Showing posts with label kent county arts council. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kent county arts council. Show all posts

Thursday, October 6, 2011

100-Voice Choir Returns to Washington College October 22 for Seventh Annual Gospel Concert


CHESTERTOWN, MD–The 100-Voice Choir and special musical guests will raise spirits in Decker Theatre, Gibson Center for the Arts, on the Washington College campus on Saturday, October 22, 2011 at 4 p.m. (doors to open at 3:30 p.m.) to celebrate the life and example of the late Rev. Vincent Hynson. A 1987 alumnus of Washington College, Rev. Hynson was a dedicated and beloved teacher, coach, pastor and community leader in Kent County who died of cancer in 2004. The gospel concert in his honor will benefit the Vincent Hynson ’87 Scholarship at the College.

Special guest artists will include the Stillpond Coleman Mass Choir, the Second Generation Choir, the Gibbs Trio, the interpretive dance pair “Undivided Hearts,” Washington College’s WACappella, Minister Otis Williams on keyboard, and 8-year old cellist Tia Raimond-Jones, granddaughter of Leslie and Vince Raimond of Chestertown. Mrs. Denise Jones of Mt. Olive A.M.E. Church in Worton will serve as M.C.
Founded in 2005, the 100-Voice Choir is the vision of Sylvia Frazier, a gospel music producer and promoter who runs S&B Productions with her husband, Bill Frazier. The annual fundraising concert in honor of Vincent Hynson is co-sponsored by Washington College and the Kent County Arts Council and is organized by S & B Productions. Tickets, at $7 a person, will be available in advance at The Compleat Bookseller and Scottie’s Shoe Store, both in the 300 block of High Street, downtown Chestertown.
For more information, contact S & B Productions at 410-778-6006 or the Kent County Arts Council at 410-778-1149.
Photos: Top, Lester Barrett performs at last year's concert. Above, the granddaughter of Vince and Leslie Prince Raimond will perform at the 7th annual concert October 22.

Monday, April 18, 2011

An Evening with Professor Emeritus Robert Day at the Smithsonian, April 21


On Thursday, April 21, in Washington, D.C., Robert Day, Washington College professor emeritus of English and active University of Kansas alumnus, will discuss his travels around the world in a talk entitled "Bar Art: John Sloan's McSorley's Old Ale House Paintings, a Vargas Girl behind the Bar at Ruby Red's in New Orleans, The Luncheon of the Boating Party on the Kansas Prairie, and Manet's A Bar at the Folies-Bergère in Paris—plus e.e. cummings, Bob Dylan, and Joseph Mitchell—A Travel Memoir with Pictures." The talk will take place at 7 p.m. in the Nan Tucker McEvoy Auditorium inside the Smithsonian American Art Museum and National Portrait Gallery.

A bus will depart from the Casey Academic Center at 4:30 p.m. for those interested. Cost is $23 per person. For reservations, please contact Patsy Will at 410-778-7813.

The lecture is part of two April Art Talks in collaboration with the Smithsonian American Art Museum and is also sponsored by the 1782 Society as well as the Kent County Arts Council.

Adam Goodheart will present the second lecture about his new book, 1861: The Civil War Awakening (Knopf, 2011), on Saturday, April 23 at 2 p.m. For more information, please visit: http://washingtoncollegenews.blogspot.com/2011/04/civil-war-at-smithsonian-starr-center.html.

Both talks are free and open to the public.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Washington College Joins Arts Council to Present Annual Kent County Poetry Festival

CHESTERTOWN, MD — Washington College and the Kent County Arts Council will present the fourth annual “Kent County Poetry Festival: A Day of Public Poetry in Celebration of National Poetry Month” at the Book Plate, 112 South Cross Street, on Friday, April 8, from 4 to 7 p.m.
People from throughout the county will gather to read aloud their favorite lines from the world of verse—a reminder that poetry, rather than being some rarefied specimen, is in fact a vital, living art with widespread appeal.
The public is welcome to simply drop by during the event to listen. Those who want to share a poem should register in advance by sending an email to poetry@washcoll.edu or by filling out one of the festival sign-up sheets posted throughout the county.
“This program is in the spirit of the ‘Favorite Poem Project’ pioneered by Robert Pinsky when he was Poet Laureate of the United States,” said Christopher Ames, Provost and Dean of Washington College. “The goal is to bring together diverse peoples in our community around the poetry people know and love to share and, in doing so, debunk the idea that poetry is just something for academics to study. During National Poetry Month, we want to illustrate the role that poetry can have in enriching our everyday lives.”
The organizer of the festival is Robert Earl Price, a poet and playwright who is lecturer and writer in residence in the Drama Department at Washington College. This year’s featured poet, Mark Nowak, the Director of the Rose O’Neill Literary House at the College, will read a brief selection from his works. Nowak’s most recent book is Coal Mountain Elementary and he has been awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship to support the development of his next work. The rest of the program will be devoted to community members reading their favorite poems.
For more information about the Poetry Festival, contact Leslie Prince Raimond at the Kent County Arts Council (kentcountyartscouncil@verizon.net) or Tom Martin at the Book Plate (bookplate@verizon.net).
Photo: Poet Mark Nowak, director of the Rose O'Neil Literary House, is the featured poet at this year's festival.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Kohl Gallery Hosts Multi-Media Installation by Internationally Acclaimed Artist and Washington College Faculty Member Monika Weiss



