Poet Vadis Elmo Daley Placer Land Trust Art Show Granite Bay`s
Transcription
Poet Vadis Elmo Daley Placer Land Trust Art Show Granite Bay`s
Ar ts Council of Placer County Ar ts Newsmagazine & Calendar of Events Poet Vadis Elmo Daley Placer Land Trust Art Show Granite Bay’s Otow Orchard North Tahoe/Truckee 2006 ARTour J u ly / A u g u s t 2 0 0 6 Volume 12, Number 4 5 Let’s Not Let Landscapes Disappear! Placer Land Trust presents “Disappering Landscapes” art show and sale by Janis Dice 8 North Tahoe ARTour 2006 — Fresh and Contemporary Truckee and North Tahoe artists open their studios July 7 – 9 by Eve Werner 10 Honoring a Family Farming Tradition Otow Orchard Farm’s history goes back a hundred years by Karen Killebrew 18 A Poet Emerges Teacher Vadis Elmo Daley, 95, has published his first book of poetry by Persia Woolley 12 Arts News From around Placer County 14 Arts Leap Jamming at Truckee High by Arlene Evans 16 The Score Classical music reviews – concerts and CDs by Ronald D. Greenwood, M.D. “Codfish Falls,” oil on linen by Victoria Brooks, a work done especially for the Placer Land Trust Art Show, August 10 – October 4. 19 Poets Speak “Bull Pen” by Taz Michael G 21 Arts Calendar Galleries, Music, Dance, Museums, Events, Festivals, Film, Theatre, Classes, Arts for Children, Calls to Artists 34 End Paper The Learning Curve or Why Would Anyone Move to Alaska? by Libbie Martin “Listen & Tell,” blown glass and copper pieces by Carola Nan Roach About the Cover These two pieces were created in relation to one another. I thought of work as a conversation, a relationship between them. In this work, as with most of my glass sculptures, I was trying to capture the beauty and movement in the molten glass itself. I think of the glass works as frozen moments in time. I titled these pieces after they were finished — one seemed to be listening, the other telling. —Carola Nan Roach 2 July/August 2006 Perspectives About the Artist For Carola, it is the process of creating art that brings inspiration. Whether working in bronze or glass, or painting, she conveys her strong connection to nature. She strives to achieve a visceral sense, to capture the essence of an object, place, or person. Before moving to Tahoe four years ago, Carola taught art for eight years at Art Center College of Design, in Pasadena. Roach is one of three dozen artists participating in the 13th annual North Tahoe Arts’ open studio ARTour, July 7–9. Putting Your Money Where Your Values Are L ast August, I was strolling around Ashland, Oregon on our family’s annual trek to the Shakespeare Festival. We had enjoyed several plays, played tennis in the park, browsed in the second-hand bookstores, and had lively conversations with the old friends we meet up with there every year. Going to the Festival is one of our annual rituals; we plan for it; look forward to it; and depend on it to keep connected. A few years ago we became donors to the festival, in large part because the development director asked us to. A few days after returning from Ashland, I was sitting around a table at aboard meeting of the Arts Council. The treasurer was making his report, and, after listening to the analysis of income and expenses and hearing the plea for more intense fundraising efforts, I had a moment of silent embarrassed recognition. Apart from our annual membership, I’d made almost no financial contribution to the Arts Council. Yet I’d believed in its mission and applauded its effect on our community. I’d enjoyed the Farm and Barn Festival, gone to many Jazz at 808 concerts with friends, and seen how the arts programs had improved our schools. My artist friends have told me how much they depend on the studio tours and Auburn Art Walks to promote their work. I’ve spread a picnic blanket and listened to the free concerts at the Auburn Library every summer for almost 20 years! Inwardly, I scolded myself for donating to an arts program so far away, while ignoring the needs of a cherished organization so close to home. Well, I came home, discussed the situation with my husband, and, after all these years, we became supporters of the Arts Council. In my own defense, all I can say is that, unlike at the Shakespeare Festival, no one at the Arts Council has ever asked me directly for funds or made a personal pitch on behalf of the organization. Still, I feel more integrity now that my finances are more in line with my values, and I’m helping support an organization that makes a difference in my daily life and the life of my community. The point of this message, as you’ve already guessed, is to ask you to take a look at your relationship to the Arts Council of Placer County and see if your commitment is in line with the benefits you think you and the community receive from the organization. If you’re not a member, consider joining. If you are a member, consider taking your membership to a higher level or making a donation. Or consider offering time to one of the many committees — including resource development! Jazz portrait by Rudy Browne, from Faces of Jazz 2, showing at the Arts Council of Placer County through August 4. — Joan Stockbridge Member, Arts Council of Placer County Board of Trustees Perspectives July/August 2006 3 Contributing Writers Perspectives is a bi-monthly publication of the Arts Council of Placer County and the City of Roseville. Its purpose is to create a forum for communication for artists and arts organizations in Placer County and to increase awareness of activities and programs related to arts and culture in the area. MISSION STATEMENT The Arts Council of Placer County is the catalyst for the arts in Placer County. ARTS COUNCIL OF Eve Werner (“North Tahoe ARTour 2006 — Fresh and Contemporary,” pg. 8) is an acrylic painter who this year is participating in her second North Tahoe ARTour. Werner favors natural subjects with underlying personal symbolism done in a loose, expressive style. When not painting, she relishes life in the Sierra Nevada with her family and practices landscape architecture. Her work is found in private collections throughout the United States. PLACER COUNTY Karen Killebrew (“Honoring a Family Farming Tradition,” pg. 10) Executive Committee Susan Dupre, Chair Gloria Coutts, Vice-chair Bob Hagmann, Secretary Anu Vuorikoski, Treasurer Board of Trustees Vacant, District 5 Susan Giles, Trustee At Large, Loomis David Imgrund, Trustee At Large, Auburn Rachel L. Kimbrough, District 2, Lincoln Claudette Mitchel-Weismantel, District 4, Elverta Priscilla N. Richter, District 3, Loomis Joan Stockbridge, Trustee At Large, Auburn Jan White, Trustee at Large, Newcastle Jennifer Rexroad, District 1, Granite Bay Barbara Wauters, Trustee At Large, Auburn Advisory Team Dave Breninger, Chair Emeritus Dick Cushman, Resource Development April Maynard, Chair Emeritus Program Team Angela Tahti, Executive Director Rosie Stilwell, Special Projects Valerie Anderson, Finance Consultant Norma Brink, Accountant Perspectives Editor: Sandra Reeves Design/Production: Blue Cat Studio Printer: Auburn Printers, Inc. is the owner of Nature Media Network, in Applegate. Killebrew’s marketing services help individuals, organizations, and communities to tell their stories effectively. Ronald D. Greenwood, M.D. (The Score, pg. 16) is a pediatrician in private practice in Roseville. A classical music lover with an extensive music collection, Greenwood is the president of the Auburn Symphony Board of Directors. Arlene Evans (Arts Leap, pg. 14) has written two non-fiction books on the subject of colorblindness. Her latest book, a novel, is called Dinner for Two. Author Persia Woolley (“A Poet Emerges,” pg. 18) writes non-fic- tion books and historical novels. As a journalist, she writes for several regional publications, including the Auburn Sentinel. She is at work on a novel about Shakespeare’s Ophelia. Janis Dice (“Let’s Not Let Landscapes Disappear,” pg. 5), an Auburn-based photo-journalist, writes for Gold Country Media newspapers, Prosper magazine, and Comstock’s Business magazine. Publication and distribution of Perspectives is made possible with support from the County of Placer, the California Arts Council State-Local Partnership and Local Arts Education Partnership Programs, and by the Placer County Visitors Council, and the cities of