and writes for the Discover magazines published by the Sacramento Bee. A former school nurse, she has written a book for young readers on color vision deficiency called Seeing Color: It’s My Rainbow, Too, just released. Advisory Team Dave Breninger, Chair Emeritus Dick Cushman, Resource Development Phyllis Butz, Leadership Development Administrative and Program Staff Angela Tahti, Executive Director Dorothy Crites, Office Manager Norma Brink, Accountant Perspectives Editor: Sandra Reeves Design/Production: Blue Cat Studio Printed by Auburn Printers Publication and distribution of Perspectives is made possible with support from the County of Placer, the California Arts Council State-Local Partnership and Local Arts Education Partnership Programs, and by the Placer County Visitors Council, and the cities of Auburn, Lincoln, and Roseville. Perspectives, published four to six times a year, is sent to members and distributed via the public library system countywide and regionally. Copies are available at the Arts Council of Placer County office as well as at the California Welcome Center Auburn. Opinions, findings, and conclusions expressed are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the arts council or cultural arts commission, board of trustees, staff, advertisers, or funders. Letters, suggestions, and story ideas are welcomed. Calendar items, along with photographs or slides, may be sent to the office. Deadline for the January/February 2004 issue: November 20, 2003. Arts Council of Placer County 808 Lincoln Way Auburn, CA 95603-4807 Phone (530) 885-5670 Fax (530) 885-0348 [email protected] www.PlacerArts.org 4 November/December 2003 Perspectives Monotype print by Diane Ruhkala Bell, one of 80 artists participatiing in the Autumn Arts Studios Tour November 8–9. In the Abstract An artistic Loomis couple share a passion for abstraction by Janis Dice W hat do you get when you wed an impressionist painter to an abstract photographer? A home that is as artistic and eclectic as the couple that lives there. Married 31 years, watercolorist Imi Lehmbrock-Hirschinger and her husband, photographer James Hirschinger, use different media to share a passion for abstraction. Their work covers the walls of their home in the hills of Loomis, the framed pieces and works in progress competing with views of Folsom Lake glimmering through the windows. The two-story structure is an extension of themselves: open and flowing, relaxed and inviting, a part of the wooded setting that quiets their minds and renews their spirits. “For us, art is a lifestyle,” James says. “We surround ourselves with visual interpretations of everything. Imi interprets through her painting; I interpret through my lens. But there’s a lot of compatibility because we approach things in the same way, each of us using color abstraction to create powerful images.” Imi designed the 19-year-old multi-level house and the subsequent addition of a voluminous garage that functions as their studio. Broad windows in the airy workshop face out on hummocky outcrops bunched under a copse of oaks, framing views of native woodland inhabitants that provide a serene backdrop for their artistic endeavors. The niece of a noted European architect, Imi always felt a need to create and was working as an art instructor in her hometown of Mayrhofen, Austria, when she met James. He was first introduced to art masterpieces by a college professor, then traveled to Europe to broaden his exposure to classic works. When he met Imi, who was mainly doing sculptures and ceramics at that time, he was impressed with — and inspired by — the strength of her artistry. Eventually, admiration turned to love. After marrying, the couple returned to the United States in 1973. They settled in New Jersey before relocating to California, where the crest of the Sierra Nevada reminded Imi of her homeland, and its forests and mountains offered her favorite recreations — hiking and skiing. Here, Imi worked as a framer, becoming known for her mastery, while James earned his doctorate at the University of the Pacific in Stockton. Imi completed her BA in Art at the same school, receiving in Perspectives “New Folsom Bridge,” photograph by James Hirschinger November/December 2003 5 Above: Imi Hirshchinger in Mayrhofen, Austria, at work on the third wall of a 140foot wraparound mural she finished this year. the process Awards of Excellence for her work. The Hirschingers moved to Loomis in 1984 when James was offered the position of Dean of Students at Sierra College. Imi continued painting while operating the Ibex Visual Arts gallery, in Folsom. At that time, James had to be content with “Ojo Sarco Window” photograph by James Hirshcinger 6 November/December 2003 Perspectives doing photography as a hobby. But since retiring two years ago, he has devoted himself fulltime to the craft of capturing objects and scenery on film in abstruse fashion: A ship’s compass housing is reduced to a melange of gleaming light and smooth curves; a dewdrop sliding down an emerald leaf turns out to be sunlight reflecting off the hood lamp of an antique car; a staircase bleached by the burning Southwest sun is a still life of pattern and texture so rich it seems dimensional through James’ artful eye — and the lens of either his Nikon 35mm with telephoto lens, or his cherished Pentax medium-format camera. “If I never sold any work, I would not be happy. I would probably give up,” James admits, shaking his head at the thought. “Because my goal is to share my images and to get people to think non-traditionally about photographs. For me, real art is interpretation, not replication. That, to me, is the most creative thing.” James need not worry about his work going unnoticed: Both he and Imi are being commissioned to provide pieces for private parties and are showing in solo, joint and group exhibitions. Imi was honored as a “Collectible Artist,” and James earned an “All Star” position during KVIE’s recent fundraising Art Auction. And they participated in their ninth annual Autumn Art Studios Tour, where patrons were invited into their atelier to see the mechanics behind their creations. Although she dabbles in everything from narrative airport scenes and coastal vignettes in layered watercolors to assemblage collages of modern gadgetry, Imi’s unique “colorfields” — abstract paintings of aerial views — are perhaps her most uncommon productions and the art most often requested for display “Colorfields” paintings by Imi LehmbrockHirshinger in corporate buildings. Struck by the montage of curvilinear color blocks formed by crops, fields, rivers, roads and buildings observed while descending to the Sacramento Airport, Imi now works from aerial photographs to capture the multi-hued patchwork of landscapes in vivid impressions. Although the figures are represented abstractly, they are in proportional perspective, making them seem familiar despite the interpretive qualities of their simplified shapes and designs. On a recent trip to Santa Fe, where James shot doors and windows for his next series and show, one of Imi’s colorfields won a coveted spot in an upcoming exhibition at the prestigious Wiford and Vogt Fine Art Gallery. “I was told they get two to three people coming each day, trying to get their art into the gallery,” Imi says. “So, this is one of my biggest accomplishments in the last three years.” But it’s not her only one: Last fall, she had a solo show at the Art Foundry Gallery in Sacramento and has been adding to collections displayed at the UC Davis Med Center and other corporate buildings in Sacramento and Folsom, where some of James’s work is also exhibited in elephantine scale, thanks to the efforts of their representative — art consultant Cindy Strickland. Now printing and framing archival-quality original pieces and reproductions to better control their presentation, the Hirschingers have added greatly to their non-creative work load. But they still carve out time for hiking mountain trails and traveling. Earlier this year, Imi returned to her home town in Austria to complete the third wall of a 140-foot wraparound mural she started years ago on a graphics art building. During her last week of painting, James joined her for a family holiday. Mixing the business of producing diverse creations with the pleasures of companionship is just a way of life when you share an ardor for abstract art. ■ Perspectives Artists Imi LehmbrockHirschinger and James Hirschinger in their Loomis home studio. November/December 2003 7 They’ve Got Rhythm T horeau wrote about each person marching to his or her own drummer, and it would seem the founders of InnerRhythms Dance Theatre in North Tahoe City had that idea in mind when they began their outreach to young people interested in dance. Founded in July 2002, InnerRhythms is a regional performing arts organization designed to broaden the area’s cultural activities and open a door for local dancers of all kinds into the performing arts. “I was trained by and grew up in a regional dance company in Stockton,” recalls Elizabeth Archer, co-founder and artistic director of the group. “Not only was it a great introduction to the performing arts, I learned many life skills from it as well.” Among these, Archer mentioned self-discipline, self-esteem, commitment to others as well as one’s self; how to handle disappointment and, perhaps most important, how to work with others of differing backgrounds, goals, and ideas. Trained in both classical ballet and jazz dance, Archer studied under such masters as Robert Joffrey and Maria Tallchief. After coming to the Tahoe area, she became a full-time teacher at Sierra Nevada Dance. She also works with students at Truckee High School and, for the last five years, has choreographed the school’s spring musicals. Kimberly Danek Pinkson, InnerRhythms’ associate artistic director, has an equally impressive background, having studied and performed classical ballet, modern dance, jazz, and hip-hop in dance companies from Marin and San Francisco to Los Angeles, as well as in several international venues. She is also an accomplished writer (currently for the Tahoe Quarterly Magazine) and is well-versed in promotion, public relations, and event coordination. While Archer and Pinkson bring their backgrounds in teaching and performing, Sheri WoodsGreen, co-founding director of 8 November/December 2003 Perspectives The youthful InnerRhythms dance troupe. InnerRhythms, adds the balance of a businesslike mind that so often makes the difference between the success or failure of an artistic project. WoodsGreen has a good deal of experience in marketing, in both the public and private sectors. She was development officer for Sierra Nevada College and the American Red Cross-Sierra Nevada Chapter, as well as events and entertainment coordinator for Caesars Tahoe. In the not-for-profit arena, her clients include the Lake Tahoe Chamber of Commerce and the Lake Tahoe Shakespeare Festival. These three women got InnerRhythms rolling last summer. Student auditions were held in the fall, and the troupe gave its inaugural performance at the Truckee High School auditorium on April 5, 2003. “It wasn’t quite sold out, but we made a good run at it,” Archer notes with pride. The program included both classic and popular music — ”Rhapsody” and “Outlet” were ensemble numbers, and Pinkson cho- A North Tahoe dance company makes its debut by Persia Woolley reographed and performed “Fever,” putting dance pizzazz into the Peggy Lee classic. The finale, “A Taste of Fosse,” got everyone involved. Guest artist Richard Hess performed a pair of monologues by Tom Stoppard and Sam Shephard, and Sara Kuttel, who boasts a long-time association with the Nevada Opera Company, sang “Memories” from Cats and “Habanera” from Bizet’s Carmen. “We decided to use a bare stage,” Archer explains, “and Ron Gaunt gave us a scrim at the back of the stage that could be varied both by lighting and the use of drapery across it.” Besides the guest artists, performers ranged in age from 12 to 25, a reflection of the group’s goal to expose children early on to the arts. In that same vein, Pinkson worked with the Boys and Girls Club to create an opening act for the Oakland hip-hop group Culture Shock when it performed at Cal-Neva. Club members will also open for Savage Jazz, a professional troupe from Berkeley scheduled to perform at