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Arts and Culture

40th Street Artist-in-Residence Program accepting applications for 2012-2013

April 3, 2012

2011-2012 residents. (Photo courtesy of 40th Street AIR).

40th Street Artist in Residence, a program that awards West Philadelphia artists one year of free studio space, is now accepting applications for the 2012-2013 residency. If accepted to the program, artists will be granted a studio space at either 4007 Chestnut or 4013 Chestnut Street, beginning on August 25, 2012 and ending August 15, 2013.

The program, founded in 2003 by artist Edward M. Epstein, addresses the need for studio space in West Philadelphia and assists artists with their career development. In exchange, residents are asked to share their creative talents with neighbors. Examples of this include creating a public installation or holding a workshop or class.

To apply, please complete and submit the application that can be found HERE by Monday, May 7, 2012. Email it to 40th.AIR.app [at] gmail.com or mail it to 40th Street Artist-in-Residence Program, 4007 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104. To read more about the program, click here.

 

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Lucien E. Blackwell Library presents Paul Robeson programs

April 3, 2012

In honor of the birthday of Paul Robeson, an acclaimed actor, concert singer, lawyer, athlete and social activist, The Lucien E. Blackwell Regional Library presents two programs in collaboration with the Friends of the Blackwell Library and the West Philadelphia Cultural Alliance.

On Saturday, April 7, from 1:00-3:00 p.m. two biographical films will be shown: “Speak of me as I Am” and “Paul Robeson, Tribute to an Artist.” Refreshments will be served.

On Tuesday, April 17, at 6:00 p.m. there will be a lecture by Frances Aulston, Founder & CEO of the West Philadelphia Cultural Alliance-Paul Robeson House. A reception will follow.

A series of panels depicting various stages of Paul Robeson’s life will be on display for both programs.

The Lucien E. Blackwell Regional Library is located at 125 South 52nd Street (corner of 52nd and Sansom). For more information call 215-685-7433.

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Penn Museum celebrates India on Saturday

March 23, 2012

Bharathiya dancer.

This Saturday, March 24, from 1 – 4 p.m. Penn Museum presents Hello India!, a special event celebrating this vibrant nation. There will be classical dance performances and workshops, music, spicy food, and an assortment of arts and crafts activities for all ages.

Highlights include dance performers from Bharathiya Vidhyalaya presenting traditional Indian folk dances, Indian classical music performed by Penn’s student group Penn Sargam, and a Sari-wrapping station where visitors can dress in authentic Indian garb.

Children and families are especially welcome. The event is free with Museum admission ($10 general admission; $7, seniors and military; $6, children 6-17 and students with ID; free for children under 6). For more information and performance schedule, visit this page.

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New location for GO WEST! Craft Fest

March 15, 2012

Click to enlarge. (Photo from Gowestcraftfest.blogspot.com).

VIX Emporium has sent news that the location for GO WEST! Craft Fest has changed. This Spring’s Craft Fest will be held at The Woodlands (40th & Woodland) on Saturday, April 14 (rain date – Sunday, April 15). It is a cemetery, but the Craft Fest will be in a space that is set apart from it, so you don’t need to encounter any grave sites unless you want to stroll around the grounds and view historic grave markers and monuments.

This Craft Fest will be the biggest show yet, with 50 of Philadelphia’s finest artists and crafters presenting their work – jewelry, clothing, screen prints, home accents, fine art, toys, cards, accessories, soaps, candles, terrariums and more.

There will be live entertainment as well, with Jay Sand of All Around This World doing a kid’s music set, and a performance by Tiny Circus. There will also be random acts of juggling throughout the day and face painting for kids.

For more information, click here, or check out the event’s Pinterest board to see some examples of the vendors’ fine work.

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Abstract Art Exhibit to open Friday at UCAL Gallery

March 8, 2012

Paul King – Maven.

 
University City Arts League brings us West Philly Abstraction, presenting eight West Philadelphia artists whose works have been exhibited internationally and are part of major museum collections, and who all participate in the abstract tradition.

The opening will be held this Friday, March 9 from 6-8 p.m. at 4226 Spruce Street.

From UCAL:

Marina Borker – Big Block Plane.

Marina Borker began as a painter but moved into the realm of stained glass. Focusing on the leading of the glass, perhaps more so than the colored glass itself, Borker’s recent pieces exist in space like transparent line drawings. Borker holds an MFA from Tyler School of Art, and her work has been exhibited at Vox Populi, Nexus Foundation for Today’s Art, and Fleisher Art Memorial.