Auburn, Lincoln, Rocklin, and Roseville. Perspectives, published four to six times a year, is sent to members and distributed via the public library system countywide and regionally. Copies are available at the Arts Council of Placer County office as well as at the California Welcome Center Auburn. Opinions, findings, and conclusions expressed are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the arts council or cultural arts commission, board of trustees, staff, advertisers, or funders. Letters, suggestions, and story ideas are welcomed. Calendar items, along with photographs, may be sent to Perspectives@PlacerArts.org or delivered to the office. Deadline for the September/October 2006 issue: July 20, 2006. “Newborn,” photograph by Bre Wait, a student showing in Viewpoint Photographic Art Center’s student exhibit through July 28. Arts Council of Placer County 808 Lincoln Way Auburn, CA 95603-4807 Phone (530) 885-5670 Fax (530) 885-0348 email@PlacerArts.org www.PlacerArts.org 4 May/June 2006 Perspectives “Let’s Not Let Landscapes Disappear!” by Janis Dice W hat do you get when you cross a themed art show with a fundraising event to preserve valuable natural resources? Priceless inspiration. To celebrate its 15th anniversary, while helping raise money to preserve natural areas and agricultural lands, Placer Land Trust is sponsoring the “Disappearing Landscapes” art exhibit and sale. The event will open during the Auburn Art Walk on Thursday, August 10, at The Arts Building, 808 Lincoln Way, in Downtown Auburn. The show will run through October 4. Admission to the art show is free to the public. Proceeds from the sales benefit Placer Land Trust (PLT), the artists, and the gallery. More than 20 of Placer County’s finest artists will display their works for sale during the exhibit. The artists are enthusiastic about creating artwork depicting the vanishing landscapes of Placer County. “The Land Trust has a lot of friends in agriculture, but not as many in the arts,” explains Jessica Pierce, PLT program associate. “So that’s why we wanted to branch out into the art community.” Participants were encouraged to provide two to three pieces, with at least one having something to do with open space or protected lands, Pierce says. Some chose wildlife as their framework for the project. Besides paintings in a variety of media, there will also be blown glass pieces, metal sculptures, photographs, “and pretty much every medium you can think of,” Pierce says. Not only does the exhibition generate financial support for local arts and land conservation efforts, it also accentuates the artistic and natural resources that distinguish and enhance the community. The event is modeled after a yearly benefit exhibit sponsored by the Marin Land Trust in the Bay Area. Pierce hopes Placer County’s premier art show-fundraiser will be so successful that it, too, will become an annual tradition. “It’s a way for artists to get in touch with what we’re doing,” Pierce says, “and it’s a good way for us to promote the open lands mission during the Art Walk. It’s really an outreach tool.” The Placer Land Trust (PLT) was founded in 1991 as a private community-based nonprofit organization devoted to preserving lands in Placer County that hold precious natural, historic, agricultural, and recreational resources. Its mission is to work with willing landowners who are interested in having their properties preserved in perpetuity. To date, PLT has preserved over 2,000 acres in Placer County for future generations. It currently is working on several large and small projects, including the 5,000-acre West Placer Habitat Protection Program in western Placer County; the 2,000-acre Bear River Watershed Project, which ranges from Sheridan to Colfax; and the American River Watershed Project, which protects 1,000-plus acres, from Granite Bay to Cisco Grove. To inspire the participating artists for the Perspectives July/August 2006 “Cisco Grove,” oil on linen, by Victoria Brooks 5 “Lone Orange Tree,” photograph by Jim Hirschinger a work in the Placer Land Trust show. “Disappearing Landscapes” — the Artists More than 20 local artisans will be producing special works of art for the Placer Land Trust’s “Disappearing Landscapes” art exhibit and sale. The fundraising event opens during the Auburn Art Walk on Aug. 10, and continues at The Arts Building, 808 Lincoln Way, in Downtown Auburn, through October. 4. Participating artists include: Diane Ruhkala Bell Bob Gilliom, watercolor Victoria Brooks, oil Kim Brown Francisco Castro Kara Castro Brenda Dominguez Fred Ekman Reif Erickson, plein air Sonja Hamilton Hazel Haase James Hirschinger, photography Imi Hirschinger, paintings: mixed oil, pastels & water colors Nancy Holtz, pen & ink Jennifer Johnson, metal sculpture Mya Louw, oil and pastels Michael Kent Murphy, photography 6 July/August 2006 Janet and Rick Nicholson, blown glass L. Luis Ortiz Stan Padilla Barbara Paitich Juan Pena, watercolor Helen W. Phillips Patty Pieropan Dong Ann Ranlett, pen and ink Gayle Rappaport J.T. Ravize J. Randall Smith, ceramic sculpture Sandy Wythawai Starbird Joe Strickland Keith Sutter, photography Maria Sylvester Leslie Warren Perspectives “Disappearing Landscapes” show and encourage them to create their pieces in the “plein air” tradition, painting on site, rather than from a sketch or photograph. PLT suggested they visit some of We’re using PLT properties to highlight art in the community, and Placer County’s most scenic natural backdrops, as well as working farms and ranches. “Art is such a wonderful way to express our love of the outdoors and open space in our communities,” Pierce suggests. “And through this exhibition, we can show how beautiful Placer County is and how we need to take steps to preserve it.” Some of the suggested sites include Codfish Falls, on the North Fork of the American River, south of Weimar; the 30-acre Labadie Farm in Newcastle, which features a picturesque barn, pond, glacial boulders and stately cottonwoods Artist Patty Pieropan Dong painting at Codfish Falls for Placer Land Trust’s “Dissappearing Landscapes” art show and sale. along a creek; and the 400-acre Hofman Ranch in Lincoln. It comprises grasslands, vernal pools, woodlands of valley and blue oaks, old barns and riparian areas along Doty Ravine. Accompanied by her son, Patty Pieropan Dong, an award-winning artist and art instructor, took the long drive — and 35-minute hike — to reach Codfish Falls. Unexpectedly, she found fellow artist Victoria Brooks packing up her plein air gear after a day of painting the view. “It was such a beautiful spot,” says Dong, an Auburn resident. “It will be interesting to see how two artists captured the same scene, from the same point of view, in different media.’ Brooks is working in oil while Dong’s composition of the lush glen is in watercolors. If her busy schedule permits, Dong will produce at least one other work for the Disappearing Landscapes exhibition, possibly in oils, pastels or woodblock printing — her other favored materials. Like many participants, Dong supports the PLT mission to preserve Placer’s unique natural resources and its agrarian legacy, and sees the project as a complementary extension of her artistic efforts. Her subjects often include still life tableaus and California landscapes, and disappearing relics are a recurring theme throughout much of her work. A prolific artist who teaches private lessons to children and adults, instructs art classes at several local school campuses each week, and occasionally leads nature-art sessions at the Placer Nature Center, Dong didn’t need to add another project to her full plate. “But it’s an interesting topic that has a lot of appeal, and it’s for a worthy cause,” she says. For the participating artists, that combination is too inspiring to resist. “Store Buildings of Cisco Grove,” pen and ink/ watercolor by Nancy S. Holtz-McMahan, picturing one of the places preserved as open space forever through the efforts of Placer Land Trust. “Codfish Falls,” pastel by Reif Erickson, a work done especially for the Placer Land Trust Art Show, August 10 – October 4. For more information on the “Disappearing Landscapes” art exhibit and sale, contact the Placer Land Trust at (530) 887-9222; info@placerlandtrust.or g; or visit http://www.placerlandtrust.org Perspectives July/August 2006 7 North Tahoe ARTour 2006 — Fresh and Contemporary by Eve Werner “Spring In Martis Valley,” acrylic on canvas by Sara Zimmerman, one of three dozen artists opening their studios for North ARTour July 7 – 9. 