CHESTERTOWN—On Friday, February 25 the Kohl Gallery will open a one-person show by internationally acclaimed artist and Washington College faculty member Monika Weiss. “Lamentations (Sustenazo): Recent Works by Monika Weiss,” will run through April 15 at the gallery, which is located in the Gibson Center for the Arts on the Washington College campus, 300 Washington Avenue.

Weiss is a Polish-American artist who works in drawing, projected video, musical composition, performance and sculpture, often combining these elements in her public installations. The new exhibition, which is being shown for the first time in the U.S., is drawn from a larger exhibition of 2010, “Monika Weiss: Sustenazo,” held at the Centre for Contemporary Art (CCA), Ujazdowski Castle, Warsaw. Weiss completed the work while on junior sabbatical leave from Washington College, where she serves as assistant professor and coordinator of the studio art program in the Department of Art and Art History. The U.S. Embassy in Warsaw provided a major grant for “Sustenazo,” which also received support from the Central Medical Library, Warsaw, the Warsaw Rising Museum, the Historical Museum of Warsaw, Media in Motion, Berlin, and a number of individuals, including a physician. The exhibition later traveled to Berlin.

“Lamentations” is curated by Donald McColl, the Nancy L. Underwood Associate Professor of Art History at Washington College and former Director of Kohl Gallery. The first of several special events planned around the show will be the opening reception, Friday, February 25 at 6 p.m. On Wednesday, March 2, from 4 to 6 p.m., the Kent County Arts Council will host a “Town & Gown” event for the local arts community that will include a talk by the artist, a walk-through of the exhibition and a reception. And on the afternoon of Wednesday, March 30, internationally renowned art historian, critic and curator Dr. Julia P. Herzberg will come to Chestertown for a lecture on Weiss’s work and a conversation with the artist. Each event is free and open to the public; some content may not be suitable for children.

Sustenazo is a Greek word meaning to sigh or to lament inaudibly together. Weiss’s exhibition on this theme was inspired by a specific event that took place at Ujazdowski Castle, Warsaw, when it was a hospital—and actually was installed there, in the cellar, the only portion of the castle to survive. On August 6, 1944, during the onset of the Warsaw Uprising, the German Army forced more than 1,800 patients and medical staff to evacuate the hospital overnight. With that incident as its reference point, Weiss’s art explores visual and musical aspects of the ancient ritual of Lament and its historical connection to feminine expression, especially as contrasted with the notion of the heroic myth within the narrative of war. “An important part of this work is the motif of lament as a form of expression outside language,” she says.

“Lamentatons” speaks to the essence of a hospital as a metaphor for healing, but in the context of the specific horrors of the Nazi evacuation of Ujazdowski Hospital and the general oppression of human rights throughout history. The artist’s original sound composition (Weiss trained for many years at Warsaw’s Conservatory of Music) incorporates the voice of a surviving witness of the hospital’s expulsion along with voices of average Germans reading passages from the second part of Goethe’s classic play “Faust.”

Weiss’s installation also juxtaposes original objects and documents related to the hospital’s exodus—mostly old books and small pieces of medical equipment—with other images, including video. The interplay of all these visual layers in video projection with the mix of voice and music creates a poetic environment in which viewers can form their own assumptions and conclusions. “Much of my art investigates the relationships between memory and history, but I build it from multiple narratives in order to leave the meaning open to interpretation,” says Weiss, who teaches drawing and new genres at Washington College.

London-based art critic Guy Brett has written of Weiss, “Her work is a remarkable, individual counterpoint between technological media (video projection) and the ancient activity of drawing. Sound is also an important element, meticulously composed by the artist. It lifts the silent filmed actions into another emotional register.” The result, he says, “is an alternative experience of space and time, … steady and enduring, establishing and deepening a human presence.”

Curator McColl adds that Washington College is “exceedingly fortunate” to have Monika Weiss on the faculty. “She not only maintains a complex, thoughtful, and highly successful international practice—one based on cutting-edge trends in media and culture, as well as a deep-rooted knowledge of history, literature, language and myth, let alone everything from philosophy to medical theory—but she also holds such deep convictions about teaching and the mentoring of our students,” he says.

