Coocoo for Coconauts: Chatham County’s Improv Squad Kicks off Cirlce City Late Night Second Friday

You’ve seen Second City (Dan Akroyd, Mike Myers, Tina Fey & the like).

You’ve spent countless hours watching “Who’s Line Is it Anyway?” (while secretly believing that you too could be that funny if only given the chance).

But you have NOT yet experienced the likes of the Coconauts, ChathamArts & Chatham County’s first live (as in not dead) Improv Squad.

The Coconauts will be performing 2nd Fridays at Circle City Late Nite at the General Store Cafe, 10 pm.

And will be doing longer shows every 3rd Friday at Davenport & Winkleperry Steampunk Gallery, 9 pm. Davenport has wild Victorian wear, a blimp mural, coffee, tea, and a PUB.

For the full skinny, read the article in the December 2011 issue of the Chatham County Line (thank you, Julian Serrano)! http://chathamcountyline.org/pdfs/CCL.dec11.web.pdf

P.S. A couple of corrections-

1. The Coconauts were founded in October 2011 (not in 2008) and emerged from ChathamArts’ community classes, which launched with a beginning improv acting class in 2009.

None of the Coconauts had any improv experience at that time. Many of them recall being terrified, but now improv is an addiciton that they refuse to give up.

2. Molly Matlock, Executive Director of Chatham County Arts Council, does not perform with the Coconauts. However, she did participate in the intro and intermediate classes for a year and LOVED them.

[So, now you'll be prepared for Coconauts Trivia Night - some day.]

3. You too can register for ChathamArts’ improv classes (or other classes in photography, art history, portraiture, and much more) at http://www.chathamarts.org/classes-camps/

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Process Wins

I enjoy ironing. I also really like scrambling eggs. I love to watch things becoming. Similarly, I’ve caught myself completely unable to turn away from Bob “Happy Tree” Ross as he paints landscapes. I know I’m not alone.

The act of creation is a mesmerizing experience that touches a primal cord in everyone. It’s the process of formation that’s fascinating.

In his work as a visiting artist in the department of Communication Studies at UNC-CH, Joseph Megel (currently a Chatham County resident) directs The Process Series, a program of Carolina Performing Arts which aims “…to illuminate the ways in which artistic ideas take form and to follow artists and performers as they explore and discover.”

This coming weekend, Friday, Dec. 2 & Saturday, Dec. 3 at 8pm, the multi-media production by Jared Mezzocchi “Poppa, God Bless” will be the latest featured presentation in The Process Series at the historic Playmakers Theater on the campus of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Admission is free and performances are open to the public.

For more information, contact Joseph Megel: megel@email.unc.edu

The Process Series is a project of Carolina Performing ArtsCo-sponsored by the Department of Communication Studies and the Institute for the Arts and Humanities

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Rock Ridge Park Grand Opening & Sneak Peak

Grand Opening November 5, 2011, 10 am to 2 pm!  To feature: . . . free horse rides for the kids and cake while it lasts!  Planning is still ongoing, but we’ll have lots of kids’ activities and a beautiful new park for all area residents.  Come on out and join your neighbors to celebrate this wonderful new asset to the community.  Walk the trails, play on some of coolest playground equipment in the area, or just hang out and listen to the bluegrass musicians slated to perform.  Food vendors and park related booths should round out the festivities.

WAY TO GO PBO PARKS & REC!

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“NC is a Great Place to Grow.” – Michael Tiemann

This was a proud weekend in Chatham. 1. ChathamArts and the Bluegrass Experience dazzled an audience of nearly 600 music fans at the band’s 40th Anniversary Concert with special guest, Clyde Edgerton. They played nearly ’til midnight, and 25 of Tommy Edwards’ former co-workers from Chatham Middle School showed up to surprise him, which of course, choked him up.  Check out Dynamo Muse Productions’ commemorative slide show, “Bluegrass Experience, This is Your Life:http://chathamarts.org/downloads/Bluegrass Experience.ppt

2. Piedmont Biofuels, the Abundance Foundation, and Miraverse Power and Light unveiled their new Solar Double Cropping Venture: http://www2.nbc17.com/news/2011/nov/06/3/solar-double-cropping-unveiled-pittsboro-ar-1580494/.

3. Amy & Michael Tiemann cut the ribbon/recording tape on their new world-class Manifold Recording Studio off of Seaforth Road in Pittsboro. The studio has already hosted some of the top recording artists in the world, like Croatian Marimba virtuoso, Ivana Bilic. The Tiemann’s want to allow musicians the freedom to create the art *artists* want to create in the absence “market” limitations. They also wish to share the magic that happens at the very moment of creation by inviting intimate audiences to witness the recording act in progress in a sort of listening-room concert experience.