8 T he natural beauty of the North Lake Tahoe area inspires many talented artists to depict the opulent vistas and wildlife that bring the region world-wide fame. Yet some artists react in a less literal manner to these surroundings. The 13th annual North Tahoe ARTour, July 7 – 9, features several artists whose work is more contemporary or conceptual, challenging viewers to look beyond simple physical beauty. “This event is a wonderful way to see not only traditional Tahoe art but also exciting contemporary works without having to drive July/August 2006 Perspectives to Reno or San Francisco,” says Sandy Pyer, North Tahoe Arts’ executive director. “ARTour is a free event that is a perfect opportunity to see the evolution of what is perceived as Tahoe art.” This year, 36 artists present work in a range of media including fiber arts, gourds, paintings, glasswork, woodwork, sculpture, and photography. Open studios will feature artists’ original works, their studio spaces, worksin-progress, technique demonstrations, and reproductions. In the past, Tahoe art collectors have been drawn to traditional “cabin” styles, such as photos or paintings of classic Tahoe scenes. But an influx of second home owners from urban areas with sophisticated art cultures is increasing the demand for contemporary art. “Cabin décor is no longer the strict rule of thumb for decorating in Lake Tahoe,” says Kerry Brehler of Online Design and Gallery, in Incline Village. “We are now moving towards a lot of texture with contemporary accent pieces.” Other resort destinations such as Jackson Hole, Aspen, and Sun Valley had a similar relationship to art. As more and more art buyers from metropolitan areas visited these towns, contemporary art influences burgeoned. Now galleries boasting art of wild colors and shapes speckle the streets of these resorts, and home decoration has evolved from “cabin” to “elegant.” The Lake Tahoe area is joining this group of elite vacation destinations with its growing recognition of regional contemporary art. And with this expanding market come artists dedicated to stretching the definition of Tahoe art. Sara Zimmerman’s acrylic paintings juxtapose modernism with detail honed from a background in science illustration. Her sensuous, vibrantly colored paintings often feature large flowers, leaves, or fish soaring above vast western landscapes. Though her works depict only natural components, they do so with a vivid, contemporary flavor that reflects her deep love of the outdoors, appreciation Truckee and North Tahoe artists open their studios July 7–9 of modernism masters, and lifelong contact with art. “For content, I draw on my outdoor experiences here in Tahoe and from my travels, though my growth in art has come from visiting other artists’ studios, galleries, museums, and now staring at magazines and books,” says Zimmerman. Greg Van Loon combines assemblage and mixed media collage in his rustic studio. Van Loon began his art career in San Francisco before moving to Truckee six years ago. “I was looking to get away from the urban emphasis in my art, and tried to create art that ‘fit in’ with the natural environment of the Sierra,” he says. “I tried lots of different things, but the end result was common and boring. Ultimately, the boredom was empowering because it lead me back to working in my old style of mixed media collage. It felt right, the quality of my work improved, and I realized that this type of art did fit in here in Truckee. And most importantly, the boredom went away. Now I concentrate more on a global view with political and strangely humorous undertones at times.” Carole Sesko’s art is an exploration of form and color. “I start out with a specific concept to express, and as I work the piece takes on a direction of its own.” Sesko collects objects which she collages into her work, and colors them using acrylic paint layered with a metallic background. “The art that emerges has a particular meaning to me, but I find each viewer sees something different. The resulting art is open to interpretation and inspires the imagination, which is a quality about my work I find satisfying,” continues Sesko. Annika Hemminge paints as a way of reaching out to people on a personal level. “Painting… tells others how I experience my surroundings; I don’t literally paint that dog, but the emotion it produces in me. An artist is not a reporter, she does not render the world the way it is, but rather the way she sees it, the way she thinks it ought to be.” Bold color and humorous compositions nearly sing out the high spirits of their creator. “I thrive on colors. Color in a picture is like excitement in life. Who wants to live in grey? Colors enthuse, stimulate, and make you feel alive. One artist said: ‘art is not what you see, but what you make others see.’ I want to make others see the joy, passion, happiness, humor and pleasure in life and the things around us.” These and 31 more ARTour 2006 artists, both contemporary and traditional, will exhibit a sample of their work at North Tahoe Arts throughout July. Opening reception is Thursday, July 6, 5 – 7 p.m. at North Tahoe Arts, 380 North Lake Blvd., Tahoe City (just past the Tahoe City “Y,” next to the fire station). Plenty of free parking is available. The reception is a great place to preview the artists’ work and plan a studio tour route. “Cuisine Unique,” acrylic by Annika Hemminge, an ARTour participant. Free ARTour maps are available at North Tahoe Arts, Incline Village Visitors Center, Truckee Visitors Center, and most art galleries in the region. Or just follow the gold ARTour signs dotting the landscape. Studios will be open from 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. daily through the event. For more information, contact North Tahoe Arts at (530) 581-2787 or visit www.northtahoearts.com. Perspectives July/August 2006 9 Honoring a Family Farming Tradition Otow Orchard packing shed. (photo by Karen Killebrew.) A long with other immigrants from Japan and Asia, Kichitaro Kawano came to the United States in the late 1800s. He eventually found his way to Loomis, where he worked on various farms. In 1911,he and his wife Momi purchased 20 acres of land in the Rosedale Colony Tract of Loomis and named it Rosedale Farm. This land later became Roseville and is now part of Granite Bay. Kichitaro cleared the land of rocks, boulders, and scrub oak and began propagating trees for his future orchard. Most of Kichitaro’s orchard was planted in grapes and persimmons, along with some pears and a few peaches. When grape prices plummeted in the 1920s, the grapes were replaced with plums. After Kichitaro’s death in 1939, his widow and youngest daughter, Helen, ran the farm. During WW II, Helen and her new husband, Seiichi Otow, were interned at Tule Lake Relocation Center and later worked in Chicago. After the war they returned to the farm to find that it was not in condition to provide them an income, so Seiichi opened a radio repair shop in Sacramento while working to revive the orchard. Eventually, Seiichi and Helen returned to farming fulltime. Rosedale Farm shipped plums to Eastern markets via the fruit sheds in Loomis, and fresh persimmons were sold to markets in Oakland, Los Angeles, and Seattle. Dried persimmons were sold locally as well as in Los Angeles, the Bay Area, and eventually Hawaii. Peaches were sold at the Sacramento Market. The Otow family, including Seiichi, Helen, June, Christine, nd Wesley not only Granite Bay Farmers Market Another place to buy farm-fresh produce in Granite Bay is the Foothill Farmers Market. The market operates 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Thursdays from May 18 to December 21 at Granite Bay Village. The market features 15–20 vendors each week, with products changing throughout the season. Eden Ranch and Blossom Hill Farm are just two of the Placer County farms who offer their delectable fruits and vegetables alongside growers from other parts of California, such as Rodriguez Ranch from Watsonville