Sunday, November 8 2009

Format: 2009/11/20

Sunday, November 8 2009

October New Exhibits and Opening Reception at Silvermine Guild Arts Center

Opening Reception to be held October 18 from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.

Exhibit runs from October 18 through November 13.

 
 Director’s Choice: Scott Bricher - “Dreams, Desires & Curiosities”
                  In this exhibit of works ranging from large scale realist oil paintings to small mixed media pieces, dream images are linked with the mystical and everyday to create images of discovery. The artist uses multiple themes, while maintaining their separate identities…. existing side-by-side to create a suggestive ambience, each with its own chapter or vignette yet forming a complete story, leaving it to the viewer to compile the images for their own meaning.
 
 Juried Guild Group - “Narrative”
                 An exhibition of artworks with social, political, historical and psychological dimensions. Visual expressions of cultural and personal worlds can possess deeply powerful communicative imagery arrived at through literal, abstract and figuratively visual means. The intention of this exhibit is to reveal timeless stories in powerfully evocative ways. Artwork in all mediums juried by artist Mary Frank.
 
Mary Frank – “Selected Works”
                 For over 50 years, Mary Frank has used such diverse media as sculpture, painting, drawing, printmaking and encaustic to explore the idea of narrative, suggesting that her primary loyalty is not to a particular way of working or to any medium, but rather to the power of direct expression and to the act of creation itself. In this exhibit of selected works, the viewer will identify with the artists imaginary figures, landscapes and creatures on the emotional, philosophical and psychological levels. 

 

GALLERY HOURS: Tuesday – Saturday: 11 am – 5 pm; Sunday: 1 – 5 pm.
 

Noelle Carr: A Veterans Memorial Garden

A Veterans Memorial Garden is an installation created by Connecticut artist Noelle Carr to honor American Veterans of Operation Iraqi Freedom, Operation Enduring Freedom, and the global war on terror. "My intent is to express gratitude to our troops and their families and remember all of the men and women who have served in America's Armed Forces, especially our fallen heroes," said Ms. Carr.

A Veterans Memorial Garden  will include an A Million Thanks receptacle for visitors to leave their own letters of thanks to the troops that will be sent at the close of the exhibit. A portion of proceeds from the exhibit will be donated to Wounded Warrior Project.


 

The Connection's Second Annual Walk & Roll Benefit

Come care for your neighbors in need and enjoy a two-mile leisure walk for families and walkers with an abundance of fun activities for everyone.  Proceeds benefit children and families in need in Middlesex County served by The Connection.  Susan Bysiewicz is the Honorary Event Chairperson and Desiree Fontaine of WTNH-TV will be this year's emcee.  We look forward to see you there! 

 

Mystery Hunt at the Museum

10:00am – 4:30pm Daily; Sunday, 12:00pm-4:30pm

Come to The Barnum Museum and try your hand at being a detective. Create a detective badge and follow the clues to find the missing sculpture.
 

Create a Bookmark

10:00am – 4:30pm Daily; Sunday, 12:00pm-4:30pm

Come on down to The Barnum Museum and create a bookmark; use it in your favorite book.
 

Art of Deception Exhibition

10:00am – 4:30pm Daily; Sunday, 12:00pm-4:30pm

In collaboration with the Music and Arts Center for Humanity and the University of Bridgeport, The Barnum Museum will host an extraordinary collection of student art and writing that will speak to the themes of The Maltese Falcon. The exhibition will challenge the viewer to look beyond the obvious to discover deeper meanings intended by the artists.

 

 

Art of Deception Special Exhibit

10:00am – 4:30pm Daily; Sunday, 12:00pm-4:30pm

A special exhibition presented in the historic Blue Parlor period room at The Barnum Museum.
 

City Lights Student Art Show

City Lights Gallery hours

Illustrating the themes and symbols cloaked in the lines of Dashiell Hammett’s Maltese Falcon, Bridgeport Public Schools students will present their artistic interpretations of the great detective story.
 

The Rocky Horror Show

Showtimes are at 8:00pm AND Midnight

It’s Alive! Following last fall’s smash hit production, The Rocky Horror
Show returns to the Playhouse. Experience this new Bridgeport tradition
for the first time, or come “do the Time Warp Again!” Recommended for
Mature Audiences.  Tickets and showtimes at www.playhouseonthegreen.org

 

 

Big Read Mystery Lab

10:00am-5:00pm

The Discovery Museum’s Big Read Mystery Lab will bring out your inner
detective, whether you’re a puzzle ponderer by nature or not. Visitors can
gather clues and examine evidence to solve totally fictional, historically
hokey “Crimes of Science”. Included with general admission.