Manifold  hosted a professional recording of local school groups from the Community Chorus Glee Project: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FrcfZukRH6U, and they have invited elementary and middle school students in to also experience performances and interactive discussions with their recroding artists. Manifold is truly a special and vital addition to the rich creative atmosphere that we enjoy in Chatham County and NC. Please read the Tiemann’s wonderful introduction speech here: http://blog.miraverse.com/2011/11/06/speech-text-from-miraverse-power-light-solar-double-cropping-ribbon-cutting/.

Many state and national leaders attended the ribbon cutting on November 5th, including:

Senator Ellie Kinnaird
Representative Verla Insko
NPR’s Dick Gordon
Musician, Pierce Freelon
Lyle Estill of Piedmont Biofuels
Pittsboro Mayor Randy Voller
NC Arts Council Director, Mary Regan and Arts in Education Director, Banu Valledares

 

 

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Everyday Art and Extraordinary People

Uncle Bill had collected postage stamps from the time he was a youngster. But he’d moved on from the collection housed in three huge books so he loaned them to my brother and I. We found postage stamps were a fun way to learn about countries, flora, fauna, and events that stretched well beyond our home.

To my pre-teen eyes, the postage stamps in my Uncle’s heavy books were exotic, colorful, and cultivated so many questions. Where was that place? What does that symbol mean? Who was this person?

Recently, I had the pleasure of meeting one of the people behind the selection of postage stamp art and the US Postage Service itself.

At her retirement in 1987, Dr. Jackie Strange had served the US Postal Service for 40 years. She is the former Deputy Post Master General of the United States Postal Service, and to date the only woman to serve in that position. During her tenure, Dr. Strange distinguished herself as a sucessful leader of the world’s largest non-military workforce of 800,000 employees and oversaw an annual budget of $32 billion. She’s received numerous distinguished awards and honors and even designed her own couture fashion line for women. Dr. Strange is also an author, having written “Ms Deputy Postmaster General: How Trusted Leadership, Courage and Innovation Impacted the Postal Service.” As a graphic designer, I was most interested in Dr. Strange’s accounts of having participated in the selection of the original “LOVE” stamp in 1973, designed by artist Robert Indiana.

I remember using that stamp to send letters to my pen pal in New York. Now I marvel at the utility and sentimentality that this small adhesive square of art evokes.

Coincidentally, Dr. Strange was honored on a day that also celebrated the unveiling of the forever postage stamp depicting American humorist and literary artist, Mark Twain. This was a perfect alignment of so many personal interests: visual and literary art, history and political commentary, graphic design, stamp collecting and leadership.

Life in Chatham County is so very rich… with everyday art and extraordinary people.

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This week’s ChathamArts “What If?”

On Saturday, I was at a friend’s brunch. As I sampled some “Maple & Bacon” flavored ice cream for Locopops (thank you, Paul Mihas), I grew transfixed by some prints on my friend’s turquoise wall. He told me that the pieces were by Seth Patrick, who somewhat recently moved to the Triangle.

I began to think, “What if ChathamArts found funding to hire Mr. Patrick for a giant mural of our own town scapes for our main streets in Siler City, Goldston, and Pittsboro? OR we could get him to do print series’ of our most beloved architectural wonders that we’d exhibit throughout our downtowns?

Take a look: http://sethpatrick.com/hello-durham/. Don’t you wonder the same thing?

We have a few other dream projects up our sleeve here at ChathamArts (stay tuned on work from Marie Hermansson and more), but we need money to commission the pieces.

If you or someone you know might enjoy helping to make projects like this happen, email us at info@chathamarts.org and enter “public art” in the subject line.

And PLEASE, send us your own Dream Scheme “What Ifs” for Chatham County Public Spaces and Art.

It takes a village. Get in the thick of it.

 

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Fearrington Village Launches Artist Cooperative

Article from Chapel Hill Magazine: http://www.chapelhillmagazine.com/articles/more-from-the-artist-studios-at-fearrington-village

In our September/October issue, we sat down with three artists of The Artist Studios at Fearrington Village to learn about efforts to make the neighborhood a fine arts destination. Rita Spina makes three-dimensional pieces from used materials, Murry Handler writes poetry and prose and creates signature acrylic paintings and Forrest Greenslade makes nature-based sculptures and acrylic and relief paintings. Enid Handler is in charge of organizing the project. Here’s more from our Q&A.

On Fearrington Village’s Future

CHM: Where do you see Fearrington Village in five years? What’s your goal?

Enid Handler: Well, we want to be well known in the area surrounding Fearrington Village. Chapel Hill being the primary [and] Pittsboro, Durham.