Weiss’s past exhibitions include the 2005 “Monika Weiss: Five Rivers,” a comprehensive survey of her work at Lehman College Art Gallery, City University of New York, which was favorably reviewed in The New York Times, and a two-person exhibition with the pioneering filmmaker and performance artist Carolee Schneemann at Remy Toledo Gallery, New York, in 2004. She has also exhibited at such venues as the Muzeum Montanelli in Prague, the Cisneros Fontanals Art Foundation in Miami, the Frauenmuseum in Bonn, and the Kunsthaus Dresden in Dresden; examples of her work are also in the permanent collections of places from Vienna’s Albertina Museum to the Drawing Center, New York.

Weiss’s work is featured in the book on contemporary drawing practices Drawing Now: Between the Lines of Contemporary Art, (I.B. Tauris, London). Her papers have been published in books and journals, including Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research (Intellectbooks, Bristol, UK) and Being Syncretic (Springer, Vienna/New York). She co-edits the contemporary drawing magazine Tracey, published by England’s Loughborough University.
Weiss is represented by Galerie Samuel Lallouz (Montréal) and Remy Toledo Projects (New York). A member of the Washington College faculty since 2006, she lives in Chestertown and New York City.

"Lamentations" is sponsored in part by the Chestertown Spy. To learn more about the artist and her work, please visit: http://www.monika-weiss.com and http://art.washcoll.edu/faculty_monikaweiss.php.

Kohl Gallery is open Wednesdays and Thursdays from 1 to 5 p.m., Fridays noon to 6 p.m., and Saturdays and Sundays noon to 5 p.m. (Closed Mondays and Tuesdays).

On exhibit in the William Frank Visual Arts Hallway outside the Kohl Gallery through Sunday, Feb. 27 is the photography exhibit, “Photography Exposed,” curated by Brian Palmer, manager of the Multimedia Production Center at Washington College. Each photograph has an accompanying QR Codes, or “Quick Read” matrix barcode, that can be scanned by any iPhone, Android phone or new generation iPod (those with cameras) to gain access to a video or text message from the photographer.


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Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Chestertown Observes International Day of Peace


Chestertown, MD — The Chestertown Peace Alliance, the Kent County Arts Council, the Community Mediation Center, and the Center for Environment & Society (CES) at Washington College are observing Peace Day at Chestertown's Fountain Park on Saturday, September 20, from 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon. The celebration includes live music, educational exhibits, the lighting of a Unity Candle, and welcoming remarks by Mayor Margo Bailey, Dr. J. David Newell, and Dr. Kevin Brien. The event is free and open to the public. For more information, call 410/778-7295 or contact jfairchild2@washcoll.edu.
The International Day of Peace ("Peace Day") is a global holiday when individuals, communities, nations, and governments highlight efforts to end conflict and promote peace. Established by a United Nations resolution, the first Peace Day was celebrated in September 1982. In 2002 the General Assembly officially declared September 21 as the permanent date for the celebration.
By creating the International Day of Peace, the UN devoted itself to worldwide peace and encouraged all of mankind to work in cooperation for this goal. During the discussion of the UN Resolution that established the International Day of Peace, it was suggested that:
"Peace Day should be devoted to commemorating and strengthening the ideals of peace both within and among all nations and peoples...This day will serve as a reminder to all peoples that our organization, with all its limitations, is a living instrument in the service of peace and should serve all of us here within the organization as a constantly pealing bell reminding us that our permanent commitment, above all interests or differences of any kind, is to peace. May peace prevail on Earth."
Since its inception, Peace Day has marked our personal and planetary progress toward peace. It has grown to include millions of people in all parts of the world, and each year events are organized to commemorate and celebrate this day. Events range in scale from private gatherings to public concerts and forums where hundreds of thousands of people participate.
Anyone, anywhere can celebrate Peace Day. It can be as simple as lighting a candle at noon, or just sitting in silent meditation. Or it can involve getting your co-workers, organization, community or government engaged in a large event. The impact if millions of people in all parts of the world, coming together for one day of peace, is immense.
International Day of Peace is also a Day of Ceasefire—personal or political. Take this opportunity to make peace in your own relationships as well as impact the larger conflicts of our time. Imagine what a whole Day of Ceasefire would mean to humankind.
September 3, 2008

Thursday, April 17, 2003

Shore Poetry Contest Winners To Be Honored April 24 At Washington College's O'Neill Literary House

