Archive for January, 2010

Art-Fully Furnishing a Room

Posted by Doreen on Thursday, January 28th, 2010

Furnished Room

Surface coverings by Gary Kachadourian

There’s nothing better than learning about the making and meaning of art directly from those who conceive and create it. I did just that in a large Pigtown industrial building on Saturday, January 23, when artists in UMBC’s Imaging and Digital Arts program opened their studios to strangers.

Meghan Flanigan, an accomplished dancer/choreographer, exhibited a riveting split screen video that juxtaposed images of her crawling through a brilliantly sunlit but desolate urban site. If I hadn’t become dizzy from the multiple viewpoints, I could have watched this absorbing performance for hours. (Visit Movement Research Blog, to get a real sense of the role video plays in Meghan’s work.)

 

 

YouTube Preview Image

 

I also took the opportunity to reconnect with that great friend-of-the-arts-in-Baltimore, Gary Kachadourian, who until last summer was Visual Arts Coordinator for the Baltimore Office of Promotion & the Arts. For many years, Gary dedicated himself to serving the needs of other artists. Now, here he is, in his mid-fifties, pursuing his own work. He’s back in school, immersed in new projects, surrounded (as usual) by the next creative generation. But here’s the best part: he’s as imaginative, energetic, and edgy as any MICA undergraduate I’ve ever seen. There’s the power of art-full living!

Gary Kachadourian

Gary was exhibiting his new life-size prints, enlarged Xeroxes of extraordinarily detailed 8-by-10 inch pencil drawings. He often depicts items or surfaces we walk past every day, yet his images elicit potent memories. 

As a label explained about his authentic scale reproduction of a 3-by-4 foot section of a brick wall from a 7 Eleven Store in Baltimore County, Maryland: “[It] will hopefully give you, the purchaser, a warm feeling and a memory of a good moment. Maybe it was that pack of cigarettes that got you through a tough time, or that Slurpee that cooled you on a hot day, or maybe it’s that 16 ounce cup of Mountain Blend that gives you the strength to walk into work each morning.” For me, these drawings evoke memories of the New York suburbia of my childhood, half a century away on Long Island.

Best of all, these Xeroxes can be assembled to create imaginary rooms.  On Saturday, they were configured to suggest the corner of a furnished room with brick walls; an over-stuffed sofa; a television showing a blurry black-and-white image; a festive Christmas tree complete with ornaments and lights; and a view of a parked Volvo with a McDonald’s in the distance. 

Gary’s furnished room is unquestionably the perfect gift for the man who has everything and for the man who has nothing (think hapless single or divorced man). A 3-by-4 foot section of brick wall is only $9.99. You could find good use for dozens of these! There is also a print of a cinderblock wall—I will not even speculate on who might be the appropriate recipient of that item. And there’s more to come soon. Gary is already experimenting with drawing asphalt and promises that a dropped ceiling is in the offing.

For those of us who love his beautiful drawings of grass and weeds, he’s still at work on those in parallel to these built spaces and surfaces. Maybe more will pop up in the springtime.

  • If you can’t wait for spring, you can see one of Gary’s installations in the upcoming Annex Theater & Gallery exhibition Parts and Labor. Curated by Michael Farley, the exhibition presents works from more than 30 of Baltimore’s visual and performing artists.
  • If you can’t make the opening of Parts and Labor on February 6 at 7 p.m., mark your calendars now for the closing on March 6 at 7 p.m. Here I believe you’ll begin to see the huge impact made by the recent Baltimore Community Foundation “confetti grants.” The Annex will literally be transformed!

Vampires at Church?

Posted by Doreen on Monday, January 25th, 2010

Collinsport

Where in Charm City can you find vampires residing happily in a church? 2640, of course! That’s 2640 Saint Paul Street, Saint John’s Church, a regular venue for everything from vampires to great food, compelling music and performances, or themes of social justice.

On Friday, January 15, the lofty-but-crumbling interior of this church became the set for Collinsport: Onward Phlebotomogical Vempiricism: An Epistemological Collapse in the Dark Shadows performed by Geodesic Gnome, a local super group that specializes in extraordinary, out-of-the-box work. The play, John Berndt’s directorial debut, was written by four of Baltimore’s most talented artists—Stephanie Barber, Berndt, Connor Kizer, and Ric Royer.  From both the visual and the auditory perspective, this performance was a remarkably immersive experience. 

Collinsport is a 21st-century interpretation of Dark Shadows, the late 1960s Gothic soap opera. A campy chronicle of the mysterious Collins family, Dark Shadows wove supernatural elements into its plot, reaching the apex of its popularity with the introduction of vampire Barnabas Collins. This vampire remained a lead character in Friday’s performance despite his physical absence from the stage.

