Thursday, April 19, 2007

Spring Dance Concert April 20 and 21




Enjoy contemporary and classical dance by guest artists, faculty and students in a sophisticated and cutting edge program at the Colorado State University Dance Division's Spring Dance Concert on Friday and Saturday, April 20 and 21 at 8:00 pm and on Saturday, April 21 at 2:00 p.m. in the Lory Student Center Theatre.
The Spring Dance Concert displays the versatility and depth of the Colorado State dance program featuring dance and choreography by students and faculty members Chung-Fu Chang and Melissa Corr, in addition to choreography by distinguished guest artist, Gabriel Masson.

About Guest Artist Masson
For the Spring Concert, celebrated guest artist Gabriel Masson's unique choreographic vision is back by popular demand. Known for creating dances that fill the stage with movement, Masson has crafted a new large-scale work for twelve student dancers with a much-anticipated appearance by faculty members Chung-Fu Chang and Jane Slusarski-Harris. The dance, "Of Another Place," deals with the concept of memory and how easily human beings can float between the past and the present. With a score by British composer Graham Fitkin that alternates between driving intensity and imperceptible calm, Masson has created a world within a world, where time is relative and what seems real could just as easily be a memory.

Gabriel Masson's career as a choreographer, performer and teacher spans 20 years. Since 1989, he has choreographed over 30 pieces for professional and repertory dance companies and from 1997 to 2002 he served as artistic director of his own national touring company. Masson has an international reputation as a teacher, has taught and performed at festivals worldwide, and is on the rotating faculty of several prestigious dance festivals.

After receiving an M.F.A. from NYU's Tisch School of the Arts he was on faculty there from 1990-1995 and from 1997-2001 he served as artist-in-residence at the University of the Arts, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Currently, Masson is a guest artist at the University of Colorado/Boulder for the 2006-07 academic year.

Dance Faculty
In addition to choreography by guest artist Masson, audiences will also experience choreography and performance by Colorado State's distinguished dance faculty. Assistant Professor of Dance Chung-Fu Chang will present a dance, "Ash Wind" by six dancers that draws inspiration from musician Alan Hovhaness's "Visionary Landscape." The piece fuses rich, poetic, ritualistic, and profoundly spiritual Chinese cultural heritage with Western dance tradition to portray life as a grain of sand that disappears traceless in the wind.

"In/Out," also choreographed by Chung-Fu Chang, uses Chinese calligraphy, a work of art conveys the moral integrity, character, emotions, spatial awareness and esthetic feelings, as a metaphor for kinetic space. In this piece, the dancers and movements abstract from Chinese writing characters and transform into an infinite universe.

The solid talents of the dance program will also be displayed as five Colorado State students perform "Bonne Amies," a contemporary ballet piece choreographed by faculty member Melissa Corr that she explains reflects the "wonderful playfulness and friendly warmth" she witnessed between this group of dancers, which influenced the movements and groupings she selected.
Spring Dance Concert audiences will also see the faculty selections of the most innovative and highest quality dances from the department's "Studio Night," an entirely student-run production held in early April featuring a diverse selection of student choreography and dance with both solo and group dances ranging from ballet to hip-hop and from modern to tap.

Ticket Information
Ticket holders are invited to compliment their evening of dance with lunch or dinner at Fish, a sponsor of all of the Colorado State Dance Division's Dance Month performances, which includes the Spring Dance Concert on April 20 and 21, and "Mind Body & Soul" - the Spring Senior Dance Showcase on April 26 and 27.

Fish, located at 150 West Oak in Old Town Fort Collins, is offering all Dance Month ticket holders 10 percent off the entire food portion of their bill during April. Tickets are $6 for CSU students, $10 for seniors, and $12 for the general public, plus a small campus box office service charge. Tickets can be purchased at http://www.csutix.com or by calling (970) 491-4TIX. Performances are popular and advance ticket purchase is highly recommended.
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The School of the Arts at Colorado State University provides an enriched venue in which the study and practice of Art, Dance, Music and Theatre are nurtured and sustained by building the skills and knowledge needed by future generations of arts professionals to become contributors to the essential vitality of our culture and society.

