People
-
Patssi Valdez of Asco Part Two
How a Mural Walked Through East LA
By: - Mar 11th, 2012When Asco agreed to meet and create an event at a particular time and date Patssi Valdez states that she never knew what to expect. Gronk arrived at her home as a Christmas tree. Willie was a mural and Passi dressed as the Virgin Mary with glitter and platform shoes. They cavorted through East LA as A Walking Mural straight into the history books. Their friend Harry took the documentary photographs.
-
Patssi Valdez of Asco Part One
Bi-Coastal Exhibition at Williams College Museum of Art.
By: - Mar 11th, 2012During the opening weekend and seminar associated with the bi-coastal exhibition "Asco Elite of the Obscure a Retrospective 1972-1987 " at the Williams College Museum of Art we met and spoke briefly with one of the four artists, Patssi Valdez. Later we spoke at length by phone when she returned home to LA. She spoke of the drive early on to make it into the art history books. Due to this major exhibition, catalogue, seminar and this coverage, that dream has become a reality. This is the first segment of a dialogue with a charming art star,
-
Canadian Curator Claude Gosselin 2
Designing Biennials for Younger Audiences
By: - Mar 08th, 2012Claude Gosselin has been the artistic director for La Biennale de Montreal. His recent projects have focused on new and digital media attracting a younger audience. As an authority on contemporary Canadian art he is skeptical about the survey of 65 Canadian artists planned for Mass MoCA this summer. He also sees paradigm shifts for museums scrambling to attract declining audiences for the visual arts.
-
Canadian Curator Claude Gosselin 3
Reviving the Canadian Biennial
By: - Mar 08th, 2012The Canadian Biennal was staged in 1989 at the National Gallery in Ottowa and shelved for lack of funding after that. Under Marc Mayer it has been revived. But rather than a true biennial the 2011 incarnation was an overview of recent acquisitions.
-
Jessica May of Portland Museum of Art
Named Curator of Contemporary and Modern Art
By: - Mar 05th, 2012Jessica May has been named Curator of Contemporary and Modern Art at the Portland Museum of Art. May will be responsible for overseeing the interpretation and development of the Museum’s contemporary and modern art collection, including annual exhibitions, the Biennial, and the Circa series. May will join the staff in June 2012.
-
Claude Gosselin Curator of La Biennale de Montréal
Starting with Aurora Borealis in 1985
By: - Mar 05th, 2012This summer Mass MoCA will present a survey of 65 Canadian artists curated by Denise Markonish. Recently we spoke at length with the leading Canadian curator Claude Gosselin who has organized major thematic exhibitions combining Canadian and international artists since 1985. His 2011 La Biennale de Montréal may have been his last. He plans to continue Centre international d'art contemporain de Montréal (CIAC) with a refocused program.
-
Mass MoCA's Joe Thompson 4
Impact of Wilco's Solid Sound Festival
By: - Mar 01st, 2012With the Wilco Solid Sound Festival taking a hiatus and the Clark Art Institute in the midst of construction and renovation it may prove to be a challenging summer for Mass MoCA. We discussed with Thompson how best to continue to grow cultural tourism through synergy among the arts organizations of the Berkshires. In the past two years the 6,000 visitors for the Wilco weekends brought much needed revenue to the region. We need more such initiatives. This is the final chapter of the dialogue with Thompson.
-
Joe Thompson Director of Mass MoCA Three
Buchel and a Peck
By: - Feb 24th, 2012Helping artists to fabricate and install new works entails trust, commitment and risk taking. All of those elements went terribly wrong in a project with the artist Christoph Buchel. Ever escalating demands resulted in legal action that brought Mass MoCA to a standstill. Eventually a judge found in favor of the museum. It is painful even now to revisit the incident from which Joe Thompson and the museum have moved on.
-
Joe Thompson Director of Mass MoCA Two
Space is the Place
By: - Feb 23rd, 2012During the twelve years of developing Mass MoCA, before it opened in 1999, Joe Thompson and his wife Jennifer cooked and sold hot sauce to help pay their bills. Twenty five years later in further developing the vast museum complex Thompson discussed the once unthinkable notion of running out of vacant real estate.
-
Joe Thompson Director of Mass MoCA
Reflecting on 25 Years
By: - Feb 22nd, 2012On an unseasonably mild February afternoon, during the off season, we sat with Mass MoCA director, Joe Thompson, for an in depth overview of his 25 years of developing the largest contemporary art museum in North America. In this first installment we discussed the beginnings and mandates for the 17 acre campus and its 650,000 square feet of "developable" space. We spoke on the record for an hour and a half then another hour after that. It is most unusual to spend that much time with a busy museum director.
-
John Douglas Thompson Part Four
A Scholarly Approach to Developing Roles
By: - Feb 16th, 2012John Douglas Thompson undertakes considerable research to develop roles. He compares and contrasts his performances in O'Neill's The Emperor Jones and The Iceman Cometh now in rehearsal in Chicago. He has a two year grant to study Shakespeare's comedies and the tragedies of Marlowe through Theatre Communications Group. It will culminate in his third production with Theatre for a New Audience. Again he will be directed by Arin Arbus. On February 27 he will give a reading of The Misanthrope at the Clark Art Institute through Williamstown Theatre Festival.
-
Critic Peter Bergman Part Two
Liking Theatre and Wanting It to Thrive
By: - Feb 07th, 2012Here Bergman states "My history in the theater as a critic, as an actor, a director, a designer and a playwright gives me a very "reasoned" opinion about any show I see. I have worked in this industry in all those capacities over the years and I am still a performing artist in my lectures, readings, in my classes, in performances before a paying audience. I may not be a star, but I am creditable in my work. All of my work."