Cal-Neva next March. In the meantime, InnerRhythms has also developed a party mode in which they turn any child’s birthday party into a memorable event. The Celebration Package includes an hour-long class in dance/drama or music (Mother/Daughter Jazz, Hip-Hop, creative Inner Rhythms Dance Company performing with the Sierra Mountainaires in September 2003 dance or Swing) plus cake, place settings, gift bags and balloons for up to 15 children. In addition, a coordinator is available to help with all the aspects of the celebration. “We not only got off to a great start,” Archer notes, “we’re rapidly becoming part of the community, and are looking forward to a unique spring production as well.” For that show, InnerRhythms is planning an outdoor “installation art” concert to be presented in various stream and garden spaces. The audience will move with the performers from setting to setting and watch as they act, dance, and sing, interacting with the environment. Future programs will make use of modern technology as multi-media events. “The culture here at the lake is changing so fast,” Archer concludes. “It’s very exciting to realize that InnerRhythms can be an important part of that blossoming.” ■ For more information about InnerRhythms’ performances or auditions, call Elizabeth Archer at (530)584-1210. Reporter’s Note: As I was growing up in Auburn, my godmother would tell me about her godfather, Jackson Gregory. He had married Lotus McGlashan of Truckee, and during the summer he, his wife, and their two boys would go camping on the shore of Donner Lake with the rest of the McGlashan brood. (This was in the nineteen-teens.) And on more than one occasion the grown-ups made up a pageant for the youngsters, who were wakened to “come see the fairies.” According to Nona McGlashan, one of those pre-school cousins, the event included finding a half-walnut shell holding a small lit candle floating on a pool where one of the many streams had spread out before reaching the lake. There was also a tiny doll whose limbs could be moved by attached strings, and this little creature danced amid the ferns and pines, enchanting the youngsters. Development has changed the scene around the lake, but one could almost see InnerRhythms’ events as a modern-day extension of that early bit of magic for kids. Perspectives November/December 2003 9 Conquering the Darkness A severely sight-impaired artist carries on courageously by Shirley M. Pooley T hose who have celebrated their Medicare Poet and weaver Polly Roberts never stops pursuing her artistic interests. 10 birthday and qualify for senior discounts wouldn’t quibble with the premise of Art Linkletter’s book, Old Age Is Not For Sissies. And one senior who exemplifies that title is 82-year-old Polly Roberts. Though she can barely see, Polly still actively pursues her artistic interests as a poet, weaver, gallery founder, and lifelong student. Just recently, she received awards at the Gold Country Fair for her beautiful fabric art and book of poetry. Polly is a wife and mother, too. For 61 years she has been a devoted wife to her husband, Ray. Together, they raised eight children, and have been blessed with 17 grandchildren. Born and raised in Los Angeles, Polly was started on her creative path by two women. Her mother, a seamstress, taught her to sew. While other girls in the seventh grade made gym bags, Polly sewed her own school clothes. As an elementary student in a gifted program, she was encouraged by her teacher to write poetry. Polly attended U.C.L.A. majoring in bacteriology. “In my junior year I met Mr. Wonderful on a blind date. Six months later, we were engaged,” she relates. “World War II had broken out, so we married. Our first child, Steven, arrived when Ray was a soldier in basic training. Our baby was six months old when Ray was sent overseas. Steve and I lived with relatives until his return. Meanwhile, our romance flourished by way of the U.S. mail.” November/December 2003 Perspectives Several years ago, the Roberts compiled and published those letters into a book entitled, One Thousand Love Letters from World War II, as a Christmas gift to family members. A second book, of Polly’s poems, A Life of Love, Laughter and Tears, was recently compiled on her computer. A love of learning has been a strong motivator in Polly’s life. With seven children at home, she returned to California State, Northridge as a part-time student seeking a teaching credential. “Ray was working as an attorney, and I felt if something happened to him, I needed a job to support our children,” she recalls. “I couldn’t have done it all without his help. Pregnant with our eighth child, I left school. Four years later I returned to graduate, earning a B.A. degree with the class of 1971.” Missing the challenge of academia, she returned to the campus and during the next eight years took courses in fiber and ceramic arts. At age 35, Polly was diagnosed with R.P. retinitis pigmentosis. Asked how she dealt with such terrifying news, Polly replies, “I believe when God closes one door, another one opens.” Instead of leaning on her handicap as a crutch, she uses it as a springboard for discovering resources and helpful aids. In 1980, after Ray retired, the couple moved to a rural area outside of Auburn. Then, Polly’s night blindness forced them to sell their dream home and move into town where public transportation was available. Another door had closed. “If Ray can’t drive me, I use the Placer County Transit, which takes me to Sierra College for computer or writing classes,” Polly explains. “I love the friendly small-town atmosphere of Auburn. The sales people and bus drivers know me. I feel safe walking through town with my white cane,” she’s quick to add. Another door was shut when Polly could On her home studio loom, Polly Roberts creates scarves, ponchos, and wall hangings. no longer read or write. With a castoff computer from her children, she set about becoming computer-friendly with two great programs that read the script out loud and enlarge the print. “Now I can read books. This has really put me back into the mainstream.” Polly’s creative talent finds expression in a basement studio, where she turns out beautifully woven scarfs, ponchos, and various other garments on her loom. “I’ve collected black trash bags, blue cleaner bags, orange and yellow bags, which I cut into strips and weave them through my loom, making vibrant-colored wall hangings,” she says. “My kids teasingly call me a bag lady.” “In the past three months, I’ve started to lose my sense of colors,” she laments. “But a weaving friend has labeled my color chart in large black paint so I can continue weaving. I’ve had to limit myself to simpler garments that don’t have to be cut or sewn.” A few years ago, Polly helped establish Auburn’s Old Town Gallery of Fine Art, a cooperative where artists display and sell their artwork. A blurb in the Auburn Journal in the fall of 1995 had piqued her curiosity. Merv and Nikki Totten Mack were looking for artists interested in starting a cooperative art gallery. One dozen determined folks rented a small space in the back of the Old Livery Building. After three months of scraping floors and painting walls, they opened for business. Several years later, the gallery was moved to larger quarters at the front of building. This past September, the Old Town Gallery celebrated its eighth anniversary. Currently, the cooperative displays and sells the high-quality work of 37 area artists. Six to eight potential members remain on the gallery’s waiting list. Each member works an eight-hour shift once a month as a salesperson. When Polly could no longer do the required paperwork, another artist began working her shift with her. “These friends are my extended family,” the artist notes. Doreen Kidd, an artist and friend for the past five years, relates, “Polly is an asset to our business. She’s positive and upbeat when greeting customers or when showing her work and that of others. You wouldn’t know of her blindness unless she told you.” Everyone who knows this gutsy lady agrees — she’s no sissy! ■ Perspectives November/December 2003 11 What’s the Big Idea? Michael Kreutzburg (left), Mary Gambale, and Chris Lamb in a scene from “Cold Storage,” a comedy performed by the Big Idea Theatre this year. C urtains up! Light the lights! Roseville has a big idea — a Big Idea Theatre, that is — dreamed up by friends Gian Montesini and Blake Flores. Originally, the pair discovered their mutual enthusiasm for theatre at Hewlitt Packard, where they are both employed. “I started a theatre group at HP,” says Gian. “Our first play was ‘Rebels Without Applause,’ which was the first play I performed when I was 16.” The HP group has done about eight plays. “Whatever play was short and fun, we chose.” Gian and Blake originated BIT in December 2002 with the vision that the plays would be different from those they staged at HP. Gian says, “We want our plays to be thought-provoking. We want the audience to enjoy not only a quality play, but to take a message with them. Something intriguing.” 12 November/December 2003 Perspectives Located in the Polish American Hall in Roseville, BIT opened in March of this year with the play, “Arts and Leisure,” a comedy about a drama critic who blurs the line between life and art. The group’s second production was “Cold Storage,” a poignant comedy about life and death. In September, BIT mounted “The Importance of Being Earnest,” in which two young men claim to be named Earnest for the purpose of wooing two young ladies. The theatre’s children’s productions are known as “Little BIT.” The children have performed “Cinderella,” and “Aladdin” is coming up. Besides rehearsals where actors are limited to practicing one role, Gian offers acting workshops for all ages in which participants are challenged in a wide range of roles. Gian started theatre work in his native Its founders have big plans for Roseville’s newest theatre company by Arlene Evans Brazil when he was 16. “English teaching is big business in Brazil because many people want to learn English, and many multi-national companies need to do business in English. I went to a school that taught English as a foreign language, and they had drama as a means to enhance the teaching, so I got involved with their drama group.” He also worked with other theatre productions in Brazil, both in English and Portuguese. Besides doing improvisations, he directed plays and taught acting classes. “All of my experience was from an amateur standpoint.” After graduating from business school in Brazil, Gian worked in a finance position for Ford Motor Company. “I always did theatre on the side. It’s a passion for me,” he says. Although he came to the U.S. six years ago, Gian still has just a hint of an accent, a fact that leads him to comment, “If Antonio Banderas can keep his accent, so can I.” Ticket sales pay for the plays themselves, but, Gian notes, “At this time, ticket sales do not cover the cost of renting the theatre, so Blake and I cover that out of our own pockets.” Getting started, BIT held a fund-raising gala to help with some initial costs. Gian explains that they didn’t want to open entirely out of pocket. “At the gala we had music and snippets of upcoming productions. About 90 people attended. It was a lot of fun.” The staff wants BIT to be known as a community theatre. “We’re counting on people in the community to become involved in all aspects of the production of the plays. We are taking our actors and directors from the community, and we want to use community resources to find everything we need.” For the coming years, BIT is planning other cultural events besides stage plays — musical reviews, poetry readings, and other types of productions. “We don’t have any of this planned in our next season when we will have three plays. But word of mouth is what we’re counting on to build our reputation. I do believe in the value of the work we’re doing. I see a strong future. It will take some time. But we’ll get there.” ■ For more information about Big Idea Theatre, call (916) 789-8477 or visit www.bigideatheatre.com Big Idea Theatre Company founders Blake Flores (left) and Gian Montesini. Big Idea Theatre actors Ryan Nicholls (left), Trish DeBaun, and Analise Marie Langford in a scene from “The Importance of Being Ernest.” Perspectives November/December 2003 13 Bringing arts to the Lake The AFtS student quilt and poetry show, The Day I Met the Sky, toured California, Oregon, and Washington, D.C. The squares were created by students and quilted by the Truckee Quilters Guild. Arts for the Schools director Terry Yagura shows one of the show’s quilts. 