Evan Bailyn Sizzle Reel from Bradley Bailyn on Vimeo.
The New York Arts & Business Council sez:
After rave reviews of our sold-out SEO & social media workshop in February, Evan Bailyn, CEO of First Page Sage, is returning to present another marketing workshop exclusively on using social media to drive real world action. Are you trying to sell tickets to a show? Increase your Facebook likes? Encourage your supporters to give more? Then you should attend this session. Using case studies and on-the-spot analysis of audience members' online presences, this workshop will enlighten, entertain, and illuminate the short list of strategies you should be focusing on to have your constituents take action.
This workshop speaker is a for-profit business professional who will give a presentation tailored to nonprofit arts organizations.
Monday, September 12, 2011
6:00 p.m. – 8:30 p.m.
Midtown Manhattan (exact location TBD)
$35 members; $55 non-members
Register HERE
Questions? Contact vquinones@artsandbusiness-ny.org
Evan Bailyn is an Internet entrepreneur, author, speaker, and child advocate. He is best known for being an expert at search engine optimization, having used his ability to rank at the top of Google to build and sell five businesses, including one of the largest children’s websites online. His Facebook page, which provides daily inspirational thoughts, has over 90,000 “likes,” making it one of the most popular non-celebrity pages on Facebook.
He has been interviewed on ABC and Fox News and featured in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Post, The International Business Times, and Crain's. He is a frequent speaker and television guest, and will be featured on an upcoming segment of Joan Rivers' reality show "How'd You Get So Rich?"
In 2010, Evan established The Evan Bailyn Foundation, which awards grants to groups that promote emotional awareness in children. His first book, Outsmarting Google, will be published with Pearson Press in March, 2011
Tuesday, August 30, 2011
ON SEPTEMBER 12, INTERNET GURU EVAN BAILYN IS GONNA ROCK YOUR SOCIAL MEDIA CAMPAIGN
Monday, August 29, 2011
ASANA ALPHABET OFFERS CLASS ABOUT TEACHING CHILDREN'S YOGA
A Note from my friend Ann:
Hello teachers and administrators,
Welcome back to another great school year! Asana Alphabet provides high-quality yoga trainings for bringing children's yoga into the schools. We wanted to let you know about our upcoming professional development opportunities because full-time school teachers and administrators always receive a discount with us! Incorporating yoga into your school day is easy and beneficial to you and your students. Here's what is coming up:
Asana Alphabet's Basic Training: Teaching Children's Yoga
Sep. 17-18th on the Lower East Side, NYC;
10am-4pm Saturday; 11:30am-5:30pm Sunday
Commercial Rate: $475; Full-time Teacher/Administrator Rate: $395
This workshop covers appropriate and authentic yoga techniques for kids of all ages and how to combine them with fun games and activities.. Yoga poses, meditations, relaxation and more! Includes sample lesson plans, teaching guide and yoga goodies.
Please feel free to pass this message along to others who may be interested. For more information you can look at our website at http://www.asanaalphabet.com/ or to register, please email AsanaAlphabet@gmail.com.
We hope to work with you soon.
Namaste, Ann
Ann Robideaux
Director and Founder
www.AsanaAlphabet.com
646.321.9383
AsanaAlphabet@gmail.com
Hello teachers and administrators,
Welcome back to another great school year! Asana Alphabet provides high-quality yoga trainings for bringing children's yoga into the schools. We wanted to let you know about our upcoming professional development opportunities because full-time school teachers and administrators always receive a discount with us! Incorporating yoga into your school day is easy and beneficial to you and your students. Here's what is coming up:
Asana Alphabet's Basic Training: Teaching Children's Yoga
Sep. 17-18th on the Lower East Side, NYC;
10am-4pm Saturday; 11:30am-5:30pm Sunday
Commercial Rate: $475; Full-time Teacher/Administrator Rate: $395
This workshop covers appropriate and authentic yoga techniques for kids of all ages and how to combine them with fun games and activities.. Yoga poses, meditations, relaxation and more! Includes sample lesson plans, teaching guide and yoga goodies.
Please feel free to pass this message along to others who may be interested. For more information you can look at our website at http://www.asanaalphabet.com/ or to register, please email AsanaAlphabet@gmail.com.
We hope to work with you soon.
Namaste, Ann
Ann Robideaux
Director and Founder
www.AsanaAlphabet.com
646.321.9383
AsanaAlphabet@gmail.com
Sunday, August 28, 2011
ELLEN, MAIRA, AND ME
Earlier this week, I stopped in friend Ann Lopatin's Blue Ribbon General Store and thumbed through the pages of The Essentials of Fabulous: Because Whatever Doesn't Work Here Anymore written by Ellen Lubin-Sherman and illustrated by Susan Sugar. Annie told me how Ellen had self-published the book, and how it had been flying off the shelves. I thought that any woman who self-publishes has a lot of chutzpah, so I brought a copy home with me.
Ellen, in a highly-entertaining and down-to-earth writing style, describes how we can upgrade various parts of our lives and do them with more finesse, panache, style, and care for quality and impact. She covers, for example, how we treat people, how we conduct our virtual/online presence, how we write emails. She talks about the importance of writing hand-written notes, being warm and accessible, dressing with flair, treating everyone we encounter with respect, showing a passion for life.
