Posts Tagged ‘Ohio arT’

Artist Hopes to Make Connection With Phone Booth

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

It has nearly vanished from the American landscape. Some teenagers have never even seen one before.

But the once ever-present telephone booth has popped up on a street corner in this southwest Ohio village as part of an unusual art project and a statement about private communications in the let-everybody-know-what-I’m-doing age of Twitter and MySpace.

The project is the brainchild of Tokyo-born artist Migiwa Orimo, who had to search high and low for a phone booth before finding one in the Windy City.

“It was really in bad condition,” Orimo said. “The whole thing was black, pitted from Chicago weather on the street.”

Orimo polished up the metal structure, replaced its broken panes of glass and installed a mustard-colored telephone with a black rotary dial.

But it’s not a working phone booth. It’s a living interactive sculpture that will serve as a stage for poetry readings, light shows and dance performances over the next year.

Beginning Saturday, people will be able to walk into the phone booth, pick up the receiver and listen to a recorded rendition of the Spoon River Anthology, a collection of short poems published in 1915 that describe the life of a fictional small town. Seventy actors and others with ties to Yellow Springs were recruited to read the poetry.

“I like the intimate performance space,” said Rani Deighe Crowe, who came up with the poetry project. “You listen to this over the phone, which gives it that extra personal confessional quality.”

Crowe said she rejects the notion of trying to reach the largest possible audience, opting instead for a performance that can only be delivered to one person at a time.

“I’ve been really interested in trying to reach the smallest possible audience,” she said.

Orimo said she is trying to break the traditional boundary between the artist and audience, where people taking in the performance at the phone booth also become part of the art.

Orimo said the project is her reaction to Twitter, MySpace, surveillance cameras and other technologies designed to enable people to view and be viewed by others.

“Knowingly or unknowingly we do that every second of our lives nowadays,” she said. “But it’s all in a different kind of sphere — a virtual sphere. I wanted to sort of bring that question once again to the physical level by letting people see this piece on the street corner, which is not going to move anywhere.”

Kathy Thorne stopped to take a look at the phone booth earlier this week. She acknowledged that she is a bit overwhelmed by high-tech communication and yearns for the past.

“I wish I’d get letters from people from the mail instead of stupid e-mail,” said Thorne, of Sarasota, Fla.

U.S. pay phones — including telephone booths — numbered 2.6 million at their height in 1998, according to AT&T. The decline in pay phone usage was in part due to the growth of other communications channels such as cell phones.

While the Yellow Springs phone booth had a nostalgic effect on people old enough to remember them, it was a mystery to young people who passed by. One teen didn’t know how to open the folding door. Others commented that they remember rotary dials only from visiting their grandparents.

But Orimo has made a concession to the Twitter generation.

Inside the booth above the telephone is a digital clock/calendar. Orimo hopes that those who experience the phone booth art will record their thoughts on a log inside the booth. She plans to document what effect the phone booth has on the community over the next year.

“It redefines the notion of what an art space can be, while appropriating an everyday public facility as a place for intimate contemplation and even inspiration,” said Anne Pasternak, director of Creative Time Inc., a New York City-based organization that commissions and presents public arts projects.

Other artists have used phone booths to make statements.

Last year, Dylan Mortimer installed phone booths in New York City, Jackson, Tenn., and Cedar Rapids, Iowa, that were designed to resemble confessionals. Outfitted with flip-down kneelers, the booths were aimed at sparking dialogue about prayer.

The Yellow Springs phone booth sits on a downtown corner next to an ice cream shop and an array of wooden cafe tables. And even though it’s only been on the street for a few weeks, the phone booth has already made a splash.

Someone put a helium balloon inside the booth. And a cardboard robot appeared there last week and then vanished as quickly as it came.

“People are already finding a relationship with it,” Orimo said.

More at: www.telephoneboothproject.blogspot.com
Written by: James Hannah, The Associated Press
Source: www.daytondailynews.com

Ohiopyle Over the Falls Festival

Friday, August 21st, 2009
Outdoors: Over the falls

It’s time to go over the falls again.

The Ohiopyle Over the Falls Festival, the one time in the year it is legal for kayakers to go over the 18-foot-high falls in that Fayette County town, will be on Saturday, from 9 a.m. through a town party that begins at 7:30 p.m.

Whitewater paddlers will be able to race over the falls, and compete in a river slalom course upstream and a surfing and acrobatics event.

The town party in the evening will feature live music, vendors and pictures from the event. The falls will be illuminated after dark.

The event is sponsored by American Whitewaters, the Pennsylvania Organization for Watersheds & Rivers and the state Department of Conservation & Natural Resources.

Fees to participate in events range from $20 to $30. Observation is free.

Details: FallsRace.com.

— Bob Karlovits

Theater: One-acts take the spotlight

The Pittsburgh New Works Festival kicks off its 19th season Sunday with the first of two evenings of staged readings.

