Tag Archives: controversial art

Moving Memories

As the 10th anniversary of 9/11 approached, I realized that my three children (now grown) had never seen “Moving Memories,” the Arizona 9/11 memorial located at Wesley Bolin Plaza across from the Arizona State Capitol.

So I headed out one morning with my son Christopher to explore the 9/11 memorial — as well as other memorials located at the plaza. “Moving Memories,” the subject of controversy both during its development and after its installation, is the site of an interfaith memorial taking place Sun, Sept 11 (11:30am-12:30pm). Members of the public are welcome. www.azifm.org.

I’ve explored many a memorial while following coverage of 9/11-related events — and find some to be utterly lacking in imagination. That’s not the case with “Moving Memories.” The structure, designed by Jones Studio in Phoenix, captures light, creates shadows and shares words that reflect the diversity of an ever-evolving democracy.

The words stenciled into “Moving Memories” present a jarring juxtaposition of everyday life and larger than life events — which is exactly how life presented itself on 9/11. I was particularly struck by words reflecting personal experiences. Making T-shirts to raise memorial funds. Writing songs to honor a brother. Some are captured in the images below.

“Moving Memories” sits on a lawn opposite a circle of other Arizona memorials…

The memorial includes this section of a building from the World Trade Center…

This metal arc is stenciled with words so light passes through to the concrete below…

Sunlit words are projected on to the concrete circle at the memorial’s base…

Children intrigued by these stencils can create the same effect at home…

Examples of both readily accepted and controversial wording on the memorial…

Some wording reflects the ways everyday Americans responded to 9/11…

The most important words in this memorial may be those pictured below…

If you’re heading to outdoor memorial events today, remember to take along plenty of water and sunscreen — and to be especially kind on a day when many may be hurting.

— Lynn

Note: While you’re at Wesley Bolin Plaza, make time to explore other memorials you’ll find there — to peace officers, veterans, victims of genocide, canines who work with law enforcement, workers who’ve died on the job and many others. Visit the calendar section of www.raisingarizonakids.com to learn about additional 9/11 memorial events in the Valley. To learn more about controversial 9/11 art visit www.artinfo.com/news/story/38569/7-controversies-that-shaped-the-debate-about-911-art/?page=2. To explore additional images of “Moving Memories” visit www.jonesstudioinc.com/26/index.htm.

Coming up: Spotlight on “CATS,” A trio of tea parties, Honk if you love Hans!, From acting to anatomy, The making of “Munched”

Update: Ground Zero photos taken during the past ten years are now posted at www.boston.com/bigpicture/2011/09/ground_zero_september_11_2001.html

Plays on Jewish identity

See Josh Kornbluth perform at the Herberger Theater Center through Sunday

Valley audiences have two chances this month to explore issues of Jewish identity through the medium of performance art — as two plays take to Phoenix stages.

First, “Andy Warhol: Good for the Jews?” presented by Actors Theatre through this Sunday at the Herberger Theater Center in downtown Phoenix.

It’s a reflection by playwright and monologist Josh Kornbluth on a series of Andy Warhol prints that caused quite a stir when first exhibited in 1980.

The prints feature ten prominent Jews of the 20th century– including Franz Kafka, Gertrude Stein, Martin Buber, Albert Einstein, Louis Brandeis, George Gershwin, Golda Meir, Sarah Bernhardt, Sigmund Freud and the Marx brothers.

Kornbluth’s show is described as “an irreverent mix of autobiography, music, philosophy and improvisation.” It’s “a wide-ranging meditation on art and religion” that recounts, in non-liner fashion, how Kornbluth’s discovery of his own “Jewishness” was fueled by Warhol’s work.

Tickets for remaining performances are available for just $15, making this one of the best theater values in town. Perhaps Kornbluth’s musings will even inspire you to discover your own “artistness.”

See Michael Kary, Ben Tyler and Andrea Dovner perform with Arizona Jewish Theatre Company starting March 24 (Photo: Mark Gluckman)

Second, “My Name is Asher Lev” by the Arizona Jewish Theatre Company presented March 24-April 3 at the John Paul Theatre on the campus of Phoenix College.