I loved this book so much that I wrote a note to Ellen, who promptly wrote me back. Here is our correspondence, accompanied by the framed letter from Maira Kalman to Ellen which Ellen refers to in her email to me.
My Email to Ellen:
Subject Line: Totally Grooving on Your Book / Interview with Maira
Hi Ellen -
I know I should be writing a thank you for your AWESOME book on gorgeous stationery (which is actually something I would ordinarily do) but I wanted to include my interview with Maira Kalman in the note. (I saw that you liked one of her books, so thought the article would be of interest to you.)
After hearing the story behind your book from my friend Annie L. at Blue Ribbon, I decided to buy a copy. To say that I DEVOURED your book would be an understatement; I read it and savored it during all my subway rides over a 24-hour period.
Growing up, I had a grandma who was born at the turn of the century. She wrote letters to me all the time and sent articles that pertained to my personal interests. From the time I was about six, my family wrote each other "blessings," or letters of appreciation at the end of each year. I still have most of those treasures! I'm the person that my friends know as loving stationery and stamps and sending birthday and anniversary cards. (Congratulating someone for special occasions on Facebook just does not cut it!) So it was wonderful to read the words of someone who also takes a stand about the personal touch.
Loved watching your tv interview (and that sassy yellow jewelry - wow!) and will post something about The Essentials on Creative Times and Facebook.
My interview with Maira is below my signature. She just had a magical exhibit at The Jewish Museum!
Keep up the inspiring work, Ellen, and I hope to meet you in person down the road.
Ellen's Email to Me
Subject Line: whoooooooooooooooooooosh
WOWEE!
I am just speechless as not only did I go to the Jewish Museum, I ransacked the gift shop!
Eleanor Traubman, I am just so delighted to hear from you! What a wonderful note and so heartfelt. I'm touched when readers let me know how the book has resonated. When I completed it, I sent it to Maira and inscribed it to her for all the wonderful moments she gave to me and "my" two boys. Of course she wrote back in her inimitable handwriting on Verge de France paper (which I've stockpiled). I framed the note including the envelope. Of course I have everyone of her children's books in my library. I still look at the illustrations.
Then The Principles of Uncertainty. And I knew how to proceed with my book.
Eleanor, you are so fabulous for writing to me. You have given me a whoooosh of excitement for the day ahead.
I wish you well..all good things...they're much deserved...and you are a treasure. Loved your interview with Maira and thrilled to hear she has a "new beau" and I know the loss of Tibor was devastating.
Sending love
Ellen, in a highly-entertaining and down-to-earth writing style, describes how we can upgrade various parts of our lives and do them with more finesse, panache, style, and care for quality and impact. She covers, for example, how we treat people, how we conduct our virtual/online presence, how we write emails. She talks about the importance of writing hand-written notes, being warm and accessible, dressing with flair, treating everyone we encounter with respect, showing a passion for life.
I loved this book so much that I wrote a note to Ellen, who promptly wrote me back. Here is our correspondence, accompanied by the framed letter from Maira Kalman to Ellen which Ellen refers to in her email to me.
My Email to Ellen:
Subject Line: Totally Grooving on Your Book / Interview with Maira
Hi Ellen -
I know I should be writing a thank you for your AWESOME book on gorgeous stationery (which is actually something I would ordinarily do) but I wanted to include my interview with Maira Kalman in the note. (I saw that you liked one of her books, so thought the article would be of interest to you.)
After hearing the story behind your book from my friend Annie L. at Blue Ribbon, I decided to buy a copy. To say that I DEVOURED your book would be an understatement; I read it and savored it during all my subway rides over a 24-hour period.
Growing up, I had a grandma who was born at the turn of the century. She wrote letters to me all the time and sent articles that pertained to my personal interests. From the time I was about six, my family wrote each other "blessings," or letters of appreciation at the end of each year. I still have most of those treasures! I'm the person that my friends know as loving stationery and stamps and sending birthday and anniversary cards. (Congratulating someone for special occasions on Facebook just does not cut it!) So it was wonderful to read the words of someone who also takes a stand about the personal touch.
Loved watching your tv interview (and that sassy yellow jewelry - wow!) and will post something about The Essentials on Creative Times and Facebook.
My interview with Maira is below my signature. She just had a magical exhibit at The Jewish Museum!
Keep up the inspiring work, Ellen, and I hope to meet you in person down the road.
Ellen's Email to Me
Subject Line: whoooooooooooooooooooosh
WOWEE!
I am just speechless as not only did I go to the Jewish Museum, I ransacked the gift shop!
Eleanor Traubman, I am just so delighted to hear from you! What a wonderful note and so heartfelt. I'm touched when readers let me know how the book has resonated. When I completed it, I sent it to Maira and inscribed it to her for all the wonderful moments she gave to me and "my" two boys. Of course she wrote back in her inimitable handwriting on Verge de France paper (which I've stockpiled). I framed the note including the envelope. Of course I have everyone of her children's books in my library. I still look at the illustrations.
Then The Principles of Uncertainty. And I knew how to proceed with my book.
Eleanor, you are so fabulous for writing to me. You have given me a whoooosh of excitement for the day ahead.
I wish you well..all good things...they're much deserved...and you are a treasure. Loved your interview with Maira and thrilled to hear she has a "new beau" and I know the loss of Tibor was devastating.
