this week in lectures, signings, panel discussions, workshops, and Q&As

THE SCENE @ TAVERN: ICE FESTIVAL

Central Park Ice Festival will feature live carvings at Tavern on the Green (photo by Okamato Studio)

Courtyard of Tavern on the Green, Central Park
67th St. off Central Park West
Saturday, February 11, free, 11:00 am – 3:00 pm
212-874-7874
www.centralparknyc.org

Central Park celebrates the cold weather, which perhaps has finally arrived, with its annual Ice Festival, being held Saturday afternoon in the Courtyard of Tavern on the Green. Matthew Reiley, the Central Park Conservancy’s associate director of conservation and preservation, will give a talk about the many permanent sculptures that can be found throughout the park, and the Long Island City-based Okamoto Studio will create temporary ice sculptures of Central Park icons. “Purity. Crystalline. Evanescent,” Okamoto explains on its website. “Ice evokes romance…. Forms follow timelines of existence as they gradually change from rigid to organic, eventually disappearing, melting away.” There will also be free hot cocoa on hand to warm your freezing bones.

CINEMATIC GODDESS: THE FILMS OF RAQUEL WELCH

The Film Society of Lincoln Center places Raquel Welch front and center for long-overdue tribute

Film Society of Lincoln Center, Walter Reade Theater
165 West 65th St. at Amsterdam Ave.
February 10-14
212-875-5601
www.filmlinc.com

Chicago-born actress Raquel Welch was the embodiment of the Hollywood superstar, the supreme sex symbol of the late 1960s and 1970s. A tougher, more physical version of Marilyn Monroe and Brigitte Bardot, Welch made a series of films in multiple genres, from the sci-fi cult classic Fantastic Voyage to the shoot-’em-up Western 100 Rifles, from the literary bomb Myra Breckinridge to the caveman stomp One Million Years B.C., from the period comedy Mother, Jugs, and Speed to the sports favorite Kansas City Bomber. Her costars included Burt Reynolds, Bill Cosby, Jim Brown, Christopher Lee, James Coburn, Oliver Reed, and Harvey Keitel — in addition to Dyan Cannon, Mae West, Barbara Stanwyck, and Farrah Fawcett — but when Welch was on-screen, her impressive assets took over. Welch made more than three dozen movies, ten of which will be shown at the Film Society of Lincoln Center for the long-deserved tribute “Cinematic Goddess,” including all of the above works in addition to Hannie Caulder, The Last of Sheila, The Three Musketeers, and The Wild Party, with Welch on hand for several Q&As before or after the screening, moderated by the likes of Simon Doonan and Dick Cavett.

LAR LUBOVITCH DANCE COMPANY: HISTOIRE DU SOLDAT / CRISIS VARIATIONS

The Lars Lubovitch Dance Company will present CRISIS VARIATIONS and HISTOIRE DU SOLDAT at MMAC this weekend (photo by Kokyat)

Manhattan Movement & Arts Center
248 West 60th St. between Amsterdam & West End Aves.
February 10-12, $15-$45
212-787-1178
www.manhattanmovement.com
www.lubovitch.org

Last March, an all-star lineup teamed up for a one-night-only presentation of a new English-language production of Igor Stravinsky’s Histoire du Soldat (The Soldier’s Tale) at Galapagos Art Space in DUMBO. The production is now back for three shows this weekend at the Manhattan Movement & Arts Center, running February 10-12. The 1918 work, based on a parable about a Russian soldier who makes a deal with the devil, will be conducted by flutist Ransom Wilson for his Le Train Bleu ensemble, with choreography by Lar Lubovitch. The production features Lar Lubovitch Dance Company members Reid Bartelme as the soldier, Nicole Corea as the princess, and Attila Joey Csiki as the devil, with Reed Armstrong acting the part of the devil and Corey Dargel the soldier; Marni Nixon will serve as narrator. The evening will also include Lubovitch’s Crisis Variations, which plays off the word “crisis,” with dancers Katarzyna Skarpetowksa, Brian McGinnis, Corea, Csiki, Reed Luplau, Jason McDole, and Laura Rutledge along with five musicians performing a commissioned score by Yevgeniy Sharlat. The Lar Lubovitch Dance Company will then head farther uptown for the Harkness Dance Festival at the 92nd St. Y, where Stripped/Dressed will feature The Legend of Ten and various demonstrations, with Lubovitch discussing the creative process with dance writers Anna Kisselgoff (February 17), Deborah Jowitt (February 18) and Gus Solomons Jr. (February 19).

THE MINERS’ HYMNS

Bill Morrison’s THE MINERS’ HYMNS revisits a Northeast England mining community

THE MINERS’ HYMNS (Bill Morrison, 2011)
Film Forum
209 West Houston St.
February 8-14
212-727-8110
www.filmforum.org
www.billmorrisonfilm.com

Avant-garde filmmaker Bill Morrison (Decasia) collaborated with Icelandic musician and composer Jóhann Jóhannsson in the elegiac The Miners’ Hymn, a tribute to the now-gone collieries, or coal mines, of Northeast England. The fifty-two-minute documentary opens with new aerial shots of the locations where the Durham coal mines were, since replaced by luxury housing and megastores. The film shows the birth and death dates of several collieries going back to the nineteenth century, then seamlessly blends into archival black-and-white footage of the miners at work underground, the community coming together for a local fair, and a union rally during a strike that includes a confrontation with the police. There is no text and no narration in The Miners’ Hymn; instead, Morrison’s savvy editing of the found footage, consisting of both moving pictures and still photographs primarily acquired through the British Film Institute and the BBC, brings the old-fashioned town and its old-fashioned ways to vibrant life even though they roll across the screen in slow motion. Jóhannsson’s score punctuates the proceedings with an occasional brassy flare when not sounding more funereal. Despite the lack of text and narration, Morrison’s point of view is clear and all too obvious, paying homage to something that has been lost, and he is never quite able to make an emotional or personal connection with the viewer. However, The Miners’ Hymns contains remarkable footage that still manages to tell an important story, even if it is one-sided and lacking at least a little more historical context. The Miners’ Hymns is playing February 8-14 at Film Forum, along with Morrison’s short films Release (2010), featuring footage of Al Capone’s release from prison, Outerborough (2005), which looks at the Brooklyn Bridge, and The Film of Her (1996), a documentary about a Library of Congress copyright office employee who finds a vault full of old paper movies. Morrison will be at Film Forum for the 8:00 show on February 8, which will also feature live violin by Todd Reynolds.

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.