For more information, visit http://www.CSUSchooloftheArts.com or contact the Department of Dance at (970) 491-6330.
Contact: Jeanna Nixon Email: Jeanna.Nixon@colostate.edu Phone Number: (970) 491-1584

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Aspen Film Fest


An Aspen Film Presentation.Movies at the Wheeler: LIVE AND BECOME.
Live and BecomeFrance/Israel, 2005, 140 min.
Radu Mihaileanu directs.Yael Abecassis, Roschdy Zem, Moshe Agazai, Mosche Abebe, Sirak M. Sabahat star.

Aspen Film and the Wheeler present this return screening of Aspen Filmfest 2006 Audience Award-winner Live and Become, an epic, emotional story of sacrifice and survival. Amidst the confusion of a refugee camp during the Ethiopian famine of the mid-1980s, a mother, desperate to save her young son, places him with a group of Falashas (Ethiopian Jews) bound for Israel as part of "Operation Moses." Warned to never reveal his true identity, the boy, now called Schlomo, grows up pretending to be both Jewish and an orphan in modern Israel. He adopts Judaism and Western values, but must also confront the cultural divides - black and white, secular and orthodox, war and peace - that compete for the soul of his country. Warmly embraced by his new family, Schlomo maintains his secret as he comes of age, but growing tension between his hidden truth and outward facade challenges his deepest fears and his never-forgotten desire to one day reunite with his mother. Featuring a succession of remarkable performances by actors portraying Schlomo as a child, adolescent, and young man, Live and Become is brave, complex, moving, and compassionate. It is both the story of one small boy and anyone who starts over, reborn in a new land

Trinitiy House Corporation

Trinity Housing Corporation
The Kaleidoscope Youth Program (KYP) is a six-week, all-volunteer-taught, laugh-a-minute summer program for kids at Island Grove Village Apartments (IGV) and the surrounding community. IGV is a HUD (Housing and Urban Development) low-income housing complex in Greeley’s impoverished, primarily Hispanic northeast side, and KYP is one of the few, free summer programs available which provides structured, supervised activities. The CCA sponsored “Visiting Artists Series” (VAS) artists quite literally brought a variety of folk artists and cultures to these kids in ways no MTV or X-Box ever can, by engaging, intriguing, and educating them through hands-on, participatory entertainment.

Over 100 kids from IGV, the City of Greeley Summer Recreation Program, and a nearby Habitat for Humanity community listened, sang, rhymed, drummed, chanted, danced, and created with Native Americans, a Cowboy Poet, and an Hispanic folk artist. They asked youthfully-honest questions and received direct answers, even when the questions definitely would be considered inappropriate in the MTV, X-Box, adult world. They touched and shared, dreamed aloud and bragged about their own family heritage. The “Visiting Artist Series” brought real people – people of heart and culture – into these kids' community and showed them in tangible and wonderfully intangible ways that their lives could extend beyond the walls of a low-income housing project and maybe even as far away as their own roots, their own culture, their own heritage.

George Antuna, a member of Teresa McNeill’s Morningstar Drum Group, chanted traditional songs with silly lyrics about Mickey and Minnie Mouse, low-riders, and getting sick in school, passing his homemade drums around and encouraging the kids to pound away. It was hot, over 100 degrees, and sweat ran down his face, even in the shade of the large tree where he sat cross-legged in a casual circle with the kids. He brought a friend with him, introducing him as "Tom," who, it turned out, grew up at Island Grove Village Apartments. George told of his own involvement in gangs, the trouble that landed him in prison, while Tom waved a burning sage bundle in the air. “I had to be put away, far away from my family, in prison” George said, “before I could face who I was and then who I wanted to be.”