Sending love
Saturday, August 27, 2011
RUN, DON'T WALK, TO SEE NEW YORK PREMIER OF MANUFACTURING STOKED ON SEPTEMBER 15
MANUFACTURING STOKE from misfit pictures on Vimeo.
Hey, y'all. Make sure you set aside September 15th to see the New York Premier of the surf documentary Manufacturing Stoke at the New York Surf Film Festival. I'm proud to say that my nephew, Niko Traubman, and brother, Adam Traubman, are both in the movie. Stoked is directed by Pierce Kavanaugh.
Tickets go on sale September 6.
Here is the movie synopsis:
No other sport is so intrinsically linked to nature. Some call it a spiritual experience, most call it indescribable. And yet, in becoming the multi-billion dollar industry it is today, a great paradox has risen. Surfers are indeed directly connected to the earth’s pulse and yet a majority of the materials used are environmentally toxic.
The story begins in the 1960’s, the golden era of surfing, a time of innocence and discovery. Surf culture erupted onto the collective consciousness and became the epitome of cool. Fast forward to December 5th, 2005 and the closing of Clark Foam for environmental reasons, the largest surf blanks manufacturer in the world. Not only was the event a wake-up call for many to shift from petroleum-base products to more ecofriendly materials, it also re-framed the foundation of a stagnant culture. Enter surfing’s renaissance, an era where the new generation is completely changing what it means to be a surfer. And amid timid efforts from the industry’s biggies, a plethora of grassroots up-and-comers is redefining what a surfer is supposed to ride. From wooden surfboards, handplanes and alaias to recycled blanks and organic clothing, wave riding is taking on a new soul.
Taking California as its focal point, the birth place of the surf industry, the film travels from San Diego to San Francisco, via San Clemente, to capture the diversity of the Californian coast, while interviewing an amazing variety of people in their respective environments. Let it be a shaping room, an office, a beach, a blank factory, an art gallery, or a wood shop, you will be transported to a world rarely-ever-seen. Framed through the eyes of the youth, the documentary features for the very first time three up-and-coming surfers:
Lucas Dirkse, 16, Niko Traubman 13, and Tiare Thompson, 9. From riding the unconventional and bodysurfing, to bringing back the stoke, they are now dictating what the industry will become. Also featured are icons of the industry, including John Baker Dahl and Carl Ekstrom. From the invention of surf wax to those who created the modern board, these individuals have shaped the surfing world for the last 50 years and they now share their invaluable insights on the evolution of the industry.
Inspired by the great innovators of surfing's golden era, a myriad of inspired individuals are taking a stand and changing the rules. From Danny Hess in San Francisco who is proving that a board made out of wood can be just as performing as a traditional foam board, to Local Clothes in the Central Coast who are completely redefining how the clothing industry operates. Manufacturing Stoke is an introspective look into the surfing culture’s struggle to be beneficial unto itself, a tapestry of both influential and eclectic members of the surfing community that are constantly striving for positive change.
DUMBO ARTS FESTIVAL IS LOOKING FOR VOLUNTEERS
The Dumbo Arts Festival is a feast for the senses that attracts 200,000 visitors over 3 days with the participation of over 500 artists from a variety of disciplines, 100 studios, 50 galleries and stages and 100 programming partners. This year, the Festival will take place on Friday, September 23rd, Saturday, September 24th and Sunday, September 25th.
We are reaching out in hopes that you will join the 2011 Dumbo Arts Festival Volunteer Team!
This year we are searching for volunteers who can devote some of their time between Friday, September 16th and Thursday, September 22nd, as well as, the three days of the Festival itself.
The activities you might engage in include assisting exhibiting artists with installation of their works, guiding attendees through and between the various exhibits, lending a hand at one of our performance stages, or helping the next generation of artists at our children’s creation station.
We are also looking for a number of volunteers to start early on in September, to work on specific projects.
This is an amazing opportunity to get involved with one of the biggest and most cutting-edge art festivals in New York City.
For more information or if you are interested in applying, please visit http://dumboartsfestival.com/volunteer/, or call 718-488-8588.
We are reaching out in hopes that you will join the 2011 Dumbo Arts Festival Volunteer Team!
This year we are searching for volunteers who can devote some of their time between Friday, September 16th and Thursday, September 22nd, as well as, the three days of the Festival itself.
The activities you might engage in include assisting exhibiting artists with installation of their works, guiding attendees through and between the various exhibits, lending a hand at one of our performance stages, or helping the next generation of artists at our children’s creation station.
We are also looking for a number of volunteers to start early on in September, to work on specific projects.
This is an amazing opportunity to get involved with one of the biggest and most cutting-edge art festivals in New York City.
For more information or if you are interested in applying, please visit http://dumboartsfestival.com/volunteer/, or call 718-488-8588.
Erica Finkelstein
Dumbo Arts Festival
1115 Broadway, 12th Floor
New York, NY 10010
dalzellproductions.com
212-647-1877
erica@dalzell.com
Thursday, August 11, 2011
THE MAGIC OF MARIMEKKO AS PORTRAYED IN A DWELL MAG SLIDE SHOW
Friday, August 05, 2011
ALL KINDSA CRAZY COOL STUFF AT JIM HENSON'S FANTASTIC WORLD
Last Saturday, I made my first venture out to the Museum of the Moving Image in Queens (actually, right by where they film Sesame Street) to see the new exhibit called Jim Henson's Fantastic World.