 

Women's Work, Women's Dreams

The works in this exhibition reflect the visions of Swedish women who broke from their traditional roles of women, mothers and homemakers to explore their creativity as textile designers, weavers, painters, sculptors and glass artists. Their art resonates with dream-like images of free-flying birds evoking flight and escape from domestic confinement, year-round idyllic visions of midsummer blossoms, and spare Nordic landscapes filled with greenery, water, space, and light.  

Women's Work, Women's Dreams celebrates a remarkable legacy from a country whose art and artists are little known to American viewers.  The Benton Museum is grateful to Samuel and Ann Charters for sharing their extraordinary collection of Swedish Art and Art Glass and for curating this exhibit.

Gallery Hours: 

Thursday & Friday: 10 am - 4:30 pm

Saturday & Sunday: 1 - 4:30 pm

The Benton will be closed:

November 23 - December 2

 

The Spirit of Afghanistan: Carpets of War and Hope

Three decades of wars have deeply marked the entire culture of Afghanistan, yet artistic expression, particularly through carpets, has been maintained in spite of hardships including displacement to refugee camps.  

In traditional Afghan carpet-weaving, patterns tended to be geometric or floral, reflecting the Islamic rejection of anthropomorphic depictions.  However, by the mid-1980s, in response to the 1979 Soviet Invasion, Afghani weavers, principally women, were creating carpets that showed Russian tanks, helicopters and guns.  The subtle geometric borders often contained rows of bullets and grenades.  Most recently, these "war carpets" have included references to the American conflict and even to 9/11.  Although many of the carpets have Arabic or Persian woven into their designs, the Afghani who created them found a market for these rugs in the West.  In part this may be presumed anti-war sentiments but also, while the rugs are generally traditional in design and relatively inexpensive, they are nonetheless a contemporary artistic expression of a century old craft.  

In this exhibition of over fifty contemporary Afghan carpets showing both war and traditional designs, the rugs offer a commentary on modern Afghan history and, in their maintenance of a vibrant tradition, a measure of hope for the future.

Gallery Hours:

Thursday & Friday: 10 am-4:30 pm

Saturday & Sunday: 1-4:30 pm

The Benton will be closed:

November 23-December 2

 

Western Connecticut Youth Orchestra and Junior Orchestra Concert

 Come and enjoy the first concert in the The Western Connecticut Youth Orchestra's 2009 - 2010 season.  The program will also feature a soloist from the Ridgefield Symphony Orchestra.  The concert starts at 6 PM and tickets can be purchased at the door.

 

Veterans' Day Celebration




Each year IAIS honors a local Native American who has served in the United States Military.   Throughout history Native Americans have served their country with the highest record of service per capita when compared to any other ethnic group.  Join us in remembering all veterans, Native and non-native, who have served our country with courage and pride.  Following a traditional ceremony in our outdoor village we invite participants and visitors for a light lunch.

 

 

Litchfield Hills Archaeology Club Lecture





“First Nations-Last Elephants”

An illustrated presentation by Tom Lake

 

 

Twelve millennia ago the first humans entered the Northeast into a landscape that contained a myriad of now-extinct animals. These Paleo-Indians were entering virgin forests and grasslands, but the fauna they encountered were not new; they had seen them all before during their millennia-long trek across North America. What was new was the ticking clock of extinction as the First Nations met the Last Elephants, one heading toward dominance, the other to oblivion.

Tom Lake is an archaeologist, and teaches anthropology at SUNY Dutchess Community College in Poughkeepsie (NY). He also works for the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation’s Hudson River Estuary Program as its Estuary Naturalist, where he shadows eagles, teaches the ecology of the estuary, and edits the Hudson River Almanac, a natural history journal now in its 16th year.  

 

 

Connecticut College Chamber Choir Fall Concert

The Chamber Choir performs. Paul Althouse, director. Event will be held at 7:30 PM.

 

Lecture Series with David Dunlop: “Look Back to Move Forward: How the Arts uses other Cultures and Times as Sources”

Lecture starts at 4:30 PM.

David will discuss how artists have borrowed from ancient and foreign sources to find modern ideas.  The lecture will explore the arts of varied times and cultures and show how they are retrofitted to contemporary artists. He will also provide insight as to how ancient mythologies, exotic cultures and lost societies might shape our imagination and give contemporary artists a new language with a new set of tools.
 
