Skidmore College Department of Theater Announces its Spring 2015 Season

penelopiad  

THE PENELOPIAD

By Margaret Atwood, 
Directed by Emily Moler ’15, 
Black Box Studio, Janet Kinghorn Bernhard Theater, Feb. 27 – March 4. All shows at 8 p.m., except the Sunday matinee at 2 p.m.

In a splendid contemporary twist on The Odyssey, Margaret Atwood has chosen to give a voice to Penelope, wife of Odysseus, and to her twelve maids. In this dazzling, playful retelling, the story becomes as wise and compassionate as it is haunting, and as wildly entertaining as it is unsettling. With wit and verve, drawing on the story-telling and poetic talent for which she herself is renowned, Atwood gives Penelope new life and reality – and sets out to provide an answer to an ancient mystery. 
Seating is limited, so reservations are a must!

blood wedding

 

Federico García Lorca’s BLOOD WEDDING

A stage adaptation by Carolyn Anderson and Will Bond Mainstage Theater, Janet Kinghorn Bernhard Theater, 
April 10-12 and April 16-19
. All shows at 8 p.m., except Sunday matinees at 2 p.m.

Tradition, passion and violence are at the core of this true story about a love that can never become a marriage. Blood Wedding is rooted in the land, and in its people’s desire to cling on to tradition in changing times. Underneath the landscape of this play is the rumbling of the early days of the Spanish Civil War and Lorca’s poetic resistance.

TICKETS: $12 general admission, $8 students and senior citizens


For reservations or information, call the Skidmore Theater Box Office at (518) 580-5439 or email boxoffice@skidmore.edu. For online ticketing, refer to Skidmore College Theater on Facebook or Skidmore.edu/theater. For group sales, please contact Kathy Mendenhall at (518) 580-5431.

 

Weekend A&E Briefing

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

juried shick

2015 Juried Student Art Exhibition

Opened Feb. 5, Shick Art Gallery

Skidmore's Schick Art Gallery presents the 2015 Juried Student Exhibition, a celebration of the creativity, imagination, and skill of Skidmore students, from Feb. 5 to March 9, 2015. It’s completely free and open to the public. The gallery is open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Fridays, and from noon to 4 p.m. weekends.

circus

Skidmore Circus Club Performance Team Auditions

Feb. 7 12 p.m. – 1 p.m., Filene Hall

Come in comfortable clothes and be ready to have some fun. Bring a skill to present – from gymnastics, to juggling, to hooping, to any form of acting!

westfall lecture

Lecture by Stephen Westfall and Spring Opening Reception

Feb. 7, lecture at 5 p.m. and Spring Opening reception at 6:30 p.m., Tang Museum

Artist and critic Stephen Westfall speaks on the artwork and career of Nicholas Krushenick, followed by the Spring Opening celebrating the latest exhibitions.

thodos dance

 

Thodos Dance Chicago performance

Feb. 7, 8 p.m., Skidmore Dance Theater

The performance will highlight two Skidmore graduates and renowned choreographers: Melissa Thodos and Sybil Shearer. The program includes a contemporary dance about Helen Keller and mixed repertoire that celebrates Chicago voices past and present. Tickets for the Skidmore performance are $15 for adults, $10 for the Skidmore community, and $5 for students.

meccore

Meccore String Quartet performing Beethoven

Feb. 7, 8 p.m., Zankel Music Center

The Meccore String Quartet is the next group to participate in Skidmore’s ambitious Beethoven String Quartet Cycle project, which features six internationally renowned guest artists performing the full cycle of Beethoven’s 16 string quartets over the course of the next two years. Tickets are $8 for adults, $5 for seniors and the Skidmore community, free for students and children.

tropicana

TRoPICANA!

Feb. 7, 10pm – 2am, Falstaffs

Come to ISU’s Tropical-themed dance party! DJs Dhruv and Nico will fire up the passions for the whole night. There will also be hammocks.

 

 

Comic rapper Awkwafina at Proctors

02-awkwafina.w529.h352.2x By Michael Eck

Comic rapper Awkwafina brings her bright rhymes, twisted beats and snarky millennial humor to Proctors, 8 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 7. Born in Queens to immigrant Chinese and South Korean parents, Nora Lum, whose trumpet studies at LaGaurdia High School are evinced by a tattoo inside her right arm, learned to use her otherness as fodder for her raps, which touch on being Asian, being female and being smart, all in inventive ways.

As Awkwafina, clad in trademark over-sized glasses, Lum proffers a cheery fearlessness. A string of YouTube videos drew enough of an audience for the rapper to release her debut album Yellow Ranger in early 2014. The title track is, in part, a sly nod to Mighty Morphin Power Rangers of her youth, as well as a reflection of race and ethnicity. Always a fierce individualist, Awkwafina told The Daily Beast’s Jean Trinh that, “the song embraces an identity that is not about Asian culture. It’s about me being Asian and my experience being Asian. I’m not trying to unite Asian people with my music.” Many of her biggest hits, witty but tart adult-themed material with essentially unprintable titles, have brought similar controversy.

Prior to breaking out, Awkwafina, then still Lum, attended UAlbany, pursuing journalism and women’s studies. It’s easy to see how those tracks influenced her content and compositional style; this will be her first performance in the region since her time as a student at the school.

Currently a cast member on the popular hit MTV comedy series, Girl Code, Awkwafina recently performed as part of Festival Supreme, the music and comedy festival curated by Tenacious D’s Jack Black and Kyle Gass. She is also set to appear in the upcoming documentary Bad Rap, which puts the spotlight on fellow Asian rappers Dumbfoundead, Rekstizzy and Lyricks.

Tickets for Awkwafina’s 8 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 7 performance are $20, with VIP packages (including a meet-and-greet with photo op and signed poster) available for $30, at the Box Office at Proctors, 432 State Street, Schenectady; by phone at 518-346-6204; and online at proctors.org.

Tang Teaching Museum presents exhibition of South Asian paintings

tang pic Works span fifteenth to nineteenth centuries; series of free events includes acclaimed artists, art-making, dance, music and tours.

From the opulence of the Mughal court to stories of gods in human form; from battle scenes to intimate depictions of courtly love, historic South Asian paintings on display at The Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College offer visitors a chance to explore important cultural narratives that remain central to living belief systems on the Indian subcontinent.

“Realms of Earth and Sky: Indian Painting from the Fifteenth to the Nineteenth Century,” opens January 31 and runs through May 17. The collection of 43 South Asian paintings from the University of Virginia’s Fralin Museum of Art spans multiple artistic and cultural traditions. Portraitures, religious and literary texts, ragamala paintings, and works from both Mughal and Rajput traditions are represented in meticulously rendered tableaux contained in small scale manuscripts or album pages. The themes of Realms of Earth and Sky include the stylistic relationship between Mughal and Rajput paintings and the function of book illustration.

“There’s something about the small scale that makes them intensely powerful,” says Tang Assistant Director for Curatorial Affairs Rachel Seligman. “The size, the detail, the luscious colors create great intensity,” she says, noting that the Malloy Wing Galleries have been painted and lit to offer a feeling of warmth and intimacy for exploring works that originally would have been held in one’s hands.

A rich array of special events supporting the exhibition invites visitors to enjoy a festival with Indian food, music, and dance, workshops with artists who combine traditional painting with contemporary practice, and lectures organized as Skidmore’s annual Alfred Z. Solomon Residency. Highlighting the lecture series is a Feb. 5 talk by renowned artist and MacArthur Fellow Shahzia Sikander, whose work will be displayed on the Tang mezzanine.