“My name is “Asher Lev,” by Aaron Posner, is based on a novel of the same name authored by Chaim Potok. It’s the story of a young Hassidic painter in New York City who’s torn between his observant Jewish community and his need to create.”

Themes include beauty, truth, ambition and tradition. Plus “difficult choices” — between “art and faith” as well as “passion and family.”

Both works consider what it means to be Jewish and what it means to be an artist — but by vastly different means. Seeing both, I think, presents a rare opportunity to explore the diversity and depth of modern-day storytelling.

— Lynn

Note: When you visit the Arizona Jewish Theatre Company website, be sure and check out information on their summer theater camps for youth. With any luck at all, Kornbluth will decide to do a summer camp for grown-ups.

Coming up: That’s absurd!

Buber trumps Bieber

Need proof? It seems all the magazines with philosopher Martin Buber on the cover have sold out at this Eye Lounge retail respite on Roosevelt Row

Forget Bieber. It’s all about Buber. Or so one might suppose after talking with comedic monologist Josh Kornbluth.

Austrian philosopher Martin Buber (1878-1965) shares a great distinction with nine fellow Jews. His face was the subject of a collection of silkscreen prints by Andy Warhol (1928-1987). The works fueled all sorts of controversy when first exhibited in 1980.

Kornbluth is in town to perform one of many pieces he’s written and taken to the stage. It’s titled “Andy Warhol: Good for the Jews?” and it’s being presented by Actors Theatre March 4-20 at the Herberger Theater Center in Phoenix. 

I had the pleasure of talking with Kornbluth by phone recently. Our conversation glided between topics like art, education and democracy. As a one-time doctoral student in the philosophy of religion, I was tickled to find another soul better versed in Buber than in Bieber.

Kornbluth strikes me as a master of miscellany. If two ideas can be connected even remotely, he’ll do it — but not in a late night doom and gloom pundit sort of a way.

Hence Kornbluth’s resonance with Buber, a man for whom connections and relatedness were paramount. There’s more than a little irony here. One is known as the philosopher of dialogue, another as a performer of monologues.

I’m eager to learn more about Kornbluth’s experiences with the ten Jews chosen by Warhol as he took on his first bit of portraiture. Part of Kornbluth’s encounter with Warhol involves changing perceptions of his own Jewishness — but it’s also a great deal more.

I’ll share some of Kornbluth’s insights, and reflections on Arizona, in a future post — but hope you’ll see the show in the meantime. Not Jewish? Not a Warhol fan? Not a problem.

I get the feeling this show is outrageously fun and thought-provoking whatever your own sense of identity when you walk through those theater doors. But don’t be surprised if you leave with a different sense of self altogether.

— Lynn

Note: Let’s hope someone who sees the work commissions Kornbluth to write a piece about the people and politics of Arizona. Curious contenders can learn more about Kornbluth’s work at www.joshkornbluth.com. Click here to read a review from The New York Times.

Coming up: A labor of love, Musings of a monologist

Winter awakening

 

Snow Flower by Kitty Rogers

While feeling the sun’s rays soak in through my kitchen window Monday afternoon, I picked up the phone and dialed Paris Bradstreet, an actor, singer and dancer currently touring with the musical “Spring Awakening.”

Turns out she was sitting at her own kitchen table, in Massachusetts, watching a slow and steady stream of snowflakes fall to the ground.

Bradstreet has plenty of experience with both sunshine and snowstorms. Though born and raised in Massachusetts, she earned her B.F.A. in musical theatre at Ithaca College in New York and her M.F.A. in acting at California State University, Fullerton. And she’s had acting gigs in all sorts of places — including Nebraska, Utah and Arizona.

At her very first audition, she landed the lead role — playing “Peter Pan” in a school production. “I was the only one they trusted to learn the 100 lines,” quips Bradstreet. She was in third grade at the time, and recalls this as the moment she “first caught the acting bug.”

But times have changed, as evidenced by the casting protocol for her “Spring Awakening” gig. Like most actors looking for work, she’s aways on the hunt for casting calls — searching audition notices on websites like www.backstage.com and www.playbill.com.