and Fiddyment Farms. Other local products include Ophir Wines, Good Stuff Biscotti, plants from Ron’s Nursery, and many other treats. In July & August vendors are selling peaches, melons, strawberries, tomatoes, peppers, and many other great-tasting items to help cooks make quick summer meals. Come meet the farmers who lovingly tend their fields in order to bring residents great locally-grown produce. For locations of other area farmers markets visit www.foothillfarmersmarket.com. 10 July/August 2006 Perspectives Helen Otow surveys a wall of hoshigaki, Japanese-style dried persimmons, one of the Otow family’s specialties. Otow Orchard Farm’s history goes back a hundred years by Karen Killebrew cared for and harvested the orchard, but also packed all the fruit on the farm until the 1970s. During the 1980s and 1990s, the operations at the local fruit sheds began to decrease, and the children had grown up and moved to the city. These factors and Seiichi’s health concerns contributed to the downsizing of production. The creation of PlacerGROWN and new agricultural marketing efforts in Placer County encouraged the family to open a direct marketing fruit stand. Today Helen Otow, Chris Otow Kuratomi, and her husband Tosh Kuratomi respond to their customers’ preferences with a diverse variety of fruits and vegetables. They continue to specialize in the ancient art of dried persimmons known as hoshigaki. Surrounded by development, they strive to honor their family’s farming tradition. Today Otow Orchard’s biggest challenge is water. The family is no longer able to buy the ditch water they depended on for irrigation. Because the San Juan Water District recently changed from flat rate water bills to meters, their water costs have increased fourfold. In other areas of the county and state, farms receive favorable rates, and the Kuratomis hope that public opinion will help to change San Juan’s policies. Farms provide open space, habitat for wildlife, a green belt, and most importantly, highquality fresh food for area residents. Helen, Tosh, and Chris invite you to stop in, shop, and enjoy the different personalities of the orchard though the seasons. What they are picking in July & August: Asian pears, blackberries, chilies, peaches, plums, pears, nectarines, tomatoes, squash, cucumbers and peppers. Throughout the year: Apples, apricots, Asian pears, blackberries, cantaloupes, cherries, chiles, cucumber, daikon, dried fruits, eggplant, figs, fresh herbs, gourds, grapefruits, grapes, hot peppers, kiwis, lemons, mandarins, melons, nectarines, olives, onions, oranges, peaches, pears, persimmons, plums, pomegranate, pumpkins, radish, raspberries, strawberries, summer squash, sweet corn, tomatillos, tomatoes, walnuts, watermelons, winter squash, and zucchini. The whole OtowKuratomi family strives to honor the family’s farming tradition. The family’s biggest challenge today is the suddenly higher cost of water. Otow Orchard, 6232 Eureka Road, Granite Bay, CA 95746 (916) 791-1656 Open Tuesday - Sunday 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. Tosh Kuratomi takes a break during the 2005 Placer Farm & Barn Tour. How to get there: From I-80 in Roseville take the Eureka Road exit. Turn east onto Eureka and drive four miles to the first stop sign where Eureka makes a hard left. Drive two more miles to Barton Road. Otow Orchard is at the second mailbox on the right past Barton. Look for the sign out front. From Auburn-Folsom Road, travel half a mile south of Douglas Boulevard. Turn west onto Eureka. Otows’ is approximately a mile in on the left. Perspectives July/August 2006 11 Book Review A Sherlock Holmes of Nutrition Nutritionist Jim McAfee has published an accessible guide to how the body signals what nutrition it needs. Jim McAfee has been referred to as the Sherlock Holmes of nutrition. His dedicated 34-year search for understanding of the nutritional significance of seemingly insignificant physical or behavioral abnormalities resulted in the recent publication of a book entitled Your Body’s Sign Language. This volume takes numerous threads of medically researched information and weaves them into a tapestry illustrating the incredible workings of the human body. To McAfee, a board certified Clinical Nutritionist and member of the Scientific Council of the International and American Associations of Clinical Nutritionists (IAACN), “body signs” can be flashing warnings of the increased risk of heart disease, diabetes, or serious nutritional deficiencies. Your Body’s Sign Language covers a wide spectrum of information and teaches the reader to identify nutritional messages conveyed by the body through the skin, eyes, teeth, and other body parts. It is a reliable reference for the professional, having extensive references to the medical literature in every chapter, and yet is accessible to the layperson. McAfee is currently working on the sequel to Your Body’s Sign Language. He is also working on a series of children’s books with Heather Foster, owner and operator of Eloquence Web and Graphic Design, who will design and illustrate the books. The book is available to order at www.yourbodys signlanguage.com or by calling (800) 359-6091. 12 July/August 2006 Perspectives McAfee also does a “body signs” talk, illustrated by a PowerPoint presentation, video clips, and nutritional anecdotes. For details and a calendar of his speaking schedule, visit www.imageawareness.com. Maestro Goodwin earns cultural award Michael Goodwin, music director of the Auburn Symphony, was selected to receive an award for Excellence in the Arts at the Auburn Area Chamber of Commerce’s annual State of the Community Dinner, held in April. Goodwin was honored with other outstanding individuals in the fields of education, health care, agriculture, local government, and the arts. Based on his extensive background in music, Goodwin was appointed artistic director and conductor of the Auburn Symphony in 1995. During his now 11 seasons, he has helped the orchestra develop form a local community orchestra into an ensemble of professional-level musicians. For the last two years Auburn Symphony has performed to enthusiastic audiences of over a thousand at the Mondavi Center at UC Davis. Next season the symphony celebrates its 20th Anniversary, starting with a Gala Opening September 23. For more information, call the Auburn Symphony office at (530) 823-6683 or visit www.auburnsymphony.com. Art Docents keep art education alive in Placer County schools by Nancy Cruz The Art Docent Program is the vehicle Placer County uses to keep art appreciation alive in our schools. Over 1000 enthusiastic parents volunteer each year to present famous artwork prints to classrooms, opening the eyes of children to the wonderful world of art. Every month, an Art Docent, “a volunteer parent” visits their child’s classroom to make a presentation, showing students’ artwork by such famous artists. After the presentations, the children do a hands-on art projects relating to the artist. The Art Docents receive training at the Placer County Office of Education. Art Docents are honored at the end of each year with an Art Docent Appreciation Luncheon in their honor. This year’s luncheon was held May 18 in Roseville. For more information about the Art Docent Program, contact Cruz at (530) 886-5897. State Theatre purchased by APPAC It was one giant step for Auburn Placer Performing Arts Center and one giant leap for the future of performing arts in the Auburn area when the organization officially took ownership of the Old State Theatre March 14. APPAC made its escrow payment of $805,000 to owners KDR Partners, and now officially own the building. A group of 20 investors, along with a $100,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development provided the committee with the funds necessary for the purchase. The move is the first step toward having a new, permanent home for the Auburn Symphony and a place for local and touring theater companies and musicians to perform. The next step for APPAC is to meet with the building’s current leasees to assure them continued operation while the committee moves forward on the planned $6 million reconstruction. Work on the project will probably take five years as the group designs an 825-seat stateof-the-art theater