Skidmore art historian Saleema Waraich, who organized the Solomon lectures and is a specialist in South Asian art, notes that the exhibition introduces audiences to a very different style of painting: “South Asian artists were not interested, consciously, in realism as a pictorial mode of representation.” The works, she notes, illuminate important texts—“religious manuscripts, literary ones, and there are even several paintings that come out of representation of musical modes”—offering rich opportunities for interdisciplinary teaching and learning.

“Particularly intriguing,” says Waraich, is the way the exhibition provokes “a really exciting discussion around Hindu and Muslim interactions, especially in a contemporary context, where in India Muslims are a minority and, depending on who is in the government, are more or less suppressed and marginalized.” These paintings offer a different narrative of interaction between the two groups. The paintings, while small in scale, offer an extraordinary amount of meticulous detail.

Waraich elaborates: “People talk about using a single hair of a brush to make these fine exquisite lines. You can spend an hour looking and then go back and look at the same image and see something new.”

The following events at the Tang are free and open to the public:

  • Thursday, Jan. 29, 5:30 p.m. — Preview Tour ofRealms of Earth and Sky: Guided tour with exhibition contributor Krista Gulbransen, assistant professor of art history and visual culture studies at Whitman College.
  • Thursday, Feb. 5, 7:30 p.m. — Lecture by Shahzia Sikander

Internationally acclaimed Pakistani-born artist and MacArthur Fellow Shahzia Sikander will discuss her artistic practice of experimentation and disruption of historical Indo-Persian painting styles; presented by Skidmore College’s Department of Art History and the Tang Teaching Museum and supported by the Alfred Z. Solomon Residency Fund.

  • Saturday, Feb. 7, 2015, 6:30–8 p.m. — Spring 2015 Opening Reception:Reception celebrating the Tang’s spring exhibitions, Realms of Earth and Sky: Indian Painting from the Fifteenth to the Nineteenth Century, Nicholas Krushenick: Electric Soup, andElevator Music 28: Morton Subotnick — Silver Apples of the Moon.
  • Wednesday, Feb. 25, 7–8:30 p.m. — Ayurvedic Workshop
: exploring this system of traditional Hindu medicine, with Skidmore Professor of Religion Eliza Kent.
  • Saturday, Feb. 28, 3–7 p.m. — Indian Festival
: a celebration of Indian culture through food, dance, music, and art-making, co- organized with the Skidmore student club Hayat.
  • Thursday, April 2, 7 p.m. — Lecture by Molly Aitken and Dipti Khera:Two leading scholars of Rajput painting — Molly Aitken, associate professor of art history at the City College of New York, and Dipti Khera, assistant professor of art history at New York University — will lecture on pleasure in South Asian paintings; made possible by the Alfred Z. Solomon Residency Fund.
  • Tuesday, April 14, noon — Tour ofRealms of Earth and Sky
: Guided tour with Rachel Seligman, Tang assistant director of curatorial affairs, and Saleema Waraich, Skidmore sssistant professor of art history.
  • Thursday, April 16, 7:30 p.m. — Conversation with Talha Rathore and Hiba Schahbaz

Artists Talha Rathore and Hiba Schahbaz will speak about the traditional techniques inRealms of Earth and Sky and the ways in which they each have modernized and personalized the miniature tradition in their practice; made possible by the Alfred Z. Solomon Residency Fund.

  • Friday, April 17, noon–2 p.m. and 2:30–4:30 p.m. — Miniature Painting Workshops with Talha Rathore and Hiba Schahbaz

Free workshop with the artists. Reservations required; call 518-580-8080.

Realms of Earth and Sky is made possible by the Fralin Museum of Art at the University of Virginia. The exhibition is curated by Daniel J. Ehnbom, Fralin adjunct curator of South Asian Art and associate professor of South Asian Art at the University of Virginia, with Krista Gulbransen, assistant professor of art history and visual culture studies at Whitman College and former Luzak-Lindner graduate fellow at the Fralin Museum.

A catalogue accompanies the exhibition and features essays and catalogue entries by curator Daniel Ehnbom and Krista Gulbransen.

Enhancing this exhibition and its catalogue is The Realms of Earth and Sky app, which was developed by the Fralin Museum and is available for free in Apple’s App Store (iPhone or iPad iOS7).

 

Reel Talk: Selma vs. American Sniper—what’s with all the controversy?

posters By Sean van der Heijden '16

Staff Writer/Copy Editor

Ever since Oscar nominations were announced (see them here), there has been a ton of controversy surrounding two of the Best Picture nominees—Selma and American Sniper. The former was snubbed in a bunch of categories by almost every major awards ceremony outside of the Golden Globes, and the latter was embraced fully by Oscar voters.

Selma has gone on to offer free screenings around the country—including here in Saratoga. Meanwhile, American Sniper has become by far the highest-grossing January release ever. There are avid supporters and haters of each movie, so let me boil it down for you: Selma has become the left-wing poster boy while American Sniper is the right-wing one. And it all has to do with race issues and historical accuracy, sort of.

Selma portrays the historic civil rights march from Selma, Alabama to Montgomery. It is directed masterfully by Ava DuVernay with commanding performances all around, especially from David Oyelowo as Martin Luther King Jr. So what’s the problem? Well, DuVernay and Oyelowo weren’t nominated for Oscars, leading many people to categorize the Academy as being racist. Additionally, the film’s portrayal of Lyndon B. Johnson comes off as pretty villainous and self-motivated, when, according to tape recordings and historical testimony, he was actually much more invested in the civil rights movement.

As to this controversy, DuVernay has stated she “wasn't interested in making a white-savior movie” and wanted to focus on the people of Selma. And that’s where the controversy gets complicated. To purposefully portray a white character as antagonistic in order to make the African-American characters more heroic is just ridiculous. Why does it have to be a white savior movie? Why can’t it just be about a bunch of people doing the right thing and helping each other out, because that’s the right thing to do? That’s more historically accurate, too, so changing it seems unnecessary and, as many critics are pointing out, reverse-racist. And yet, the screenplay for Selma was actually written mainly by a white man, which everybody seems to be ignoring, and whites end up being “saviors” at the end, which the film even mentions. So the whole thing is just confusing.

American Sniper, on the other hand, portrays the life of Chris Kyle, a Navy SEAL credited with the most sniper kills in history who (spoiler alert if you don’t know the story) was tragically killed by a veteran who he was helping out after the war. Driven by the best performance of Bradley Cooper’s career—which, unlike Oyelowo’s, was Oscar-nominated—the movie is a searing critique of the hardships of war on and off the battlefield. Or is it?

I’ve read testimonies of ex-Navy SEALs, relatives of Chris Kyle, and those who served with him. Half of them say that this is the most accurate war movie ever made, and the other half say it’s nothing like the truth. Almost every critic viewing the movie has never been to war, so that controversy will basically go nowhere. The film is beefed up a bit in order to add action scenes and is only a condensed version of his life, but it seemed pretty accurate to me in terms of what someone might go through.

As an accurate representation of Chris Kyle, again there is controversy. Many are calling him an American hero, while others think he was a racist, trigger-happy pig who enjoyed killing Muslims. I didn’t know the guy, but that description seems excessive. Their tagline of “the most lethal sniper in US history” doesn’t help, but this honestly boils down to a race issue as well: yes, obviously not all Muslims are extremists. In fact, the overwhelming majority of them aren’t. But in a war, on the battlefield, when your life and others’ are on the line, what decisions would you make?