At the end of his presentation, he moaned a long, sonorous prayer he said he wanted to offer up to all the boys and girls around him. When he finished, the girl sitting next to him said that it looked like he was crying. “I was,” George said, “for you, for all of you, so that you might learn today that you only need to look inside yourself, to your family, to your roots, to find out who you are, instead of drugs and gangs and trouble.” George and Tom received a lot of hugs as they made their way to their car. “He’s pretty cool,” the girl said as kids wandered back to the classroom. “It’s like, you know, he’s really kind of one of us, you know?"

The VAS turned out to be so much more enriching than the participants imagined it would be; wide-eyed kids finding beauty in simple art, the honesty and openness of the questions and the answers, the awakening of cultural pride in the young and old alike. Even after the last cowboy poem or beat of a handmade drum has faded, the wonder and the excitement of discovery will continue for years to come.Excerpted from Final Report Trinity Housing Corporation, by Thom Mahoney

Monday, April 9, 2007

2nd Annual Art and Science Exhibition April 10 & 11


All Colorado State University students, faculty and staff are invited to the 2nd Annual Art and Science Exhibition. The Exhibition celebrates the creative energy of both Colorado State Univeristy scientists and artists and the product of their endeavors.
The Exhibition will be held in the Lory Student Center North Ballroom April 10 and 11.
The Exhibition opening is 10 a.m. Tuesday, followed at 7 p.m. by a reception and the presentation of awards.
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Ties between scientific inquiry and artistic practice
This exhibition showcases the creative energies of students, faculty and staff at Colorado State University and exemplifies the common ties between scientific inquiry and artistic practice. This includes artists who use aspects of science for their artistic inspiration or utilize fundamental principals of science in the creation of their art.
It also includes scientists who utilize or generate art in the creation of scientific models and imagery used to illustrate their concepts, theories and discoveries. This exhibition acknowledges and celebrates the wide range of creative output found in the juxtaposition of these distinct yet undeniably related disciplines.
Jurors for the 2007 Art and Science Exhibition are Patrick Fahey, Chair of the Department of Art; Ann Gill, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts; and Dan Bush, Chair of the Department of Biology.
All are invited to attend.
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The Art and Science Exhibition is sponsored by both the College of Natural Sciences and the College of Liberal Arts.
For additional information, visit http://www.natsci.colostate.edu/artscience or contact exhibition organizer Hannah Shadis, at purlyzig@hotmail.

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Heart of the Cowboy

The Durango Arts Center is hosting an exhibit entitled, Heart of the Cowboy, in association with the Durango Cowboy Gathering this month. The exhibit features the large oil paintings and drawings of Jim Bramlett, saddles of Lisa and Loren Skyhorse, Hats by Durango Custom Hat and Saddles, and a very special collection of works on paper by Will James (from the Collection of Brian Winter). Will James’ and Jim Bramlett’s books are also included in the exhibition. Senator Jim Isgar attended the opening reception and presented a check from the Colorado Council on the Arts which supports the Durango Arts Center’s arts educational outreach programs. This exhibit has offered a wealth of education programs to the children in the 9-R school district including the visual arts and cowboy poetry. In the attached photos, you will see a docent tour of the exhibit lead by DAC docents for the children of Park Elementary School. In the photograph of the check presentation, the participants (from left to right are, Brian Wagner, DAC Executive Director; Loren and Lisa Skyhorse, saddle makers; Susan Anderson, DAC Exhibits Director; Senator Jim Isgar; Brian Winter, Collector; Jim Bramlett, painter and author. The painting in the background of the check presentation is of the Durango’s Diamond Belle Saloon by Jim Bramlett.

Friday, March 23, 2007

Lindsay Obermeyer | Chicago

Lindsay Obermeyer has been making art for longer than she can remember. Both of her grandmothers encouraged this passion, providing endless bits of ribbon, yarn, lace, etc. At 17 she announced she would be majoring in underwater basket weaving, but soon decided that mastering an 8 harness floor loom was more challenging. Since graduation, her art has been exhibited in galleries and museums around the United States.

Interests
knitting, beading, embroidery, felting, dyeing, weaving, medical history, etymology, cooking, gardening, blues, jazz, funk, and last but not least - eating chocolate.