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Gotta Have Arts

Jasper Johns & John Lund: Masters in the Print Studio at the K.M.A.

April 24, 2014 by The Inside Press

Untitled, 2011 Intaglio 43 ½ x 33 5/8 inches Edition of 60 United Limited Art Editions Art © Jasper Johns and ULAE/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY Published by Universal Limited Art Editions
Untitled, 2011 Intaglio 43 ½ x 33 5/8 inches Edition of 60 United Limited Art Editions Art © Jasper Johns and ULAE/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY Published by Universal Limited Art Editions

An extraordinary and little known story is being told in the Katonah Museum of Art’s exhibition, Jasper Johns & John Lund: Masters in the Print Studio. This is the first museum exhibition to explore the working relationship of these two masters. Over the past 30 years, Johns and Lund have forged a rare artistic collaboration: side-by-side. Master printer Lund has helped Johns, one of the most prolific and prominent printmakers of the 20th and 21st centuries, achieve precisely the desired effect he seeks for his prints, 47 of which are featured in the exhibition.

“We are thrilled and honored to have Jasper Johns in our museum,” says Ellen Keiter, Director of Exhibitions who curated this show. “We were attracted to this story of the relationship of Johns and Lund. It’s a new angle and new story that hasn’t been done.” This one-on-one relationship is uncommon in the print world. Johns and Lund first worked together in 1973 at Universal Limited Art Editions (ULAE), the fine art print publisher, where Lund was a lithography printer. A decade later, Lund became integral to Johns’s printmaking process as the exclusive printer to work on the artist’s intaglio prints. In 1996, Johns established a private print studio at his home in Sharon, Connecticut and Lund and his family moved up to live on the property. “Jasper Johns and John Lund had an amazing relationship,” says Keiter. “The exhibit is rich with narrative and celebrates the contribution that Lund made to the print world.” The exhibition shows the printmaking process and offers a glimpse into Johns’s private print studio through a selection of recent photographs.

Shrinky Dink 3, 2011 Intaglio 28 ¾ x 31 ¾ inches Edition of 57 United Limited Art Editions Art © Jasper Johns and ULAE/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY Published by Universal Limited Art Editions
Shrinky Dink 3, 2011 Intaglio 28 ¾ x 31 ¾ inches Edition of 57 United Limited Art Editions Art © Jasper Johns and ULAE/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY Published by Universal Limited Art Editions

Keiter says the exhibit attracts a broad audience of all ages who are interested in prints in general and how they are made. “We have a great line-up of programs.” They include field trips to ULAE and the Museum of Modern Art and panel discussions with such noted experts as Bill Goldston of ULAE and Wendy Weitman, former curator of Museum of Modern Art. John Lund will join Keiter for a Curator’s Tour and there are many printmaking programs for children.

The exhibition Jasper Johns & John Lund: Masters in the Print Studio will be on view at the Katonah Museum of Art through June 15. For more information on the exhibition and programs visit the museum website: www.katonahmuseum.org

– Ronni Diamondstein

Untitled, 1998 Intaglio 41 ¾ x 81 inches Edition of 44 Universal Limited Art Editions Art © Jasper Johns and ULAE/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY Published by Universal Limited Art Editions
Untitled, 1998 Intaglio 41 ¾ x 81 inches Edition of 44 Universal Limited Art Editions Art © Jasper Johns and ULAE/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY Published by Universal Limited Art Editions
Flag On Orange, 1998 Etching and aquatint 26 ¾ x 19 ¾ inches Edition of 27 Low Road Studio 1 Art © Jasper Johns and LRS Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY Published by Low Road Studio
Flag On Orange, 1998 Etching and aquatint 26 ¾ x 19 ¾ inches Edition of 27 Low Road Studio 1 Art © Jasper Johns and LRS Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY Published by Low Road Studio
Cup 2 Picasso, 1973 Lithograph 19 ¼ x 12 ¼ inches Edition of 11 Universal Limited Art Editions Art © Jasper Johns and ULAE/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY Published by Universal Limited Art Editions
Cup 2 Picasso, 1973 Lithograph 19 ¼ x 12 ¼ inches Edition of 11 Universal Limited Art Editions Art © Jasper Johns and ULAE/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY Published by Universal Limited Art Editions

Filed Under: Gotta Have Arts Tagged With: Fine art, Inside Armonk, KMA

Broadway Lights!