All the controversy around Chris Kyle is interesting because recent films such as The Hurt Locker and Zero Dark Thirty—all on the same war, at different stages—received a lot of controversy, but nothing like this. Was Chris Kyle racist? I have no idea, but I think it all comes down to all the on-screen deaths perpetrated by him. The film starts out with him shooting a child—was the child innocent? Again, no idea. But people can throw race at this movie because the “enemy” in this case is mostly, well, a different race.

Just as a comparison, I want to look at WWII movies such as Schindler’s List, Saving Private Ryan, or—more recently, Valkyrie, War Horse, and Fury. Some of these movies portray every German and every Nazi as pure evil. Was that true? Honestly, as the other half of the movies portray, no. Not all Germans were Nazi’s, and not all Nazi’s were particularly happy about being Nazi’s. But in this case, everybody’s white and there aren’t any Nazi’s around who are going to do anything about it, so nobody cares. Also, the crimes perpetrated by the Nazi’s were horrific, so justifying anyone who belonged to that party is tricky.

PLEASE NOTE: I’m not equating the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan with WWII, and I’m not equating Islamophobia with racism against blacks. What I’m essentially trying to say here is any form of racism is bad—against African Americans, Muslims, whites—literally anybody. Both of these films show racism differently, and they are each just one interpretation of events.

The Academy’s response to the films is not necessarily the display of racism that everyone wants it to be. Is the Academy racist? I don’t think so. Are they sexist? Absolutely. Did that impact this year’s race? Probably a bit—DuVernay definitely should have been nominated, but as for Oyelowo, I think he just got edged out. A ton of great performances—such as Jake Gyllenhaal in Nightcrawler or Ralph Fiennes in the Grand Budapest Hotel—simply got edged out. In the latter two cases, though, race can not be seen as a “cause” of them missing out on a nomination—in Oyelowo’s case, it can be, and so it is (something Oyelowo himself has called ridiculous).

People like to stand behind their causes, and these two films have come to represent huge social movements. With Selma, it’s basically that racism is still prevalent in out society; with American Sniper, it’s either “war is great” or “we should never have been there in the first place.” The movies are obviously very different, but if you go in with an open mind—they are, after all, only movies—both are well-done, well-acted, moving, and entertaining.

Weekend A&E Briefing

  Saratoga Chowderfest

Jan. 31 in Downtown Saratoga, 11am – 4pm

Amazing food, excitement, and great quantities of chowder to bring the community together in this cold weather!

Urinetown The Musical Auditions

Jan. 31 at 2pm, Feb. 1 at 2pm in Zankel 214

This spring, Skidmore's Cabaret Troupe is producing the Tony-Award-winning show "Urinetown the Musical!" This comedic political satire deals with corporate abuse, police brutality, and the power of social movements. This edgy, thought-provoking story is told through dynamic characters and catchy musical numbers. If you want to audition, prepare a verse and a chorus of a musical theater song. No previous experience is required! Questions? Email director Callum Lane at clane@skidmore.edu.

sonneeters

Sonneteers Reunion Jam

Jan. 31 in Zankel, 2pm – 3pm

Come by and watch the generations of Sonneteers sing old and new stuff.

An Evening of Roscoe

Jan. 31 in Zankel, 8pm – 10pm

Roscoe is an opera about politics, love, and Machiavellian ways of coming to terms with your past. It is based on the best-selling novel by Pulitzer-winning author William Kennedy and composed by Skidmore faculty member Evan Mack. Libretto by Joshua McGuire and featuring Kevin Kees, Danielle Messina, Ryan Connelly, Jonathan Harris, Sylvia Stoner, and members of the Skidmore Vocal Chamber Ensemble. It is free and open to the public!

Rithmos Auditions

Feb. 1 in the Dance Studios, 1pm – 2:30pm

Want to be a member of the Rithmos dance group? Go the auditions and give it a shot.

ASO: Mozart’s Magic Dream

Feb. 1 in Zankel, 8pm – 10pm

wspn

WSPN Big Meeting

Feb. 2 at 8pm in Gannett Auditorium

If you want a radio show this semester, come to the Big Meeting and fill out an application. If you’re interested in WSPN in general, stop by and learn more!

 

 

 

Reel Talk: “The Theory of Everything” is simplistic, moving, and kind of magical.

56532 By Sean van der Heijden

Based on a true story, “The Theory of Everything” retells the relationship between renowned scientist Stephen Hawking and his ex-wife Jane Wilde. Hawking has become famous not only for his revolutionary theories on physics and cosmology, but also for battling with ALS for the majority of his life. What you may not know, though, is how Hawking started out, and that’s where the film begins.

Directed with surprising fluidity by James Marsh (best known for his documentary Man on Wire), the only words I can come up with to describe this film are extremely—but appropriately—British: delightful, charming, lovely. Despite the many heavy themes handled within the film, the overall feeling is one of hope and levity. It is astonishing to see the characters overcome so much simply out of their love for each other, and their love of a life riddled with hardships.

Eddie Redmayne (Les Misérables) portrays Hawking with wonderful charm and charisma. His performance is a heartbreaking tour de force—both emotionally and physically challenging; Redmayne is simply astonishing in his role. It’s easy to take it for granted while watching the film, but the way Redmayne is able to contort his body, face, and speech as if he were suffering from ALS is remarkable. Stephen Hawking has even commented that at certain points in the film, he felt like he was watching himself. That’s how good it is—a must-see achievement, and a shoe-in for a Best Actor nomination this Oscar season.

While this film certainly belongs to Redmayne, Felicity Jones is gives a subtle, yet powerful performance as Hawking’s wife. The anguish she portrays while watching her husband slowly deteriorate is crushing, but her optimism and refusal to give up during their 30-year marriage comes through just as strongly. Jones has been putting out solid work in supporting roles for a while now, and it’s great to see her rise up to the challenges that this role presents. While not as obviously affecting as Redmayne’s performance, it’s really a beautiful turn.

The whole film is beautiful, actually, and shot with incredible detail. A lot of focus is put on circles and spirals--on how everything is interconnected and important in its own way. The overall message is really heartwarming, the musical score is genuinely uplifting, and the whole tone of the film is designed to inspire. Okay--that might sound a little ridiculous, but it is really inspiring, and you just can’t miss out on the performances.

Overall: 8 out of 10.

Reel Talk: Winter Preview

puyallup-movie-theater By Sean van der Heijden

As we get closer to break, a ton of producers are churning out movies for all the people home for the holidays. A ton of big-budget films—like the final film in the Hobbit Trilogy, Exodus: Gods and Kings, Angelina Jolie’s WWII biopic Unbroken, and the fairytale musical Into the Woods—are all slated for release in the coming weeks. Here are a few more under-the-radar films that look promising and might be worth seeking out:

  1. Wild: dir. Jean-Marc Vallée, starring Reese Witherspoon and Laura Dern.

In her first serious role in almost 10 years, Witherspoon is getting a ton of attention for leading this true life drama about a woman who embarks on a 1,000 hike along the Pacific coast. Laura Dern plays her drug-addicted mother, and both roles look pretty raw and gritty. Wild comes out this weekend on Dec. 5.