David Dunlop has given art history lectures at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and his 13-week PBS series which began airing in March 2008, “Landscapes through Time” won a Daytime Emmy Award this year for Outstanding Special Class in writing. A teacher at Silvermine Guild Arts Center since 1993, David’s work is nationally known and featured in many prominent collections throughout the U.S. and abroad. Dunlop’s lecture series, always stimulating and fun, sell out quickly often with standing room only available.
 

Disease Detectives

Solve infectious disease mysteries by examining interactive patients, analyzing lab tests and identifying culprit microbes. Running Monday to Saturday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sunday noon to 5 p.m. through Jan. 31.

 

 

The American Mural Project at the Hartford Public Library

Hartford Public Library Exhibit

The American Mural Project (AMP) is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the creation of the largest indoor collaborative artwork in the world – a mural 120 feet long, 5 stories high, and up to 10 feet deep. Over 10,000 people have worked on it since artist Ellen Griesedieck conceived of it ten years ago. This exhibition at Hartford Public Library will feature some of the finished pieces of the mural, as well as a scale model and plans for elements in progress. Visitors will also have the chance to work on an eight-foot paper-pulp sculpture, one of many AMP is now sending across the country to be painted before their eventual installation in the mural. Throughout the month of the exhibit, AMP will also be coordinating projects with kids from local schools, the Wadsworth Atheneum, the Hartford Stage, and other arts organizations around the city.

The Artist’s Vision

In the American Mural Project, Ellen Griesedieck celebrates the engineers and ironworkers, heart surgeons and athletes, cattle workers and craftsmen, and many others who have defined our nation through their work. Ellen paints on a large scale but with an intimate relationship to each of her subjects.

To make the mural as large in spirit as it is in size, Ellen asked people in all 50 states to contribute. Thousands of artists, scientists, teachers and children from coast to coast have responded. Children have worked together with remarkable people, including the quilters of Gee’s Bend, Alabama, an inner-city dance troupe, scientists of the 2003 Mars Explorer Rover Mission, survivors of a Japanese-American internment camp, and an intergenerational foster-home community.

About one quarter of the mural is finished. Collaborative projects are in progress around the country, and work on the mural’s new home, in the Whiting Mills complex in Winsted, CT, is about to begin. With soaring ceilings, open floor plans, and long rows of windows, this 19th century complex of mills and warehouses is an ideal setting for a monumental mural about working Americans. The future includes a visitor’s center with spaces for a theater, studios, and classrooms, as well as a woodland park for outdoor summer concerts and special events.


 

Harvest Hay Rides

Hayrides are available every WEEKEND in November as well as SCHOOL holidays. Rides begin at the W.O.L.F. Cabin and are $2.00 each.

 

America Recycles Day

Noon-3:00 pm

Come to the zoo and learn fun and fascinating environmental facts about recycling. Best of all -- let the zoo help you put your old things to good re-use. Get $1 off admission if you bring something to recycle, limit one discounted admission per person. The following items will be accepted:
 
Nike Reuse-a-shoe – donate your old sneakers to be made into flooring for sports courts
Crocs Soles United – donate your old Crocs shoes to be refurbished and sent to impoverished nations
Eco-cell – donate your old cell phones to be recycled or refurbished
Techno Trash Can – Donate all things techno-digital, including computer disks, CDs, Zip disks, DVDs, VHS tapes, Beta tapes, game cartridges, hard drives, zip drives, pagers, PDAs, MP3s, iPods, digital cameras, and handheld games. Techno Trash Can is sponsored by greendisks, providing certified assurance that private or proprietary data will be systematically destroyed. They make sure your computer is recycled and your data isn’t.
 

A Home Town Holiday at Hunt Hill Farm

Hunt Hill Farm invites you to “A Home Town Holiday” at The Silo Gallery, the theme of this year’s 37th annual Christmas tree beginning Saturday November 7th, at 44 Upland Road, New Milford, CT.  View the 27 ft. towering tree decorated with hand-crafted wooden ornaments by folk artist Joy Gaiser.  Adorning the tree are 21 well-known New Milford buildings, over 40 snow-capped pine trees and a moon with the silhouette of Santa and his eight reindeer at the top.  Gaiser’s garland of festive picket fences and snowflakes made by 4th graders at Sarah Noble Intermediate School add the finishing touches to this spectacular tree!  The New Talent Gallery will feature artist Diana Luscombe for a second year, displaying her “Healing Strokes” paintings and a new line of note cards.  Silo tastings from The Silo Cooking School will be served throughout the exhibit’s opening day from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Joy Gaiser and her father started “Handmade by Dad and Me” in 1985 consisting mostly of Christmas ornaments, wooden jewelry, birdhouses, home decorations and historic buildings of New Milford.  After her father passed away in 1997, Joy’s husband John took over the task of cutting the wood, formerly her father’s job, so the business could continue and renamed it “Dad and Me Too”.  The husband and wife team with the help of their daughter and Joy's sister worked over a year to complete the ornaments in time for this year’s show.  Over 200 additional ornaments and decorations made by the artist will be for sale in The New Talent Gallery.