Robert Goodman‘s densely painted works pull the viewer into a swirling vortex of color and gestural energy.  Currently teaching at Moore College of Art, he holds an MFA from Tyler School of Art and was the recipient of a 2008 Pennsylvania Council on the Arts Fellowship for Painting.

Paul King takes a contemporary yet unabashedly expressionist approach to abstraction. His gestural canvases nevertheless show a firm devotion to the sensitive and disciplined painterliness of Cezanne. Paul King’s work has been shown regularly in the Philadelphia area for the past two decades and is in the permanent collection of the Woodmere Art Museum. He teaches at The University of the Arts.

Alice Oh, winner of a Pew Fellowship in the Arts, makes paintings that are built up from small color shapes and components. They evoke natural growth and progression as a metaphor for contemporary human living. Alice Oh’s works are in the collection of The Philadelphia Museum of Art and Yale University. She holds an MFA from Yale University and currently teaches at Moore College of Art.

Caroline Letham Santa traverses a territory somewhere between painting, drawing, and arguably, sculpture. Her recent works made of paper that has been found, aged, distressed, folded, and, as the artist states, “stored” and “transported” result in visual experiences that exist outside a realm of verbal definition. Caroline Letham Santa received her MFA from the University of Pennsylvania She has exhibited in curated group shows regionally and has had two solo exhibitions with the collective Tiger Strikes Asteroid.

Tremain Smith makes hybridized oil/encaustic paintings whose imagery and color hang together in building-block-like structures. She interprets the lines and planes she creates as bridges or passageways; doors, walls and floor plans to inner realities. Smith’s work is in the permanent collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, as well as numerous corporate and private collections.

Todd Keyser – Cave. (Photos courtesy UCAL).

Todd Keyser collides strategies of abstraction with the ultimate form of illusion: photography. Layering abstract painting actions upon found photographs of caves, Keyser chips away at the perennial conceptual dichotomy of seeing versus belief. Keyser holds an MFA from the Maryland Institute College of Art. Recent exhibition venues for his work include Rebekah Templeton Gallery (Philadelphia) and the Delaware Center for Contemporary Art in Wilmington.

Douglas Witmer takes an intuitive approach that combines simple geometric imagery, emphatic color, and subtle manipulation of surface physicality. It is an inquiry into the materiality of seeing, perception, feeling and memory. Douglas Witmer holds an MFA from the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. His work has been the subject of 10 solo shows nationally and curated group shows internationally, including such venues at MoMA PS1 in New York.

– Emma Eisenberg

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Hot young literary culture site seeks Philadelphia contributors

March 7, 2012

In November 2010, over beers in Kensington’s El Bar, West Philadelphia resident Jesse Montgomery and friend Alex Shephard, two bibliophiles and voracious cultural consumers right out of Oberlin College, surveyed their options as literary career hopefuls in the uncertain world of publishing and literary criticism. Instead of accepting the dark pronouncements on how books and literary culture are dead among young people, Montgomery and Shephard set out to craft their own online community, Full Stop, that would be committed to “an earnest, expansive, and rigorous discussion of literature and literary culture.”

Montgomery and Shephard brought on as editors former Oberlin classmates Max Rivlin-Nadler, Amanda Shubert, and Eric Jett (who also designed the sleek website look), partnered with Google Ads (later replaced by Lit Breaker), and hit the ground running in January 2011. Starting out by publishing reviews and interviews and later expanding to include features and a daily blog, Full Stop “aims to focus on young writers, works in translation, and books we feel are being neglected by other outlets while engaging with the significant changes occurring in the publishing industry and the evolution of print media.”

In December 2011, in response to what the Full Stop editors characterized as “a year of global unrest,” they launched a new series called “The Situation in American Writing” inspired by a 1939 Partisan Review questionnaire that asked leading writers of that time about literature, politics, and the intersections between the two. “The Situation” spoke with prominent contemporary writers including George Saunders, Marilynn Robinson, Steve Almond, and Aimee Bender, and was picked up by such publications as The New Yorker, The Millions, The Rumpus, The LA Times, HTMLGIANT, and The Daily Beast.

When asked what was on the horizon for Full Stop, Montgomery wrote, “We just launched a new series called “Thinking the Present” that focuses on contemporary political questions and current non-fiction. Expect a series on pedagogy soon as well as more puns about birds and basketball.”

Despite the scattered locations of the other editors (New York City, Northampton, and Charleston, W.Va), Montgomery says he’d like to give Full Stop more of a local Philadelphia focus and was excited about running more content specific to Philadelphia readers.

If you’re interested in contributing to Full Stop, contact Jesse Montgomery at: jesse [at] full-stop.net

Emma Eisenberg

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