modeled after the original 1930s décor of the Old State Theatre. For more information about APPAC, to contribute or volunteer, call (530) 823-2364. Placer Community Theater welcomes new director for A Musical Voyage Through Time by Brenda Lindley Placer Community Theater’s next production will be a variety show featuring entertainment through the decades. A comedic story line pulls together “A Musical Voyage Through Time,” with Broadway show tunes and classic television skits. PCT is extremely pleased to introduce a new director for this show, Leslie Holland, who comes to the group with nearly 20 years experience in theater arts. Having recently moved to Auburn, she is very excited about the opportunity to work with the non-profit theater group. Leslie grew up in Southern California working at the La Habra Community Theatre and began performing at age 10 in choruses and in starring roles such as Wendy in “Peter Pan.” She received her Bachelor of Arts in Theater Education from Cal State Fullerton. She taught high school theater arts for four years in Riverside and then for two years in Reno, during which time she received her Master’s in Theatre Directing. Her directing experience began in 1996 directing “Joseph and the Technicolor Dreamcoat” at Camp Canadensis, PA, and continued up to 2004 with “Rumors” and “Working” in Reno. A portion of the proceeds from the performance of “A Musical Voyage Through Time” will be donated to the Auburn Area Performing Arts Center to help restore the Old State Theater as a performing arts center. Leslie Holland, Placer Community Theater’s new director. “A Musical Voyage Through Time” will be presented August 11, 12, 18 & 19, at 8 p.m., at Theatre Pamelot, 540 Wall St. For tickets and details, call (530) 8522708 or visit www.placercommunitytheater.org. Perspectives July/August 2006 13 Watching the arts work in Placer County Schools by Arlene Evans The Truckee High Marching Band performing music from the “Pirates of the Caribbean” at a football game. D ave Green is the only band teacher at Truckee High School. He’s been teaching there for 17 years. His work morning begins at 6:15 a.m. when he teaches Jazz Band, which is on a volunteer basis for the students. At 7:30 a.m. he teaches a technical theater course designed to give students a grounding in the basic elements of theater, such as lighting and sound production. At 10:50 a.m., there’s 9th grade concert band practice. At 1 p.m., he teaches If you’re interested in improving arts education for kids… you’ll need a license. The Arts License Plate, designed by renowned California artist Wayne Thiebaud, is the first plate in the nation solely designed to benefit the Arts. Your purchase of the Arts plate helps fund arts education and local art programming in schools and communities throughout California. Order your plate today by calling (800) 201-6201 or visit www.cac.ca.gov. 14 July/August 2006 Perspectives 10th through 12th grade symphonic band. For the first nine weeks in the fall, Green says, the concert and the symphonic bands practice marching. “They practice their separate parts during certain blocks of the day. On the weekend before a game, we have a Thursday rehearsal, so instead of eating lunch, the students rehearse together. We show them how they fit together, because it’s like a puzzle, and Saturday morning we work from 8 – 9:30 on the field before the junior varsity game.” The band also performs at half time and at the pre-game show. “This is where we play the fight song and the ‘Star Spangled Banner,’” he says. “We also entertain while people are leaving the stand.” The bands present a concert every year in the third week of October. “We have a parent booster program with a chairman who does publicity, usually with our local paper, The Sierra Sun,” Green explains. “We also have a local TV station that runs our publicity, and the students put up flyers around town.” “All of our curriculum is based on the California Visual and Performing Arts Framework,” Green notes. “We also meet the national standards.” The Honor Band season starts in November and runs through April, so the band does a lot of traveling on weekends. Green says that in the second quarter of the year, Truckee High has an Honor Band that meets at Sierra College as well as Humboldt or Chico State College. “We have our holiday program two weeks before the holiday. When we go on the holiday break, we crank it up and get ready for two things at one time: a tour and another concert, which is prior to our competition festival, where we play serious band music. We compete in the CMEA (California Music Educators Association) band competition and have received straight ‘superiors’ for a number of years, which qualifies us to go to the Jamming at Truckee High One teacher conducts the multi-faceted music program at Truckee High School Superior Festival in April,” he says. Then the band works on its tour music, which is Big Band Swing and concert music. “We tour to Sacramento, to convalescent hospitals. We go to the Shriners Hospital for Children and the children’s ward at UC Davis. We also play at several elementary schools that don’t have music in their programs. We go to Napa and play at a retirement community and at nursing homes, as well as for our veterans in Yountville. “The spring musical fires up,” he continues. “The kids audition in January and begin practicing in February. We begin our rehearsals after we finish our festival competitions. As soon as we can, we have the cast members come in to sing with us, either group members or solo. We have a pit that’s about six feet deep.” Green emphasizes that this production isn’t “a watered down high school version. It’s a professional Broadway play. This year we’re doing Cinderella.” The spring musical, directed by parent volunteers, allows students to sing and dance. Under Green’s direction, the band students learn to follow along with the singers. “If a student forgets lines, for instance, the band will catch up with them.” Truckee High’s final concert, held on June 14, was combined with an Art Show and banquet. It was a fitting, celebratory ending to the students’ — and Green’s! — year of hard work in music. Dave Green leading the Truckee High School Symphonic Concert Band in a formal concert at the school. Left to right: Kellie Conway, senior, saxophone section leader; Dave Green, Band Director; Chelsea Hess, senior, flute section leader: Ryan Vincent, senior, low bass section leader; Alex Taylor, senior, clarinet section leader — at Truckee High school. Perspectives July/August 2006 15 Classical Charmers by Ronald D. Greenwood, M.D. Anna Maria Mendieta, Sacramento Philharmonic’s principal harpist. “Ancora,” a CD by the four-man group Il Divo, is The Score reviewer’s pick for the 2006 CD of the year. “…played to perfection.” Sacramento Philharmonic at the Mondavi Michael Morgan and the Sacramento Philharmonic presented a program at the Mondavi on the UC Davis campus on March 18 that began with a modern piece, “Orchestral Reflections on a Love Song,” by Gerhard Samuel. Morgan cleverly gave us an overview that prepared the audience for this unusual musical appetizer. Without that, we could not have understood the music. Then we enjoyed Rodrigo’s Concerto Serenata with Sacramento Philharmonic’s principal harpist, Anna Maria Mendieta, as soloist. She played with freshness supported by balanced orchestral accompaniment; especially notable were the woodwinds. The real meat of the program was Brahms’ Symphony No. 3. From the crisp brass opening chords to the quiet conclusion when we could take a breath again, we realized we had just heard a Brahms Third played to perfection. All its charm and lyricism were presented in flowing precision. Especially elegant were the two inner movements, the song-like Andante and the melancholy dance-like Poco Allegretto. A wonderful performance. “…ten of the most beautiful pieces of music known to humanity…” Il Divo: Ancora The Score 2006 CD of the year was released in the U.S. January 24th. It is Il Divo: Ancora. This is 10 of the most beautiful pieces of music known to humanity performed by four incredibly beautiful voices. Included (only one in English) are “All by Myself,” “I Believe in You,” and “You Raise Me 16 July/August 2006 Perspectives