Forrest Greenslade: If you look at where we are on the map, we are right square in the center of where the three major population areas are. You have the Research Triangle and Raleigh on one side, Greensboro on the other side and Southern Pines. So we are an easy day trip.

Enid: We want to take advantage of Fearrington House as a resort area and we’ll be working with the village people with out of staters and out of towners who come to stay here.

Rita Spina: In the past history of North Carolina, there are places that are art centers. And I think that what’s been happening over the years is on one side we have Siler City that has the Incubator, and on the eastern side we have Apex that has the Cultural Center. And we’re located right in between. That feeds, I think, a tremendous number of people.

Enid: Here’s another aside. We’ve been approached by the director of the Chapel Hill CVB. They’d like to link up with us. So we’re very much interested in expanding and bringing people into this community.

Murry Handler: When people come here there will be art tours, and they will be able to visit several destinations.

Enid: We expect the art tours to become available around the time the [September/October issue of CHM] comes out.

Forrest: One of the things that people can expect to do when they come to visit Fearrington Village and the artists is a bit of insight into the creative process. All of our artists look forward to talking about how they go about producing their work, the special influences in the lives and what led to what their doing now creatively and demonstrations that people can observe. Quite often I get kids coming to my garden, sometimes we’ll even work up a little project that kids can do and take home with them. I think there’s going to be a really educational component to what we want to do.

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ChathamArts Brings EbZb Oral History & Drama Residency to Margaret Pollard Middle School

NC Arts Council Awards Grant to ChathamArts to host EbZb Residency at Margaret Pollard Middle School

Chatham County, NC – The NC Arts Council has awarded a  grant to Chatham County Arts Council to bring an Arts-In-Education residency with EbzB Productions (www.ebzb.org) to M. B. Pollard Middle School.

Artists from EbzB Productions will help MB Pollard 8th graders create a dramatic stage production from oral histories conducted with Chatham County residents.  The production will focus on the topic of diversity.  Artists will visit the school to guide students in  playwriting, staging, publicizing, and documenting the production process.  8th grade students of teachers Elizabeth Carriel, Michelle Rotante, and Mary Clayton Liles will be involved in creating and performing the play. The project will culminate in a public performance for students and the community.

ChathamArts and EbZb Productions brought the same residency to Chatham Central High School during Spring, 2011. “I’ve never seen my students so engaged in any of our projects before,” said English teacher, Emily Boyle.

Students from Margaret Pollard are documenting the residency process via a blog at http://takeastandmbpollard.blogspot.com/.

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How to Innovate a Future Innovator

Is Your School or Classroom Developing the Future Innovators?

By Patrick Ledesma on August 28, 2011 9:01 AM | 1 Comment | 2 Recommendations

http://blogs.edweek.org/teachers/leading_from_the_classroom/2011/08/is_your_teaching_developing_the_next_technology_innovator.html?cmp=ENL-EU-VIEWS2

As we begin the school year, three major news events last week provided relevant educational applications.

First, many of us on the East Coast experienced an earthquake for the first time, and if that wasn’t enough, nature provided another lesson through Hurricane Irene. These two events will give plenty of science related lessons for teachers to discuss with their students.

But I think the most thought provoking education related news event is the resignation of Steve Jobs, now former CEO of Apple.

Why? Whether you like Apple products or not, Apple is one of the most successful and valuable companies in the world. Steve Jobs has been referred to this week as the “CEO of the Decade” and “Silicon Valley’s Biggest Rock Star“.

Inevitably, many have and will study Mr. Jobs’ leadership style and lots will be written about his philosophy of organizational structure and management so that future leaders may have similar skill sets.

But for those in education, it’s insightful to look at the types of learning and knowledge that Steve Jobs attributes to his success.

Is our public education system giving our students today the same types of opportunities that will create the next Steve Jobs?

During his 2005 Commencement address at Stanford, Steve Jobs describes the class that made the difference (ironically dropping out of college to take the class.)

(Speech Excerpt)

Reed College at that time offered perhaps the best calligraphy instruction in the country. Throughout the campus every poster, every label on every drawer, was beautifully hand calligraphed….I decided to take a calligraphy class to learn how to do this. I learned about serif and san serif typefaces, about varying the amount of space between different letter combinations, about what makes great typography great. It was beautiful, historical, artistically subtle in a way that science can’t capture, and I found it fascinating.

None of this had even a hope of any practical application in my life. But ten years later, when we were designing the first Macintosh computer, it all came back to me. And we designed it all into the Mac. It was the first computer with beautiful typography. If I had never dropped in on that single course in college, the Mac would have never had multiple typefaces or proportionally spaced fonts. And since Windows just copied the Mac, it’s likely that no personal computer would have them.