14 “Who would think something as tiny as an egg could change my son’s life?” Terry Yagura reads a mother’s words and is recharged with passion and energy for the art program she created at Lake Tahoe 20 years ago, Arts for the Schools (AFtS). Yagura planted the seeds, and a small group of volunteers and artists nurtured the program into a non-profit corporation with a full-time artist in residence and visiting artists’ workshops in dance, music, theatre, and art. With those artists, Arts for the Schools enriches the lives of more than 2,500 North Tahoe students every month. Every day, AFtS brings the arts into the classrooms of private schools, charters, and home schools; sponsors training workshops for teachers and parents; schedules student field trips to theatre productions; mounts multi-cultural assemblies and performances that open students’ eyes to the entire world. One AFtS venture, the Quilt Project, “The Day I Met the Sky,” was started after the 9-11 tragedy. The project grew into three hero quilts — a Local Hero, Hero of the Americas, and a World Hero. A poetry book, also part of the project, incorporated poems written by children from the Lake Tahoe area. “It became a celebration of spirit through the arts — a creative act that moves human consciousness a step forward,” explains the project leader, Nancy Tieken Lopez, who teaches art to thirdand fifth-graders. “We joined together — artists, November/December 2003 Perspectives quilters, students, teachers, community nonprofits, and businesses to create an extraordinary movement of home, hope and charity, an act of goodwill and affection.” The three quilts and poetry book were presented at a poetry festival and exhibit at the Cal Neva resort, at North Shore. Two of the quilts were sent to heroes — one to an emergency worker in New York City, and one to an Afghan woman who risks her life to teach other women. Lopez and Marya Roddis, both part-time artists-in residence with Arts for the Schools, have written an art instruction guidebook for teachers, parents, and artists interested in art education. Called Hands-On Workshop in the Study of the Arts, published by AFtS, the book is a guide to teaching 16 classroom art projects that meet state requirements. It also gives teachers guidance in incorporating art into the curriculum for any subject. Yagura stresses the importance of such a guidebook. “Bringing art into the classroom is the best equalizer,” she says. “Art reaches all levels of abilities and development. Art uses all parts of the brain. Children’s minds expand to embrace new ideas. Not everyone is an artist, but everyone can do art.” Funded originally by bake sales and walkathons, Arts for the Schools eventually gained funding from the Truckee Community Foundation, generous community members, the California Department of Education, and the California Arts Council. In 1989, AFtS was able to a full-time Artist in Residence, Cathee St. Claire. (All AFfS artists are paid. Community volunteers, such as Yagura, run the program.) But lack of state financial support for education and the arts has decimated funding for the California Arts Council. As a result of this major cut, the matching grant for AFtS’s Artist in Residence programs is no longer available. The community is supportive, but the organization must now scramble for funding to buy materials and pay artists, to carry its invaluable work forward. Arts for the Schools brings a world of arts to North Tahoe students by Carolyn Taylor Arts for the Schools — John’s Story John was a shy boy who would rather stay home from school than face the kids in his class who would tease, bully, and hurt him. His lack of small motor skill development and difficulty understanding concepts made each day at school frustrating and demoralizing. Just before his move to another town, Cathee St. Clair, Arts for the Schools artist in residence, started her Egg Painting Workshop in his class. The “Egg Lady” talked about the importance of caring, of realizing that each of us is strong, but also fragile as an eggshell. “Our hearts can easily break,” she said. “All it takes is a look, a word, a gesture.” She talked about kindness, about being aware of little things in relationships, the importance of a smile. St. Clair showed the class how to draw lines, how to curve them around to make different shapes, how to use these shapes to draw complicated things like dragons and castles. She worked with John individually, took time to help him learn to control his pencil. She was patient. He painted a magnificent dinosaur on his masterpiece egg. When his family moved, John started his new school with new selfesteem. He taught others how to paint on eggshells. He and his mother paint eggs every day, a practice that helps his fine motor skill development, and helps them draw closer. His mother wrote to AFtS, “There’s something about the egg, about holding it in your hands. It’s almost magic. Who would think something as tiny as an egg could change my son’s life — could change our lives together?” Each year artist Cathee St. Claire designs a holiday card to be sold as a fundraiser for AFtS. To purchase a set of the 2003 cards (shown at left), or for more information about Art for the Schools, please call Terry Yagura at (530) 546-4602. If you’re interested in improving arts education for kids… you’ll need a license. The Arts License Plate, designed by renowned California artist Wayne Thiebaud, is the first plate in the nation solely designed to benefit the Arts. Your purchase of the Arts plate helps fund arts education and local art programming in schools and communities throughout California. Order your plate today by calling (800) 201-6201 or visit www.cac.ca.gov. Perspectives November/December 2003 15 Eleven-year-old wins Best of Show at Children’s Open Sarah Croft, 11, of Loomis, with her oil painting “Oh So Still,” Best of Show winner at the 2nd Annual Children’s Open Show at the Art House Gallery, in Roseville. Sarah Croft, 11, of Loomis, won Best of Show for her oil painting “Oh So Still,” shown in Roseville Arts Center’s 2nd Annual Children’s Open Show at the Art House Children’s Gallery. The show ended October 30. Jurors, artists Elma Jella and Barbara Blabon, picked Croft’s piece for this highest honor from among the 117 in the exhibit. The young artists and their families came to accept awards and celebrate the exhibit opening at a reception on September 20. At the reception, all participants received certificates and ribbons. Nine honorable mention awards were presented, and twelve 1st, 2nd, and 3rd place awards in four age categories. Art House Children’s Gallery, at 424 Oak St. in Roseville, is open Tues. – Fri. 11 a.m. – 3 p.m. or by appointment. (916) 783-4117. New book explores color vision deficiency in children More than eight percent of the world’s population has some degree of color vision deficiency (CVD), usually referred to as “colorblindness.” The effects of CVD on children’s lives is explored in a new book by local author and retired school nurse Arlene Evans, R.N. Seeing Color: It’s My Rainbow, Too is an introduction to CVD designed for children ages 9 – 12. In kid-friendly language, the book explores all aspects 16 November/December 2003 Perspectives of this genetic disorder that affects one in 12 males and one in 200 females. Whimsically illustrated by Auburn artist Bud Pisarek, Seeing Color: It’s My Rainbow, Too retails for $11.95. The book may be ordered and the first chapter read at: www.CVDbooks.com. The book is also available at Sharon’s book store in Auburn. Although CVD has been recognized for more than 200 years, the condition remains poorly understood. Children with CVD may experience a variety of difficulties in preschool and primary grades, where there is an emphasis on color. Older children may experience problems with colored maps and, for instance, comparing colors that are the end result of science experiments. Evans peppered the book with examples from her own experiences, gathered from testing children’s color vision and talking with parents and teachers. She wrote the book because throughout her 22 years of school nursing with the Placer County Office of Education she could find no books, articles, or pamphlets for children on this subject. Placer County artists win KVIE Auction 2003 awards Three Placer County artists received awards at KVIE’s Art Auction 2003, held on the air on September 19, 20, and 21. Rick and Janet Nicholson won 1st Place in the Fine Crafts division with a blown glass bowl from their Point Break Wave Bowl Series; and Steve Coverston won an Honorable Mention in the Pastels and Drawing division for his drawing “Raft Trip in Coloma, South Fork American.” The three were among 30 award winners in seven categories. Other Placer County artists participating in the auction were Steve Aldridge, Donna Fay Allen, Michael Anello, Millie Beatie, Victoria Brooks, Pam Cushman, Thien Dao, Sandy Delehanty, Francis Domaratius, Fred Ekman, Reif Erickson, Ray Gonzales, James Hirschinger, Imi Lehmbrock Hirschinger, Dorene Kidd, Judie Larson, Mya Louw, Joyce Mayer, Constance McLennan, Barbara Newell, Barbara Noble, Stan Padilla, Barbra Paitich, Helen Phillips, Marsha Proud, Ann Ranlett, Gayle Rappaport Weiland, Michael Reigel, Merridee Joan Smith, Susan Sorensen, Paul Sprunck, Keith Sutter, David Thibeault, Margaret Wilner, and Sandy Wythawai. Pastel Society offering scholarship The Pastel Society of the West Coast is offering a $500 scholarship for the continuing study of art to a high school senior graduating in 2004. The society is accepting any subject matter in any medium. Although PSWC is a representational society, it is open to receiving abstract work of a high quality. Work will be judged by PSWC board members, and the winner will be announced before the end of the school term. Deadline is March 31, 2004. For an application, write to Rosemary Boissonade, 6024 Plum Canyon Lane, Roseville, CA 95747 or contact her at (916) 771-4415 [email protected] Historic Local Scenes Calendar 2004 Now On Sale For the 23rd year in a row, Colfax High School has published its Historic Local Scenes calendar. The 2004 calendar, done by the CHS Drafting Design Department, is on sale at a dozen Placer County locations for $5 each. Each calendar month is accompanied by a detailed drawing of a past event or location in the region, and each picture includes a short identifying caption. What started out as a lark one year has become a sought-after collector’s item of the region’s history. The unique historic drawings the publication contains have earned it the Governor’s Historic Preservation Award. Colfax High was the only school in California to receive the award in 2002. This one-of-a-kind publication takes a full year to put together. Local people loan students old family photos. The teen artists then draw pictures in pencil from the reference photos. Then, master drawings are inked-in, each student using his or her own personal style. Drawings can take up to 60 hours each to complete. Over the years, hundreds of student artists have produced more than 340 drawings unique to this region. Once the calendar layout is complete, it is delivered to the printer. The calendar comes off the press in the fall, ready for delivery to stores from Auburn to Nyack. Last year, CHS received emails from as far away as Florida with requests for copies. “Because of our Gold Rush history, people from all over the world find our calendar interesting,” says Steve Coverston, instructor and advisor to the students’ Art Drafting Club. “Year after year, our wonderful readers send us thank you notes and personal stories that relate to the pictures. One year we used a picture from Iowa Hill that helped reunite family members that had lost contact with each other 40 years ago. Many people have shared stories of steam trains, mining, Highway 40 adventures, and their favorite swimming holes,” he relates. “If you happen to have old family photos you think we could use, please contact us.” For more information about the Twenty-third Anniversary Edition of