April 22, 2014 by The Inside Press

west-point-imageThe Chappaqua Orchestra presents the West Point Band’s Jazz Knights with singers Alexis Cole, Mary Kay Messinger, and Jeremy Gaynor, Sunday, May 18 at 3 p.m. at Horace Greeley High School Auditorium in a concert of All Broadway Hits by Gershwin, Rodgers, Porter, Loewe, Bernstein, and Sondheim.

The West Point Band’s Jazz Knights

Bringing over three decades of musical excellence to their audiences, the West Point Band’s Jazz Knights present the best in big band favorites, popular music, and original compositions and arrangements for jazz ensemble. Members of the group are graduates of some of America’s most prestigious music schools such as the University of North Texas, Eastman School of Music, Indiana University, Berklee School of Music and the Manhattan School of Music.

They are recruited and selected through a competitive audition process specifically for service in the United States Military Academy Band at West Point.

Past and present members of the band have played with such icons as Count Basie, Buddy Rich, Woody Herman, Maynard Ferguson, Ahmad Jamal, Chaka Kahn, Prince, Billy Cobham, and the Tommy Dorsey and Glenn Miller Orchestras.

The Jazz Knights’ highlights over the years include playing with Benny Goodman at Lincoln Center in 1982, performing with the Duke Ellington Orchestra for the 200th Anniversary of the New York State Legislature, and twice appearing at the Hatch Shell for Boston’s Independence Day celebration.

The Jazz Knights have also performed for festivals and music educators’ conventions, including the International Association for Jazz Education conventions, the Western International Band Clinic, the University of Northern Colorado Jazz Festival, the International Society of Bassists’ convention and the New York State Band Director’s Association Conference in 2008.

Notable guests who have performed with the Jazz Knights include David Liebman, Rufus Reid, John Clayton, Eddie Daniels, Steve Turre, James Carter, Randy Brecker, Michael Abene, Steve Weist, Jon Faddis, Jim Snidero, Gary Smulyan, Scott Wendholt and Benny Golson.

At West Point, the Jazz Knights provide music for numerous functions throughout the year. In combination with the Concert Band and field music unit, the Hellcats, they help fulfill official musical requirements of the Military Academy and the Army, including military and patriotic ceremonies both at West Point and throughout the country. The Jazz Knights… also perform for the summer concert series at the Trophy Point Amphitheatre and for the winter concert series at Eisenhower Hall. Their performances recreate the sounds of the greatest jazz ensembles and the innovative styles of today through their original compositions and arrangements.

chap-orchestraAbout The Chappaqua Orchestra:

Hailed as “The Jewel of New Castle”, The Chappaqua Orchestra has served Northern Westchester since 1959. Now under the baton of Michael Shapiro, the orchestra plays diverse and challenging programs and has grown into a sophisticated ensemble of professional level artists.

Many notable artists have been associated with TCO over the years, including Joseph Fuchs, Julius Baker, Chee Yun, Allison Eldredge, Ruth Laredo, Eugenia Zukerman, Leslie Parnas, Andrew Litton, Lucie Arnaz, Vanessa Williams, Jerome Rose, Edward Arron, and Timothy Fain.