Up.” This group, now on a world tour including Sacramento, has brought opera to the mainstream. Find it, buy it, enjoy it. Celebrate the diverse world we live in. “…superbly performed…” The St. Petersburg Quartet in Auburn The St. Petersburg Quartet was featured at the March 26 concert in the Auburn Community Concert Association’s 60th season. The quartet consists of Alla Aranovskaya (first violin), Alla Krolewich (second violin), Boris Vayner (viola), and Leonid Shakayev (cello). This quartet, previously known as the Lenningrad Quartet, has won numerous competitions and has performed internationally.The program included the Schubert String Quartet in D Minor D810, “Death and the Maiden,” the Nocturne from Borodin Quartet No. 2, and the Dvorak Quartet in F Major Op. 96, “American.” In the Allegro of the Schubert, the cello was played with an incredibly beautiful tone, as was both first violin and cello in the Andante con motto. The entire piece was superbly performed by all four players. The Nocturne of Borodin was gorgeous, especially with the violin and cello sensuously singing back and forth to each other. The Dvorak was quite lively and spirited and simply fantastic. A Glanuzov encore, Novelette No. 2, “Oriental,” played in the Georgian style followed the standing ovation. It is clear this is a world-class ensemble. Simply put, as the saying goes,” it just doesn’t get any better than this.” “A sensational concert.” Chamber Music Alive (CMA!) in Rocklin CMA! performed on April 23 at the Dietrich Theatre. Players were Vadim Serebryany (piano), Eric Sung (cello), David Thorp (viola), Jason Uyeyama (violin) and Ben Dominitz (violin). Dominitz and Uyeyama gave us a charming Spohr: Duo for two violins, Op. 67, No. 2. The interactive first movement, the slow second movement, and the wild third were all exceptional. The ensemble is bringing back Spohr’s repertoire with bravura. Schubert Quartet in A minor, “Rosamunde,” was performed by all strings. It was a subtle combination of sadness and happiness. The third movement was so very beautifully played, I heard several around me whisper, “Wow.” I might have even been one of them. If Robert Schumann wrote his Quintet for Piano and Strings in E flat Major, Op. 44, to demonstrate his love for his pianist wife, Clara, he succeeded magnificently. And all of the beauty and passion in the piece was brought out by the five players, clearly and with such excitement. I think I have never heard such an exhilarating performance of this quintet. A sensational concert. For the leader Ben Dominitz to have to raise his hand to try and silence the audience on its third long series of bravos and standing ovation is something rare for a chamber concert event. “…splendidly done…” The Sacramento Choral Society and Orchestra (SCSO) On May 6th, the SCSO presented at the Community Center Theatre in Sacramento a primarily Dvorak program, conducted by SCSO’s music director Donald Kendrick. It opened with the Mass in D Major, Op. 8, which was splendidly done, especially the Gloria. The orchestra followed with a delightful performance of Legends, Op. 59. Then, a diversion from Dvorak to a China tour (planned this summer) preview. Three charming little pieces — Turot Eszick A Cigany (Kodaly), How Can I Keep from Singing (Stroope) and Portones Abiertos (Basler) — demonstrated the stunningly beautiful voices of the chorus. Dvorak’s Te Deum, Op. 103 concluded the program with Maureen Mette (Soprano) and Stephen Janzen (Bass). The SCSO literally soared with the dignity and beauty of the piece and gave us an exciting performance. Soloists Stephen Janzen, bass, and soprano Maureen Mette perform Dvorak’s Te Deum, Op. 103 with the Sacramento Choral Society and Orchestra. The SCSO will indeed be 230 cultural ambassadors to China. The Te Deum is available as part of the two CD set recorded live in Hungary during the SCSO European tour at www.sacramentochoral.com. Dr. Donald Kendrick conducts the Sacramento Choral Society and Orchestra in a performance in Sacramento May 8. Perspectives July/August 2006 17 A Poet Emerges by Persia Woolley Vadis Elmo Daley, 95, has just published a book of poems he has written throughout his lifetime. M ost all of us live on at least two different levels, and sometimes three. There’s the public/social interaction, the personal/family world, and the private/inner realm. All kinds of art emerges from the private world — painting, dancing, and music I SHAKE AGAINST THE COLD generally reflect at least the moods of the inner Observe this antic, dancing leaf, life. But wordsmiths, and An entertaining clown, particularly poets, not Yet unaware past painted mask only attempt to express The sad, the rueful frown. the ineffable, they provide us glimpses of the Soon sift of wind and rain shall rinse poet’s most personal Away deceitful mirth, world. And rigid, brown-curled leaf shall know For upwards of 30 Swift mockery of Earth. years, Vadis Elmo Daley taught English literature An October frost has freckled and poetry at Sierra Maple red and gold, College, much to the And like the leaf I’m autumned, delight of his students, I shake against the cold. many of whom went on to become personal 18 July/August 2006 Perspectives friends. Daley could weave whole poems into conversations and lectures with such freshness that they seemed to be his words rather than others’ committed to memory. And while he gave Pope, Blake, T.S. Eliot, Wallace Stevens, and many other acknowledged wordsmiths their due, it was the Welsh poet Gerard Manley Hopkins who most attracted the professor. Over the years, the natural question came up: “Elmo, aren’t you writing poetry yourself?” The response was always vague, a kind of diffident shrug implying that whatever words he had put to paper were not of much consequence. Whether this response stemmed from modesty, shyness, or the perfectionist’s conviction that his poems were unimportant, it was hard to say. Following his retirement in 1976, Elmo and his wife Helen spent a good bit of time traveling. They lived in Mexico, at San Miguel d’Allende and Puerto Vallarta, where, in both places, Elmo pursued his life-long hobby of butterfly collecting in the nearby jungles. Europe was a frequent stop on the Daleys’ itineraries because their son Sean lives in Paris, where he is a translator for various international agencies. (Their eldest son Kevin recently retired from the faculty of E.V. Cain middle school.) And at one point the couple lived for a year in Spain. As the years wore on, Elmo’s sight began to fade until now, at 95, he is totally blind. And although that limits his physical activities, it has not affected his ability to draw forth and recite with precision and feeling the precious poems he taught for so long. A sea-change in Elmo’s attitude toward his own poetry took place in 2004 when, with her father’s permission, the Daleys’ daughter Katie Wlasiuk, who lives in Rocklin, gathered up a lifetime collection of her father’s poems. Scribbled on scraps and tucked into drawers, the work ranged in style from sonnets to haiku. Elmo went over them with Katie’s help, polishing and pruning until he felt them sufficiently finished to be shown to close friends Teacher Vadis Elmo Daley, 95, has published his first book of poetry Poems from The Islands of My Inland Seas THURSDAY’S RAIN For my wife, Helen Vadis Elmo Daley, c. 1933, was already writing poetry. XIV: HAIKU Not only shorebirds Frequent these beaches — windblown Waves feather the sea. The year commits sits usual crime: Our summer was sub-let to Time. Then let us sit beside this fire Teaching Time Love’s not for hire, Nor wondering where the swift years go, But watching November’s fall of snow, With memories of our Thursdays’ rain Raveling yesterday’s windowpane. And should our season turn a page, Love shall read on. It knows not age. and family. It was then that Bill Hotchkiss and Ray Oliva, longtime friends and fellow teachers, put forth the idea of getting the poems published. And now, early in 2006, the collection has been made available by Pelican Pond press under the title The Islands of my Inland Seas. Here at last are the shadow maps of a life ensnared with words. Paeans, anthems, slight whistled tunes — all reflect the focus and desires of one man’s life. Many are dedicated