One thing I liked about the exhibit was that it featured many of the sketches Jim created, the sketches that were the groundwork for his commercials, Muppets, films, and television shows. I appreciated that the show revealed the creative process behind the final product. With everything so computer-generated in today's world, there's something so reassuring about seeing pencil and pen drawings that come straight from the artist's mind.
During my visit to MOMI, I had the pleasure of attending "Hands Up! Puppets Down!": An Inside Look at Puppetry for Television. Writer/producer Craig Shemin and veteran Sesame Street puppeteer and wrangler Lara MacLean shared behind-the-scenes footage and live demonstration to show how puppetry magic is created for television.
Great fun was seeing the Muppet which Craig's wife and Sesame Street performer Stephanie D'Abruzzo had created in Craig's image. Craig and Lara together were a great team.
They fielded questions from Muppet fans in the audience who ranged greatly in age. Like Star Wars, the Muppet shows and movies have a fan base that spans generations. One young person in the audience asked "Is it true that Tim Burton was a Muppeteer in a scene from one of the Muppet Movies?" Craig confirmed that yes, it is true. Wow, how do people get their hands on this info?!?!?
Click HERE for the full list of Henson-related workshops and screenings. Be sure to note that some events require advance ticket purchase to guarantee a seat.
One thing I liked about the exhibit was that it featured many of the sketches Jim created, the sketches that were the groundwork for his commercials, Muppets, films, and television shows. I appreciated that the show revealed the creative process behind the final product. With everything so computer-generated in today's world, there's something so reassuring about seeing pencil and pen drawings that come straight from the artist's mind.
During my visit to MOMI, I had the pleasure of attending "Hands Up! Puppets Down!": An Inside Look at Puppetry for Television. Writer/producer Craig Shemin and veteran Sesame Street puppeteer and wrangler Lara MacLean shared behind-the-scenes footage and live demonstration to show how puppetry magic is created for television.
Great fun was seeing the Muppet which Craig's wife and Sesame Street performer Stephanie D'Abruzzo had created in Craig's image. Craig and Lara together were a great team.
They fielded questions from Muppet fans in the audience who ranged greatly in age. Like Star Wars, the Muppet shows and movies have a fan base that spans generations. One young person in the audience asked "Is it true that Tim Burton was a Muppeteer in a scene from one of the Muppet Movies?" Craig confirmed that yes, it is true. Wow, how do people get their hands on this info?!?!?
Click HERE for the full list of Henson-related workshops and screenings. Be sure to note that some events require advance ticket purchase to guarantee a seat.
Here are two that I am particularly excited about:
Photo of Lara MacLean from Muppet Wiki
Wednesday, August 03, 2011
60TH BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION OF MUPPETEER RICHARD HUNT AUGUST 16TH AT BLUESTOCKINGS BOOKSTORE
I was heartened to see the listing for this event dedicated to the life and work of Muppeteer Richard Hunt in L Magazine and the Bluestockings website:
Tuesday, August 16th @ 7PM – $5 suggested
Presentation: Jessica Max Stein “The Rainbow Connection: A 60th Birthday Celebration of Gay Muppeteer Richard Hunt”
August 16th would be Richard Hunt’s 60th birthday! Come join his biographer, veteran zinester and CUNY English teacher Jessica Max Stein, for a sneak peek at “The Rainbow Connection: The Life and Times of Richard Hunt,” including plenty of Muppet clips and rare behind-the-scenes footage. Hunt performed beloved Sesame Street and Muppet Show characters such as Beaker, Scooter and Janice, while living joyfully in Manhattan’s liberating post-Stonewall era. He was only 40 years old when he died of AIDS-related complications. Let’s celebrate his birthday by appreciating his life and work!
Photo from the website of Jessica Max Stein.
Tuesday, August 16th @ 7PM – $5 suggested
Presentation: Jessica Max Stein “The Rainbow Connection: A 60th Birthday Celebration of Gay Muppeteer Richard Hunt”
August 16th would be Richard Hunt’s 60th birthday! Come join his biographer, veteran zinester and CUNY English teacher Jessica Max Stein, for a sneak peek at “The Rainbow Connection: The Life and Times of Richard Hunt,” including plenty of Muppet clips and rare behind-the-scenes footage. Hunt performed beloved Sesame Street and Muppet Show characters such as Beaker, Scooter and Janice, while living joyfully in Manhattan’s liberating post-Stonewall era. He was only 40 years old when he died of AIDS-related complications. Let’s celebrate his birthday by appreciating his life and work!
Photo from the website of Jessica Max Stein.
EVERY FRIDAY IN AUGUST IS 12 ANNUAL KIDFLIX FILM FEST OF BED-STUY
MoCADA and African Film Fest Proudly Host
The 12th Annual KIDflix Film Fest of Bed-Stuy
In collaboration with Creative Outlet, Sweetbeatz, Violin Diva and Aamir Smith’s tribute to Michael Jackson
Sponsored by: Travelers Foundation, New York State Council on the Arts, Assemblywoman Annette Robinson, New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, Councilman Albert Vann and District Leader Robert E. Cornegy Jr.
