Clean Slate: New Paintings by Anne LaPrade Seuthe

The paintings in this exhibition started out as, what LaPrade Seuthe calls, clean slates. Beginning with discarded maps, she carefully color matches the hues in the existing maps and applies these opaque paint mixtures to eradicate names, symbols and other location identifiers. Once the clean slate has been established, she adds drawings of images culled from encyclopedias, dictionaries, travel guides and assorted manuals. The images are separated by layers of grid lines – a device suggesting there is a connection between all that exists in the natural world. Translucent layers of paint are built up in a process that unifies the surface while modifying the imagery in various ways. Some images become obscured while others become more pronounced. For her, this process seems to parallel an internal process of creating a clean slate or starting over. Some experiences remain vivid in our minds and can easily be recalled, while others exist as vestiges. Her painting is complete when connections between seemingly random images are revealed.
Since her first solo show in 1994, Massachusetts-born LaPrade Seuthe has participated in numerous group exhibitions including most recently the London Biennale, and the Zendai Museum of Modern Art in Shanghai. She is Director of Hampden and Central Galleries at the University of Massachusetts. More Information

Pilobolus

This collaborative dance company is acclaimed for its mix of humor, invention, and drama. Drawing inspiration from biology, Pilobolus has created a dance vocabulary all its own. Their smooth, organic choreography often blurs the lines between individual performers, creating a sense of dance-troupe-as-organism.

About Pilobolus, The New York Times writes, “the continuity of changing imagery, the easy sensuousness and the wonderful push-me-pull-you surprises of the physicality: These still seem to come right out of their makers” dreams and into ours.” More Information

Charles Lloyd New Quartet

A towering musical figure, Charles Lloyd carries on the unifying mission of such truth seekers as Sonny Rollins and John Coltrane. During the late 60s, Lloyd led one of the most popular groups in jazz that went on to produce Forest Flower, one of the best-selling jazz albums ever.

All About Jazz writes, “There was plenty to admire in the Charles Lloyd New Quartet’s San Francisco concert: Lloyd pushed his young rhythm section to a new plane of sensitivity; the compositions were elegant and flexible, allowing for both hard-driving rhythms and feathery melodic exploration; and the band played ballads with a beauty intolerant of sap.” More Information

Thank You for Telling Us What You Think

Out of hundreds of people who have submitted their comments from this season’s past events to the Fine Arts Center blog, we would like to congratulate Sara Upton and Bill Mullin. They are our winners of yesterday’s random ticket giveaway for this Thursday’s event: Cantus & Theater Latté Da’s “All Is Calm.”

Sara Upton’s comment from the Venice Baroque Orchestra earlier this month: “I haven’t been a committed fan of Philip Glass but after last night’s incredible performance, I have a very different view. Also, Vivaldi was much like a ‘conversation’ in which I was included. Thank you,”

Bill Mullin also submitted a comment about the Venice Baroque Orchestra: “The Vivaldi and Glass Seasons were remarkable. Robert McDuffie is a show-off but he plays his instrument wonderfully. I have loved Glass’s music for a long time and this confirmed it. I thought some of the violins might have to go into rehab after that performance!”

We appreciate all of the comments we read about our events here at The Fine Arts Center so please keep them coming. For each submission you make, you increase the chance of being picked in a future ticket giveaway.

Cantus & Theater Latté Da: “All Is Calm”

The Western Front, Christmas Eve, 1914. Out of the trenches comes a silence, then a song as a young German soldier steps into no man’s land singing “stille Nacht.” Thus begins a truce between allied forces and German soldiers and an extraordinary night of camaraderie, music, and peace. Bringing this historical moment to life, Cantus and Theater Latté Da beautifully combine theater and music including new arrangements of European carols and war-songs for a capella voices.

“And if a classic work is marked by its capacity to stretch and deepen in meaning on repeated viewings, then ‘All is Calm’ seems destined to become timeless. Even without an ornament or a shred of red drapery anywhere on its stark set, ‘All is Calm’ has no peer in the Christmas theatrical sweepstakes—on the terms of celebrating the possibility of peace on earth, goodwill to all” (Graydon Royce, Minneapolis Star Tribune“. More Information

Randy Weston

After six decades as a professional musician Randy Weston remains one of the world’s foremost pianists and composers, a true innovator and visionary. “Weston has the biggest sound of any jazz pianist since Ellington and Monk,” writes Stanley Crouch. In a career that began in the late 1940s, Weston has criss-crossed the globe connecting the African diaspora through sound. “Mr. Weston is a truth seeker who sees a power in music much greater than all of us,” writes The New York Times.

Born in Brooklyn in 1926, Weston’s first recording as a leader came in 1954 on Riverside Records, Randy Weston plays Cole Porter –  Cole Porter in a Modern Mood. In the 50’s Weston played around New York with Cecil Payne and Kenny Dorham and wrote many of his best loved tunes, “Saucer Eyes,” “Pam’s Waltz,” “Little Niles,” and, “Hi-Fly”, now all jazz standards.
In the 1960s, Weston’s music prominently incorporated African elements, as in the large-scale suite Uhuru Africa (with poet Langston Hughes) and Highlife: Music From the New African Nations. On both these albums he teamed up with the arranger and his long-time collaborator, Melba Liston. In 1967 Weston traveled throughout Africa with a U.S. cultural delegation, and decided to settle in Morocco, running his African Rhythms Club from 1967 to 1972. For a long stretch he recorded infrequently on smaller record labels, but made quite an impact with the recording The Spirits of Our Ancestors (1992), which contained new, expanded versions of many of his well-known pieces and featured an ensemble including African musicians and North American such as Dizzy Gillespie and Pharoah Sanders.
Randy Weston has made more than 40 albums and performed throughout the world. He has been inducted into the ASCAP “Jazz Wall of Fame,” designated a Jazz Master by the National Endowment of the Arts, and named jazz composer of the year three times by Downbeat magazine. He is the recipient of many other honors and awards, including the French Order of Arts and Letters, the “Black Music Star Award” from the Art Critics and Reviewers Association of Ghana, and a five-night tribute at the Montreal Jazz Festival. In October 2010, Weston will publish his autobiography, African Rhythms: The Autobiography of Randy Weston (Duke University Press).

Randy Weston appears in Amherst as part of “Art & Power in Movement -Rethinking the Black Power and Black Arts Movements”, produced by the W.E.B. Du Bois Department of Afro-American Studies, University of Massachusetts.

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Michelle Dickson: Never Arriving

“Never Arriving” is an installation that focuses on concepts of the temporal and duration. Dickson will create a site-responsive installation in the Incubator Space over the course of several weeks with the installation process on view to the public.

The final work itself will have a finitduration; its own life span. Each stage of the process is both a part of the work and of the conceptual intention. When the exhibition is over the piece will cease to exist as the de-installation destroys it. The impermanence of the installation connects it to the life span of the body in aging and death, but also to the uncertainty of life in general and the ever changing dynamics of personal relationships. More Information

Victor Signore: Transmutations

Victor Signore’s solo exhibition of new mixed-media sculpture and installation explores the creation of a liminal space where the boundaries between corporeal and immaterial states or physical and mental experience are blurred. Utilizing the visceral quality of natural materials such as beeswax, ashes and lead; the works attempt to evoke both personal and collective memory through seemingly disparate channels of perception and experience. More Information

Amreeka

Amreeka (Cherien Dabis, USA/Canada, 96 minutes, in English and Arabic with English subtitles) In this heart-warming tale, an accomplished feature debut by Palestinian/Jordanian filmmaker Cherien Dabis, a courageous and resourceful single mother leaves the West Bank with her son for a new life in America. More Information