  1. A Most Violent Year: dir. J.C. Chandor, starring Jessica Chastain and Oscar Isaac.

A drama about an immigrant father (Isaac) struggling to keep his family afloat in 1980s NYC, Chandor’s latest film is hinging its success on Chastain’s brutal performance as the corrupt wife of Isaac’s businessman. The film looks clean and moody, and could surprise audiences. It opens on New Year’s Eve.

  1. American Sniper: dir. Clint Eastwood, starring Bradley Cooper and Sienna Miller.

While Eastwood has had a couple misses lately in terms of his directorial efforts, this one looks really intense. The true story of Chris Kyle—the most deadly sniper in US history—the film is aiming to take a realistic look at the effects of war without glorifying Kyle’s achievements. The film opens on Christmas Day in limited release and goes wide on Jan. 16.

 

  1. Still Alice: dirs. Richard Glatzer and Wash Westmoreland, starring Julianne Moore, Kristen Stewart, Alec Baldwin, and Kate Bosworth.

A few months ago, nobody had heard of this film, but now Julianne Moore’s performance is almost guaranteed to win her a long-deserved Oscar. Centered on a linguistics professor (Moore) who gets diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer’s disease, it’s a crushing and taut looking film definitely worth watching. It opens on Jan. 16.

 

  1. Big Eyes: dir. Tim Burton, starring Amy Adams, Christoph Waltz, Jason Shwartzman, Krysten Ritter, and Terrence Stamp.

Burton hasn’t really had a good live-action film since Sweeny Todd seven years ago. Big Eyes could go either way, but represents a change from the dark zaniness of his most recent films into something a bit more accessible. Based on pop-culture artist Margaret Keane and the husband who claimed to have painted all her works, the film opens just in time for Christmas.

 

Some other films coming out soon are Paul Thomas Anderson’s drug-fueled adaptation of Thomas Pynchon’s Inherent Vice and Chris Rock’s comedy about acting Top Five, both of which open on Dec. 12. Also, the Seth Rogan-James Franco comedy The Interview about assassinating North Korea’s dictator opens for Christmas. Liam Neeson reprises his role as Bryan Mills one last time for Taken 3, which opens Jan. 9, along with the MLK historical drama Selma about the fight for civil rights in the 1960s—which has recently been surprising a lot of critics, but has yet to screen for audiences.

 

*One notable omission: The Imitation Game—about WWII logician Alan Turing and staring Benedict Cumberbatch and Keira Knightly—was slated for release on Nov. 21 and thus made my Fall Preview earlier in the year. However, it was pushed into a limited release on Nov. 28 and goes wide on Dec. 12. It looks great and has been getting pretty solid reviews.

 

‘Birdman’ is just really confusing and not much else.

By Sean van der Heijden, Copy Editor birdman-poster-1As you might have been able to tell by the title, I really don’t know what to think about ‘Birdman,’ the latest film by Mexican auteur Alejandro González Iñárritu. So many things about the movie are absolutely perfect—the acting, the direction, the cinematography, etc.—but the whole thing is just so ambiguous that I don’t know what to think about it.

The film is about a washed-up actor who used to be a blockbuster superhero, and tries to stage a comeback through starring in a Broadway play. Keaton is exceptional and delivers by far the best performance of his career. Other standouts are Edward Norton—who plays a cocky, pretentious co-star in the play—and Emma Stone, who plays the cynical, fresh-out-of-rehab daughter of Keaton’s character. Naomi Watts is great, too, as Norton’s ex, and Amy Ryan, Andrea Riseborough, and Zach Galifianakis round out the cast.

Additionally, the whole film is shot to look like one take. That means there are no cuts within the film to other scenes—it’s all just one constantly moving scene. It’s great art, but the film is literally nonstop—it just keeps going and going and going and going to the point where I just wanted it to stop so I could take a rest and breathe. I never realized how important cuts were within films.

Also, the soundtrack has the same issue. Instead of being mostly orchestral, like a traditional score, it is almost all percussion instruments. This was neat, but the music just gets annoying and I really wanted it to go away.

All of the technical marvels in the film are cool, but distracting from the actual story—which, it turns out, isn’t much. Honestly, the film just turns into a “life imitates art” example, which makes it incredibly predictable and hollow. While I was never bored and I definitely laughed at the darkly comic aspects of the movie, the problem is that ‘Birdman’ aspires to be so much more than it actually is.

As for the ambiguity of the film—especially the ending—I really can’t say much without spoiling it, but again it’s the same problem: ‘Birdman’ wants to be profound, it wants to make a statement, and wants to get you thinking. Because of its ambiguity, the film really only achieves the latter—and all I’m thinking about is how confused I am. A film can’t make a point if I don’t know what it’s trying to say, and ultimately ‘Birdman’ feels really important, but in the end turns out not to be.

Overall: 6.5 out of 10.

 

Reel Talk: ‘Interstellar’ is a technical marvel and a beautiful film

interstellar By Sean van der Heijden

Christopher Nolan’s latest film, ‘Interstellar,’ has, as usual, divided fans and critics. Some are calling it pretentious, familiar storytelling, while others are saying it is a bold, unique film unlike any ever made. While you really have to watch it to find out, the film concerns a group of astronauts who travel through a wormhole in order to find another habitable planet while, back at home, earth is slowly wasting away.

The one thing that I can say about ‘Interstellar’ is that it is the most well-made film I’ve ever seen. Every shot is pure perfection—a work of art—and the visual effects are utterly stunning. Black holes, wormholes, and other space oddities are depicted here like never before—they actually had to invent new software based on the works of theoretical physicist Kip Thorne in order to achieve their vision. Other technical components, such as Nolan’s direction, a fantastic (but way too loud) score by Hans Zimmer, and striking cinematography from Hoyte Van Hoytema, all help add to the epic vision of space Nolan wanted to convey.

The acting, too, was very good. Everyone is at the top of their game, from Matthew McConaughey, Anne Hathaway, Jessica Chastain, and Michael Caine, to supporting actors like Casey Affleck, David Gyasi, Wes Bentley, John Lithgow, Ellen Burstyn, and (surprise!) Matt Damon. An additional standout was Mackenzie Foy, who plays McConaughey’s daughter and expertly sets up the emotional tension for the rest of the film.

So why are there so many detractors for this film? There really aren’t, it’s just that they are being very vocal, and for two reasons: first off, Nolan critics are always fast to point out his heavy use of expositional dialogue and overcomplicated plotlines. Both exist here, but for the most part are handled well. Secondly, the plot itself isn’t as grand as the ideas Nolan grapples with here. I don’t agree with every plot choice Nolan made—some parts were made overly dramatic for no reason, and small parts could have been cut—but thought the overall plot was pretty original and well thought-out.

Additionally, critics have pointed to the science in the film: while it’s mostly sound, a lot of it is very complex, and they do bend the rules a bit for plot purposes. I didn’t find either of these to be an issue, and everything was explained in pretty simplistic terms. Also, the film does happen in the future, so holding its world to the limited science of our world seems unfair.

It’s hard not to be moved by this film’s message, too—by its vision of the future, and by the urgency with which it pushes us forwards. Yes, it makes you feel tiny compared to the vast frontiers of space yet to be explored. But it also makes you hopeful—it makes you feel that, no matter what direction we are heading in as a society, there is always the possibility for change. For this, any issues with the film can easily be overlooked.

Overall: 9.5 out of 10.