Historic Local Scenes Calendar, 2004, visit www.puhsd.k12.ca.us/colfax and click on “Historic Local Scenes Calendar”; or email Steve Coverston at [email protected]. Or write to Colfax High School, Attn. Steve Coverston, 24995 Ben Taylor Rd., Colfax, CA 95713. Arties Event Notes Arts Council’s 20th Anniversary The Arts Council of Placer County’s 20th Anniversary figured prominently in the Arties awards ceremony, held October 19 at the Shiloh Center, in Auburn. Presided over by ACPC’s executive director Angela Tahti, the event honored past arts council directors Larry Ortiz and Persia Woolley. A special award went to Bud Pisarek, founder of ARTcetera, the organization that became ACPC. Former Perspectives Colfax High School’s 2004 Historic Local Scenes Calendar is now on sale at the following locations: Buzz Thru Joe’s Colfax Area Chamber of Commerce Railcar Dawn’s Hallmark Dutch Flat Trading Post Hilda’s Pastries Monte Vista Inn Nyack Shell Oliver’s Grocery Placer County Museum Gift Shop Prince’s Chevron Food Mart Sierra Market Toy and Nature Walker’s Office Supplies—Auburn Wildflower November/December 2003 17 Earthbound Series — Illuminations Table Lamps by Rick and Janet Nicholson. board of directors chairs were recognized, as well as other past board and staff members. Both Ortiz and Pisarek spoke, reminiscing about their times with the council. Shaden Mousa, who as a young art student volunteered with ACPC, spoke about what that stint, when she worked closely with established artists, has meant to her. Artie Awards for 2003 went to Keith Sutter of Auburn, manager of the Arts Building (Arts Administration); Anke Hass of Truckee, an artist and teacher (Arts Education); Susan Federico of Roseville (Arts Education); Signature Theatre Group (Business Support/ Partnerships) for Auburn’s Independent Film Series. And the award in a new Arties category, Arts Volunteer/Patron, went to ACPC Tellabration: An Annual World-Wide Storytelling Event Saturday, November 22, 2003 Co-sponsored by the Foothills Storytelling Guild and The Arts Council of Placer County Story Hour: Stories for You and Your Young Children 11 a.m. – 12 noon The Arts Building , 808 Lincoln Way, Auburn Story Concert: Stories for adults and children who can listen like adults 7 – 9 p.m. Unity Church, 1212 High Street, Auburn Free admission but donations gratefully accepted! For more information call Linda at 530-478-1604 or Joan at 530-637-5858. Tellabration is a world-wide storytelling event sponsored by the National Storytelling Network, with over 400 communities participating across the globe. Come hear Placer County’s talented storytellers tell a variety of funny, moving, and inspirational tales. 18 November/December 2003 Perspectives board member Phyllis Butz for her 20 years of continuous, indefatigable service to the arts council. This year’s commemorative Arties awards were made by Marianne DeMartini, who created matte-glazed china plates symbolizing traditional 20th Anniversary gifts. After a luncheon and awards ceremony at the Shiloh Center, the entire audience, led by the Sugar Plump Fairies, a zany group of three less than light-weight sprites, danced its way down the block to the Arts Building to be musically entertained by guitarists L. Louis Ortz and D. R. Wagner. There the fairies presented special ribbon awards to all the Arties “losers.” MissionaryArts.com helps artist-missionaries MissionaryArts.com, a virtual art gallery, was launched in January 2003 to help artists working as missionaries throughout the world. Co-creators Tim Anderson and his friend Carl Kisling, a missionary, envisioned the site as a way for missionary artists to supplement their incomes. They posted an announcement of their new site on a missions resource internet bulletin board and quickly received a response from John Afolayan, a Nigerian missionary pastor who was producing museum-quality, silk-woven tapestries depicting life in his native country. After a few more artists joined the effort, Anderson and his business partner, Kevin Smith, expanded the requirements to include not only full-time missionaries but any Christian artist interested in supporting missions work through sales of their artwork. By the time MissionaryArts.com was launched, 10 artists had signed on. There are now nearly 30 artists participating. Eighty percent of art sales on the site goes directly back to the missionary. Original artworks by Kisling, Afolayan and local artist Bryan Lynch (also part of the MissionaryArts.com family) are currently on display and for sale at Sunset Oaks Frame Shop and Gallery, in the Fiddler Green Plaza, 1273 Grass Valley Hwy., in Auburn. professor. Snooks’ vibrant photographs reflect the many facets of Hmong culture, in which wisdom and prsonal relationships are central. Ridley Gallery, Sierra College. (916) 789-2873. December 8–13: Holiday Show and Sale. Paintings, ceramics, sculptures, drawings, prints, photographs, jewelry, fiber arts, silk paintings, ornaments, and more by Sierra College students, faculty, and artists from the community. Procceds benefit the Ridley Gallery. At Ridley Gallery, Sierra College. Call for hours. (916) 789-2873. www.sierracollege/edu/events/current.html Lincoln Through November 21: “Lost in America,” sculptural art by Miriam Morris and woodcuts by Vic Edmisten. Lincoln Arts & Culture Foundation, 580 Sixth Street. (916) 645-9713. November 25–December 20: Holiday Shoppe, an invitational show including art, crafts, and ceramics. At Lincoln Arts & Culture Foundation, 580 Sixth Street. (916) 645-9713. Auburn November 1–December 24: Art is a Gift, a group exhibit of affordable art gifts by local artists. Auburn Old Town Gallery, 218 Washington St. (530) 887-9150. “Aerial 1, 2003,” oil on canvas, by Erin Noel, showing at Julie Baker Fine Art Gallery in Grass Valley. Galleries November 17 – December 31: “Dolls and Smallworks.” An exploration of the capacity of dolls to take us into the realms of imagination, ritual, and play. Included in the show is an opportunity to create a “doll” for inclusion on a Tree of Life; date and time for this event TBA. Also on display, small works in various media by Jody AhlquistMough, Andrea Fuhrman, Kathleen Curtis, Andrew Bissell and others, available for purchase as holiday gifts.The Arts Building Gallery, 808 Lincoln Way. (530) 885-2787. P E R F E C T LY P E A C H Y Roseville Through December 18: Roseville Arts Center’s 28th Annual Open Show. Jurors Sarah Flohr and Tom Monteith, from CSU Sacramento, selected 60 pieces of two-and three-dimensional art from 325 slides submitted from across the country. Work chosen ranges from traditional watercolor and oil to innovative presentationsl using silver leafing, magnets, guitar strings, and felted wool. Free to the public at the 405 Gallery, 405 Vernon St. (916) 786-7827. Through December 18: Tropical Birds, is the theme of a show by students of Antelope Crossing Middle School. At The Art House Children’s Gallery, 424 Oak St. (916) 78304117. Ongoing: Showing oil paintings by Margot Comer. Studio 5 Gallery, 510 Oak St. (916) 771-8955. www.studio5gallery.com Ongoing: 3rd Saturday Art Tour. Free art viewing and Open House every Third Saturday of the month, 6:30-9 p.m., in participating galleries: 405 Gallery, 405 Vernon Street; The Art House Children’s Gallery, 424 Oak Street.; FASTFRAME, 1132 Galleria Blvd.; Owl Club, 109 Church St., Old Roseville; Studio 5 Gallery, 510 Oak Street; and 2237 Gallery, 2237 Douglas Boulevard; Borders Books, 2030 Douglas Blvd.; Frostad Atelier, 8609 Auburn Folsom Rd., Granite Bay; and Triple Vision Art, 6661 Stanford Ranch Road, Suite E, Rocklin. Maps available at all galleries and at the Roseville Arts Center. (916) 786-7827. M O O N S TO N E P L AT I N U M • P E AC H G O L D • D I A M O N D S studio & galler y Rocklin Through November 20: Many Ideas Open the Way, a collection of Hmong proverbs in photographs by Randy Snook, a Sierra College 107 sacramento st., old town auburn • (530) 823-1965 Perspectives November/December 2003 19 Colfax Through January 3, 2004: Land Scapes—City Scapes, an art show featuring landscape paintings by Chris Duke, cityscape scenes by Sue Averell. Reception, Sat., Nov. 15, 6–9 p.m. with live music & refreshments. Suggested donation $10. The Rainbow Gallery of Art & Music, 46 N. Main St., 2nd Floor, Historic Colfax. (530) 346-6906. www.therainbowcompany.com (photo of Chris Duke, emailed) North Tahoe/Truckee Through November 15: “Winter Dreams,” pastels by Carolyn Kiegley, an artist known for her evocative snowscapes. Main Gallery, North Tahoe Arts, 380 North Lake Blvd., Tahoe City (530) 581-2787. Through November 15: “Through the Lens” photography by Al Beirl, Susan Nielsen, and Rhonda L. Wilson. Outdoor and abstract photography by three accomplished Tahoe artists. Upstairs Gallery, North Tahoe Arts, 380 North Lake Blvd., Tahoe City (530) 581-2787. November 24–December 20: HollyART 2003. North Tahoe Arts’ Annual holiday extravaganza. Holiday artwork in a multitude of media by North Tahoe Artists, on display and for sale. HollyART Preview Brunch, November 23, 11 a.m. - 2 p.m., $15 per person. North Tahoe Arts, 380 North Lake Blvd., Tahoe City (530) 581-2787. Opening in December: A new gallery, the Keoki Flagg Gallery, located in the Village at Squaw Valley, will feature original works and limited edition graphics, photography, ceramics, and sculpture. On display in December, ceramic artwork by Tahoe artist Jennifer Egan. (530) 581-3839 Outside Placer County November 3–30: 20th Annual Northern Mines Open Art Show. Main Gallery, Center for the Arts, 314 W. Main St., Grass Valley. (530) 265-6076. Sourdough Slim will perform at the Cowpoke Fall Gathering, in Loomis November 14 & 15. Through December 19: Sacramento Archives & Museum Collection Center Exhibit. Viewpoint Gallery, Sacramento Valley Photographic Art Center, 551 Sequoia Pacific Blvd., Sacramento. (916) 441-2341. www.viewpointgallery.org November: Pastel Society of the West Coast, 12th bi-annual associate membership show. More than 80 paintings by members. Juror: Waif Mullins, PSWC-Distinguished Pastellist, Pastel Society of America. Awards and Reception, Nov. 8, 1–3 p.m. At Gallery One, 291 AuburnFolsom Rd. (916) 663-1211. Through November 16: Gillian Hodge Outdoor Memorial Sculpture Exhibit. An exhibition of work of students and emerging artists. Sierra College Campus, Grass Valley. Awards reception Sept. 7, 5–7 p.m. (530) 274-5300. Through November 11: Autumn Art Studios Tour Preview Show featuring work from the more than 80 artists participating in the November 8 – 9 studios tour. Tickets for the tour ($10) are available at the gallery. The Arts Building Gallery, 808 Lincoln Way. (530) 8852787. November–December: Art Can Heal. Art in a variety of media chosen for its healing qualities. Work by area artists and students from local schools. Sutter Auburn Faith Hospital Hallway Galleries.11815 Education Dr. (530) 389-8504. December: All Creatures Great & Small, a group show by Placer Arts League. Reception, Dec. 14, 1–4 p.m. At Gallery One, 291 Auburn-Folsom Rd. (916) 663-1211. Ongoing: Pastels by Margot Schulzke & Watercolors by Trudi Hayden & Susan von Borstel. Sunset Oaks Framing and Gallery at Fiddler Green Plaza, 1273 Grass Valley Hwy. (530) 885-4858. Granite Bay Ongoing: Exceptional work by regional visual artists. Elliott Fouts Gallery, 4120 Douglas Blvd., #305. (916) 797-7270. www.efgallery.com 20 November/December 2003 Perspectives Through November 29: Erin Noel, “The Divide: Notes on Landscape and Memory,” a multimedia installation piece. In her work, Noel blends digital media and painting, traditional and conceptual. Through December 20: Ansel Adams, PortfolioV, at the Sacramento Valley Photographic Art Center. Reception Dec. 13, 5:30–8:30 p.m. 551 Sequoia Pacific Ave., Sacramento. (916) 441-2341. Through January 4: Main Street USA: Shopkeepers of the Past. An exhibit of retailers of yesteryear, the items used in their trade and the goods they sold; vintage oddities and treasures from watchmakers, cobblers, music dealers, and gunsmiths featured in the “store front town.” Folsom History Museum, 823 Sutter St., Folsom. (916) 985-2707. Ongoing: Marty Gessler: Portraits & Oils on Canvas. On display at the American River College Gallery, 4700 College Oak Dr., Sacramento. (916) 484-8011. Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento Through November 9: Remembering the Family Farm: 150 Years of American Prints. November 21 – February 8: Knock on Wood: Sculpture by Michael Stevens. Stevens’s wood sculptures evoke his trademark attraction to dark comedy and irony. Featuring two decades of the artist’s work, the exhibition surveys Stevens’s evolution as an artist and seeks to acknowledge his position as one of Northern California’s premier sculptors. Continuing: European Painting from the Collection, European Galleries. Introduces museum visitors to the subjects and styles represented by our European collection; includes a small selection of decorative arts rarely seen on display. Continuing: Early California Painting Collection. Demonstrates the artistic vitality of Northern California through the 1870s. The Crocker’s collection includes works from Europe, North America, and Asia, dating from the 15th century to the present. The museum also offers special exhibitions, educational programs, workshops, concerts, and events. For a complete list of activities for all ages call (916) 264-5157 or visit www.crockerartmuseum.org. 216 O St., Sacramento. Music & Dance Rocklin November 19: Jazz Night at the Dietrich Theatre, Sierra College. 7:30 p.m. (916) 789-2920. December 6 & 7: Winter Concerts at the Dietrich Theatre. Sat., 7:30 p.m.; Sun. 2 p.m. (916) 789-2920. December 19 & 20: Roseville High School Dance Show. About 150 RHS students participate in this 26-number show, which includes tap, ballet, jazz, Latin, swing, clogging, and character. Shows held at the Woodcreek High School Theatre, Woodcreek Oaks Blvd., Roseville. Dec. 19, 7 p.m.; Dec. 20, 2 p.m. & 7 p.m. Tickets, $7, go on sale Dec. 1. (916) 782-3753, ext 3913. December: Candlelight Concerts at the Dietrich Theatre. Dec. 12 & 19, 7:30 p.m.; Dec. 13, 14, 20, 2 p.m. (916) 789-2920. Auburn November 9: The Vega String Quartet, a bright star among chamber music ensembles, will charm with its pristine style, silken sound, and exciting presentation. Presented by Auburn Community Concerts Association. For ticket information, call (530) 887-1624. December 4–7: Placer Theatre Ballet’s Annual “Nutcracker.” Tchaikovsky’s classic ballet presented Dec. 4 and 5, 7 p.m.; Dec. 6 and 7, 1 p.m. Placer High School Auditorium. Tickets and information at (916) 630-7820. www.placertheatreballet.org. December 9: Auburn Symphony’s Messiah Sing-Along. Guest soloists and visiting choirs join the audience in selections from Handel’s Messiah. Placer High School Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. (530) 823-6683. Truckee/North Tahoe November 18: Figures of Speech Theatre, combines banraku puppets and actors presenting “Cupid & Psyche, a 2,000-year-old Greek myth.” Many consider banruku to be the most refined puppet theatre in the world. At Cal Neva, North Shore, 7 p.m. Presented by Arts for the Schools. (530) 546-4602. November 21–23: “Sleeping Beauty” Ballet, presented by Sierra Nevada Dance, a community dance academy. More than 100 local students and adults in a fully costumed production. Sponsored by Arts for the Schools. Friday, Nov. 21, 7 p.m.; Sat., 7 p.m.; Sun., 3 p.m. At Cal Nev, North Shore.(530) 546-4602. The Vega String Quartet will perform in Auburn on Sunday, November 9, at Placer High Auditorium. December 5–7: Where’s Rudolf? Original ballet choreography for the holidays by the Tahoe Dance School. Fully costumed production. Fri., Dec. 5, school show at 10 a.m.; Sat., Dec. 6, public show at Cal Neva, North Shore, 7 p.m.; Sun., Dec. 7, public show at 3 p.m. at Cal Neva, North shore. Sponsored by Arts for the Schools. (530) 546-4602. January 9: Storyteller Willy Clafin performs in the Cal-Neva’s Indian Room, 7 p.m. Outstanding storyteller for all ages. Presented by Arts for the Schools.(530) 546-4602. Colfax November 22: An Evening of Opera with Sussy Flanigan. General seating $25, tickets available at the Rainbow Gallery 46 North Main Street, Colfax, (530) 346-6906. www.therainbowcompany.com Outside Placer County November 2: April Verch in Concert. Fiddle-playing and dancing presented by the Folsom Lake Community Concert Assn. At the Folsom Community Center, 52 Natomas St., 3 p.m. (916) 483-7004. November 1: Sacramento Philharmonic Orchestra’s 7th Season Opening: “Paradise and More.” Brahms’ Violin Concerto with guest artist Axel Strauss, violinist; cesar Franck’s Symphony in D Minor. Community Center Theater, 8 p.m. Season tickets available for the five-concert series. (916) 732-9045. November 5–16: 26th Annual Festival of New American Music. Concerts, lectures, performances. At CSUS, Sacramento. (916) 2785155 or www.csus.edu/events. Perspectives November/December 2003 21 November 7: Reconciliation Singers Voices of Peace and the Sacramento Children’s Chorus present “Prelude to a Season,” a concert to benefit the Mustard Seed School. An inspiring evening of choral music. RSVP is becoming known as the outstanding chamber choir of the region, and the award-winning Children’s Chorus recently returned from its tour of Czechoslovakia. At the Arden Christian Church, 4300 Las Cruces Way, Sacramento. Tickets available at the door. For more, visit www.rsvpchoir.org. Bernhard Museum Complex, 291 Auburn-Folsom Road This complex was built as an inn called Travelers Rest in 1851. The house, one of the oldest wooden structures in Placer County, was added in 1868. Now restored, the house is furnished with late Victorian pieces. Also located here is an 1874 winery, one of the first in the state, a reconstructed carriage barn, and Gallery One, home of the Placer Arts League. Docent tours, permanent and seasonal exhibitions. (530) 889-6500. Opening November 21: Hansel and Gretel, a Sacramento Opera production with music by the Sacramento Philharmonic Orchestra. At the Community Center Theater, Sacramento. For tickets, (916) 264-5181. Gold Country Museum, 1273 High Street This museum chronicles the rich history of gold mining in the region. Exhibits include gold panning demonstrations, a walk through a man shaft, an operational stamp mill model, and displays showing the lifestyle of gold country residents during the Gold Rush. At the Gold Country Fairgrounds. (530) 889-6500. Ongoing: Mondavi Center Presents. World-class performances of music, dance, and drama; also well-known speakers and concerts for children. On the UC Davis campus. For a complete schedule of events, call (530) 752-1915 or visit www.MondaviArts.org. Museums Roseville Roseville Telephone Co. Museum, 106 Vernon Street With exhibits detailing the history of telephone communications and of the Roseville Telephone Company, the museum offers a portrayal of an often-overlooked aspect of the past. Displays include old-style switchboards and telephones; models range to present day. (916) 786-1621. Maidu Interpretive Center: Indian Museum Maidu Interpretive Center—Indian Museum and Nature Learning Center offers tours of the ancient Nisenan (southern Maidu) village site Tuesday-Friday 10 a.m. & Saturday 10 a.m. and 1p.m., featuring over 300 bedrock mortars, petroglyphs and evidence of thousands of years of occupation by the Maidu. Cultural classes for children and adults ongoing. Center is open Tuesday through Saturday, 9 a.m.–4 p.m. $4/adult; $3/child; $12 family of four. 1960 Johnson Ranch Drive, Roseville. (916) 772-4242. www.roseville.ca.us/indianmuseum Rocklin History Museum, 3895 Rocklin Rd. Opened in June 2002, the museum houses a history timeline, Whitney Family items, Indian artifacts, quarry tools and railroad items, Ruben Ruhkala paintings, and a Rocklin Jubilee display, as well as many historic photos. Also on display are a quarry photo supergraphic, a quarry layout with a description of quarry operation, geology exhibits, and Rocklin’s Centennial quilt. The architectural style of the small Victorian home that houses the museum is typical of many early 1900’s Rocklin homes. Its original doors, cabinetry, woodwork and exterior trim are good examples of the period. (916) 624-2355. Penryn Griffith Quarry Museum, Taylor and Rock Spring roads Griffith Quarry’s history dates back to its founding in 1864. The quarry was major supplier of granite for many of California’s buildings, including the State Capitol in Sacramento. The museum houses exhibits reflecting the history of the granite industry in the region. Three miles of nature trails offer views of old quarry sites. (916) 663-1837. Tours (530) 889-6500. Auburn Placer County Museum, 101 Maple Street On display are exhibits on the Placer County Courthouse, a unique set of Pleistocene animal remains, and the Pate Native American Collection of over 400 items. All located on the first floor, Placer County Courthouse. Docents offer free walking tours of Old Town Auburn on the first and third Saturdays of every month. (530) 8896500. November/December 2003 Foresthill Foresthill Divide Museum, 24601 Harrison Street Museum displays portraying the history of the Foresthill and Iowa Hill Divides include a model of the Foresthill Logging Company, firefighting equipment, depictions of life during the Gold Rush and of early modes of transportation. (530) 889-6500. Dutch Flat Golden Drift Museum, 32820 Main Street The colorful history of the “Golden Triangle”—Dutch Flat, Gold run, Alta/Towle—is shown in exhibits depicting boom days of hydraulic mining, the rise of the county’s timber industry, the coming of the transcontinental railroad, and the growth of communities. Tour the town and all its historic buildings. (530) 889-6500. Truckee/North Lake Tahoe Rocklin 22 Joss House Museum and Chinese History Center, at Sacramento Street and Brewery Lane, Old Town Auburn This historic building is almost completely restored and will soon be open to the public. The original temple altar is preserved in this Chinese house of worship; on display are artifacts representative of the lives of the Chinese people during the Gold Rush. Open by appointment. (530) 823-2613. Perspectives Gatekeepers Cabin Museum, 130 West Lake Blvd., Tahoe City The museum houses artifacts of Lake Tahoe history, including paneled history displays, illustrated pioneer stories, hundreds of historical items, and a research library. One wing contains the Marion Steinbach Indian Basket Museum, filled with a collection of more than 800 rare baskets from 85 tribes, and collections of Indian dolls, and Southwestern pottery. (530) 583-1762. The Watson Cabin Living Museum, 560 N. Lake Blvd., Tahoe City An outstanding, preserved, turn-of-the-century log cabin, built in 1908 by Robert Montgomery Watson, Tahoe City’s first Constable. (530) 583-1762. Share Your Love of the Arts and Humanities… Forever Including a charitable bequest to the Arts Council of Placer County in your estate plans is a way that you can say thank you to your family, friends, and community while sharing your love of the Arts and Humanities with future generations. For more information about a charitable bequest, call the arts council at (530) 885-5670. sense of humor and outrageous stories. Tri-tip dinner BBQ Sat. 3–7 p.m. by the South Placer Heritage Foundation. BBQ tickets at (916) 787-0878. Poetry tickets and information at (916) 652-6290. Penryn December 6–7: First Annual Christmas Sale, at the Penryn Workshop. Ceramic art for sale, refreshments, music, Raku demonstrations. 9 a.m.–6 p.m., 1394 Orange Hill Lane. (530) 663-2815. Lincoln Ongoing: Tea in Crimson. Elegant Victorian afternoon teas every Tuesday, 1–5 p.m. in the lavish Gladding McBean Dining Rooms. Presented by Beermann’s. Reservations at (916) 645-2377. Auburn The Colfax Hometown Holiday Festival on December 5 features a Light Parade at about 7:30 p.m. Emigrant Trail Museum, 12593 Donner Pass Rd., Truckee Located in Donner Memorial State Park, this museum focuses on the theme of the Donner Party. A 26-minute movie on the Donner Party is shown on the hour. Other exhibits portray the lives and arts of the Washoe Indians, early explorers, the building of the railroad through the Sierra Nevada, and the early days of Truckee. (530) 582-7892. Outside Placer County Folsom History Museum, 823 Sutter St., Folsom Main Street USA: Shopkeepers of the Past, an exhibit of retailers of yesteryear, the items used in their trade and the goods they sold; vintage oddities and treasures from watchmakers, cobblers, music dealers, and gunsmiths featured in this “store front town.” Showing through January 4, 2004. (916) 985-2707. Events & Festivals Western Placer County November 8–9: 10th Annual Autumn Art Studios Tour. More than 80 artists participate in a self-guided tour. Great variety of media on view and available for purchase in studio settings. Artists will be on hand to talk with visitors. Tickets are $10 each. For tickets and more information, call the Arts Council of Placer County at (530) 885-5670. Roseville November 8–9: 19th Annual Auburn Christmas Festival. A spirited celebration of the season featuring 200 craft artists, live entertainment on three stages, fine food and drink, Santa’s Merry elves and Twinkle Trees. Continuous entertainment by such artists Tom Rigney & Flambeau, Sourdough Slim, Rob & Christine Bonner, bagpiper Chris Caswell, and jugglers Grinn & Barrett. The “Polar Express” train for children will run all day both days. Sat., 10 a.m.