TCO began as the Chappaqua Chamber Orchestra and was founded by a small group of musicians and music lovers, among them Dr. Boris Koutzen, the distinguished violinist, teacher, and composer, who quickly agreed to take up the baton. The February 7, 1959 premiere performance firmly established the orchestra’s reputation for musical excellence. On stage were a baker, a lawyer, a doctor, a stockbroker, a minister, an artist, a postman, homemakers, music teachers and professional musicians – all of them exceptional performers. TCO also has a proud history of collaboration with young soloists who later went on to stardom, many of them proteges of longtime Music Director Norman Leyden, who also conducted the Westchester County Youth Orchestra.

From 1967 when Norman Leyden, principal oboist, composer, and teacher, became the next in a series of distinguished conductors, the orchestra continued in its commitments to quality music and to the communities of New Castle and Northern Westchester. The establishment, also in 1967, of the Boris Koutzen Memorial Fund provided income to commission original works to be premiered by TCO. The first Koutzen Fund commissioned work, Thanatopsis, by Paul Creston, was performed in 1971. In 2002, a generous gift from two anonymous donors made it possible for the Fund to once again commission an original work. Michael Shapiro’s original score to the 1931 movie Frankenstein received its world premiere in October 2002 at the Jacob Burns Film Center.

In 1970, Wolfgang Schanzer, pianist and opera conductor, became conductor. He remained on the podium of TCO for 12 exciting years. Then in 1984, Andrew Litton, who at the time was an internationally renowned pianist, was engaged as conductor. Mr. Litton, of course, has gone on to preside over several of the best known orchestras of the world, including the Dallas Symphony. From 1987 through 1989, the orchestra continued under the direction of Jesse Levine. During this period the orchestra increased in size and was briefly called the Chappaqua Symphony. The orchestra also evolved from a volunteer community orchestra to a semi-professional organization. Unfortunately this transition proved costly to the orchestra, and TCO struggled financially. In 1992, James Sadewhite became conductor. During his tenure, a benefit concert featuring Vanessa Williams, whose star power filled the Horace Greeley High School Auditorium to capacity, revitalized the orchestra’s finances..

In recent years the orchestra has performed at the Reader’s Digest World Headquarters, Chappaqua Library, the First Congregational Church of Chappaqua, Presbyterian Church of Mount Kisco, Tarrytown Music Hall, The Paramount Center for the Arts, Temple Beth-El of Northern Westchester, Horace Greeley High School, and the new Seven Bridges Middle School Auditorium in Chappaqua.

In 2001, Michael Shapiro was appointed Music Director and Conductor of TCO. Mr. Shapiro’s background as an internationally recognized conductor, composer, pianist, and author brought TCO national attention in a joint concert with the Westchester Holocaust and Human Rights Education Center featuring multimedia director, musicologist, and human rights advocate Gottfried Wagner, great grandson of Richard Wagner. Today, The Chappaqua Orchestra is a professional level orchestra that presents challenging repertoire in the context of thematic programming, while building an ensemble of top musicians and showcasing rising stars.

The Chappaqua Orchestra is proud to have the support of a devoted and enthusiastic Board of Trustees. The Board welcomes new members and volunteers who are dedicated to producing high quality music in the Northern Westchester area, promoting local musicianship and creating music lovers for the next generation.

Filed Under: Armonk Cover Stories, Gotta Have Arts

70 Young Jewish Artists Strut their Stuff

March 29, 2014 by The Inside Press

2 Group ShotSome 70 top young Jewish artists from around the world gathered in Garrison, NY on March 23-26, 2014 for the Asylum Arts International Jewish Artist Retreat. The one-of-a-kind networking and learning experience is intended to connect and empower Jewish artists around the world, ultimately to help cultivate an international community of Jewish artists.

The retreat was organized by Asylum Arts, a first-of-its-kind global network of Jewish artists that has recently launched with the support of the Schusterman Philanthropic Network and aims to engage more people with Jewish ideas, identity and community through the vibrant Jewish and Israeli cultural landscapes. Asylum Arts supports contemporary Jewish culture worldwide, bringing greater exposure to artists and cultural initiatives, providing opportunities for new projects and collaborations and elevating the level of excellence and artistic activity.

