Yearly Archives: 2012

TOM ECCLES, MARK HANDFORTH, AND IRVING SANDLER DISCUSS THE WORK AND CAREER OF MARK DI SUVERO

Mark di Suvero’s “Joi de Vivre” stands tall in Zuccotti Park (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

New York Foundation for the Arts
20 Jay St., seventh floor
Tuesday, February 7, free, 6:30
www.nyfa.org
www.stormking.org

For more than half a century, Chinese-born American artist Mark di Suvero has been creating sculptural works using wood and steel beams, focusing on large-scale pieces such as “Joi de Vivre” that occupies Zuccotti Park, “Yoga” in Brooklyn Bridge Park, and a number of installations at Storm King Art Center. Last summer di Suvero, who led the transformation of a Long Island City landfill into the beautiful Socrates Sculpture Park twenty-five years ago, had an impressive exhibit of works across Governors Island, and he regularly shows a massive piece inside the Paula Cooper Gallery in Chelsea. On February 7 at the New York Foundation for the Arts, curator extraordinaire Tom Eccles of Bard’s Center for Curatorial Studies, Miami-based site-specific sculptor Mark Handforth, and art critic and historian Irving Sandler will discuss di Suvero and his oeuvre, placing his work in sociocultural and artistic context.

ALL ME: THE LIFE AND TIMES OF WINFRED REMBERT

Winfred Rembert tells his fascinating life story in ALL ME

ALL ME: THE LIFE AND TIMES OF WINFRED REMBERT (Vivian Ducat, 2011)
Pelham Fritz Recreation Center
18 Mount Morris Park West at 122nd St.
Thursday, February 9, free, 1:00
212-860-1380
www.allmethemovie.com
www.nycgovparks.org

Born in 1945 in rural Georgia to a mother who abandoned him when he was three months old, Winfred Rembert grew up picking cotton, dropped out of high school, spent time in jail and on a chain gang, and lost nearly all his teeth. But it was his years behind bars that turned him into a new man, as he learned to read and write and developed a unique art style that soon had him carving out the tales of his life on leather. Longtime journalist, producer, and writer Vivian Ducat tells Rembert’s amazing story in her engaging feature-length debut, All Me: The Life and Times of Winfred Rembert. Ducat follows the oversized Rembert, who regularly bubbles over with joy, as he returns for a show in Cuthbert, Georgia, and prepares for a big opening in New York City. “I know he’s here for a reason,” his sister Lorraine says in the film. “To help people and to be a witness through his art.” Throughout All Me, Rembert discusses many of his works, in which he uses indelible dyes on carved leather, in great detail, each one representing a part of his life, focusing on being a poor black man in a white-dominated society. It is quite poignant late in the film when he points out that his art seems to be most appreciated by whites even though it is meant as a visual history for blacks. But what really makes the documentary work is not just that Rembert is such an enigmatic, larger-than-life figure but that his art is exceptional, his self-taught, folksy style reminiscent of such forebears as Romare Bearden and Jacob Lawrence, capturing a deeply personal, intensely intimate part of the black experience in twentieth-century America. Rembert, one of the most fascinating characters you’re ever likely to come upon, will be at the Pelham Fritz Recreation Center on February 9 at 1:00 with Ducat and producer Mark Urman for a free screening of All Me, and what should be an enlightening Q&A afterward. (Rembert and Uman will also be at the Montclair Art Museum on February 16 at 7:00 as part of the fifth annual Montclair African American Film Festival, which is also free.) And if you’re as captivated by Rembert’s story as we are, you can see more of his work in his “Amazing Grace” exhibition, running through May 5 at the Hudson River Museum in Yonkers.

iPHONE FOR PHOTOGRAPHY IN NEW YORK WITH STEFAN FALKE

Stefan Falke will show and discuss his Fake Polaroids, taken with an iPhone, at the Apple Store on February 6 (photo © Stefan Falke)

Apple Store, Fifth Ave.
767 Fifth Ave. at 58th St.
Monday, February 6, free, 8:00
212-336-1440
www.apple.com
www.stefanfalke.com