–6 p.m.; Sun., 10 a.m. –5 p.m. At the Gold Country Fairgrounds. (209) 533-3473. www.fireonthemountain.com November 15: Faith & Fantasy Ball, “A Tryst in the Evening Mist.” Sutter Auburn Faith Hospital Foundation’s annual black tie fundraiser. Cocktails, dinner, dancing, cruise raffle, live and silent auctions. At The Ridge Golf Course. (530) 888-4557. November 15: 2nd Annual Harvest Celebration, a dinner and auction for the benefit of Placer Land Trust. The event will showcase foods, beer, and wines produced in Placer County. $30 per person. Dinner prepared by Cow Camp; vegetarian option available. At Placer Hall, Gold Country Fairgrounds, 6:30 - 9:30 p.m. (530) 878-6053. November 22–23: Mountain Mandarin Festival, a celebration of the county’s mandarin harvest, featuring mandarins and mandarin products, arts and crafts, food and entertainment. At the Gold Country Fairgrounds, Auburn. (916) 663-1918. November 28–30, & December Weekends: 22nd Annual Nicholson Blown Glass Holiday Open Studio. Artists Rick and Janet Nicholson open their studio to the public for demonstrations. Fridays and Saturdays, 10 a.m. – 4 p.m.; Sundays, 12 noon – 4 p.m. Nicholson Blown Glass, corner of Bell and Cramer Roads, north of Auburn. (530) 823-1631. www.nicholsonblownglass.com December 6 & 13: Country Christmas in Old Town Auburn. Arts & crafts vendors, Santa, strolling musicians, warming refreshments. (530) 823-3836. November 22: Holiday Parade. Vernon St., Roseville. (916) 783-8136. Colfax December 6: 14th Annual Holdiay Craft Faire. More than 100 quality crafters, strolling entertainers, food and specialty coffees. Parking and admission are free. Hosted by the Roseville Parks, Recreation and Libraries Dept. Maidu Community Center, 1550 Maidu Dr., 9 a.m.–4 p.m. (916) 774-5950. December 5: Colfax Hometown Holiday featuring crafts in historic downtown Colfax on Main St., 3–8:30 p.m.; Soroptimist Soup Kitchen, 5–7 p.m., at the Sierra Vista Community Center; Light Parade on Main St. at about 7:30 p.m. (530) 346-8888 or www.colfaxarea.com. Rocklin November 21: Germany Travelogue, last in a film series at Sierra College. A feature-length film narrated live by a noted photojournalist. At the Dietrich Theatre, 7:30 p.m. (916) 781-0590. Loomis November 14–15: Ninth Annual Cowpoke Fall Gathering. Cowboys and cowgirls share their poems and songs. Three shows: Fri., 8 p.m.; Sat. 1 p.m. and 8 p.m. Entertainers include Sourdough Slim with his unique musical variety act, and Pat Richardson, known for his dry Truckee/North Lake Tahoe November 8–13: Art Quilt Tahoe, a study conference featuring a faculty of 14 well-known fiber artists. Conference includes accommodations at The Hyatt at Incline, gourmet meals, faculty presentations, quilt exhibit, and quilt shop. For details, call (530) 887-0600 or visit www.artquilttahoe.com November 24–December 20: HollyART at North Tahoe Arts. One of the largest, most diverse holiday shopping events at North Tahoe. Handcrafted items by local artists fill the gallery space, creating a wonderland of holiday cheer. Soaps, holiday cards, home decor Perspectives November/December 2003 23 items, table runners, quilts, snowmen, angels, hostess gifts, fabulous fine art, and photography are among the treasures available for purchase. Pictures with Santa, Dec. 6, 10 a.m.–12 noon. North Tahoe Art Center, 380 North Lake Blvd., Tahoe City. (530) 581-2787. December 21: Messiah Holiday Group. Free morning holiday concert in the Village. Northstar-at-Tahoe. (530) 562-1010. December 22–25: Holiday Festivities. Santa, choirs, music, and much more in the Village. Northstar-at-Tahoe. (530) 562-1010. Ongoing: North Shore Poets Open Mike & Feature Readers. Every third Thursday, 7–9 p.m., North Tahoe Art Center, 380 North Lake Blvd., Tahoe City. (530) 581-2787. Outside Placer County November 1: World Beard & Moustache Championships. Competitors judged in 17 categories, ranging from the Musketeer, a small pointed goatee with a prominent moustache, to the freestyle full beard, where creativity is encouraged. Contestants coming from around the world. All contestants will march in the annual Nevada Day Parade in Carson City in an Oktoberfest-style celebration. Carson City Community Center, Carson City, Nevada. (530) 581-3940 or www.worldbeardchampionships.com November 6–9: Wild Women Show, “With Curves Like These.” Wild Women is a group of California and Eastern Nevada artists (one member lives in Mississippi) who draw upon their wild natures to create works of art in a variety of media. Every year the group stages a several-days show in Reno. This year, the show celebrates Reno’s new museum of art building, which has a curved and bowed facade. Opening Reception, Thurs. 5–8 p.m. Fri., Sat., Sun., 11 a.m.–6 p.m. Nevada Museum of Art, 160 West Liberty St., Reno. www.wildwomenartists.com November 8–9: Art to Wear. The Sacramento Center for the Textile Arts presents its annual fashion show and sale. One-of-a-kind handcrafted garments, accessories, and jewelry. Fashion show, Sat., 10 a.m.; sale, Sat., 11 a.m.–4 p.m., Sun., 11 a.m.–3 p.m. Shepard Garden and Arts Center, 330 McKinley Blvd., Sacramento. (916) 481-2348. November 28–30: Artisan’s Festival. Nevada County’s most prestigious arts and crafts show, a tradition at Miners Foundry, Nevada City. (530 265-5040. December 7: Holiday Craft Faire. North Columbia Schoolhouse Cultural Center, Nevada City. (530) 265-2826. December 31: Annual New Year’s Eve Bash. Miners Foundry, Nevada City. (530) 265-2826. Film Roseville September–October: Roseville Historical Society at the Movies. Free classic movies every Thurs. & Sun., 1:30 p.m. 557 Lincoln St., Old Roseville. For schedule, call (916) 773-3003. Auburn November 1: Silver Screen Classic Movies:Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, starring Fredric March and Miriam Hopkins. Shows at 2 and 7 p.m. at the Beecher Rm., Auburn-Placer County Library, 350 Nevada St. Presented by the library. Suggested donation $5 general admission, $4 seniors and students.(530) 878-7938. December 6: Silver Screen Classic Movies: North by Northwest, starring Cary Grant, James Mason, and Eva Marie Saint. Shows at 2 and 7 p.m. at the Beecher Rm., Auburn-Placer County Library, 350 Nevada St. Presented by the library. Suggested donation $5 general admission, $4 seniors and students.(530) 878-7938. Theatre Roseville November 1, 6–8: Macbeth, Shakespear’s classic tale of greed, magic, and murder. Presented by the Woodcreek High School Drama Department, featuring a cast of 30 students. 7:30 p.m., Woodcreek High School Theatre, 2551 Woodcreek Oaks Blvd. (916) 771-6565, ext. 4228. Through November 29: Rumors by Neil Simon. A very funny farce by America’s foremost comic writer. At the Magic Circle Repertory Theatre, 241 Vernon St. (916) 782-1777. www.mcircle.org GALLERY SHOWS, ARTISTS’ STUDIOS, CLASSES November 7–16: Mystery at Greenfingers, by J. B. Priestly. Presented by the Sierra College Drama Department at the Dietrich Theatre. Nov. 7, 8, 14 & 15 at 8 p.m.; Nov. 9 & 16 at 2 p.m. Nov. 13 at 7 p.m. Director’s Discussion at 5:30 p.m. (916) 789-2920. December 14–23: Scrooge. A comical take on Dickens’s Christmas Carol. At the Magic Circle Repertory Theatre, 241 Vernon St. (916) 782-1777, www.mcircle.org 808 Lincoln Way, Auburn (530) 885-2787 24 November/December 2003 Perspectives January 9–February 14: The Man of La Mancha. Miguel de Cervantes and the inmates of a Spanish dungeon act out Cervantes’ story of Don Quixote in this musical, with such songs as “Aldonza” and “The Impossible Dream.” At the Magic Circle Repertory Theatre, 241 Vernon St. (916) 782-1777. www.mcircle.org INDEPENDENT FILM SERIES Late Fall 2003 Outside Placer County AUBURN STADIUM 10, 500 NEVADA ST. AUBURN, CA November 20–December 31: A Christmas Carol. Charles Dickens’ errie ghost story is still the definitive Christmas tale. A new adaptation by the Foothill Theatre Company at the Nevada Theatre, Nevada City. (530) 265-8587 or toll-free 888-730-8587. Every Wednesday and Thursday at 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. October 29–30 WINGED MIGRATION Sony Classics, Rated G, 87 minutes More than 450 people, including 17 pilots and 14 cinematographers followed and filmed a variety of bird migrations through 40 countries and each of the seven continents. November 5–6 THE MAGDALENE SISTERS Miramax Pictures, Rated R, 120 minutes Starring Garaldine McEwan, Dorothy Duffy, Annie-Marie Duff; directed by Peter Mullan. Set in 1960s Ireland, while women’s liberation is sweeping the globe, four “fallen women” are condemned to sentences in the Magdalene Laundries. The last Magdalene Asylum closed in 1996, and since then the horror of the these institutions has begun to emerge. November 12–13 SECRET LIVES OF DENTISTS Manhattan Pictures, Rated R, 105 minutes Starring Denis Leary and Robin Tunney. A dentist living in the suburbs, Dr. David Hurst, suspects that his wife, also a dentist, is having an affair. November 19–20 AMERICAN SPLENDOR Fine Line Features, Rated R, 101 minutes Harvey Pekar, the hilariously downtrodden Cleveland comic book artist, is the subject of the movie. Played by actor Paul Giamatti, Pekar also appears as himself, giving the film a documentary feeling with many behind-the-scenes on-set shots. Directors Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini maintain this balance between the actors and the real-life characters. November 26–27 No film during Thanksgiving week December 3–4 DIRTY PRETTY THINGS Miramax Films, Rated R, 107 minutes Starring Audrey Tatou (Amelie); directed by Stephen Frears (The Grifters, Dangerous Liasons). Set in London’s secret underworld, the film follows two workers at a West London hotel who are put to the test when one of them makes a shocking discovery one night. December 10–11 BUFFALO SOLDIERS Miramax Pictures, Rated R, 110 minutes Starring Joaquin Phoenix, Ed Harris, Scott Glenn, Elizabeth McGovern, Anna Paquin; directed by Gregor Jordan Set on an Army base just as the Berlin Wall is about to fall in 1989, the film takes a satiric look at a group of soldiers who over-indulge in illicit activities, until a new Sergeant arrives and takes charge to crack down on the soldiers’ activities. Save over 30 percent on regular evening adult admission price by buying a (transferable) series ticket for six films prior to the first film showing, and a portion will be donated to the Arts Council of Placer County. Tickets are available at the arts council office in the Arts Building, 808 Lincoln Way, Auburn, (530) 885-5670, or at the Stadium Theatre box office. There will be an express line at the box office for series ticket holders. Come early and enjoy our trivia contest and win prizes. For more information, call the theatre or visit our Web site at www.signaturetheatres.com Through November 9: New Voices of the Wild West. Fifth year of staged readings of four new plays chronicling stories of the American West, past and present. At the Center for the Arts, Grass Valley. (530) 265-8587 or toll-free 888-730-8587. November 15–December 14: Five Women Wearing the Same Dress by Alan Ball. A comedy about bridesmaids by the author of the film American Beauty. A wickedly funny, irreverent and touching celebration of the women’s spirits. River Stage, 8401 Center Parkway, Sacramento. (916) 691-7364. November 15–January 18: SantaLand Diaries by David Sedaris. An unusual monolugue based on the playwright’s encounters working as one of Santa’s little helpers at Macy’s SantaLand. Sacramento Theatre Company, 1419 H. St., Sacramento. (916) 446-7501. www.sactheatre.org December 6–28: The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupery. As this classic, fantastical story, full of color and life unfolds, there is a distinct sense of magic taking place. Sacramento Theatre Company, 1419 H. St., Sacramento. (916) 446-7501. www.sactheatre.org Classes & Workshops Roseville November 5 & 12: Write and Illustrate a Children’s Book. 6–8 p.m., Roseville Public Library. (916) 774-5950. November 8: Petroglyphs by Night. A class for adults, 7–9 p.m. at the Maidu Interpretive Center, 1960 Johnson Ranch Dr. (916) 7724242. www.roseville.ca.us/indianmuseum November 12: Watercolor Workshop. 