Diana Luscombe’s acrylic paintings continue to be inspired by scenes from nature.  Her study on birds has progressed with more sensitivity to detail compared with last year's paintings which were derived primarily from memory and imagination.  After a serious car accident over two years ago resulted in Diana being paralyzed, painting became an emotional release for her.  She is having fun with her new endeavor and is amazed at what flows from her paintbrush!  Prior to the accident, being an artist had never crossed her mind.  The gift of painting, Diana says is “an emotional and spiritual place for me to heal and let go because it’s peaceful.”   It also is much needed “me time” for the painter who is married with two young children, all who are extremely supportive of her efforts.  “Hannah is my biggest fan!  With Cole, I just have to keep his fingers out of the paint!”  Donations from her “Healing Strokes” exhibit will go towards a handicap accessible van for Diana.

This holiday season, plan on spending some extra time on the farm to see all that The Henderson Cultural Center has to offer.  Find your traditional Silo favorites like Marzipan Stolen and Holly Berry Wreaths under the tree.  View a slice of Skitch’s life touring The Skitch Henderson Museum.  Stop by The Silo Cooking School to register for a holiday cooking class including; Gingerbread House Making, Rick Rodgers’ Thanksgiving Bash, Christmas Cookie Workshops for all ages and more!  A Home Town Holiday is free and open to the public.  Hunt Hill Farm hours are Wed. through Sat., 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. and Sunday’s noon to 5 p.m.  For more information, please call Valerie Culbertson, Silo Gallery Director at (860) 355-0300 or visit their website www.hunthillfarmtrust.org. 

 

ArtWalk at Hartford Public Library

Stanwyck Cromwell

Journey (2):  A Renewed Consciousness

 

Downtown Library, 3rd Floor

November 6, 2009-January 15, 2010

Artist Reception November 6, 6:00-8:00 p.m.

 

 

American Mural Project Exhibition

The American Mural Project will create the single largest piece of indoor collaborative artwork in the country.  A mixed-media painting and relief sculpture, it will ultimately be housed in the Whiting Mills Complex in Winsted, CT and measure 120 feet long, 5 stories high, and up to 10 feet deep. This exhibition features some of the huge finished pieces of the mural, a scale model, drawings and plans for elements in progress, and an eight-foot sculptural element.

 

Downtown Library

October 26-November 29, 2009

Artist Reception Friday, November 13, 5:30-7:00 p.m.

 

 

Exhibition tour: Horace Walpole's Strawberry Hill

Exhibition tour of Horace Walpole's Strawberry Hill at 2pm

 

The Art of Giving Art Show Opening

The Valley Arts Council (VAC) and Valley Philanthropy Council (VPC) will collaborate for a second year to present the “Art of Giving” juried art show. The show opening which is free and open to the public, will be held at the Greater Valley Chamber of Commerce, 900 Bridgeport Avenue, Shelton, CT on Sunday, November 8th from 1-5 pm. The art will remain on display through December 5.  30% of the proceeds from sales of work by children and adults will be donated to philanthropic causes throughout the Lower Naugatuck Valley 

 
 

The Church of the Infinite Spirit Service

The Church of the Infinite Spirit

 

The Masonic Hall

80 Walsh Avenue

Newington, Connecticut 06111

 

(860-635-6396) (peggic@comcast.net)

http://newingtonspiritualistchurch.org/Spiritualist_Church.html

 

 

For Immediate Release

 

Sunday Service

Nov 8    10:30 AM  Kimberly Wright, Certified Medium with the NSAC.  Kim has served our church in the past and has given workshops on table-tipping which we  enjoyed. 

 

12 – 1 PM Fellowship Hour    All are welcome

 

 

 

The Crucible

 The Crucible - This classic Arthur Miller play uses some of the events of the Salem Witch Trials to examine social themes that still resonate today.