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Arts

Bits And Pieces 04.12.12

Concert for Concerts

    Three of the East End’s most popular local bands will perform at Gurney’s Inn on Sunday from 3 to 7 p.m. in the fourth annual Concert for the Concerts to benefit the Montauk Chamber of Commerce’s free Monday night Concerts on the Green series. 

    Gene Casey and the Lone Sharks, Caroline Doctorow and the Steamrollers, and Nancy Atlas with Johnny Blood will entertain for the cause, with a $10 admission fee. A discounted menu will be available for hungry listeners.

Apr 10, 2012
The Southampton Historical Museum’s blacksmith shop, seen here in 2009, was destroyed last summer and has been in the process of being rebuilt since Halloween. The images below show how it looked in its original location around 1880, and at the museum property in 2000 and today. Forging a New Blacksmith Shop

   The story of the building known as the E. and C. Bennett Blacksmith Shop at the South­ampton Historical Museum began and ended with a tree.

    The shop building, complete with a functioning forge, was originally built from local oaks in about 1790, moved to the museum from Hampton Road in the 1970s, and was restored in the 1990s. There it stood until Aug. 28

Apr 10, 2012
Peter-Tolin Baker designed a foam-core model of the set, which is now being built at the Bridgehampton Community House. Passion, Creativity, and Commitment in Tokyo and Bridgehampton

   Sometimes a play needs a grand vision. Sometimes it needs a minimal touch. But sometimes, it needs both. Josh Perl and Peter-Tolin Baker have brought both to bear on a late Tennessee Williams play “In the Bar of a Toyko Hotel,” which opens next Thursday in Bridgehampton.

Apr 10, 2012
Anne Porter, 2007 Paying Tribute to Anne Porter

   The Parrish Art Museum will celebrate Anne Porter’s life and her contributions to the arts and letters of the East End on Saturday at 3 p.m.

   Ms. Porter, a poet who was a National Book Award finalist, was married to Fairfield Porter, an artist with whom she raised a family on South Main Street in Southampton. She died in October, just shy of her 100th birthday.

Apr 10, 2012
Tea at the Manor, First Forsythia” by Pingree Louchheim is on view at Romany Kramoris Gallery in Sag Harbor. The Art Scene: 04.12.12

Groovy in Springs

    Music and art will merge at Ashawagh Hall this weekend with the second annual presentation of “Art Groove,” an exhibition of work by 14 artists paired with music with a dance beat, including Motown, disco, and hip-hop styles.

Apr 10, 2012
Audrey Flack with her latest piece, “Self-Portrait as St. T­eresa.” A major exhibition of her sculpture, the first in 30 years, opens at the Gary Snyder Gallery in Chelsea on April 19. Audrey Flack: Redemption Through Art

   On a temperate spring day last week, works of art from Audrey Flack’s light and airy studio in East Hampton were being gently borne to the Gary Snyder Gallery in the Chelsea district of Manhattan, where they will be on view from next Thursday through May 19. They range from tabletop size to flat-out enormous, and they all showcase Ms. Flack’s passion for the “sacred feminine” — the women heroes of mythology and religious iconography.

Apr 3, 2012
Bits And Pieces 04.05.12

Pollock-Krasner Benefit

    Stony Brook University will honor Ed Harris, an actor, writer, and director, at its 2012 Stars of Stony Brook Gala on April 25 at Chelsea Piers in New York City. The event will also honor the Pollock-Krasner Foundation, which has issued a $1 million challenge grant to help the Pollock-Krasner House and Study Center in Springs establish an endowment during this centennial anniversary year of Pollock’s birth.

Apr 3, 2012
Marilee Foster shared a new way of scaring away farm critters or attracting fetishists at the second “Lightning Round” at the Parrish last week. Lightning Round, Part II

    Farmer, winemaker, musician, “art worker,” editor, chef, and even artist, were some of the vocations represented last week at the Parrish Art Museum’s second “Lighting Round” presentation.

    Participants were asked to show 20 slides and speak for six minutes on who they are and what makes them tick.

Apr 3, 2012
Thomas Cardone’s “Shelter Island Fall” is on view at the Grenning Gallery in Sag Harbor through the end of the month. The Art Scene: 04.05.12

New at the Monkey

    The Crazy Monkey Gallery in Amagansett will feature work by three members of its artists cooperative — Barbara Bilotta, Lance Corey, and Wilhelmina Howe — beginning tomorrow.

    Ms. Bilotta attended the fine arts program at the State University at Stony Brook. An “abstract impressionist,” she said she uses “the flow of colors and their relationship to trigger the imagination.”