6–10 p.m., Maidu Community Center.(916) 774-5950. November 15: Soapstone Carving for Adults. Learn the ancient art of carving soapstone, rasping and smoothing this beautiful natural material as you sculpt an animal pendant or shape of your choice. Maidu Interpretive Center, 1960 Johnson Ranch Dr. (916) 772-4242. www.roseville.ca.us/indianmuseum November 22: Creating Soaproot Brushes. A class for adults, 9 a.m.–12 noon, at the Maidu Interpretive Center, 1960 Johnson Ranch Dr. (916) 772-4242. www.roseville.ca.us/indianmuseum December 6–7: Painting Miniatures as Gifts Workshop. Margot Comer will repeat this popular holiday workshop. Students will create six 5” x 7” oil paintings in their choice of animals or florals. Fee: $85. Studio 5 Gallery, 510 Oak St. (916) 771-8955. September–October: Cultural Skills and Nature Hikes. Call for listings. Maidu Interpretive Center, 1960 Johnson Ranch Dr. (916) 772-4242. www.roseville.ca.us/indianmuseum Ongoing: Painting in Oils and Acrylics with Margot Comer. Adults learn about paint, brushes, mediums and other painting tools in oils and acrylics. Drawing, composition, color and value are taught as they are used to start, work and finish successful canvases. A variety of methods introduced, a lively exchange of ideas encouraged. Tues. 10 a.m.–3 p.m. Mon. and Thurs. 5:30–9 p.m. Location: Studio 5 Gallery, 510 Oak Street, Roseville (916) 771-8955 Perspectives November/December 2003 25 Ongoing: Calligraphy Classes with Chris Foster. Italic hand, beginner. Fri. 9:30–11:30 a.m. Michaels Arts and Craft Store. (916) 797-0232. Ongoing: Classes with Gayle Rappaport-Weiland. For full schedule and sign-up information, visit www.art.grappaport.com Ongoing: Roseville Parks & Recreation Cultural Arts Classes. For a full schedule, call (916) 774-5950 or visit www.roseville.ca.us, Parks & Recreation Department, Activity Guide. Rocklin Ongoing: Sierra College Community Education. Day, evening, and weekend classes. Short, fun, interesting classes. Sierra College, 5000 Rocklin Rd. (916) 781-0590 or visit www.sccommed.org Ongoing: City of Rocklin Community Education. A variety of cultural arts classes for children and adults. (916) 632-4100. Auburn November 22–December 6: Small Format Watercolors for Cards & Calendars with Sonja Hamilton. Saturdays, 9:30 a.m.–!2: 30 p.m. at Dewitt Center, Rm. 324B. Register with Placer School for Adults, (530) 885-8585. Ongoing: Handbuilding in Clay with Gerda Imgrund. Beginning and advanced students. At the Old Library Art Studio, Almond St. (530) 887-8216 or (530) 885-9928. Ongoing: CLAYart Classes with Larry Ortiz. Ceramic clay adult classes Tues. & Thurs., 6:30–8:30 p.m. Adult figure sculpture class Mon., 6:30–8:30 p.m. The Arts Building, 808 Lincoln Way. (530) 885-2787. Ongoing: Music, voice, dance, and drama classes at Music & More Arts Academy & Theatre. For schedule, (530) 885-0594 or visit www.musicandmore.net Ongoing: Learn to sing and perform Barbershop-style fourpart harmony. For women of any age or singing experience. Sierra Gold Chorus (member of Sweet Adelines, Int.), under the direction of Sharon Hardie, invites singers to join the chorus every Monday, 7 p.m., at the Bill Burback Hall (Dewitt Center), 11577 E Ave. (530) 885-4202. Alta November 14–16: The Art and Act of Journaling. Wanda Recely and Steve Ceccato show students how to make journaling a creative part of life. Cedar Moon Guest House. For reservations or more information, (530) 389-8718 or [email protected] Publicize YOUR Arts Event Send your CALENDAR listings, along with photos — black and white or color — to Perspectives, 802 Lincoln Way, Auburn, CA 95603 Fax to (530) 885-0348 or email to [email protected] Deadline for the January/February 2004 issue: November 20 26 November/December 2003 Perspectives Willi Chevalier, from Singmaringen, Germany, current freestyle beard champion. The World Beard and Moustache Championship will be held November 1 in Carson City. November 21–23: Art Weekend at Cedar Moon Guest House. Bring your own art and work and play together. Friday dinner until Sunday lunch. For reservations or more information, (530) 389-8718 or [email protected] December 6: Victorian Greeting Cards with Susie Flanagan. Create your own cards from times past. At Cedar Moon Guest House, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. For reservations or more information, (530) 389-8718 or [email protected] Truckee/North Lake Tahoe November 1, 8 & 15: Representation Painting & Drawing Workshop with Anke Hass. For artists of all levels. 12–4 p.m. At North Tahoe Arts, 380 North Lake Blvd., Tahoe City. (530) 581-2787. November 6 & 13: Knitting 101 Workshop with Bev David. For those new to knitting or born-again knitters. 6–9 p.m. At North Tahoe Arts, 380 North Lake Blvd., Tahoe City. (530) 581-2787. November 21–23: Sculptural Felting with Bev David. Learn three different techniques for creating fiber sculptures: needle felting, traditional felting, and felting with an armature. 10 a.m.–4 p.m. At North Tahoe Arts, 380 North Lake Blvd., Tahoe City. (530) 581-2787. November 22: Pointsettia Watercolor Workshop with Jan Foss. Focus on the wet-in-wet technique, the perfect way to capture the soft, delicate beauty of flowers. 10 a.m.–3 p.m. North Tahoe Arts, 380 North Lake Blvd., Tahoe City. (530) 581-2787. December 5–6: Landscape Watercolor Workshop with Heidi Reeves. Exploring depth and atmosphere, light and shawows of a landscape. Class size limited; individual help. 9 a.m.–4 p.m. North Tahoe Arts, 380 North Lake Blvd., Tahoe City. (530) 581-2787. Ongoing: Ballroom dancing with Judy Lee. Couples and singles of all ages. Learn the basics of foxtrot, waltz, tango, rumba, cha-cha, and swing. Beg/Int, Tues., 6:15–7 p.m.; Adv., 7–8 p.m. Private lessons Sundays 5–9 p.m. Tahoe Lake School. North Tahoe Arts, Tahoe City. (530) 581-2787. Outside Placer County November 6, 13 & 20: Glass Mold Making and Slumping Classes with Diane J’Wood. Prerequisite: a Fused Glass class. Students will prepare their own molds and slump glass into their molds. Includes instruction in how to run a kiln for slumping glass, and a review of different forms of glass molds. 6–9 p.m. American River Extension College, (916) 484-8643. Ongoing: Classes with Gayle Rappaport-Weiland. For full schedule and sign-up information, visit www.art.grappaport.com Ongoing: Color Intensive and Landscape Workshops at the School of Light and Color. Taught by master artists. 10030 Fair Oaks Blvd., Fair Oaks. For class schedule, (916) 966-7517 or [email protected] or www.lightandcolor.com Ongoing: Backstage Hands with Connie Omans. Ages 13–18. High School students learn technical skills while earning community service hours, working with spotlight, sound special effects, and stage props. Class is free. Wed.–Sun. 7–8:30 p.m. Finnish Temperance Hall, 4090 Rocklin Rd. (916) 632-4100. Loomis Ongoing: Hands-On Art History (ages 6–8) and Creative Process Through Art (ages 9–11) with Terri Kent-Enborg. Students will explore the Elements of Art and/or the cultural relevance of Art History in a process-oriented environment where each child’s creative thinking process will be encouraged and celebrated. Private tutoring/lessons available. At Creativity Central. (916) 652-4538 or [email protected] Arts for Children Ongoing: McLaughlin Studios of Music offers a complete program of individualized music instruction in flute, clarinet, saxophone, trumpet, piano, guitar, bass, percussion, violin, cello and voice. Jazz and youth symphony classes. (916) 652-6377. Roseville Penryn November 7: Campfire with songs, stories, and marshmellow roasting. 7–8 p.m. Maidu Interpretive Center, 1960 Johnson Ranch Dr. (916) 772-4242 or www.roseville.ca.us/indianmuseum November 25–30: Wood Firing at Penryn Workshop. Kiln loading Nov. 25–26; bring your work to fire. Unloading Dec. 5. The Penryn Workshop, 1394 Orange Hill Lane. (530) 663-2815. November 12: Beginners’ Watercolor Workshop with Gayle Rappaport-Weiland. 6–10 p.m. Roseville Parks & Recreation. (916) 774-5950. Auburn November 15: Carving Soapstone Pendants. Sat., 10 a.m.–12 p.m. Maidu Interpretive Center. (916) 772-4242. Ongoing: CLAYart Classes with Larry Ortiz. After-school Kids’ Program. Tuesday and Thursday, 3:30–5 p.m. The Arts Building, 808 Lincoln Way. (530) 885-2787. November 15: Autumn in the Creek and Woods. Walk for families to explore nature’s fall harvest. 12 - 1:30 p.m. Maidu Interpretive Center, 1960 Johnson Ranch Dr. (916) 772-4242 or www.roseville.ca.us/indianmuseum December 6: Animal Tracks and Tracking. 9–10:30 a.m. Maidu Interpretive Center, 1960 Johnson Ranch Dr. (916) 772-4242 or www.roseville.ca.us/indianmuseum December 13: Bird Watching for Young Naturalists. 9–10:30 a.m. Maidu Interpretive Center, 1960 Johnson Ranch Dr. (916) 772-4242 or www.roseville.ca.us/indianmuseum December 13: Build a Book. Ages 8+. Sat. 12 noon–2.p.m. Maidu Branch Library. (916) 774-5220. Ongoing: Maidu Interpretive Center Children’s Classes, Workshops, and Events. For listings, contact Maidu Interpretive Center, 1960 Johnson Ranch Dr.(916) 772-4242 or www.roseville.ca.us/indianmuseum Ongoing: Fun with Art, Margot Comer. Ages 6–12. Themed sessions on animals, people, plants, objects, or events. Classes explore a variety of skills: drawing and painting, color theory, composition and value study, all in a wide variety of mediums. Wed. 3:45–5 p.m. $15. Studio 5 Gallery, 510 Oak Street (916) 771-8955. Ongoing: Roseville Parks & Recreation Cultural Arts Classes for Children. For a full schedule, call (916) 774-5220 or visit www.roseville.ca.us, Parks & Recreation department, Activity Guide. Rocklin November 13: Watercolor Greeting Cards & Gift Tags with Gayle Rappaport-Weiland. 6–9:30 p.m., Rocklin High School. (916) 781-0590. Ongoing: City of Rocklin Community Education. A variety of cultural arts classes for children. (916) 632-4100. Perspectives November/December 2003 27 Ongoing: Kindermusik Classes. Ages birth to 8. Scholarship funding from Children and Families Commission. Full or partial scholarships available. Piano: Ages 6-18. Guitar: Ages 8-18. Keyboard Konnection, 1515 Grass Valley Highway. For full schedule, (530) 745-0248. Ongoing: Music & More Arts Academy, music, voice, dance and drama classes. Classes for all ages in most instruments taught by master teachers. For schedule, (530) 885-0594 or www.musarts.com Truckee/North Tahoe Ongoing: KidArt Classes with Nina Ski. Age-specific art classes are held at various times at various North Tahoe locations. (530) 582-5555. Ongoing: Piano lessons with Zuzana Balazshazyovr. Weekly lessons for beginners, 8 to 10 students to a group, for six-week sessions. The Tahoe Conservatory of Music. For details, call (530) 546-2356 or visit www.tahoemusicconservatory.com Calls to Artists Deadline November 12. 