The play began with playwright Berndt’s hilarious portrayal of a pretentious JHU professor of philosophy lecturing on “paradox paradox.”  He then introduced “a different medium to travel in,” a convoluted play-within-the-play, which opened with a dream sequence clip from Dark Shadows

The young Victoria Winters rode a train to her future as a nanny for the peculiar Collins family. As her thoughts were projected on a screen and the Geodesic Gnome actors moved on stage, three screens simultaneously played dizzying loops of black-and-white interior vignettes from the vintage soap opera. The actors cast huge silhouettes over the moving images behind them, literally becoming dark shadows themselves. 

“An unexplained Man in the Iron Mask (Connor Kizer)
huddled in the background or intruded on dialogue
with a loud vacuum.”

The words the actors spoke also moved in loops, often beginning and ending with the same impenetrable patterns of words. Jason McGuire (Ric Royer) explained: “And just when we all thought that we thought it couldn’t get any stranger in Collinsport, yes, a strangely familiar stranger arrived to Collinsport and introduced himself as Barnabas Collins, a long lost relative who now just wants to live in the old house, the old house, the old house, the old house, the old house.”

For ambiance, there was eerie music, the howling of wolves, and disconcerting sounds (my favorite was the anxiety-provoking rumblings of sheet metal flexed by actors whose faces were concealed by mirrors). An unexplained Man in the Iron Mask (Connor Kizer) huddled in the background or intruded on dialogue with a loud vacuum. And mimicking the awkward soap-opera-a-day production value of Dark Shadows, a videographer accompanied by a gaffer (Peter Blasser, absent his tuba) were constantly tripping through scenes and interrupting our view, a suggestion that this performance, like the original soap opera, was really less about us as an audience and more about being filmed for daily television consumption.

Until it was far too late, the Collinses and their odd friends never seemed to realize that Barnabas was a vampire, this despite his inadequately explained origins, his strange behavior, and the prominent display of his terrifying black-and-white vampire portrait. Victoria Winters (Stephanie Barber) explained ruefully after the entire cast joined the undead: “We were unwilling to admit that a vampire might have gotten past our constant vampire vigilance. Realize the immense illusion of credit that we lived under and proceed to an unending and total collapse of all our systems and all our customs.” This government-speak felt like a page out of the national reaction to our 2008 financial implosion or the recent near miss with airborne terrorism in Detroit.

YouTube Preview Image

This evening epitomized Baltimore’s vibrant art scene—its creativity, innovation, and highly collaborative spirit. Most of the performers with Geodesic Gnome have and will reconfigure fluidly with other groups—John Berndt as a visual artist and musician with THUS, The Multiphonic Choir, Baltimore Afrobeat Society, the Red Room and the experimental music festival High Zero; Ric Royer, as poet, creator of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley and until recently,  impresario of The Lof/t at the Load of Fun; Connor Kizer as a part of Wham City, Whartscape, and Santa Dads; Peter Blasser as an experimental musician and installation artist at High Zero and elsewhere; and Alexandra Macchias a performer with the a cappella group Lexie Mountain Boys.  

And I am just on the sidelines of this scene—I am sure every single participant in Collinsport leads an art-full life, with continuous, constantly morphing performances!

  • If you missed this one-time play, on February 5 catch an installment of the Los Solos Series, a monthly performance highlighting the ground-breaking work of female artists. Curated by Jackie Milad and Bonnie Jones, best known for the Transmodern Festival, this performance at the 5th Dimension in the H & H Building will feature Baltimore’s Ayako Kataoka, a musician and movement artist, and Asima Chremos, a Chicago-based dancer.

Stew on This!

Posted by Doreen on Friday, January 15th, 2010

Photography by Edward Winter

Photograph by Edward Winter

Three idealistic young artists work as a collective in East Baltimore as the ironically named Baltimore Development Cooperative. Each summer since 2007, they’ve planted an urban farm/community garden at Participation Park (formerly vacant land they grabbed as squatters).

When the first frost arrives and the cultivating season ends, BDC expands its radical, urban practice. You have a chance to find out how by attending STEW, a once-a-month experience at 2640; the next feast will be Friday, January 22

Co-organized with Red Emma’s Bookstore Coffeehouse, this grassroots effort asks, in its organizers’ words: “Can we build urban democracy over a collective dinner table?” This is about the meaning of sharing food, conversation, and values, all in a magical stew of its own.

The spirited DIY event is also about challenging established 
institutions … to seek new, more transformative roles in
the 21st century or risk becoming irrelevant …”

I was fortunate enough to make it to STEW’s inaugural dinner in late November. There, 70 or so people—both friends and strangers—came together over organic, locally sourced, and incredibly delicious food (vegan options abounded). Thanksgiving was still in the air. But here those warm feelings were without the stress.