Of course it was impossible to connect the dots looking forward when I was in college. But it was very, very clear looking backwards ten years later.

Again, you can’t connect the dots looking forward; you can only connect them looking backwards. So you have to trust that the dots will somehow connect in your future. You have to trust in something — your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever. This approach has never let me down, and it has made all the difference in my life.

Steve Jobs later comments…

You’ve got to find what you love. Your work is going to fill a large part of your life, and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work. And the only way to do great work is to love what you do.

And in this speech we have an answer to create the next visionary- studying calligraphy was the source for inspiration that led to an appreciation of simplicity of design. This simplicity of design should influence how the user interacts with technology. This experience drives how technology is used to create that experience. (Often, technology folks have this backwards- insisting that technology drives use.) The product becomes popular and the end result is one of the world’s most successful companies. And, just love what you do, and success will follow.

If replicating success were only that simple.

But, from an educator’s point of view, our beginning questions are simple. It all begins with stepping back and asking what opportunities we provide our students.

We may not teach classes like Calligraphy in K12 education, but we do have opportunities to expand our students’ perspective and understanding to inculcate an appreciation of art and music.

In our high stakes testing and accountability era where we focus heavily on tested subjects, the non-tested subjects cannot be ignored.

If our education system is to really create the next generation of visionaries, then we should listen to what our present-day leaders identified as the factors for their success in their lives.

And while the next Steve Jobs may or may not be sitting in your classroom, educators can do more to provide a balanced education for all students, because one never knows if that art project will someday lead to how a student will use math and science to design the next innovation.

Educators need to help students explore their interests to find what they will “love to do” so they can do “the great work.”

So when you plan for what your students will learn this year, ask:

1. What opportunities will my students have to be exposed to the arts and music?

2. What opportunities will my students have to explore areas of interests that may someday inspire and give them purpose?

3. What opportunities will my students have to apply their skills and interests to create something that demonstrates “what they love to do?”

If your students will have these opportunities this year, your students are on the track to finding what may someday be their “great work.”

If your students do not have these opportunities, it’s time to start analyzing when these opportunities can be made available, if not during class, then perhaps through other venues such as clubs or after school programs.

Parents will need to demand that schools provide these opportunities.

Because when your students “connect the dots” in the future to find the source of that one influence that made a difference in their life, they will be thankful you made this effort to give them these opportunities today.

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Get SmART with ChathamArts Fall Classes!

ChathamArts, the Chatham County Arts Council, announces fall classes for 2011.

ChathamArts ArtSchool began in January 2010 and is made possible by Briar Chapel Development, located off of Highway 15-501 between Chapel Hill and Pittsboro.

For class cost, more info or to register, visit  http://www.chathamarts.org/classes-camps/
For Fall 2011, ChathamArts is offering the following classes:
Beginning and Intermediate Improvisational Acting
Instructor: Anoushka Brod of Transactor’s Improv and City of Medicine
Fall Series for Beginning and Intermediate Improv, Actors, Ages 16+

Dates: Wednesdays, September 7-October 12, 7-9pm

 Advanced Improvisational Performance

Instructor: Anoushka Brod of Transactor’s Improv and City of Medicine
Dates: Thursdays, September 8-October 13, 7-9 pm
• Contemporary Art History: Exploring the Motivations Behind 20th and 21st Century Art
Instructor: Catherine Howard
Dates: Tuesdays, September 13-October 18, 7-9pm
• Documentary Photography Workshop: A Day in the Life of a Small Town
Instructor: Anna Blackshaw from the Sun Magazine
Dates: Two-Day Workshop, October 1 & 2, 2011, 11 am-5 pm
Location: Bynum on Saturday and Downtown Pittsboro First Sunday
 Interdisciplinary Art for Artists, Ages 18+
Instructor: Matt Zigler
Dates: TBA, If interested, please email info@chathamarts.org

• Knitting 9-1-1
Instructor: Lynn Sims
Dates: Thursdays, October 13-November 17, 6:30-8:30 pm
Location: TBA

Portraiture, From the Inside Out
Instructor: Judy Katz
Date: One-Day Workshop, Saturday, October 15, 1:30-5:30 pm
OR-
Three-Session Series, Mondays, October 24-November 7, 6:15-8:15 pm
More winter classes to come in “Broadway Bound Drama Classes for Youth,” Partner Dance, and Healing Arts.


REGISTER at http://www.chathamarts.org/classes-camps/. Or mail a check to ChathamArts, PO Box 418, Pittsboro, NC 27312.

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