Born and raised in Germany and based in Brooklyn for the last ten years, Stefan Falke is a photographer who specializes in reportage, movie stills, and album covers; among his recent projects are taking behind-the-scenes shots of Heinrich Breloer’s Buddenbrooks and Gavin Millar’s Albert Schweitzer and shooting Catherine Russell for such albums as Inside This Heart of Mine and the brand-new Strictly Romanin’ and the Holmes Brothers for their latest, Feed My Soul. His work can also be found in such books as Luise Kimme: Sculpture and The Dancing Spirits of Trinidad: Moko Jumbies. In addition, Falke travels around New York taking what he calls “Fake Polaroids,” capturing images of the city on his iPhone; the shots range from storefronts and bridges to billboards and the sky, from buildings and trash to graffiti and other street scenes. On Monday, February 6, the gregarious Falke will discuss his iPhone pictures at the Apple Store on Fifth Ave. in a free lecture at 8:00. “It is funny how what started as something just for fun takes on its own life,” Falke notes on his blog. “I never thought my Fake Polaroids (I process my iPhone with the ShakeItPhoto app) images would go anywhere.” Everyone might think they’re photographers now that digital equipment is more affordable and widespread, but Falke, whom we have bumped into many times on the street, including at parades and other special events, will show you how it’s really done.

TICKET GIVEAWAY: IONESCOPADE

The York Theatre Company has a ball with Ionesco in updated musical vaudeville (photo by Carol Rosegg)

York Theatre Company
619 Lexington Ave. at 54th St.
Through February 26, $67.50
212-935-5820
www.yorktheatre.org

The “York Celebrates Off-Broadway” season continues with a revival of Robert Allan Ackerman’s wacky 1974 show Ionescopade: A Musical Vaudeville. In this updated version, director/choreographer Bill Castellino and music director Christopher McGovern have fun with Mildred Kayden’s original music and lyrics, which riff on the oeuvre of French-Romanian Theatre of the Absurd playwright Eugene Ionesco, who wrote such unusual shows as The Bald Soprano, Rhinoceros, The Chairs, and Exit the King. Set pieces are performed by Nancy Anderson, Leo Ash Evans, Susan J. Jacks, Samuel Cohen, David Edwards, Pal Binotto, and Tina Stafford, with of course an eye toward the absurd. Ionescopade runs through February 26 at the York Theatre, and twi-ny has four pairs of tickets to give away for free for performances on February 14, 15, and 16. Just send your name and daytime phone number to contest@twi-ny.com by Tuesday, February 7, at 12 noon to be eligible. All entrants must be twenty-one years of age or older; four winners will be selected at random.

“NAKED” POLAR BEAR CRUISE

“Naked” Polar Bear Cruise on board the Circle Line raises funds for the Wildlife Conservation Society

Circle Line Sightseeing Cruises, Pier 83
West 42nd St. at 12th Ave.
Saturday, February 25, 10:30 am – 12 noon
Spectators $20, participants free
212-563-3200
www.circleline42.com

Founded in 1903 by the Father of Physical Culture, Bernarr Macfadden, the Coney Island Polar Bear Club celebrates each new year with its members jumping into the ocean on January 1, braving freezing cold weather conditions. But that’s not the only time those crazy old souls take off their clothes and luxuriate in bitter temperatures, which they believe have health benefits for the human body. On February 25, the CIPBC will join forces with the Wildlife Conservation Society for the fourth annual “Naked” Polar Bear Cruise aboard the Circle Line. It’s free to participate, although you are encouraged to solicit donations from friends and family, raising money for every minute you can remain in your bathing suit outside on the cruise ship, with prizes going to the man and woman who last the longest. (No, you will not be jumping into the Atlantic.) Once it gets too much for you, there will be hot chocolate waiting inside. It’s harder than you think; last year only a handful of people made it through the full hour. If you want to go along for the ride but not strip down to your bathing trunks or bikini, it’ll cost you twenty bucks, with all proceeds going to the WCS, which oversees the Bronx Zoo, the New York Aquarium, the Central Park Zoo, the Queens Zoo, and the Prospect Park Zoo.