to his wife, and some are salutes to other poets. The influence of Gerard Manly Hopkins is often heard in sublime alliteration, with thoughts that are equally fractured and redefined. Butterflies and flowers abound, which is not surprising from a man who spent so much time lovingly creating gardens or stalking miniature winged creatures. And there is the VII: HAIKU Aster and garden Reverse heaven and earth — blue Star in a green sky XXVI: HAIKU Pale rain unravels Down path of the wind: Poem On a windowpane. spiritual — a questing, yearning toward God and at the same time celebrating life in pagan terms. The awareness of mortality, of aging and darkness, and the unrelenting aspects of time also run through the poems. The book concludes with several of Daley’s prose “Mythic Tales,” as well as a wonderful selection of haiku. It is here one finds a key to this poet’s process: To be clad in proper raiment, Words demand precision: they have souls. The Islands of My Inland Seas is available from Pelican Pond for $14.95 at www.bluedolphinpublishing .com. With his grandson Gregory Wlasiuk, Elmo Daley has been working for several years on a book dealing with the prosody of the poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins. The book, Gerard Manley Hopkins: A Genius of Alliteration, will be published soon. Perspectives July/August 2006 19 Bull Pen by Taz Michael G Loney Meadow, pine tinted with bovine fertilizer boquet, Montane Chaparral, visited by mountain mint and huckleberry oak, American pipits flit along sticky bush monkeyflower, overcast day, Marmot grazing wooly butterweed, chilled stream, hooves to soak. Needle phlox and spur lupine to guide the trek, east, Capped in golden moss, jagged outcroppings of slates and schist, On the rise, trail blanketed in shed needle, mule deer feast, Rod rises then dips, nymph fly soars into Bull Pen, flick of the wrist. About the Poet Possessing a dedicated interest in written art, Taz Michael G (the poet’s chosen name) experiments in several forms of poetry — ballad, monody, ode, quatrain, free verse, and song — working always to improve his ability to set down his feelings in words. Born in 1966 and raised near Sacramento, the poet has traveled the western states includ“Casting Off,” painting by Ron Jenkins. 20 July/August 2006 ing Alaska. To read more of his poetry, visit www.thestarlitecafe.com Perspectives Galleries Roseville Through July 8: Ray Kruger & Bob Tonges: Impressionist Works. Also Early California impressionists’ works contributed by Mark Vespoli. Artful Blend Gallery, 22 S.Grant St. For details, call (916) 7722787. Ongoing: The Total of One Gallery showcases art, sculpture, and mixed media that represent the finest in casual living. 2029 Opportunity Dr., Ste. 4. For details, call (916) 797-8707. Ongoing: Placer Valley 3rd Saturday Art Tour. Free art viewing and Open House every third Saturday of the month, 6:30 - 9 p.m., in participating Roseville galleries: Artful I Gallery, address; Artists of Timber Creek, SunCity, Del Webb Blvd., (916) 204-5020; Beyond Point B, 151 N. Sunrise Ave, Ste 1303, (916) 787-9909 x 3; Borders Books, Galleria, 1173 Galleria Blvd. (916) 788-1580; Borders Books, 2030 Douglas Blvd., (916) 784-1088; C R Gallery, 625 Vernon Street, Historic Downtown, (916) 769-6879; Cascades Cuisine, 1420 E. Roseville Parkway, (916) 788-9707; Comfort Zone, 426 Folsom Rd., (916) 773-2444; Cordia, 5161 Foothills Blvd., (916) 778-3330; La Provence, 110 Diamond Creek Pl., (916) 789-2002; Mike Martin Photography, 508 Vernon St., Historic Downtown, (916) 223-8361; Noel Flynn Gallery, 1725 Santa Clara Dr., (916) 786-0702; Roseville Arts!, (916) 783-4117. Call galleries to confirm times or visit www.jointhearts.com Rocklin Ongoing: Exhibits at Ridley Gallery, Sierra College. For details, call (916) 781-0411. “Daisies,” watercolor by David Lobenberg. Lincoln Through July 29: Bring Summertime to Your Art: Garden Art Show. At Lincoln Arts, 580 Sixth St. For details, call (916) 645-9713. August 1 – September 2: Keep Art Hot, works by Lincoln Hills Art Association. Reception Aug. 11, 6 – 8 p.m. At Lincoln Arts, 580 Sixth St. For details, call (916) 645-9713. Auburn Through August 2: Summer Invitational Show. Featured artists include Bettie Smith, Paula Lloyd, Varian Mace, Nancy Langhorn, Darlene Engellenner, Lee Kavaljian, Ken Starbird, Rick and Janet Nicholson, Jenny Long, and Mya Louw showing works in oil, watercolor, collage, acrylic, stoneware, glass, pencil, and pastel. The Arts Building Gallery, 808 Lincoln Way. Open Tues. – Sat., 10 a.m. – 5 p.m. For details, call (530) 885-2787. OOH LA LA DESIGNS Through August 4: Faces of Jazz 2, Paintings by Rudy Browne. In The Arts Building Conference Room, 808 Lincoln Way. For details, call (530) 885-5670. August 10 – October 4: Disappearing Landscapes, a Placer Land Trust Art Exhibit and Sale. The exhibit reflects the appreciation and joy that comes from honoring and preserving our natural heritage. Placer Land Trust works with landowners and conservation partners to permanently preserve Placer County natural open spaces and agricultural lands for future generations. Reception during Art Walk, Aug. 10, 6 – 9 p.m. The Arts Building Gallery, 808 Lincoln Way. Open Tues. – Sat., 10 a.m. – 5 p.m. For details, call (530) 885-2787. August 1 – 31: From Earth to Art, featuring works by 16 local ceramic artists – wheel- thrown and hand-built clay forms; raku-fired, pit-fired, and saggar-fired sculpture; wall pieces, masks and vases; unique functional pottery. Meet the artists at a reception during Auburn Art Walk Aug. 10, 6 – 9 p.m. At Auburn Old Town Gallery, 218 Washington St., Old Town. (530) 887-9150. ROSE GOLD NECKLACE July - August: Works by Reif Erickson and other artists. Showing at Sunset Oaks Framing and Gallery at Fiddler Green Plaza, 1273 Grass Valley Hwy. For details, (530) 885-4858. studio & galler y 107 sacramento st., old town auburn • (530) 823-1965 July - August: New Works: Sculptor J. Randall Smith, metal sculptor Jennifer Johnson, blownglass by Nicholson Glass, and Perspectives May/June 2006 21 “JB” Budny, specializing in classic black & white images and Tahoe winter scenes. Downtown Tahoe City, at the “Y.” For details, call (530) 546-8450. Ongoing: Lakeside Gallery & Gifts. Original art, prints, watercolors, jewelry, art supplies, framing and art classes. 8636 North Lake Blvd., Kings Beach. (530) 546-3135. Ongoing: Potter’s Wheel. Fine-quality crafts by regional artists. Specializing in pottery, woodworking, and watercolors. 8331 North Lake Blvd., Kings Beach. (530) 546-8400. Ongoing: Keoki Flagg Gallery of Fine Arts. Features limited edition fine art photography from acclaimed photographer Keoki Flagg. Original glass and hand-painted ceramics exclusive to the gallery. The Village at Squaw Valley and at 419-3 North Lake Blvd., Tahoe City. (530) 583-1419. Molten Crater Flow Bowl, 2004, porcelain with reduced-iron crater glaze, by James Lovera, a piece from the Craters from Fire exhibit at the Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, July 22 - October 8. Ongoing: Pogan Gallery. Original paintings of Lake Tahoe and the Sierra by the nation’s top landscape painters. 6921 North Lake Blvd., Tahoe Vista. (530) 546-7846. sculptor Claire M. At Smith & Boggs Studio & Galleries, 1130 High St. For details, call (916) 289-7133 or visit www.jrandallsmith.com Ongoing: Lake of the Sky Gallery. Landscape and fine art photography by Richard Francis Topper; designer jewelry by Michou. 521 North Lake Blvd., Tahoe City. (530) 583-2722. Ongoing: Latitudes Galleries. Well-known local and regional artists showing work in rotating exhibits in an historic Auburn Victorian, Latitudes Restaurant, 130 Maple St. For details, call (530) 885-1121. PlacerArts presents Ongoing: Art Can Heal. Art in a variety of media chosen for its healing qualities. Work by area artists and students from local schools. Sutter Auburn Faith Hospital Hallway Galleries,11815 Education Dr. (530) 389-8504. The Arts Spectrum Series Ongoing: Works by Joan Charson & Joyce Williams showing in the Backroom Gallery in the Chocolate Shoppe and Gift Emporium. 