KIDflix Date: Every Friday Night in the month of August (5, 12, 19, 26)
Rain Date: Final two Saturday’s in the month of August (20 & 27)
Time: 7:00 pm
Location: Fulton Park (corner of Utica Avenue and Fulton Street)
A or C Train to Utica Avenue
Cost: Free to the Public
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Arts (MoCADA) and African Film Fest (AFF) proudly celebrate the 12th Annual KIDflix Film Fest of Bedford Stuyvesant this August! This year’s festival promises to be the most exciting line up ever with newly released film’s of the African Diaspora, live performances, Q&A opportunities with directors, art workshops for children and as always we will end with our grand finale dance party for The Wiz! In addition, MoCADA is thrilled to premier MoCADA TV prior to each feature film, which is an exciting new revolution that takes the African Diaspora outside of its Museum walls and into the world of television!
Marking the 12th Anniversary of the Annual KIDflix Film Fest of Bed Stuy, this year’s selection will feature a very exciting and eclectic line up including:
August 5th – Performance: Jamel Gaines’ Creative Outlet Dance Academy - Feature: Brownstones to Red Dirt with director and actors attending the screening
Featured Film: Brownstones to Red Dirt, directed by Dave LaMattina, Chad N. Walker
Children from Marcy’s Housing Development in Bedford – Stuyvesant and orphans from Sierra Leone are featured in Brownstones to Red Dirt, a feature-length documentary, which tells the story of how these children find one another through a pen pal program that not only expands how they see the world but also shows them how much they have in common through shared experiences.
August 12th – Performance: Violin Diva (Jazz, RnB, Soul) - Short: Mwansa the Great - Feature: Soul Boy
Featured Film: Soul Boy, directed by Hawa Essuman and Tom Tykwer
Soul Boy is a 2010 Kenyan drama film, written by Billy Kahora and directed by Hawa Essuman. When his father falls ill a teenager sets out to find the cure, only to learn that a witch has stolen his father’s soul.
August 19th – Caribbean Night: A Night of Animated Shorts and Performances presented by CariBBeing Film Festival and Trinidad & Tobago Film Festival
This evening will include children specific, African Diasporic film shorts from the Caribbean. Additionally, there will be performances from CASYM Steel Orchestra. This event will be a festive evening of Caribbean film and culture!
August 26th- Performance: Dance Like Michael workshop with Aamir Smith - Feature: The Wiz
Featured Film: The Wiz, directed by Sidney Lumet
Starring the beloved late Lena Horne as Glenda the Good Witch and the late Michael Jackson in his award winning role as Scarecrow, and the talented Diana Ross, The Wiz is a 1970s urban adaptation of The Wizard of Oz. This film version of the Tony award winning Broadway sensation will have you up out your sit, ready to “Ease on Down the Road”.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
About MoCADA
MoCADA is committed to creating a greater awareness and appreciation of the African Diaspora as it relates to contemporary urban issues through innovative exhibitions, public programs and educational interactive tours. Our mission is to undertake the responsibility of rewriting history in order to give a more accurate portrayal of our contributions to the historical, artistic and cultural landscape of the world.
About MoCADA TV
The Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Art has for the past ten years been at the vanguard of contemporary African Diasporan culture, now the museum has partnered with Media MVMT to present to you the first season of MoCADA TV, a half hour television program dedicated to profiling, artists, cultural institutions and business of the African Diaspora.
About African Film Festival New York
For the past decade, African Film Festival, Inc. has bridged the divide between post-colonial Africa and the American public through the medium of film. We are particularly mindful of the many ways in which cinema is as much a medium of cultural exchange as an educational gate-way.
About Travelers Foundation
Travelers offers a wide variety of property and casualty insurance and surety products and services to businesses, organizations and individuals in the United States and in selected international markets. Travelers also provides support for charitable organizations
About Assemblywoman Annette Robinson
For the past seven years, Assemblywoman Annette Robinson has served the Bedford Stuyvesant community. She was elected in 2002 by an overwhelming majority of 90% of the vote. Her dedication to the youth in the community extends as she is a generous contributor to this year’s KIDflix celebration.
The 12th Annual KIDflix Film Fest of Bed-Stuy
In collaboration with Creative Outlet, Sweetbeatz, Violin Diva and Aamir Smith’s tribute to Michael Jackson
Sponsored by: Travelers Foundation, New York State Council on the Arts, Assemblywoman Annette Robinson, New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, Councilman Albert Vann and District Leader Robert E. Cornegy Jr.
KIDflix Date: Every Friday Night in the month of August (5, 12, 19, 26)
Rain Date: Final two Saturday’s in the month of August (20 & 27)
Time: 7:00 pm
Location: Fulton Park (corner of Utica Avenue and Fulton Street)
A or C Train to Utica Avenue
Cost: Free to the Public
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Arts (MoCADA) and African Film Fest (AFF) proudly celebrate the 12th Annual KIDflix Film Fest of Bedford Stuyvesant this August! This year’s festival promises to be the most exciting line up ever with newly released film’s of the African Diaspora, live performances, Q&A opportunities with directors, art workshops for children and as always we will end with our grand finale dance party for The Wiz! In addition, MoCADA is thrilled to premier MoCADA TV prior to each feature film, which is an exciting new revolution that takes the African Diaspora outside of its Museum walls and into the world of television!