The annual festival is dedicated to fostering the development of original one-act plays. Each year, it debuts 18 original one-acts, each produced by a different theater company. Six receive staged readings during the first two weekends in groups of three. Over each of the remaining four weekends, a different trio of plays receive fully staged performances.

The free staged readings begin at 7 p.m. Sunday for:

• “No Flash Bright Enough” by James Sievert of Switzerland, produced by Actors Civic Theatre.

• “The Desperate Man” by Michele Scaramucci of Belle Vernon, produced by Veronica’s Veil Players.

• “The Mantua-Maker” by Elizabeth Orndorff of Danville, Ky., produced by Comtra Theater.

This year, the Pittsburgh New Works Festival has moved to the Father Ryan Arts Center, 420 Chartiers Ave., McKees Rocks.

Details: 412-394-3353 or www.pittsburghnewworks.org.

— Alice T. Carter

Music: Growing in importance

When the local band Meeting of Important People released its self-titled album in March, expectations were low, especially given the ongoing plight of the record industry. Then things started happening: airplay on WYEP-FM, some good reviews and, just recently, a deal with Authentik, a label based in Los Angeles that’s run by Scott Austin, formerly a creative executive with Maverick/Warner Bros. and Capitol Records.

Authentik repackaged the album as a digital release. Recently, “Meeting of Important People” reached No. 11 on iTunes’ independent album charts; the group also was listed as a featured band on the iTunes site. A video of the song “Brittney Lane Don’t Care,” directed by Thom Glunt (Anti-Flag, Iggy Pop) and shot at a Bloomfield warehouse featuring the group towering over a city constructed from cardboard, will be released soon.

Josh Verbanets (guitar, vocals), Aaron Bubenheim (bass) and Matt Miller (drums, vocals) will perform at 9:30 p.m. Friday at Thunderbird Cafe in Lawrenceville. Ben Hardt and His Symphony and Jupiter One also are on the bill.

Admission: $5.

Details: 412-682-0177 or www.thunderbirdcafe.net.

— Rege Behe

Dance: ‘Step Touch’ under the stars

They’ll be dancing only the hits tonight when Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre presents its annual outdoor performance at Hartwood Acres, part of the Allegheny County Summer Concert Series.

Given the success of choreographer Dwight Rhoden’s “Step Touch” at its premiere performances in March, it’s not surprising the ballet is presenting it again today. Performed to music by Charlie Thomas’ Drifters and Pure Gold, Rhoden’s ballet employs nine couples in an intricate sequence of contemporary dance styles that is breathtaking.

The concert will be completed by George Balanchine’s exquisitely conceived “Theme and Variations” to music by Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky.

The performance starts at 7:30 p.m. at Hartwood Acres, Hampton. Admission is free.

Details: 412-281-0360.

— Mark Kanny

Jazz: From Rio with love

Versatile song stylist Kenia returns to the Cultural District on Tuesday, bringing her distinctive mix of jazz, pop and Brazilian accents.

A native of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Kenia has “a wonderfully expressive vocal instrument that throbs with sultry intensity. It’s low key, yet ultra bright,” JazzTimes magazine says. Her repertoire ranges from Antonio Carlos Jobim and Gilberto Gil to Stevie Wonder and Harold Arlen.

The free performance starts at 5 p.m. Tuesday at Katz Plaza, Cultural District, Downtown.

Details: 412-456-6666.

— Mark Kanny

Art: Working together

This Saturday, art and fashion collide in “Synergy,” a fashion show and multimedia art event that will focus on the creative aspects of fashion design, melding them with other art forms to create an evening of “synergy” and collaboration.

The evening will showcase work from several talented Pittsburgh artists, taking the form of music, dance, fashion and sculpture. The work of eight fashion designers will be trotted out among works by a half-dozen local artists to the music of Ishtar, Nadina and Kellee Maize, and dance performances by The Pillow Project and Sadiqa Bellydance.

Event organizer Jesse Riesmeyer says the inspiration came from the drive and desire to bridge the gap between fashion and art.

Admission is $12. Synergy runs from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. at the Meter Room, 2637 Chartiers Ave, West End.

Details: 412-728-0724.

— Kurt Shaw

Special events: Pittsburgh landmarks tour

Get a fresh, in-depth look at a neighborhood you thought you knew.

From noon to 1 p.m. Friday and Aug. 28, Pittsburgh History & Landmarks is offering a free tour of the area around Fourth Avenue and PPG Place, Downtown.

The neighborhood, one of 18 National Register Districts in the city, contains buildings constructed between 1836 and 1984 from designs by more than a dozen distinguished architects.

Styles range from Greek revival to post modern and include buildings tall and small. Some have been repurposed from their original intention, and others serve multiple new uses or are awaiting renovation.

The tour begins from the parklet at Fourth Avenue and Smithfield Street and lasts one hour.

The tour is free, but Pittsburgh History & Landmarks asks that those who plan to attend let organizers know at least one day before the event.