Apr 3, 2012
Bits And Pieces 03.29.12

From Europa to Heidi

    On Sunday at 2 p.m., Guild Hall will screen in HD the Berliner Philharmoniker’s “Europa Konzert” from Moscow in its North American premiere. The concert will feature Vadim Repin, a violinist, with Sir Simon Rattle conducting. The program will include Stravinsky’s Symphony in Three Movements, Bruch’s Concerto for Violin No. 1 (Op. 26), and Beethoven’s Symphony No. 7 in A major (Op. 92). Tickets cost $20, $18 for members. Students under 21 are free with identification.

Mar 27, 2012
Tony Berlant’s “Sandy,” a sculpture from 1964, left, is part of the “Places” section of the “EST-3” exhibition and shown in an installation, right, at the Parrish Art Museum in Southampton. Opinion: Los Angeles Art on the Other Coast

   Purists may sniff at giving up an entire museum show to a single private collector and — in the Parrish Art Museum’s case — putting art on the wall that is from an entirely different region of the country. Yet there is an argument to be made for the “EST-3: Southern California in New York-Los Angeles Art from the Beth Rudin DeWoody Collection” exhibition, and the museum and its curator have made it well.

Mar 27, 2012
Deborah Black’s new series of acrylic-on-paper works will be on view in the “Spring Quintet” show opening today at the Southampton Cultural Center. The Art Scene: 03.29.12

New Work at Vered

    “Ray Caesar: Selected Works” will open at the Vered Gallery in East Hampton tomorrow. The exhibition features the artist’s work in Maya, a three-dimensional modeling software used for digital animation effects in film and games.

Mar 27, 2012
Bits And Pieces 03.22.12

St. Luke’s Series Ends

    The Music at St. Luke’s series will conclude on Saturday with a solo recital by Daria Rabotkina, a pianist, at 4 p.m. in Hoie Hall at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church in East Hampton.

    The program will be: Robert Schumann’s Humoreske, op. 290, Franz Schubert’s Grand Rondeau for four hands in A Major, D. 951 (featuring William McNally), and Sergei Prokofiev’s Romeo and Juliet — Op. 75.

    Tickets are $20 and free for students 18 and younger.

New Organist

Mar 20, 2012
Corwith Farm,” an oil-and-canvas painting by Aubrey Grainger, will be on view at Pritam & Eames in a show called “Art at Home” beginning this weekend. The Art Scene: 03.22.12

New Amagansett Gallery

Mar 20, 2012
Bonnie Grice plays the sensual Emilie, a courtesan and one of Valmont’s mistresses. ‘Les Liaisons’ In Tuxedos And Evening Gowns

    “Les Liaisons Dangereuses,” the 18th-century French novel by Pierre Choderlos de Laclos about aristocratic power games and the lives they affect, has been adapted into every form imaginable. It can boast of at least seven versions on film, including two set in Korea, an opera, a radio series, and even a ballet. But it is the Christopher Hampton stage adaptation that has garnered the most attention in the Western world, first as a successful Broadway production and then as a successful Hollywood film in the 1980s.

Mar 20, 2012
Bits And Pieces 03.15.12

Pina and Juliet

    The Parrish Art Museum’s schedule of programs for next week starts on Sunday with a screening of “Pina,” a documentary by Wim Wenders about the choreographer Pina Bausch, and continues with a ballet performance of “Romeo and Juliet.”

Mar 13, 2012
John Bock, standing center, was joined by, from left, Colin Stillwell, Audrey Chen, and Leslie Bloom at a Watermill Center performance on Saturday night. Opinion: A God at the Center of His Own Universe

   We all should write a thank you note to Robert Wilson for locating his grand experiment in arts sponsorship on the South Fork.

Mar 13, 2012
Frank Sofo’s “High Tide” will be one of the works on view in “Body of Work VII” this weekend at Ashawagh Hall in Springs. The Art Scene: 03.15.12

Body on View at Ashawagh

    “Body of Work VII” will revisit the figurative work of several members of this group of artists, including Rosalind Brenner, Linda Capello, Michael Cardacino, Cynthia Loewen, Anthony Lombardo, Bob Markell, Frank Sofo, and Margaret Weissbach. In addition, four other artists have been invited to exhibit with the group for the first time — Janet Culbertson, Tina Folks, Douglas Reina, and Frederick Paxton Werner.

Mar 13, 2012
Writers Award For Muske-Dukes

   Carol Muske-Dukes will be among those receiving Barnes & Noble Writers for Writers Awards from the Poets & Writers organization at a benefit dinner on March 29 in Manhattan. The award recognizes “authors who have given generously to other writers or to the broader literary community,” it says on Poets & Writers’ Web site.