-
Berkshire Critic Peter Bergman
Covering Broadway at Fourteen
By: - Feb 06th, 2012Berkshire theatre critic reviews for the weekly paper The Advocate. He also posts overnight for his on line site Berkshire Bright Focus. His reviews are also syndicated nationally. He started covering Broadway at the age of fourteen and now in his 60s had been doing it ever since.
-
John Douglas Thompson Three
Portraying Louis Armstrong and Joe Glaser
By: - Jan 22nd, 2012John Douglas Thompson is renowned for his interpretations of iconic theatrical roles. This summer he returns to Shakespeare & Company with a world premiere of Satchmo at the Waldorf written by Wall Street Journal drama critic Terry Teachout. Charles Giuliano started listening to Louis Armstrong in the 1950s. Here they discuss Satchmo and his controversial manager Joe Glaser. In the play Thompson will portray both characters.
-
Friend Me: Portraits and Projects, Carole Freeman
Unite the World by Painting Portraits
By: - Jan 22nd, 2012Facebook has given rise to 'Friend Me Projects,' which started publicly with an exhibition in Toronto and has expanded into different elements. In its entirety, 'Friend Me Projects' aim to engage 800,000,000 Facebook 'friends' and a global general population as well. "Every body wants to get involved" is the reaction Carole Freeman and partner Michael Bain are receiving.
-
Christina Olsen to Head Willams Museum
Joins College on May 1
By: - Jan 19th, 2012Williams College today announced the appointment of Christina Olsen as the Class of 1956 Director of the Williams College Museum of Art (WCMA). Olsen is currently the director of education and public programs at the Portland Art Museum and previously worked at the Getty Foundation and Getty Museum.
-
Brooks Ashmanskas a God of Carnage
A Comedic Bare Knuckles Slug Fest
By: - Jan 14th, 2012With Brooks Ashmanskas, currently playing in God of Carnage at The Huntington Theatre, you come to expect the unexpected. Starting with a straight interview it doesn’t take long for the wheels to come off. From there it devolves into a comedic, bar knuckles slug fest. But all in outrageous fun. Read this and weep. Tears of hysterical joy.
-
John Douglas Thompson Two
Developing the Terry Teachout Play Satchmo
By: - Jan 14th, 2012This summer at Shakespeare & Company John Douglas Thompson will premiere a one man play Satchmo at the Waldorf written by the Wall Street Journal drama critic Terry Teachout. Thompson is in the early stages of research on the life and music of the legendary jazz musician Louis Armstrong.
-
Thespian John Douglas Thompson One
Next Up Iceman Cometh at Chicago's Goodman
By: - Jan 12th, 2012John Douglas Thompson discusses working with Sam Waterson and Bill Irwin this season in King Lear at the Public Theatre in New York. And pending plans for Eugene O'Neill's The Iceman Cometh in Chicago at the Goodman Theatre with Nathan Lane and Brian Dennehy.
-
Clem DeRosa Drummer and Jazz Educator
was co-founder of the International Association for Jazz Education
By: - Dec 30th, 2011Pittsfield based jazz entrepreneur Ed Bride remembers a friend and colleague Clem DeRosa. The Texas based drummer and educator was the founder of the International Association of Jazz Education.
-
Artist Helen Frankenthaler at 83
Her Paint and Reputation Spread Thin
By: - Dec 28th, 2011In 1952 a remarkable painting "Mountains and Sea" placed a recent Bennington College graduate, Helen Frankenthaler, in a position of innovator of what critic/ boyfriend, Clement Greenberg, dubbed Post-Painterly Abstraction. The movement is more widely known as Color Field Painting. We discussed her work in 1981 during an exhibition at the Rose Art Museum. At 83 she died on December 27.
-
Boston Art Dealer Joan Sonnabend
Created Collections for Sonesta Hotels
By: - Dec 26th, 2011When Boston art dealer. Joan Stoneman, married Roger Sonnabend she had an enormous influence on his family owned chain of Sonesta Hotels. Under her charge the international hotel chain pioneered the policy of purchasing and commissioning major collections of contemporary art. She is remembered as a formidable presence during the transition of the contemporary art scene in Boston during the late 1960s and 1970s.
-
Sculptor John Chamberlain at 84
Car Crash as Art and Metaphor
By: - Dec 23rd, 2011Car Crashes with their bent and distorted slabs of polyrchormed sheet metal were the inspiration and metaphor for the signature work and jagged life of sculptor John Chamberlain. An appreciation with memories of time spent with the artist in the late 1960s and 1970s in New York and the Berkshires.
-
Vaclav Havel Dead At 75
Czech Playwright, Poet, Dissident Conscience and President
By: - Dec 18th, 2011George Abbott White met and admired Vaclav Havel, and Havel's death has brought back memories of Havel's impact not only on the Czech Republic democracy but even more so on his historic contribution to his time and place.
-
Denise Markonish Part Three
Curating a Survey of Canadian Art for Mass MoCA
By: - Dec 16th, 2011For the past three years Mass MoCA curator, Denise Markonish, has trekked across Canada making hundreds of studio visits. When not on the road she has researched exhibitions and catalogues. Few American curators and critics are as broadly informed on the vast and complex topic of contemporary art in Canada. It is a project she took on almost by default given the general lack of interest and commitment. In June the museum will exhibit the work of 64 artists in what should prove to be an eye opening and ground breaking overview. This is the third and final segment of a critical dialogue.
<< Previous Next >>