Marking the 12th Anniversary of the Annual KIDflix Film Fest of Bed Stuy, this year’s selection will feature a very exciting and eclectic line up including:
August 5th – Performance: Jamel Gaines’ Creative Outlet Dance Academy - Feature: Brownstones to Red Dirt with director and actors attending the screening
Featured Film: Brownstones to Red Dirt, directed by Dave LaMattina, Chad N. Walker
Children from Marcy’s Housing Development in Bedford – Stuyvesant and orphans from Sierra Leone are featured in Brownstones to Red Dirt, a feature-length documentary, which tells the story of how these children find one another through a pen pal program that not only expands how they see the world but also shows them how much they have in common through shared experiences.
August 12th – Performance: Violin Diva (Jazz, RnB, Soul) - Short: Mwansa the Great - Feature: Soul Boy
Featured Film: Soul Boy, directed by Hawa Essuman and Tom Tykwer
Soul Boy is a 2010 Kenyan drama film, written by Billy Kahora and directed by Hawa Essuman. When his father falls ill a teenager sets out to find the cure, only to learn that a witch has stolen his father’s soul.
August 19th – Caribbean Night: A Night of Animated Shorts and Performances presented by CariBBeing Film Festival and Trinidad & Tobago Film Festival
This evening will include children specific, African Diasporic film shorts from the Caribbean. Additionally, there will be performances from CASYM Steel Orchestra. This event will be a festive evening of Caribbean film and culture!
August 26th- Performance: Dance Like Michael workshop with Aamir Smith - Feature: The Wiz
Featured Film: The Wiz, directed by Sidney Lumet
Starring the beloved late Lena Horne as Glenda the Good Witch and the late Michael Jackson in his award winning role as Scarecrow, and the talented Diana Ross, The Wiz is a 1970s urban adaptation of The Wizard of Oz. This film version of the Tony award winning Broadway sensation will have you up out your sit, ready to “Ease on Down the Road”.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
About MoCADA
MoCADA is committed to creating a greater awareness and appreciation of the African Diaspora as it relates to contemporary urban issues through innovative exhibitions, public programs and educational interactive tours. Our mission is to undertake the responsibility of rewriting history in order to give a more accurate portrayal of our contributions to the historical, artistic and cultural landscape of the world.
About MoCADA TV
The Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Art has for the past ten years been at the vanguard of contemporary African Diasporan culture, now the museum has partnered with Media MVMT to present to you the first season of MoCADA TV, a half hour television program dedicated to profiling, artists, cultural institutions and business of the African Diaspora.
About African Film Festival New York
For the past decade, African Film Festival, Inc. has bridged the divide between post-colonial Africa and the American public through the medium of film. We are particularly mindful of the many ways in which cinema is as much a medium of cultural exchange as an educational gate-way.
About Travelers Foundation
Travelers offers a wide variety of property and casualty insurance and surety products and services to businesses, organizations and individuals in the United States and in selected international markets. Travelers also provides support for charitable organizations
About Assemblywoman Annette Robinson
For the past seven years, Assemblywoman Annette Robinson has served the Bedford Stuyvesant community. She was elected in 2002 by an overwhelming majority of 90% of the vote. Her dedication to the youth in the community extends as she is a generous contributor to this year’s KIDflix celebration.
Tuesday, August 02, 2011
GOOD NEWS FOR LOVERS OF THE SNOWY DAY AND THE ART OF EZRA JACK KEATS
If, like me, you grew up with The Snowy Day and other magical books written and illustrated by Ezra Jack Keats, you will be delighted to know about this upcoming exhibit at The Jewish Museum.
Here's the 411, straight from the website of the museum:
THE SNOWY DAY AND THE ART OF EZRA JACK KEATS
September 9, 2011 through January 29, 2012
The Snowy Day and the Art of Ezra Jack Keats is the first major exhibition in this country to pay tribute to award-winning author and illustrator Ezra Jack Keats (1916–1983), whose beloved children’s books include Whistle for Willie, Peter’s Chair, and The Snowy Day—the first modern full-color picture book to feature an African-American protagonist. Published in 1962, at the height of the civil rights movement in America, the book went on to become an inspiration for generations of readers, transforming children’s literature forever.
About Ezra Jack Keats
The author and illustrator was born Jacob Ezra Katz in Brooklyn in 1916. His parents were Eastern European Jewish immigrants and very poor. Primarily self-taught, he drew upon memories of growing up in East New York, one of the most deprived neighborhoods in the city. Yet his work transcends the personal and reflects the universal concerns of children.
Keats’s experience of antisemitism and poverty in his youth gave him a lifelong sympathy for others who suffered prejudice and want. “If,” he once remarked, “we all could really see (‘see’ as perceive, understand, discover) each other exactly as the other is, this would be a different world.” A visit to Keats’s neighborhood is restorative: Peter and his friends remind us of the simple joy of being alive.
Ezra Jack Keat's Illustrations
Inspired by Asian art and haiku poetry, Keats used lush color in his paintings and collages and strove for simplicity in his texts. He was often more intent on capturing a mood than developing a plot. “Each drawing is considered not in itself, but in relationship to the rest of the book,” he explained, while keeping in mind “drama, continuity, contrast, and mood.” His preferred format was the horizontal double-page spread, which freed him to alternate close-up scenes with panoramic views. In his illustrations Keats makes dilapidated urban settings beautiful through his mastery of collage as well as his dramatic use of color. By the end of his life in 1983, he had illustrated over eighty books, most of them for children, twenty-two of which he also authored.