7th International Open. All female artists invited to submit artwork in all media. Three entries, $20. SASE to Women Made Gallery, 2418 W. Bloomingdale Ave., Chicago, IL 60647. www.womenmade.org. [email protected] Deadline November 15. Absolute Art Gallery reviewing proposals for exhibitions for solo/group shows in 2004. $15/20 slides max. SASE to: Absolute Art Gallery, 2326 Huntington, Dr., San Marino, CA 91108. (626) 285-8585 November 29 – December 14. Holiday Arts & Crafts Faire in San Francisco. Open to artists working in all media. Entry fee. 20 percent commission. Juried. For a pros, (415) 346-8323 or [email protected]. http://demolitionkitchen.com/zono Deadline December 1. Accepting submissions for the Blue Light Press Book Award. Winner & 1st finalist will be published. Seeking imagistic, emotionally honest poems that push the edge. For guidelines, email [email protected] Deadline December 30. Juried Sculpture Competition. Artists from the U. S. and Canada are invited to submit outdoor sculptures to be featured at the Fifth Annual Peace Arch Park International Sculpture Exhibition, May 1 – Sept. 30, 2004. A panel of international art experts and park management personnell will jury the exhibit. Exhibit presented by the United States Canada Peace Anniversary Assn., in cooperation with Washington State Parks. Entry fee $10. Ongoing. For prospectus call (360) 332-7165, email [email protected], or visit www.peacearchpark.org Deadline January 9, 2004. “Home Sweet Home,” National Juried Photography Exhibit at studio2gallery in Austin, Texas. $300 cash award for Best of Show. Exhibit March 4 – April 24, 2004. For prospectus, visit www.studio2gallery.com or call (512-448-2622. Chris Duke will be exhibit his landscape paintings through January 3 at the Rainbow Gallery of Art and Music, in Colfax. Deadline January 15, 2004. National Juried Photo Competition, “Through a Lens — Urban Landscape,” presented by the Coastal Arts League, Half Moon Bay, CA. Exhibition scheduled for March 2004. Prospectus available at www.coastalartsleague.com/photos show or by calling (650) 726-5607. Deadline February 14, 2004. Feats of Clay XVII. Ceramic artists residing or working in the U.S. or its territories are invited to enter contemporary ceramic art (sculptural, functional, or nonfunctional). Show is April 24 – May 23, 2004, at Gladding McBean terra cotta factory, Lincoln, CA. Juried from slides. Juror: Richard Notkin, BFA & MFA, Helena, Montana. Purchase, place and merit awards in 2003 exceeded $16,000. Presented by Lincoln Arts & Culture Foundation. For prospectus send call (916) 645-9713 or send a #10 SASE to Lincoln Arts, 540 F St., Lincoln, CA 95648 or visit www.lincoolnarts.org Ongoing. Galeria de la Raza reviews artists’ work on an ongoing basis — Chicano/Latino artists in all genres. For more info, contact Jaime Cortez, Galeria de la Raza, 2857 24th St., San Francisco, CA 94110. (415) 826-8009. Ongoing. “Rear Window, Night Moves,” San Jose Institute of Contemporary Art. Open: All. Media: Sculpture thata activates the space. For prospectus, (408) 283-8157. Ongoing: California Society of Printmakers, Portfolio Review. Open: All. Media: Printmaking. Fee: $40. Juried. For pros, (415) 905-4296, [email protected]. www.caprintmakears.com Ongoing: Rainbow Gallery of Art and Music, in Colfax, is currently accepting sumbissions for exhibition season. All artists eligible. For info, write to P.O. Box 454, Colfax, CA 95713 or call (530) 346-6906. Ongoing. For singers for the Sierra Gold Chorus, member of Sweet Adelines, Int. Learn to sing barbershop harmony. Women of all ages welcome. Rehearsals Mondays, 7 p.m., Burback Hall, Dewitt Center, Auburn. (916) 663-2105 or (530) 885-4202. For more information visit the California Arts Council Open Call. To exhibiting artists: Great exposure in an historic Auburn Victorian, East-West Galleries at Latitudes Restaurant, 130 Maple Street in Auburn. Artists are invited to submit inquiries for the 2004 exhibit calendar. For details, call art curator Rosie Stilwell, (530) 885-1121. at www.cac.ca.gov 28 November/December 2003 Perspectives Open Call. For accomplished artists who would like to teach. Sierra College Community Education is recruiting new instructors for its ever-changing, growing program. No special degrees required. To request a class proposal, call (916) 781-0590. FYI: A new online directory, ArtChain.com, provides free searchable listings to help people find and connect with art groups. The directory is kept current and is backed by a database containing each organization’s location, art media, cultural focus, services provided, and contact information. Listings in the directory are free for art groups in the U.S. and Canada. Art groups can sign up for a listing in the directory by visiting. www.artchain.com or contacting Bob Nicholson at (408) 431-0674 or [email protected] FYI: www.Artdeadline.com holds a comprehensive listing of job opportunities, grants, percent for art, competitions, and more for artists. There is a small subscription rate for the services. FYI: ArtistsRegister.com showcases thousands of visual artists nationwide. Developed and managed by the nonprofit Western States Arts Federation, this membership-based online community features a fully searchable database of art and artists. See samples of artists’ work, along with their bios, contact details and artistic statements. to our new, renewed and business members, patrons and affiliates — and, of course, our public partners New Members Allen Adler Tom Bennett Geraldyn Bergman Bobbie Brown Francisco & Kara Castro Nelcha M. Cross Robert & Natalie Hancock George & Shirley Hare Marsha Mobley Kilian Carolyn J. Kooi Charmaine Lehman Stanley & Judith Mac Donald Jan & Kristine McDonald Arthur, Winona & Cole Miller Fusae Miyamoto Randi C. Olson Delia Panighetti Greg Perkins Larry Rief Barbara Roth Kathleen E. Ryan Laurice Schwartz Gordon & Rosemary Seck Frank J. Thomy Marianne Walpert Carol L. Walsh Ardath W. Winterowd Renewed Members Jack & Jane Amick Melissa Arnold Michael & Marilyn Barham Katherine K. Beggs Diane Bell Suzanne A. Blaney Marjorie Blodgett Kim Brown Linda Butler Glyneth Cassidy Martha Chatoian Joan A. Chlarson Kerry M. Clark Sandy Delehanty Dianne Derin Bob & Veda Eckard Mario Ferrante Lauren S. Forcella Chris K. Foster Nancy E. Foster James & Irmgard Hirschinger Elaine J. Hollows Jana K. Johnson Mary Ann Kollenberg Anthony La Bouff & Laurie Penn Nancy Langhorn James P. Lares Libbie Miller Kay Muselin Barbara M. Newell Jerry W. Oates Marian O’Neill Carol Owens Polly Roberts Gail Trapnell Robertson Jerry B. Rogers Kathleen Sailor Connie L. Scrima Bill Scrivani Linda S. Shradar Susan A. Smith Richard & Mary Stark Peggy M. Tibbs Rodger & Nancy Tognazzini Virginia Wachob Donna K. Ward Gayle Rappaport-Weiland Barbara Zollner Patrons Eldon A Cotten Kathryn Landreth Andrew Laursen Meech Miyagi of “Art Planet” Dorothy & Richard Sanborn Public Partnerships California Arts Council City of Auburn City of Lincoln City of Rocklin City of Roseville County of Placer Metropolitan Arts Partnership National Endowment for the Arts Placer County Office of Education Placer Union High School District Western Placer Unified School District Perspectives New Business Members Auburn Printers Auburn Placer Disposal Service Audio Partners Publishing Corp. Avantgarden Dancing Dog Productions Depoe Bay Coffee Company Dogwood Interior Design Fat City, Inc. High Hand Nursery High Street Gallery Impressions/Diamond Plastics Lantz & Lantz, C.P.A. Newcastle Produce Pastel Society of the West Coast Affiliates Auburn Arts Commission Auburn Branch American Association of University Women Auburn Symphony North Tahoe Arts Placer Art League Placer County Visitors Council Sierra County Arts Council Windows Art Project November/December 2003 29 An Audience of One: Memorizing Poetry O ne of the many lessons I learned when I edited Perspectives for the arts council in the ‘90s is that art has no borders. Art has fuzzy edges, if it has edges at all. If you’re creative, you’re artistic, even though you don’t paint or sculpt or weave or etch or throw or draw. This very large circle labeled “artists” includes dancers, musicians, singers, and actors. Writers, too, of course. It’s important for artists to cultivate an audience. As a writer without an audience, my words just haunt the ozone, just take up space, no matter how good they are. An artist needs an audience. More than that, an artist needs an appreciative audience, people who know what quality is, who are grateful for it and want it. A gratifying audience is one that understands the effort involved, the talent necessary to move an audience, and knows that excellence doesn’t come easy. Maybe it’s an art to be a receptive audience. That takes talent, too, and knowledge. So within that fuzzy circle of art also lives the receiver of that art: the viewer, the listener, the reader. The audience completes the circle. This is a roundabout introduction to a brief discussion of poetry. Last December I read an op-ed piece in The New York Times by poet and teacher Carol Muske-Dukes that extolled the virtues and the pleasures of memorizing and reciting poetry — and, as she wrote, “the power of reciting in order to share a poem or to comfort oneself with its words.” You may see their trunks arching in the woods / Years afterwards, trailing their leaves on the ground / Like girls on hands and knees that throw their hair / Before them over their heads to dry in the sun. — Robert Frost, “Birches” 30 November/December 2003 Perspectives I was so interested in that idea — of making a poem my own by memorizing it and then reciting it — that I started All Poetry Aloud!, a quirky offbeat group of poetry memorizers and reciters. We meet once a month and recite and read poetry to and with each other, and we get a lot of pleasure out of it. When I work on a poem to memorize it (and it does take work, let me tell you — and time and patience), I am that poet’s audience. I receive those words, and the sound of those words. I take them into me, and take delight in rolling them around in my head, heart, and mouth, on my tongue, and hearing their music. The long willows drowse / on the shoulders of the running water, / and sleep from much music / joined songs of day-end: feathery throats and stony waters / in a choir chanting new psalms. — Carl Sandburg, “Prairie Waters by Night” It’s a rare thing, memorizing poetry, because time is at a premium these days, and we have so many demands pulling at us. And we can say the same thing about art appreciation. But taking time to appreciate art is good for the spirit. It makes for a whole person. I say the same thing’s true for memorizing poetry. For those who need statistics, I’ve read studies proving that memorization is good for the brain. The more you exercise your brain, the stronger it gets and the better you feel. Poetry memorization is good for the heart, too. The March issue of GreatLife magazine, referring to a recent article in the International Journal of Cardiology, extolled the effects on the heart of reciting poetry: “The stress-releas- The benefits of knowing poems by heart by Susan Rushton ing effect of guided recitation of poetry could lead to deep heart relaxation afterward... after reciting poetry (for half an hour), participants’ heart rates slowed to match their breathing rate in ‘harmonic interaction.” Life has loveliness to sell, / Music like a curve of gold, / Scent of pine trees in the rain, / Eyes that love you, arms that hold, / And for your spirit’s still delight, / Holy thoughts that star the night. — Sara Teasdale, “Barter” Finally, if those very encouraging studies aren’t good enough for you, here’s this: I work hard to find reasons to feel good about myself, and memorizing poetry accomplishes that. I tell you with amazement and satisfaction that since January, I’ve memorized 26 poems, including The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock, that meandering white elephant by T.S. Eliot. Before I started All Poetry Aloud!, I’d assumed that memorizing that after-dinner speech of a poem (it runs nearly 1100 words) was impossible. But I’ve done it, and if I can do that, I can do anything. Now that I’ve memorized them, I have them. I’m their audience whenever I want to be, and possessing these words and these rhythms and sounds is a wonderful thing. It’s a pleasure I sincerely recommend. If you’re interested in All Poetry Aloud!, give me a call at 530-878-7938, or e-mail me at [email protected]. F or I have known them all already, known them all: H ave known the evenings, mornings, afternoons, I have measured out my life with coffee spoons. I have known the voices dying with a dying fall B eneath the music from a farther room. — from The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock, T. S. Eliot Besides memorizing poetry, Susan Rushton writes a weekly column for the Auburn Journal and runs Silver Screen Classic Movies once a month at the AuburnPlacer County Library. Perspectives November/December 2003 31 All people All arts All the time Please Support the California Arts Council To advocate call 916-322-6555 THE ARTS COUNCIL OF PLACER COUNTY Non-Profit Org. 808 Lincoln Way U. S. Postage PAID Auburn, California 95603-4807 Permit #150 Auburn, CA
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