Reel Talk: ‘Nightcrawler’ is a slow, but broodingly dark thriller

nightcrawler By Sean van der Heijden A film debut by writer/director Dan Gilroy, ‘Nightcrawler’ focuses on Lou Bloom, a sociopathic man played by Jake Gyllenhaal who gets involved in crime journalism in Los Angeles. After witnessing a car crash, Bloom decides he can capitalize on the incident by filming it and selling the footage to news stations. After he becomes more involved with his craft, however, he crosses a ton of moral boundaries. Like, a ton—I lost count.

Gyllenhaal plays the part extremely well—it’s possibly his finest performance to date. He lost 20 pounds for the role, deprived himself of sleep, and overworked himself by running 15 miles to the set everyday. The dedication shows—his stare eats away at your soul and his unflinching lack of emotion for the crimes he films is both shocking and disturbing.

There are two more great performances in his costars—the first by Rene Russo, a TV news runner who Bloom sells his footage to. Their relationship is at first amicable but grows increasingly darker as Bloom gains more leverage over her. The second performance is by Riz Ahmed, who Bloom hires to help him film the crimes. Ahmed’s characters grows more and more reluctant to participate in filming them, but his incredible desperation for money drives him far past his comfort level. Bill Paxton also stars as a veteran and competitor in the nightcrawling business.

While the performances are essentially what drive this film, the second half becomes really captivating and, by the end, ‘Nightcrawler’ is impossible to turn away from. The first half is very slow as layers are slowly peeled away from the characters’ perfect veneers. Tension builds, however, and makes the ending even more disturbing, moving, and thought provoking.

This is a relentless satire on the state of media today. Both darkly funny and just plain dark, I found it a fascinating story.

Overall: 7.5 out of 10.

Ladd Recital Hall Hosts a Stunning Performance by the Finger Lakes Guitar Quartet

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Finger Lakes Guitar Quartet (Joel Brown, Brett Grigsby, Sten Isachsen, Paul Quigley) played a sonorous series of compositions to a home crowd in the beautiful Helen Filene Ladd Concert Hall on Thursday, October 23rd 2014. The concert began with “Guitar Quartet”, a delightful original piece by Joel Brown, Distinguished Artist in Residence at Skidmore College. A three movement suite in the style of bossa nova (Suite Amazonas by Celso Machado, b. 1953) brought the feeling of autumn into the warmly lit hall and lead gracefully into “Pavane op. 50” (Gabriel Faure, 1845-1924), the lilting notes of which resounded from a joyous, confident rendition. The quartet proceeded to lead the captivated audience to an emotional plateau with the harrowing, haunting movements of the Five Miniatures for Guitar Quartet, composed by Anthony Holland. One of the pieces entitled “The Devil’s Throat” was inspired by “a labyrinth of underwater tunnels off the Island of Cozumel, Mexico”, one of the most dangerous scuba diving destinations in the world.

After the intermission, the quartet resumed with the vibrant “Ponticello Tango”, composed by Patrick Roux (b. 1962). The modern composer Leo Brouwer (b. 1939) and his visions of an ever-changing Cuba were honored by the group’s performance of “Cuban Landscape with Rumba”. Flowing into a series of works originally composed for the piano by Enrique Granados (1867-1915), the Finger Lakes Guitar Quartet truly brought new life into the long-aged “Minueto”, “Villanesca”, and “Rondalla Aragonesa”. The crowd went wild, and the group returned to play a snazzy, jazzy encore - “Take Five” by Dave Brubeck. Brown initially founded the musical group over a decade ago with fellow player Isachsen when they were both located in Ithaca, New York. The bounty of this region’s natural waterscapes inspired Brown and Isachsen to name their group after the Finger Lakes. About two years ago, the quartet was completed with the joining of two more talented members, Quigley and Grigsby.  In addition to holding several teaching positions at colleges and universities across the state, Brown, Isachsen, Quigley, and Grigsby have been busily touring the eastern and central United States since the formation of the quartet. In recent times they have performed for Keuka College, the Great Lakes Guitar Society, and the Cleveland Guitar Society. Such rigorous schedules require a strong bond between group members, a key quality that Brown confirmed is the most important component and reward of being involved in the Finger Lakes Guitar Quartet. Brown commented that “the dynamic between us, first of all, is that we’re all really good friends.” This talented group of musicians, composers, and friends is in the process of recording an album, which is tentatively set to be released next year.

Ireland Dances Its Way to Skidmore in ‘Dancing in Lughnasa’

By Mia Merrill, Sports Editor The lughnasaSkidmore College Theater Department’s black box production of ‘Dancing at Lughnasa’ opened Thursday, October 16. Brian Friel’s play explores the multifaceted relationships between five sisters and the secrets they keep in their rural Irish home. The production, directed by Marie Glotzbach, will run through Wednesday, Oct. 22.

Classified as a memory play, ‘Lughnasa’ is narrated by an adult Michael Evans as he reflects on his childhood in 1936 Ireland. Waves of social change crash onto Ireland and flood the Mundy household, where Michael lives with his mother, Chris, and his four aunts: Kate, Agnes, Maggie, and Rose. The older Michael observes his aunts and mother arguing about everything from folk dancing and harvest festivals to the whimsical but witless Gerry Evans, Michael’s oft-absent father. Meanwhile, the Mundy sisters observe a seven-year-old Michael, who spends the play decorating kites with pagan symbols.

Kate, played by Hallie Christine ’15, is the most pious of the sisters. She feels it is her responsibility to restore her Uncle Jack to his prior condition. David Bunce’s Jack, a priest who has spent much of life in a Ugandan leper colony, shocks Kate with his new pagan tendencies. Christine encapsulates the Irish-Catholic struggle that lives within Kate as she tries to keep her sisters on level ground.

All the actors in the production have worked to perfect their County Donegal accents, their Irish dancing, and of course, their characters’ emotions and desires. It’s understandable that the piece itself might not be initially appealing: it’s quite long, set in quite an isolated space that non-Irish may not know anything about, and its plot has little to do with punch-packing action. But ‘Lughnasa’ is a refreshing piece that really requires the audience to pay attention.

We must pay attention to the relationship between Alex Chernin ’15’s plucky Chris and Rebecca Zipursky ’15’s steadfast Agnes to see how love and loss can make or break a family. We must pay attention to Uncle Jack, and we, like the sisters, must not judge his expressions based on our own preconceptions. Our attention is demanded by Sierra Fritz ’17’s outstanding Rose, who makes us wonder how our attitudes towards special-needs people have and have not changed since 1936.

So why bring ‘Lughnasa’ to life in 2014 New York—a different world from 1936 County Donegal? Today, religious people struggle to maintain traditions in a progressive world. Unwed parents must combat lingering stereotypes and expectations. Children question the adults in their lives, and adults wrestle to remember the details of their adolescence. Friel’s piece may jump in time and chronology, but the questions he asks prove timeless.

 

‘Dancing at Lughnasa,’ by Brian Friel, plays at the Janet Kinghorn Bernhard black box theater, October 16-22 at 8pm (Sunday matinee at 2pm). Starring John Noble Barrack ’15, David Bunce, Alex Chernin ’15, Hallie Christine ’15, Lily Donahue ’15, Sierra Fritz ’17, Patrick Stanny ’15, and Rebecca Zipursky ’15. Scenic design by Greer Duckworth ’15 and lighting design by Noah Samors ’15. Directed by Marie Glotzbach.

 

The Tang Teaching Museum presents the Quiet Music Festival

Image 4The Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery proudly announces the East Coast premiere of the Quiet Music Festival at 5 pm Thursday, Oct. 23. Admission is free, and festivalgoers are welcome to come and go throughout the evening. Chris Johanson, festival founder and organizer, describes the event as a communal listening experience that celebrates emotional, vibrant, and low-volume music honoring the quiet act of listening.