3 Action Image

Asylum Arts International Jewish Artist Retreat was created as part of Schusterman Connection Points, an initiative launched by the Schusterman Philanthropic Network, a global enterprise that supports and creates innovative initiatives for the purpose of igniting the passion and unleashing the power in young people to create positive change in Jewish communities and beyond. Additional support is provided by Genesis Philanthropy Group and Righteous Persons Foundation.

 

Filed Under: Gotta Have Arts

“Masters in Print Studio” Jasper Johns & John Lund at KMA

March 20, 2014 by The Inside Press

shrinky-dinkBy Ronni Diamondstein

An extraordinary and little known story unfolds in the Katonah Museum of Art’s exhibition, Jasper Johns & John Lund: Masters in the Print Studio. This is the first museum exhibition to explore the working relationship of these two masters. Over the past 30 years Johns and Lund have forged a rare artistic collaboration: side-by-side. Master printer Lund has helped Johns, one of the most prolific and prominent printmakers of the 20th and 21st centuries, achieve precisely the desired effect he seeks for his prints, 47 of which are featured in the exhibition.

“We are thrilled and honored to have Jasper Johns in our museum, “ says Ellen Keiter, Director of Exhibitions who curated this show.  “We were attracted to this story of the relationship of Johns and Lund. It’s a new angle and new story that hasn’t been done.” This one-on-one relationship is uncommon in the print world.  Johns and Lund first worked together in 1973 at Universal Limited Art Editions (ULAE), the fine art print publisher, where Lund was a lithography printer.

A decade later Lund became integral to Johns’s printmaking process as the exclusive printer to work on the artist’s intaglio prints. In 1996 Johns established a private print studio at his home in Sharon, Connecticut and Lund and his family moved up to live on the property. “Jasper Johns and John Lund had an amazing relationship,” says Keiter. “The exhibit is rich with narrative and celebrates the contribution that Lund made to the print world.” The exhibition will show the printmaking process and offers a glimpse into Johns’s private print studio through a selection of recent photographs.

Keiter says they hope to attract a broad audience of all ages who are interested in prints in general and how they are made. “We have a great line-up of programs.” They include field trips to ULAE and the Museum of Modern Art and panel discussions with such noted experts as Bill Goldston of ULAE and Wendy Weitman, former curator of Museum of Modern Art. John Lund will join Keiter for a Curator’s Tour and there are many printmaking programs for children.

The exhibition Jasper Johns & John Lund: Masters in the Print Studio will be on view at the Katonah Museum of Art from March 23 through June 15, 2014. For more information on the exhibition and programs visit the museum website: www.katonahmuseum.org

cup-2-picasso
flag-on-orange
shrinky-dink
untitled-1998
untitled-2011

Filed Under: Gotta Have Arts

South African Artist Wins 2014 Neuberger Prize

March 12, 2014 by The Inside Press

Rhode-work10-Year Survey Opens May 4 at the Neuberger Museum of Art

South African artist Robin Rhode grew up during the volatile period just before Nelson Mandela became president. “I remember when teachers stopped teaching for weeks. We called it “Chalk Down.” With stolen chalk, he would draw illegally bicycles on walls “because we couldn’t afford to own bikes. You didn’t go to school with a bicycle, so it became an extension of a desire.”  The everyday objects that he drew later were incorporated into his artistic production. “The South African mentality has to do with freedom, and with the possibility of imagining or reinventing another world quite rapidly.”

Rhode has won the 2014 Roy R. Neuberger Exhibition Prize and will enjoy a ten-year survey of his work (primarily animations) at the Neuberger Museum of Art in Purchase, New York from May 4 through August 10, 2014. These exuberant animations, seen in “Robin Rhode: Animating the Everyday and created in the streets, studios, and homes in Johannesburg and Berlin where he now lives and works, transform the quotidian into the playful and fantastic.

Filed Under: Gotta Have Arts

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