To RSVP or for details, contact Mary Lu Denny at 412-471-5808, ext. 527, or marylu@phlf.org.

— Alice T. Carter

Jazz: Sharing the stage

Bassist Jeff Grubbs sometimes is known as Jeffrey, but he is not playing jazz on those occasions.

Grubbs is a member of the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra and bears the full name in the more formal settings. But he loves playing jazz as well as the classics and will show off his skills in that direction at the “Reservoir of Jazz” concert Sunday in Highland Park.

Grubbs and his wife, Tania, a singer, will offer a set of standards, which Grubbs hopes to give something of a twist, and some post-bop material.

Tania, who does some music teaching, is not a performance professional but enjoys being on the stage. Jeff says they have had enough musical spots in the past year or so that “her confidence is really getting up there.”

Music begins at 5 p.m. at the concert site near the end of Highland Avenue. It is free.

Details: 412-255-8975.

Outdoors: Pittsburgh by bike

Moving into the final two days of BikeFest, the Rivers of Steel National Heritage Area and BikePGH will co-sponsor a historic bike tour of industrial Pittsburgh on Saturday.

The casual, 6-mile ride will tour and discuss remnants of the steel industry still visible in the South Side and along the Eliza Furnace Trail on the other side the Monongahela River.

It is part BikeFest, the 10-day celebration of bicycling put together by BikePGH, the bicycle-pedestrian advocacy group.

The 90-minute ride will begin at 9 a.m. at Bessemer Court in Station Square. Reservations are required, and participation is $20; $10 for members.

Details: 412-464-4020.

— Bob Karlovits

Books: The write stuff

There are gaggles of geese, prides of lions, congregations of alligators and coalitions of cheetahs. There’s no term for a group of writers — swarm or colony might fit — perhaps because they so rarely congregate in numbers.

That will happen Friday when Penguin Bookshop in Sewickley will present “Jazzed About Local Authors,” an opportunity to meet some of the many writers who live in Western Pennsylvania.

Writers scheduled to appear include Rebecca Drake, Anne Faigen, Kathleen George, Laurie Graham, Kathryn Miller Haines, Carrie Kennedy, Many Ly, Debbie Mancini-Wilson, Shanthee Manjoo, Nancy Martin, Lewis “Buddy” Nordan, Leanne Paranik, Lila Shaara and Heather Terrell.

The event, which starts at 4 p.m., is free.

Details: 412-741-3838 or www.penguinbookshop.com.

— Rege Behe

Music: Masked musicians

Like KISS, Los Straitjackets have a gimmick.

Unlike KISS, which shed its makeup for a while, Los Straitjackets never have stopped wearing their signature Mexican wrestling masks that make them look like, well, oversized Mexican wrestlers onstage.

Don’t let that fool you; Los Straitjackets are in no way a novelty band, but one of the more energetic, instrumental groups currently performing. A new album, “The Further Adventures of Los Straightjackets,” features the band’s stratospheric garage rock that recalls the Ventures by way of the Ramones.

Los Straitjackets perform Friday at the Rex Theatre, South Side. Admission for the 8:30 p.m. show is $17.50.

Details: 412-381-6811 or www.rextheatre.com.

— Rege Behe

Funny business

Appearing tonight at the Pittsburgh Improv — Gov. Ed Rendell (via video) and various judicial and mayoral candidates.

They’ll tell jokes. We’re not joking when we tell you this.

The second annual Candidates Comedy Night is a fundraiser organized by the Allegheny County Department of Human Services. With Sen. Arlen Specter on the bill, it promises to be funnier than a town hall meeting on health care reform. And please, when you pay for your two-drink minimum, don’t heckle Dan Onorato by yelling “Hey, thanks for the drink tax!”

The candidates and elected officials are joking for a good cause. Proceeds will benefit children and youth served by the Allegheny County Department of Human Services and the Juvenile Section of the Family Division of the Court of Common Pleas.

Doors will open at 5 p.m., and at that time, a full menu and drinks will be available for purchase. The comedy show will begin promptly at 7:30 p.m. Sections of eight seats are available now at the following levels: Platinum section, $1,000 donation; Gold section, $750 donation; Silver section, $500 donation. A limited number of individual seats will be available for a $50 donation.

Details: 412-350-3428.

— William Loeffler

Special events: Need a lift?

The Pennsylvania Trolley Museum is offering the Park ‘N’ Ride trolley service to the Washington County Fair, through Saturday. The trolley service is available from 5 p.m. to midnight daily, and roundtrip tickets cost $2.

Riders will board the trolley at the Cooper House-Hinds Parking Lot and will be dropped off at the fair’s main gate. Tours of the Chartiers, Washington County museum are available for $9; $8 for senior citizens; $5 for ages 3-15; and free for those younger than 3.

Details: 724-228-9256 or www.pa-trolley.org.

— Kellie B. Gormly

Source: pittsburghlive.com

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