Johanson is also an artist whose work is included in the Tang's current exhibition I was a double. He has presented -- and played with his band Sun Foot -- in the Quiet Music Festival for the past four summers in Portland, Oregon. At the Tang, Sun Foot will be joined by, Rosary Beard, Melissa Chilinski and special guests, Lizzi Bougatsos, Hush Arbors, Dragging an Ox Through Water, David Greenberger, and Trinie Dalton.

Chris Johanson and his wife, Johanna Jackson, commonly collaborate on projects, such as custom-designed furniture installations, drawings, ceramics, skateboard designs, and a book project. The furnishings, each created specifically for designated spaces, including I was a double, feature found wood, used materials, and colorfully patterned textiles. Johanson dumpster dives for the wood and constructs the furniture frames, while Jackson weaves and sews the textiles.

Image 3Chris Johanson established the Quiet Music Festival of Portland in 2011. Recent exhibitions include the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; Malmo Museum, Sweden; Vancouver Art Gallery, B.C.; Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego; SITE Santa Fe; SFMOMA, San Francisco; and UCLA Hammer Museum, Los Angeles.

Rosary Beard is upstate New York duo Hunter Sagehorn and Matthew Loiacono, whose music is intricately intertwined acoustic guitar parts. Sagehorn is known for his angular, rhythmically-cryptic guitar work in the rock band Alta Mira; Loiacono, for his solo experimental mandolin and voice music as Matthew Carefully. As a duo, they found new synergy in composing quiet, thoughtful music, performing in churches and art galleries, and creating videos of them playing in off-beat, outdoor environments. Their debut album, Halfmoon Fever, was recorded live in December 2011 in a historic ballroom in Troy, NY.

Melissa Chilinski, a Skidmore senior, is perhaps best known as the songwriter for the band Lilting Forward. With Lyndsay Stone and Sasha Letovsky, Lilting Forward played its spirited lo-fi alt-folk sound casually around the Saratoga Springs region.

Lizzi Bougatsos, the lead singer for the band Gang Gang Dance, is a New York City- based artist and musician. Considered one of the "enfants terribles" in New York’s downtown art scene, Bougatsos has performed with her band at the Whitney Biennial, been interviewed by publications such as The Village Voice and Paper Magazine, and in 2010 was commissioned by the Guggenheim Museum Young Collectors Council.

Hush Arbors began as an acid country/drifter folk solo project for singer- songwriter-guitarist Keith Wood in 2001. A rotating member of many bands, Wood adopted this approach for the lineup of Hush Arbors, enlisting players from the experimental scene like drummer Ryan Sawyer, Wooden Wand main man James Toth and other musicians to back him up in a live setting. After releasing discs on various labels, Hush Arbors in 2008 released a self-titled LP with Thurston Moore's Ecstatic Peace!, and in 2009 released Yankee Reality.

Brian Mumford's Dragging an Ox through Water perform songs rooted in folk and country traditions, though ruptured, complicated, and complimented with broken textures of feedback, drones, tape hiss, and homemade oscillators. Chance elements and candlelight sensitive instruments destabilize customary electro-amplified- tightness & introduce improvisation to the recitation of these songs. Brian has collaborated with TJO, Sally Timms, Chris Johanson, John Wiese, John Gruntfest, Makino Takashi, John Butcher, Gino Robair, Fred Lonberg-Holm, Weasel Walter, Vic Chesnutt, Jackie-O Motherfucker, Pete Swanson, and many others.

ImageGreenwich, New York artist David Greenberger explores the individuality, integrity and humanity of the elderly. For over thirty years Greenberger has combined fragments of their conversations with music created in collaboration with professional musicians, to transform the “rich language of personal poetics” into short sound pieces that give listeners a window into the minds of older people. Instead of focusing on who they were, Greenberger’s conversations, and the resultant compositions, tease out who his subjects are now. Earlier this year, he performed over five nights in a one-seat theater at the Tang Teaching Museum.

Trinie Dalton is Faculty Director of the MFA in Writing and Publishing program at Vermont College of Fine Arts, and has taught fiction and art critical writing at VCFA, SVA, Columbia, Bard, USC, Art Center, NYU, and Pratt. She is also Core Faculty in Fiction at VCFA in the low-residency MFA in Writing program. She has published six books, most recently Baby Geisha (Two Dollar Radio). Other fiction titles include Wide Eyed (Akashic), a story collection, and Sweet Tomb (Madras Press), a fairytale novella. Dear New Girl or Whatever Your Name Is (McSweeney’s) is a transformation of her archive of confiscated high school notes into a collaboration between fifty artists. Mythtym (Picturebox) is an art/fiction anthology based on mythological monsters and horror. Dalton also reviews art, books, and music, for artists’ book projects and magazines.

Sun Foot is a Portland, Oregon, and Los Angeles-based trio of Ron Burns (drums, guitar, vocals, drum machine, keyboard), Chris Johanson (bass, guitar, drum machine, keyboard, vocals), and Brian Mumford (guitar, bass, drum machine, vocals, clarinet). They play low volume tunes through small amps and a drum set that consists of a hand drum, cymbal, pan lids, and electronic drum pad, all three singing, playing random cheap electronic keyboards maybe, and switching of instruments probably. Good to listen to if you are interested in the sun and tired of negativity.

Image 2The exhibit, I was a Double, began when a composer and a curator had a conversation about how composers work. Western classical music traditionally splits music making into two distinctly separate jobs: the composer and the performer. The composer invents the ideas behind the music and the performer realizes them. Sometimes the composer and performer are the same person; sometimes they are separated by hundreds of years. Yet even across great distances of time and space, the composer and performer can communicate with each other through a series of written instructions: the score. Like a rulebook, a score is a description of actions the composer proposes to the performer. We value composers by noticing what qualities of rules they invent; we value performers by noticing what they add to, change, emphasize, or ignore in the following of those rules.

Visual art can be made this way as well. It is not always as easy to see, because so many artists are both the composer and the performer, both the rule maker and the rule fulfiller. The artists in I was a double invent rules and then follow them; whether written or not, the artist made a proposal to herself or himself that becomes realized in the physical artwork. As in Western classical music, each artist has separated the invention of the idea behind the thing from the creation of the thing itself.

Curators David Lang and Ian Berry asked the artists for a sentence describing their rule making. David Lang composed music for each artwork based on the artists’ statements, making his score out of theirs. I was a double comes from one of the artist’s statements, with the word “double” resonating on multiple levels: pair, duplicate, shadow, doppelganger; the musical term that indicates two instruments playing the same part together; the artists’ double roles in inventing and realizing their own rules.

Image 1The multilayered exhibition I was a double opened July 5 and runs through January 4, 2015, at the Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College. David Lang’s collaboration with the Tang’s Dayton Director Ian Berry marks the acclaimed composer’s first curated museum exhibition.

I was a double features the work of artists Suzanne Bocanegra, Regina Bogat, Céleste Boursier-Mougenot, André Cadere, Sarah Cain, Karin Davie, Taylor Davis, David Dupuis, Tony Feher, Alfred Jensen, Chris Johanson and Johanna Jackson, Chris Martin, Gabriel Orozco, Bruce Pearson, Ciara Phillips, Kay Rosen, Wolfgang Tillmans, Fred Tomaselli, Johannes VanDerBeek, Ruth Vollmer, Stanley Whitney, and Christopher Wool.