She learned of “Spring Awakening” opportunities online and got her adult woman understudy gig after sending in a video with readings from various sides she’d been sent for the show. “Sides” are pages or scenes from a script used during the audition process.

Today’s young actors contend with more than video technology, muses Bradstreet. Thanks to Twitter, Facebook and other online offerings, actors experienced and aspiring can really make a mess of things — with lasting results. “People now have the opportunity to respond instantly without thinking,” reflects Bradstreet. “Consider the consequences,” she warns, “because they can be permanent.”

Having recently turned 40, Bradstreet says that for the first time she’s actually old enough to be a parent to many of her fellow cast members. She’s amazed at their collective knowledge of all things pop culture — and marvels at the way “they are all so connected to the whole world” and “live in a universe populated with information.”

As we spoke, I found myself wishing we were sitting at the same kitchen table. Bradstreet has much wisdom to share with actors of all generations, but offers it with a lovely humility rather than an inflated sense of self-importance. I suspect those snowy afternoons, so condusive to contemplation and conversation, have left their mark.

I asked Bradstreet about what it means to be a “character” actress — a topic she started to tackle by sharing that she’s “not what most of the media or people in our society call conventionally attractive.” Bradstreet says she knew from a young age that she would most often play someone’s mother or grandmother. “I was never the pretty ingenue,” she quips.

Every actor has a look, a type, a build and “an essence of who they are,” reflects Bradstreet. Finding a career path, and actually getting ongoing work as an actor, requires a delicate balance of “knowing who you are and knowing how others will perceive you.”

In some ways, shares Bradstreet, not having to worry about the “pretty angle” is refreshing. There’s tremendous competition, she says, for roles for attractive women. “I get work,” she says, “not because of how I look, but because of the way I do my job.”

“I’ve always been happy to play the roles I do,” says Bradstreet, “because they’re very satisfying.” Think Cathness in “Macbeth” at the Utah Shakespeare Festival and Louise in “Always…Patsy Cline” at the Allenberry Playhouse.

Turns out Bradstreet earned a 2005-2006 AriZoni award nomination for actress in a supporting role in a contracted musical for performing the role of Aunt Eller in a Broadway Palm Dinner Theatre production of “Oklahoma!” in Mesa.

We chatted a bit about her path from “Peter Pan” to “Spring Awakening.” Bradstreet recalls doing drama in high school, but working hard at academics too. “I tried to excel at academics so I could pick the school I wanted to go to.” Better grades, more options. Sometimes it’s that simple.

Bradstreet describes the younger “Spring Awakening” cast members as a mix of those with B.A. degrees and those with B.F.A. degrees. Students like Bradstreet typically choose a B.F.A. because they want to spend more time studying the arts and less time on other academic classes.

“If I was going to spend all that money,” recalls Bradstreet, “I wanted to get the most training for my dollar.” Still, she sees benefits of both options. B.F.A. students may enjoy a more intense, focused study of the craft of acting. Yet, the intensity and focus that works in building a career isn’t always the best vehicle for driving a life.

“Acting is a difficult career to succeed at,” admits Bradstreet. Actors are constantly looking for work. They’re lucky if a job lasts even two months. And your acting skill set can only get you so far — since so many other factors influence director choices.

Still, Bradstreet offers this perspective to those considering an on-stage career: “If this is the thing that makes your life worth living, then you have to do it.”

— Lynn

Note:Spring Awakening” comes to ASU Gammage Jan 27-28, 2011 — and tickets are now on sale. Watch for a future post with Paris Bradstreet’s reflections on why this show, often dubbed controversial, makes for such great conversations between parents and children (ages 12 & up) who see it together.

Coming up: News from the Arizona Commission on the Arts, Real high school musicals take the stage, Free outdoor concerts, Peace and Community Day in Scottsdale, Sculptures in the park

Update: ASU Gammage has just announced special pricing for certain tickets to “Spring Awakening.” Use the code “SPRING” when ordering tickets in price levels 1-3 (excludes balcony seating; additional fees apply). Offer not valid on previously purchased tickets or in conjunction with any other offers. Tickets available from ASU Gammage and Ticketmaster. (Updated 1/24/11)