Mar 13, 2012
A Photoshop experiment from 2007-8. Cindy Sherman in Full Disguise at the Modern

With the buzz factor on the new Cindy Sherman retrospective exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art already at full decibels, aptly descriptive words such as malleable, prescient, and chameleon-like are already sounding like clichés.

    Yet, it is not just her seemingly shape-shifting originality that is so impressive in this epic collection of photographs from three decades of art making, but the evolving mastery of her medium in coaxing out the effects that allow these transformations to occur.

CLICK TO SEE MORE IMAGES

Mar 8, 2012
Bits And Pieces 03.08.12

Dwyer Does Cider

    Coming up next in the East Hampton Historical Society’s concert series, the Cider House Sessions, is Doug Dwyer, who will perform at the Clinton Academy on Saturday at 7 p.m. Mr. Dwyer made his musical debut in Southampton in 1964 and his repertory is wide ranging, covering country, classic rock, rhythm and blues, and jazz. Performing with him will be Mike Appel, who was Bruce Springsteen’s original manager and producer (e.g., on “Born to Run”). Mr. Dwyer will sing Mr. Appel’s new song “Pink Cotton Candy.”

Mar 6, 2012
Choral Society Heralds Spring

    The Choral Society of the Hamptons will explore three centuries of music in its spring concert on March 18 at 5 p.m. at the East Hampton Presbyterian Church. Jesse Mark Peckham will conduct and three soprano soloists will participate.

    The 60-member Choral Society has chosen music by Mozart, Fauré, and Rutter, whose sacred music is marked by exquisite melody. Members of the South Fork Chamber Ensemble will accompany the chorus on harp, flute, oboe, glockenspiel, cello, and timpani. Thomas Bohlert, the music director of the church, will play the organ.

Mar 6, 2012
The Canadian band Cowboy Junkies Up-and-Comers to Veteran Hands

   The Westhampton Beach Performing Arts Center’s lineup for the spring includes a new Breakout Artist series that showcases young singer-songwriters and musicians, with tickets in the $20 range. This is in addition to the world-renowned artists of the Main Stage shows.

    Diego Garcia is up first, with a performance tomorrow at 8 p.m. that includes his new song “You Were Never There,” which is getting play on WEHM, a partner in the series. Mr. Garcia will display his Latin roots with a jazz and blues flavor.

Mar 6, 2012
Guild Hall will honor Laurie Anderson for a lifetime of work on Monday in New York City. Celebrating Laurie Anderson's Musical Innovations

    With a rich and varied body of work and now in her 60s, these are the days when Laurie Anderson has become, not necessarily an éminence grise, but certainly an artist in maturity and accepting its rewards.

Mar 1, 2012
Guild Hall will honor Laurie Anderson for a lifetime of work on Monday in New York City. Celebrating a Musical Innovator

   With a rich and varied body of work and now in her 60s, these are the days when Laurie Anderson has become, not necessarily an éminence grise, but certainly an artist in maturity and accepting its rewards.

Feb 28, 2012
Frederick Hammersley’s “Same Difference,” from 1959, will be part of the “EST-3” show opening at the Parrish Art Museum this weekend. DeWoody Brings West Coast East

   Anyone following the national art scene last year was probably aware of a series of Southern California exhibits devoted to the area’s regional artists called Pacific Standard Time, which took over most museums and many galleries with related events and shows. The art ranged from works produced in 1945 up through 1980, and the series was initiated by the Getty Center, where some of its own exhibits continue to be on view through May.

Feb 28, 2012
Jazz At Hayground

   The Hayground Forum at the Hayground School in Bridgehampton will present Groove Gumbo Super Band, a Nordic world jazz group, tomorrow from 6 to 8 p.m.

The evening will include bread making and a local cheese and wine tasting. A $10 suggested donation will be collected at the door.

Feb 28, 2012
Nick Gabaldon rode his last wave toward the Malibu Pier in 1951. This scrimshaw rendering of the event was made by Peter Spacek of East Hampton and appears in the online documentary “12 Miles North — the Story of Nick Gabaldon.” Scrimshaw Helps Tell Myth

   What’s the recipe for a myth? There’s no one formula, of course, but it seems as though gods or super-motivated humans are usually involved. Someone keeps rolling a stone up a hill, or makes fire, kisses a frog into a prince, gets swallowed by a whale, procreates, dies, gets reborn. A good myth usually requires a powerful natural or supernatural force.

    The modern myth is trickier, especially in the supernatural department. It can be harder to recognize in the present, but they do exist and reveal themselves with time.

Feb 28, 2012