Glens Falls Community Fighting Back for Reproductive Rights

Presenting an evening of political theatre that flips the “pro-life” movement on its head GLENS FALLS, NY (Sept. 15, 2014): MOM BABY GOD, Madeline Burrows' one-woman show based on her two years undercover at anti-choice conferences taps into the smoldering political conflict in the US surrounding reproductive rights is leaving audiences around the country inspired and galvanized to action. MOM BABY GOD is pleased to present a one night only performance in Glens Falls, NY on Saturday, October 11 at 7:30 pm at the Charles R. Wood Theater, 207 Glen St., Glens Falls, NY. Tickets are $20 for general admission and $10 for students. To purchase tickets call 518-480-4878 or visit mombabygod.com.

Glen Falls has become a microcosm of our nation’s reproductive rights debate. Life-sized statues of Jesus and Mary loom over the sidewalk opposite the city’s Planned Parenthood, which is seeing a growing presence of anti-choice protesters. This ostentatious showing of anti-choice sentiment hasn’t gone unanswered. Resident Enid Mastrianni saw the “tremendous amount of passion and anger aroused amongst the women of Glens Falls who have relied on Planned Parenthood for over forty years” and acted, joining Get Your Girl On, a local organization founded by Joy Kaczmarek that supports women’s access to health care. Get Your Girl On is bringing the nationally acclaimed performance, MOM BABY GOD to Glens Falls to unite the area’s pro-choice community. All proceeds from the performance will go directly to the Planned Parenthood Glens Fall Health Center, providing financial support for women seeking reproductive health care as well as improving security and privacy for their patients and staff.

MOM BABY GOD has quickly moved from the campus of Hampshire College, located in quaint Amherst, Massachusetts, to a national platform. The play's stand-alone quality as a piece of art fills seats with theatre critics and activists alike, while its provocative content and immersive portrayal of American girl culture at the mercy of the War on Women engages new audiences from all walks of life. Jaclyn Friedman, editor of Yes Means Yes and founder of Women, Action & the Media describes MOM BABY GOD as “a tour-de-force performance” that is “life altering and silly at the same time.” Gwen Tulin, a Chicago theater artist and audience member says, "I haven't seen anything that made me feel such a strong call to action since the original Laramie Project." It’s clear that MOM BABY GOD is on to something: reestablishing theatre as a tool for political change. MOM BABY GOD has seen its share of conflict: At the show’s New York premiere last October, Students for Life of America Executive Director Kristan Hawkins sent a member of her organization to the performance equipped with spy-glasses to illegally videotape the event. In her ‘exposé’ of MOM BABY GOD in the National Review, Hawkins called the footage "...too vulgar to release to the general public" and other right-wing media outlets have published reviews condemning the play - despite having never seen it or read the script. "We suspect that Hawkins quickly realized she would be in gross copyright infringement should she release the footage," says Burrows. "That, and people would actually see what the play is about."

Now on the heels of a successful national tour, Burrows and her team are emboldened by the positive receptions they’ve received with each successive performance and are excited to lend their voices to grassroots movements for reproductive rights and Glens Falls is no exception. Get Your Girl On will lead a peaceful Pro-Choice Voices rally on Saturday, October 11 at noon. The demonstration will begin at the Civil War Monument at the intersection of Glen and South Streets after which the participants will walk to Planned Parenthood. Burrows is ready: "It's about time the pro-choice movement pushed back; we've been stumbling and failed to notice just how close we are to losing the rights to control our own bodies. I couldn't be prouder to stand at the helm. Bring it on."

MOM BABY GOD is written and performed by Madeline Burrows and features lighting, projection and sound design by Allison Smartt. Emma Weinstein is the director. To schedule a review, or for more information and other press inquiries, contact Allison Smartt at mombabygod@gmail.com.

Reel Talk: Gone Girl is very dark but immersive and incredibly well done

By Sean van der Heijden, Staff WriterDavid Fincher’s latest film adaptation, Gone Girl, is based on the wildly successful novel of the same name by Gillian Flynn. After his wife’s disappearance leaves many people believing he is the culprit, a man must piece together various clues in order to figure out what happened, and while the whole case quickly becomes the attention of the media. Intense, disturbing, and full of twists, Gone Girl starts off slowly, but becomes impossible to look away from by the end.

A lot of credit must be given to the two leads—Ben Affleck and Rosamund Pike—who play Nick and Amy Dunne, a couple whose marriage slowly unravels until, on the day of their fifth wedding anniversary, Amy goes missing. Affleck plays his character very smugly the whole time, but—in contrast to a lot of anger at his initial casting—he is the perfect fit for the role: ambiguous, confident, and on edge, he leaves you wondering about his character’s motivations.

The movie, however, belongs to Pike, whose character becomes stronger as the movie progresses. She goes through an impressive range of emotions in the film, acting sweet, angry, seductive, tough, devastated, and disturbing—frequently all in the same scene. She’s shockingly good and incredibly engrossing throughout.

The supporting characters, too, are all great. Neil Patrick Harris especially stands out as the creepy ex-boyfriend of Pike’s character, and Tyler Perry can actually act as the know-it-all lawyer of Nick’s. Carrie Coon provides some dark comic relief as Nick’s sister, Margo, and Kim Dickens and Patrick Fugit are very convincing as detectives of the case.

As I walked out of the movie, the only thing I knew for sure was that it was very well done. Fincher directs with precision and confidence, the cinematography is dim and moody, the editing between past and present perfectly timed and intense, and the score by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross pulsates brilliantly throughout, bringing out the dark undertones of Flynn’s sharp screenplay.

This is a film that warrants so much discussion—not only in trying to figure out what the truth is, but also considering the critiques on marriage, the media, and police investigations. It may leave you feeling a little empty, a little gross, and a little confused, but Gone Girl is thought-provoking and definitely worth seeing. It’s also totally crazy and insane.

Overall: 9 out of 10.

New student sculpture celebrates the art of dance

The en pointe sculpture, located in front of the Dance Theater. Anyone who has visited downtown Saratoga Springs over the past year has seen them—the large sculptures of en pointe ballet shoes, each distinctly decorated. Some 30 of the sculptures are sprinkled throughout the city, and now the Skidmore campus has one of its own, located in front of the Dance Theater.

The sculptures are part of a public art project launched by the National Museum of Dance, located on South Broadway in Saratoga Springs. The project is designed not only to raise funds for the museum, but also to increase the museum’s profile and to celebrate the city’s rich tradition in the arts. Each sculpture was purchased by a sponsor, who worked with individual artists to carry out an agreed-upon design. The artists used a variety of media including paint, mosaic, metal, and collage.

The artwork for the Skidmore-sponsored sculpture was carried out by the college’s Pro-Arts student organization. “When I met with the Pro-Arts leaders to discuss the project, they jumped at the opportunity,” said Bob Kimmerle, Skidmore’s director of community relations. “Members of the club worked as a well-organized team as they proposed designs, created renderings, consulted with faculty, and then set to work applying the art. They did a great job.”

The sculptures start out as a blank slate—a five-foot-high, 90 lb. white fiberglass rendering of a ballet shoe. The Pro-Arts students, led by Madeleine Burkhart ’15, proposed a black and white design with abstract depictions of dancers in motion.