About the Exhibition
The exhibition features over 80 original works by the artist, from preliminary sketches and dummies or preparatory books, to final paintings and collages, including examples of Keats’s most introspective but less-known output inspired by Asian art and poetry. One of the spaces in the galleries will be transformed into a reading room for visitors of all ages inspired by Keats's art and stories.
Claudia J. Nahson, Curator
Here's the 411, straight from the website of the museum:
THE SNOWY DAY AND THE ART OF EZRA JACK KEATS
September 9, 2011 through January 29, 2012
The Snowy Day and the Art of Ezra Jack Keats is the first major exhibition in this country to pay tribute to award-winning author and illustrator Ezra Jack Keats (1916–1983), whose beloved children’s books include Whistle for Willie, Peter’s Chair, and The Snowy Day—the first modern full-color picture book to feature an African-American protagonist. Published in 1962, at the height of the civil rights movement in America, the book went on to become an inspiration for generations of readers, transforming children’s literature forever.
About Ezra Jack Keats
The author and illustrator was born Jacob Ezra Katz in Brooklyn in 1916. His parents were Eastern European Jewish immigrants and very poor. Primarily self-taught, he drew upon memories of growing up in East New York, one of the most deprived neighborhoods in the city. Yet his work transcends the personal and reflects the universal concerns of children.
Keats’s experience of antisemitism and poverty in his youth gave him a lifelong sympathy for others who suffered prejudice and want. “If,” he once remarked, “we all could really see (‘see’ as perceive, understand, discover) each other exactly as the other is, this would be a different world.” A visit to Keats’s neighborhood is restorative: Peter and his friends remind us of the simple joy of being alive.
Ezra Jack Keat's Illustrations
Inspired by Asian art and haiku poetry, Keats used lush color in his paintings and collages and strove for simplicity in his texts. He was often more intent on capturing a mood than developing a plot. “Each drawing is considered not in itself, but in relationship to the rest of the book,” he explained, while keeping in mind “drama, continuity, contrast, and mood.” His preferred format was the horizontal double-page spread, which freed him to alternate close-up scenes with panoramic views. In his illustrations Keats makes dilapidated urban settings beautiful through his mastery of collage as well as his dramatic use of color. By the end of his life in 1983, he had illustrated over eighty books, most of them for children, twenty-two of which he also authored.
About the Exhibition
The exhibition features over 80 original works by the artist, from preliminary sketches and dummies or preparatory books, to final paintings and collages, including examples of Keats’s most introspective but less-known output inspired by Asian art and poetry. One of the spaces in the galleries will be transformed into a reading room for visitors of all ages inspired by Keats's art and stories.
Claudia J. Nahson, Curator
SPOKE THE HUB YOUNG ARTIST SCHOLARSHIP AUDITIONS ON SEPTEMBER 9
YOUNG ARTIST SCHOLARSHIP AUDITIONS
What: Spoke the Hub's Young Artists' Scholarship Auditions
Where: Spoke The Hub's space @ Gowanus Arts, 295 Douglas Street, Brooklyn, New York
When: Friday, September 9th, 4:30 – 6:00pm
Contact: Marlena Oden - (718) 408-3234
Information: http://www.spokethehub.org/
SPOKE THE HUB (STH) is offering both full and partial scholarships to young dancers aged 8 to 18 years, with or without previous experience, based on financial need and merit. The audition will take the form of a modern dance class and will include warm-up, improvisation, and combinations across the floor. (Students do not need to prepare any material in advance). Dance scholarships will be awarded for classes in Modern Dance Technique, Ballet,
Improvisation/Choreography/Performance, and others to be selected.
The fall term for scholarship students will begin Monday, September 12, 2011 and run through February, 2012.
Teenagers may also be considered for work/study internships in our office. Applicants must call to set up an appointment and families must bring a copy of their most recent tax return to the audition. For further details and to receive an application form, please call: (718) 408-3234, or email us at spoke@spokethehub.org.
Students involved in dance at STH have plenty of opportunities to create and perform their own original choreography throughout the year. They also work with professional guest artists, and are often invited to participate in SPOKE THE HUB's professional adult productions.
Over the years, SPOKE THE HUB's Young Artists have earned additional scholarships to the American Dance Festival, the Alvin Ailey School, and the Feld Ballet, in addition to colleges throughout the country. They have also performed with STH's adult company at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, at the World Trade Center, and at Lincoln Center, as well as performing independently at the Kitchen, P.S. 122, DTW, and with Meredith Monk/The House
All youth company members are required to take a minimum of two technique classes a week at SPOKE THE HUB, and must be available for occasional additional weekend rehearsals and performances throughout the year. This pre-professional program is geared toward developing tomorrow's most outstanding and creative theater artists.
Spoke the Hub, founded by Artistic Director Elise Long, has been trailblazing in Brooklyn and beyond since 1979. Called a "neighborhood treasure," "cultural pioneers" and a community "staple" by the press and public, Spoke offers a wide spectrum of classes, performances, and special community events for all ages, 7 days a week, all year round.