FIRST SATURDAYS: BLACK MALES DEFYING STEREOTYPES

Chris Johnson and Hank Willis Thomas, with Kamal Sinclair and Bayeté Ross Smith, stills from “Question Bridge: Black Males,” multichannel video installation, 2012 (courtesy of the artists and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York)

Brooklyn Museum
200 Eastern Parkway at Washington St.
Saturday, February 4, free, 5:00 – 11:00 (some events require free tickets distributed in advance at the Visitor Center)
212-864-5400
www.brooklynmuseum.org

The Brooklyn Museum turns its attention to Black History Month for its February First Saturdays program, focusing on the exhibition “Question Bridge: Black Males,” in which Hank Willis Thomas, Chris Johnson, Bayeté Ross Smith, and Kamal Sinclair traveled around the country interviewing 150 black men in a dozen locations and editing the results into a multiscreen video installation. On Saturday night there will be an Action Station where visitors can add their own questions on the topic of identity, a discussion with the creative team, pop-up dances by Renegade Performance Group inspired by the exhibit, an interactive workshop led by “Question Bridge” education director Samara Gaev, and a dance party with DJ Stormin’ Norman featuring songs by black men. In addition, there will be live music by Game Rebellion, curator Shantrelle P. Lewis will discuss her Museum of Contemporary African Diaspora Arts exhibit “Dandy Lion: A Re(de)fined Black Masculine Identity,” hands-on art will help attendees create a mixed-media piece based on Kehinda Wiley’s work, museum guides will lead a tour about defying gender stereotypes, Daniel Bernard Roumain will play parts of his “Symphony for the Dance Floor” with Lord Jamar, Carla Peterson will discuss her book Black Gotham: A Family History of African Americans in Nineteenth-Century New York City, and the Brooklyn Circus will host a fashion runway show. And the galleries will be open late, giving visitors plenty of opportunity to check out “HIDE/SEEK: Difference and Desire in American Portraiture,” “Rachel Kneebone: Regarding Rodin,” “Raw/Cooked: Shura Chernozatonskaya,” “Newspaper Fiction: The New York Journalism of Djuna Barnes, 1913–1919,” “Work of Art: Kymia Nawabi,” and “19th-Century Modern.”

WIT

Cynthia Nixon gives a remarkably uplifting performance as a terminal cancer patient in Broadway premiere of WIT (photo by Joan Marcus)

Manhattan Theatre Club at the Samuel J. Friedman Theatre
261 West 47th St. between Broadway & Eighth Aves.
Through March 11, $57-$121
witonbroadway.com

It might at first seem odd that a play about a stern forty-eight-year-old teacher obsessed with the Holy Sonnets of John Donne and dying of stage IV metastatic ovarian cancer is called Wit. But as it turns out, kindergarten teacher Margaret Edson’s only play, which was written in 1991, was first performed in 1995, won the Pulitzer Prize in 1999, and is now making its Broadway debut in a marvelous Manhattan Theatre Club production at the Samuel J. Friedman Theatre, is extremely funny, as well as being emotionally involving and exceedingly intelligent. Tony and Emmy winner Cynthia Nixon beautifully embodies Dr. Vivian Bearing, an English professor who has agreed to participate in an experimental cancer program at a university teaching hospital. The gaunt woman, wearing a hospital gown, a red baseball cap, and white socks, begins the play by directly addressing the audience, explaining that she is in fact a character in a play in which people should not necessarily expect a happy ending. For the next one hundred minutes, Bearing goes through several medical examinations — which harken back to tests she gave her classes — regularly interrupting the action to talk to the audience, mixing an appealing irony and sarcasm into her very serious condition, which she describes as “insidious cancer with pernicious side effects.” Bearing is a fascinating, complex character, whether debating the punctuation of Donne’s “Death Be Not Proud” (“And Death shall be no more; Death, thou shalt die”) with her mentor, professor E. M. Ashford (Suzanne Bertish), discussing her options with nurse Susie Monahan (Cara Patterson), or dealing with young clinical fellow Dr. Jason Posner (Greg Keller), who has a lot to learn about bedside manner. Nixon is magnificent as Bearing, a role previously played onstage by Kathleen Chalfant and in an HBO movie by Emma Thompson; for all her eccentricities, Bearing should not be a sympathetic character, but Nixon turns the lonely, snarky woman, who has no real friends or family, into a delightful character who is not afraid to look death in the face. MTC artistic director Lynne Meadow guides the production with a steady, at times gleeful hand, with scenes cleverly changing via a revolving wall in the center of the stage. Nixon and Meadow, who are both breast cancer survivors, do a wonderful job of not allowing any overwrought melodrama to seep into Edson’s carefully composed, tightly constructed play, resulting in a mesmerizing exploration and even celebration of life, death, poetry, and the theater itself.