To prepare for the assignment, the student artists worked with Joanne Vella and Deborah Morris of the art faculty The advance work even included a modeling session with dancers, arranged by the Dance Department, giving the artists an opportunity to study dance movement and make sketches. The artists used the sketches to produce stencils, which they then used to spray-paint the sculpture.

“Everyone in Pro-Arts learned a great deal about the process of making public works of art, and we are so thankful to be entrusted with the project,” said Burkhart. “With the collaboration of the community and administration, the Dance Department, Photo Club—which helped document the modeling session—and Pro-Arts, this work truly represents Skidmore's ethos.”

For original story, go here: http://www.skidmore.edu/news/2014/images/september/0922-en-pointe-sculpture.php

Dopapod Band Breaking Boundaries: Tomorrow's Performance at Putnam Den

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By Blair Warren, Arts and Entertainment Editor

It’s hard to categorize the band Dopapod, as it seems to be of many genres. A combination of electronic, funk, and soul, the musicians see no stylistic margins. They do not hold back, disregarding norms and exploring their own groove. They have toured nationally with more than 150 shows per year, collecting listeners along the way.

Dopapod consists of Eli Winderman (keyboards), Rob Compa (guitar), Chuck Jones (bass) and Scotty Zwang (drums). When asked what inspired this type of music group, Rob Compa said that the inspiration was found in just being genuine to their own personalities. “It took a lot of experimenting and a lot of shows before it became what it is now. And if we're lucky, it will keep changing over the years. I can't speak for every musician, but I don't really have much of a vision behind what I want our music to sound like. I just feel like if we're having a great time and being ourselves, then the music will be honest and real.”

Compa explains that as a musician, the purpose is not to ensure that everybody likes the music, but rather that he likes it. “I'm not really in control of how people feel while we're playing. In the past I've spent a long time worrying about people's opinions and trying to make everybody happy, but you can't play one thing that one person will like without at least one other person having the opposite opinion about it. So at this point, we just play what we think is good and what we like. That is something we have control of. Life's too short to not play the kind of music you like!”

He also explains that inspiration can be found in anything. For Compa, he recently felt motivated to write about his concern that his next-door neighbor may be a serial killer. Whatever gets the creativity flowing! Below is a little description of each band member, from Compa’s understanding and for your entertainment:

“Eli Winderman is our keyboardist and our primary songwriter. He loves Pad Thai, Breaking Bad, vintage keyboards and is a big LeBron James fan. He can also fit his entire fist in his mouth."

“Chuck Jones is our bassist. Chuck loves staying in shape, goats, and pedals. He can name all 50 states in either alphabetical order or in chronological order based on when it was admitted into the Union."

“Scotty Zwang is our drummer and newest member. He loves the scent of lilacs, enjoys a good scotch now and again, and is a part time tattoo artist."

“My name is Rob Compa, and I play guitar. I enjoy playing guitar, looking up guitar equipment that I can't possibly afford, playing with my cat and dog, and making up completely falsified facts about the other members of the band.”

Come see Dopapod perform this weekend, Sept. 27 at Putnam Den, in advance of their upcoming new album!

Time: 7:00pm. Admission: $15 ADV/$18 DOS. Age restrictions: 18+. Address: 63 A Putnam Street Saratoga Springs, NY. Venue phone: 518 584 8066. w/ Consider The Source

Flutist Amy Porter to perform Oct. 11 at Skidmore’s Arthur Zankel Music Center

Porter HR with fluteBy Shelley Curran, managing director; Andrea Wise, director of media relations American flutist Amy Porter will perform with pianist Katie Leung at 8 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 11, at the Arthur Zankel Music Center on the Skidmore College campus.

A professor at the University of Michigan, Porter received the Henry Russel Award for “distinguished scholarship and conspicuous ability as a teacher.” She is a graduate of the Juilliard School, where she worked closely with Samuel Baron and Jeanne Baxtresser. She also studied with Alain Marion and Peter-Lukas Graf in Austria.

She has educated many musicians with her series of publications, as a master teacher for the MPULSE Summer Institute for advanced high school students at the University of Michigan, and as the past president of the non-profit Southeast Michigan Flute Association. In addition, Porter has taught numerous master classes around the world including Sweden, France, Slovenia, Brazil, Luxembourg, Japan, and Taiwan.

Porter’s concerts have earned acclaim. The New York Times has called her “technically robust and musically forceful.” She has recorded with CBS Masterworks, Boston Records, Equilibrium, and ACA Digital labels, and has won more international competitions than any American flute soloist.

Katie Leung, a two-time winner of the Lillian Fuchs Chamber Music Competition, will accompany Porter in this performance. With a B.A. from the University of Michigan and a master’s degree from the Manhattan School of Music, Leung has performed in the Akademiekonzert at the Mozarteum in Salzburg, Austria, and at the Hot Springs Music Festival in Arkansas. She has performed many times in both a solo and accompanist roles.

Admission for the Thursday, Oct. 11, event is $8 adults, $5 seniors, retirees, faculty, and staff, and free for students. For advance reservations or more information, visit www.skidmore.edu/zankel or call the Zankel Box Office at (518)-580-5321. The Zankel Music Center is wheelchair accessible and offers listening devices for the hearing impaired.

Jamaica Kincaid to present Skidmore’s Steloff Lecture Oct. 2

Jamaica Kincaid will present the annual Frances Steloff Lecture/Reading at Skidmore College Thursday, Oct. 2 Jamaica Kincaid will present “The Writer in Her World,” the annual Frances Steloff Lecture/Reading at Skidmore College Thursday, Oct. 2,  at 8 p.m. in Gannett Auditorium, Palamountain Hall.  Admission is free and open to the public.

She will receive an honorary doctorate of letters from Skidmore President Phillip Glotzbach. Following her presentation she will respond to audience questions and participate in a book signing.

Author of a wide range of books, including novels, memoirs and polemical works, Kincaid is perhaps best known for Annie John, Lucy, At The Bottom of the River, Autobiography of My Mother, Mr. Potter and A Small Place. Her most recent book, See Now Then, has stirred considerable controversy, turning as it does on a disastrous marital break-up, which is said to resemble very closely the demise of Kincaid's own long-time marriage to the son of New Yorker editor William Shawn.

A native of Antigua in the West Indies, she was discovered by the New Yorker magazine as a very young woman and rapidly came to fame as the author of "Talk Of The Town" pieces published in that magazine.

Kincaid has written on several occasions that she feels it to be her "duty to make everyone a little less happy," and there is no doubt that she has been true to her self-assigned vocation in books and in her public appearances across the country. See Now Then, for example, was said by the reviewer for The New York Times Book Review to "endow common experience with a mythic ferocity" and a "scouringly vivid" prose. The reviewer for The Chicago Tribune described it as "Chaucer's Wife of Bath meets Virginia Woolf," while Ms. Magazine described it as "a hurricane of a book, a novel of psychic bewilderment" which bears upon "the permanent legacy of slavery and colonialism" reflected upon with "frequent savage humor" and "unabashed rage."

Kincaid is a professor at Harvard University and a long-time visiting writer each July at Skidmore's New York State Summer Writers Institute.

The annual Steloff Lecture is named for the legendary founder of New York City's Gotham Book Mart. Steloff was a Saratoga native who endowed the lecture series nearly 50 years ago, and is therefor responsible for Skidmore's bringing to campus many of the world's greatest writers, from Nadine Gordiner, Saul Bellow, and Seamus Heaney to Susan Sontag, Arthur Miller, and Zadie Smith.