Visit our website for a full schedule of Current and upcoming classes and events: http://www.spokethehub.org/ (718) 408-3234
What: Spoke the Hub's Young Artists' Scholarship Auditions
Where: Spoke The Hub's space @ Gowanus Arts, 295 Douglas Street, Brooklyn, New York
When: Friday, September 9th, 4:30 – 6:00pm
Contact: Marlena Oden - (718) 408-3234
Information: http://www.spokethehub.org/
SPOKE THE HUB (STH) is offering both full and partial scholarships to young dancers aged 8 to 18 years, with or without previous experience, based on financial need and merit. The audition will take the form of a modern dance class and will include warm-up, improvisation, and combinations across the floor. (Students do not need to prepare any material in advance). Dance scholarships will be awarded for classes in Modern Dance Technique, Ballet,
Improvisation/Choreography/Performance, and others to be selected.
The fall term for scholarship students will begin Monday, September 12, 2011 and run through February, 2012.
Teenagers may also be considered for work/study internships in our office. Applicants must call to set up an appointment and families must bring a copy of their most recent tax return to the audition. For further details and to receive an application form, please call: (718) 408-3234, or email us at spoke@spokethehub.org.
Students involved in dance at STH have plenty of opportunities to create and perform their own original choreography throughout the year. They also work with professional guest artists, and are often invited to participate in SPOKE THE HUB's professional adult productions.
Over the years, SPOKE THE HUB's Young Artists have earned additional scholarships to the American Dance Festival, the Alvin Ailey School, and the Feld Ballet, in addition to colleges throughout the country. They have also performed with STH's adult company at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, at the World Trade Center, and at Lincoln Center, as well as performing independently at the Kitchen, P.S. 122, DTW, and with Meredith Monk/The House
All youth company members are required to take a minimum of two technique classes a week at SPOKE THE HUB, and must be available for occasional additional weekend rehearsals and performances throughout the year. This pre-professional program is geared toward developing tomorrow's most outstanding and creative theater artists.
Spoke the Hub, founded by Artistic Director Elise Long, has been trailblazing in Brooklyn and beyond since 1979. Called a "neighborhood treasure," "cultural pioneers" and a community "staple" by the press and public, Spoke offers a wide spectrum of classes, performances, and special community events for all ages, 7 days a week, all year round.
Visit our website for a full schedule of Current and upcoming classes and events: http://www.spokethehub.org/ (718) 408-3234
Monday, August 01, 2011
WHAT I LEARNED FROM MY TOUR OF LINCOLN CENTER
If you need a place to get out of the heat and be with your laptop, book, or the company of friends, I highly recommend the David Rubenstein Atrium at Lincoln Center between 62nd and 63rd Streets on Broadway. There, you will find a most pleasant public space which features Wi-Fi access, a fountain, wall plants, 'Wichcraft for sandwiches and salads, and the opportunity to purchase half-price tickets for cultural events.
Events taking place in the Atrium on Thursdays are FREE.
After several times of going to the Atrium, I decided to go on one of their guided tours of Lincoln Center. Our guide was Judy, who was full of good information, and the other folks on the tour were from other countries. (My only suggestion is that they have translators on hand.)
Here's some of the fun facts I learned during the tour:
The David Rubenstein Atrium
Like other buildings at Lincoln Center, it's named after someone who gave a ton of money. As Judy pointed out, in the United States the government gives very little money to the arts so as a country we rely heavily on private donors. The atrium is known as a POPS - a privately-owned public space. Which means that since the space can be used by the public, there are tax breaks involved.
This particular space has been all kinds of things over the years, including a place where folks like Charlie Chaplin were performing. In more recent years, it was home to a rock climbing wall.
The wall decor consists of a huge work made out of wool, and the artists owns the sheep. Bonus: the wool absorbs sound! There are also a couple of vertical gardens, which are made up of thousands of plants and definitely add to the peaceful feeling of the place.
Lincoln Center (on the whole)
* Celebrated its 50th birthday in 2009
* Spans 16 acres of land
* Is home to 9 million visitors per years
* Has 9 thousand employees
* Recently had a $1.2 billion renovation
* The renovation included a makeover of its famous outdoor fountain. This fountain, a gift of the Revson family (of Revlon fame) serves as the meeting place * for people in real life and people in the movies.
Avery Fisher Hall
* Built in 1962, it was originally called Philharmonic Hall
* Home to the NY Philharmonic
* First building that went up at Lincoln Center
* Everything in it is designed for acoustical enhancement
* Bernstein, its first conductor, started out as a substitute for another conductor!
* West Side Story was filmed here
* There are 2700 seats
* In the early 70s, Avery Fisher, an owner of an electronics company, came along and gave $10 million to fix acoustical problems in the building
* AFH relies on ticket sales and private donors to keep going
* Its current conductor, Alan Gilbert, is a younger man and helps to bring in a younger audience
* His mom is the first violinist
* The hall can be rented by any group or organization
The Lincoln Center Theater
* Home to these theatres: the Beaumont, the Newhouse, the LCT3 and Claire Tow
* LCT3 was built to promote new artists
* The Vivian Beaumont Theater is a Greek amphitheater with 3 quarter wrap around seating
* The stage thrusts out into the audience
* It is a Broadway theater with 1100 seats, and is the largest stage in Broadway
Its current show, The War Horse, is based on a children's story that was written in the 1980s
* There are lockers outside the theater where you can store your stuff (genius!)
Julliard (closed to public on day of the tour so we could not see inside)
* Only 6% of applicants are admitted to the school
* It was started by the Damrosch family
The Metropolitan Opera House (closed to public on day of tour so we could just see part of the lobby)
* There are 21 chandeliers made of Swaroski crystals
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