STEW dinner table

Photograph by Edward Winter

BDC artists Scott Berzofsky, Dane Nester, and Nicholas Wisniewski, all MICA grads and co-winners of the 2009 Walter and Janet Sondheim Prize, collaborated with chef Matt Day and his friends and family to produce a memorable four-course meal. Without question, they served the very best carrots I have ever eaten.  

All of this was $10 or less based on a sliding scale so no one would be turned away.

Courses were punctuated by presentations from three worthy local initiatives. We were then asked to choose which of these would win the money raised from dinner. With true democracy in action, all three won awards:

  • $175 for Odonian Records (a record label, CD-R duplication service, and distribution network for social justice musicians);
  • $175 for the Annex Theatre Gallery (a new visual arts component for a theatre group already performing and making puppets at the Copy Cat Annex);
  • $350 for The Baltimore Algebra Project (a democratic, student-run program focused on tutoring math one-on-one to middle and high school students).

The spirited DIY event is also about challenging established institutions (for example, museums and philanthropic organizations) to seek new, more transformative roles in the 21st century or risk becoming irrelevant to the communities we believe we serve.  Artists like those who lead BDC are redefining the meaning and purpose of art as well as the way we experience their work. This is not about our looking and thinking; it is about full participation—mind, body, and soul. I have to wonder: what would that look like at the BMA?  

Last night, I was lucky enough to run into the Baltimore Development Cooperative at the Metro Gallery and snag an advance copy of the menu and program for the next STEW.  This will be great!

  • Matt Day and friends are cooking again. You’ll have four courses:
    • Micro greens and apples with bread and Baltimore honey;
    • A bowl of beets and winter vegetable broth with thyme;
    • For stew, chicken and dumplings or (presumably for the vegans among you) root vegetables and potato dumplings;
    • And, finally, your choice from a stunning list of sweets that includes handmade ice cream and apple dumplings.
  • You’ll get to vote for funds to benefit one of three significant community initiatives (I’d find it hard to choose just one):
    • Open Space, an artist run gallery and performance space in Remington.
    • Baltimore Free Use, a program at the Men’s Center in East Baltimore that provides community members with the repair and fabrication skills to use discarded materials creatively.
    • Wide Angle Youth Media, a community arts group that aims to give voice to Baltimore City’s youth.

For tickets, stop by Red Emma’s. For more information, visit www.stewbaltimore.org or email stew@redemmas.org.

First Day, The Right Way

Posted by Doreen on Monday, January 11th, 2010

Creative Alliance

After too much of everything on New Year’s Eve (drinking, eating, being with friends who are not friends, forcing yourself to stay awake until the ball drops), where do you belong on the first day of the year? Or as it was this year, the first day of the decade?

The answer: at the Creative Alliance’s First Day, with poets and musicians, who provide free—and inspirational—entertainment.  At First Day, I found myself in a dark and soothing room, with opportunities to observe or jump into the art-full moments.

This series was put together by Christine Stewart, writer, instructor, and program director for arts in education, literary arts, and children’s events with the Maryland State Arts Council. Each part of First Day was curated by a different writer or collective, demonstrating (as if we ever doubted it) that writers are a very important part of Baltimore’s art-full life. Curators included Julie Fisher of Poetry in Baltimore, Gregg Wilhelm of CityLit Project, Stephen Reichert of Smartish Pace, Justin Sirois, the Creative Alliance’s Open Minds, and Linda Joy Burke.

Charlie Clark and Stephen Reichert

Charlie Clark and Stephen Reichert of Smartish Pace

I caught Justin Sirois’s segment and I loved it. It was casual and unpredictable. During it, Lauren Bender read poems she wrote that day. They were her New Year’s resolutions, but we in the audience got to vote on her choices for the year ahead—from alternatives like compiling an illustrated timeline about the Middle Ages or imagining what to do with an  L. Ron Hubbard implant.  Adam Trice, lead guitar and vocals in his “graveyard country rock band” Red Sammy, presented his Christmas wish list, both hilarious and touching.  Jamie Gaughran-Perez of Narrow House, at work on tales about a super heroine, delivered the funniest line I’ve heard in a while: “I’m not gay, I’m from the future.”

If you’d like to hear some poetry, or raise the profile of literature among your New Year’s resolutions:

•Stop by the Cyclops Book Store, formerly Baltimore Chop, in Station North Arts & Entertainment District at 30 West North Avenue. You’ll often encounter a performance or reading there.

•Join a poetry discussion group. The Maryland Writers Association, Baltimore  hosts theirs the first Saturday of every month. Professional freelancers, published authors, and aspiring writers gather for it and other MWAB events throughout the month.

•Wander through the stacks at the Enoch Pratt Free Library branch nearest you—or venture over to Central, where there’s always something fascinating—and free!