Chestertown, MD, April 17, 2003 — The winners of the 2003 Eastern Shore Poetry Contest will be honored in a public reading and awards presentation at Washington College's O'Neill Literary House on Washington Avenue in Chestertown, Thursday, April 24 at 6:30 p.m. Sponsored by the Eastern Shore County Arts Councils of Talbot, Caroline, Queen Anne's, Kent and Cecil counties, the annual Eastern Shore Poetry Contest invites submissions in all age groups from children to senior citizens. Erin Murphy, a lecturer in English and visiting associate director of the O'Neill Literary House, served as this year's judge.
The winners of the 2003 Eastern Shore Poetry Contest in the category of Children and Youth, Grades 1-8, are: First Place, “ Life Story” by Will MacIntosh of Chestertown (Kent School, Grade 5); Second Place, “Teachers at Night” by Benjamin Dryer of Elkton (Kenmore Elementary, Grade 5); and Third Place, a tie between “When I Moved Away” by Kristin Henry of Stevensville (Bayside Elementary, Grade 5) and “The Wolf” by Elizabeth A. Sughrue of Grasonville (The Key School, Grade 6).
The 2003 winners in the category of Students, Grade 9-12, are: First Place, “Three A.M.” by James Barlow of Millington (Queen Anne's County High School, Grade 12); Second Place, “Halfway Point to the Middle of Nowhere” by Christina M. Sughrue of Grasonville (The Key School, Grade 11); Third Place, “Daybreak” by Anna Rubin of Neavitt (St. Michael's High School, Grade 12).
The 2003 winners in the category of Adults, Age 18-59, are: First Place, “Autumn” by Ann E. Dorbin of Trappe; Second Place, “I Cannot Lift This House” by James Dissette of Chestertown; and Third Place, “Synesthesia” by Maggie Creshkoff of Port Deposit.
In the category of Seniors, Age 60 plus, the following take the 2003 awards: First Place, “Pop Ziegler,” and Second Place, “On Leaving a Marriage,” both by Dr. Ann Hennessy of Rock Hall; and a Third Place tie between “Kent Island Blues” by Alex Johnson of Chester, and “The Old Darnell Farm” by Mary C. Godfrey of Sudlersville.
“I was impressed by the quality of work submitted, and by the variety in the entries,” Murphy said. “The themes of the winning poems range from nostalgia about the development of the Eastern Shore to theories on why teachers are scary at night. Some made me think, some made me laugh, and all of them made me glad to have so many talented writers in our part of Maryland.”

Friday, March 21, 2003

Second Annual Chester River Film Festival April 3-5


Festival Features Experimental Art Films to Local Documentaries

Chestertown, MD, March 21, 2003 — The Kent County Arts Council and the Washington College Friends of the Arts present the Second Annual CHESTER RIVER FILM FESTIVAL, Thursday, April 3 through Saturday, April 5, 2003. This year's festival will feature 26 films showing during the weekend in Washington College's Norman James Theatre and at the Prince Theater in Chestertown. For venue information and viewing times, call the Kent County Arts Council at 410-778-3831. Admission is free and all are invited to attend.
Launched in Spring 2002, the Chester River Film Festival was created to present an eclectic exhibition of independent film and video in all genres—narrative, experimental, documentary and animation—in the enriching historic and cultural atmosphere of Chestertown. Film artists, from established national independent filmmakers to local students, have submitted for this year's festival and some of the films to be featured are:
  • “Silver Cities of the Yucatan, the Mason Spinden Expedition.” Footage of an exploration of the Yucatan in the 1920s, creating a narrative that won the 2002 award at the New York Explorers Club.
  • “The Prizefight of 1849.” A docudrama about the famous fight at the mouth of Still Pond Creek in Kent County that was the birth of modern boxing in America.
  • “Urban Hiker.” A three-minute art-film exploring wildlife in the city.
  • “Gift of the Game.” A documentary about a group who revive little league baseball in present day Cuba.
  • “Books under Fire.” A look at book-banning in Texas public schools.
  • “C-Town Girl.” A narrative produced and directed by Washington College senior Shane Brill featuring a surprise twist and a soundtrack by Chestertown's musical experimentalists, Astralyte.
  • “A Chronicle of Corpses.” A lushly detailed early 19th century period piece, concerning the last days of a family of once wealthy aristocrats.
The Chester River Film Festival is made possible by the support of Washington College's Friends of the Arts and the Kent County Arts Council. Founded in 1988, Friends of the Arts is a group of Washington College alumni, faculty, staff, parents and community members working to fund and promote visual and performing arts activities at the College. For additional information about the Friends of the Arts, please contact Ellen Wise at 410-778-7295.
The Kent County Arts Council (KCAC) is a non-profit organization dedicated to promoting the arts in Kent County, Maryland. Sponsoring dozens of diverse programs annually, it seeks to cultivate a thriving culture for the arts in Upper Shore region. Contact Leslie Prince Raimond at 410-778-3831 for information on KCAC events and programs.