823 Lincoln Way. For details, call (530) 885-4822. A series of multi-faceted, enlightening and entertaining North Tahoe/Truckee cultural events and happening demonstrations in Through July 2: Don Hatfield: Plein Air Paintings. Impressionistic works by a Napa artist. Main Gallery, North Tahoe Arts, 380 North Lake Blvd., Tahoe City. For details, call (530) 581-2787. July 6 – 9: ARTour Artists Exhibit. Works by the 36 artists participating in ARTour 2006, a North Tahoe open studio tour July 7 – 9. Media on display include oils, acrylics, watercolors, glass, metal furnishings, sculpture, gourds, photography, ceramic and fiber. Gala Opening Reception with art, wine, and food, July 6, 5 – 8 p.m. at North Tahoe Art Center, 380 North Lake Blvd., Tahoe City. For details, call (530) 581-2787 or visit www.northtahoearts.com. July - August: Vista Gallery’s New Artists: Photographer Mark S. Mitchell, wire sculpter Sten Hoiland, painter Naomi Nickerson, and painter Janne Matter. Also, new are hand-made paper and printmaking by Ingrid Evans, whimsical welded metal sculpture by Ron Hagerty, new landscape watercolors by Madeline Bohanon, small black and white etchings by printmaker Elizabeth Paganeli; and new monoprints by Douglas E. Taylor displaying innovative combinations of several printmaking processes. Vista Gallery represents more than 30 artists and offers the area’s largest collection of nostalgic and vintage photographs. Open 10 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. Tues. – Saturday. 7081 North Lake Blvd., Tahoe Vista. (530) 546-7794. www.vistagallery.com. celebration of The Arts Building’s Tenth Anniversary. Art like you have never experienced it! July 15: Rudy Cuellar “Ancient and New Dimensions on Serigraphy” Hot Silkscreen Demonstration August 26: Stan Padilla “Crossing Cultures” With traditional Ongoing: Watercolors by Jan Foss. Watercolor gallery and studio featuring soft landscapes and colorful florals. Studio visitors can sign up for a watercolor class. 120 Country Club Drive, #21, Incline Village. For details, call (775) 833-1144 Ongoing: JB Photographic Gallery. Fine art photographs by Jim 22 May/June 2006 Perspectives drumming by Children’s Taiko Dan and Loping Wolf Performances at 7 p.m. at The Arts Building, 808 Lincoln Way, Downtown Auburn. For details, call (530) 885-5670. Outside Placer County July 1 – 31: Reno Co-Op Gallery Show, showcasing the works of artists who have incorporated ancient rock art motifs into their work. About 30 local and regional artists are represented in the show, which coincides with Reno’s popular Artown, a month-long celebration of the arts. The co-op show includes hundreds of works – sculptures, paintings, photography, pottery, baskets, weavings, rugs, engraved glass, and jewelry. Opening reception July 2, noon to 4 p.m. Reno Artists Co-Op Gallery, 627 Mill St., Reno. For details, call (530) 273-6528. Through July 2: New Chroma Artists Marianne Post & David Cocker. Post paints regional landscapes in soft pastel; Cocker is a professional faux finisher and decorative painter who does landscapes in oil and plein air. Chroma Gallery, 10030 Fair Oaks Blvd., Fair Oaks Village. For details, call (916) 966-6020 or visit www.thechromagallery.com. July 5 -28: What’s Cookin’ Open Show. An all-media show of artists’ interpretations of the theme. Included are works by Placer County artist Gayle Rappaport-Weiland. At 20th Street Gallery, 911 20th St., Sacramento. For details, call (916) 930-0500. July 5 – August 6: Benefit Show: Oils by Britta Parker. Reception 2nd Saturday, July 8, 5 – 9 p.m. At The New Artworks Gallery, 10239 Fair Oaks Blvd. For details call (916) 962- 7362. July 8 – August 9: Vessels of Clay, Pots of Purpose. Works that show special consideration of the tie between form and function. Reception July 8, 6 – 9 p.m. At the Artists’ Collaborative Gallery, 910 15th St., Sacramento. For details, call (916) 444-3764 or visit wwwl.artcollab.com. July 8 – August 20: Sacramento Valley Landscape Exhibition and Conference, John Natsoulsas Gallery. Placer County artist Imi Hirschinger has been invited to participate in this prestigious exhibit along with such noted landscape artists as Wayne Thiebaud and Greg Kondos. The collection of landscape paintings ranges from works done in the 1930s by artists such as Maynard Dixon and Otis Oldfield to those done by contemporary artists including Patrick Dullanty, Michael Tompkins, Pat Mahony, Matt Bult, D.A. Bishop, Boyd Gavin, Gary Ernest Smith, and Chella. Opening Reception Saturday, July 8, 7 – 9 p.m. A one-day seminar July 8 will feature plein air painting demonstrations by seven eminent Sacramento Valley landscape painters followed by lunch with the artists and a discussion panel led by Don Hagerty. Events and exhibition at the John Natsoulas Gallery, 521 First St., Davis. For details, call (530) 756-3938. Through July 9: Floods & Flows: 50 Years at Folsom Dam. The exhibit explores the history of water issues in Folsom and the influence of early dams and today’s on residents’ lives. At Folsom History Museum, 823 Sutter, St., Folsom. For details, call (916) 985-7288. Through July 28: Student Art Exhibit. Sixty-three images from students attending nine Sacramento area colleges and universities. At Viewpoint Gallery, 551 Sequoia Pacific Blvd., Sacramento. For details, call (916) 441-2341 or visit www.viepointgallery.org/ August 9 – September 3: Works by Joan Harvey Gunter & Kathy Young Ross. Reception 2nd Saturday, Aug. 12, 5 – 9 p.m. At The New Artworks Gallery, 10239 Fair Oaks Blvd. For details call (916) 962-7362. Ongoing: Julie Baker Fine Art, 307 Spring St., Nevada City. For details, call (530) 265-9ART or visit www.juliebakerfineart.com. Michael Kollwitz plays the Chapman Stick, a stringed instrument that combines the essence of guitar, bass, keyboards, and drums on July 9, the first concert in the Auburn Summer Music Series at the Auburn Library Amphitheatre. life woodcarvings, paintings, sculptures, and photography. Featuring national and local artists.10115 Donner Pass Rd., Truckee. (530) 587-8104. Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento July 22 – October 8: Craters from Fire: Ceramics by James Lovera. From his earliest decorative wares, dating from the late 1094s, to his masterfully thrown bowls and bottles, Lovera has been central to California’s development of a vibrant and innovative ceramics tradition. Through September 3: M. C. Escher: Rhythm of Illusion. Works by the Dutch artist Maurits Cornelis Escher, one of the best-known printmakers of the 20th century. Ongoing: European Painting from the Collection, European Galleries. Introduces museum visitors to the subjects and styles represented by our European collection; includes a small selection of decorative arts rarely seen on display. Ongoing: Early California Painting Collection. Demonstrates the artistic vitality of Northern California through the 1870s. The Crocker’s collection includes works from Europe, North America, and Asia, dating from the 15th century to the present. The museum also offers special exhibitions, lectures, educational programs, workshops, concerts, and events. For a complete list of activities for all ages call (916) 264-5157 or visit www.crockerartmuseum.org. 216 O St., Sacramento. Ongoing: MacKenzie’s Gallery of American Style. Broadstone Marketplace, 2766 East Bidwell St. Ste. 600, Folsom. (916) 984-5511. www.mmackenziegallery.com/ Ongoing: Vrooman Woodcarving & Wildlife Gallery. Original wild- Music & Dance Perspectives May/June 2006 23 Kollwitz & the Chapman Stick, a radical stringed instrument that combines the essence of guitar, bass, keyboards, and drums; jazz, blues, pop, and rock. July 16: Cool Heat, smooth jazz, R&B, and light rock featuring guitarist Michael Gregory, percussionist John Basa, saxophonist Bob Chapman, vocalist Aimee Wild, and bass player Jim Irion. July 23: Ivan Najera, Latin jazz encompassing a multitude of Spanish, Latin, and jazz-flavored rhythms. July 30: Dead Stetson, country rock by one of the newest “Vegas style” show bands to appear in Northern California. Free concerts on July Sundays, 7 – 8:30 p.m., at Auburn Library Amphitheatre, 350 Nevada St. Attendees welcome to bring picnics, blankets, and low lawn chairs. For details, call (916) 355-3600. July 13: Jazz at 808, featuring drummer Jimmy Robinson & Friends. Robinson chooses a different set of musicians, sometimes including vocalists, for this tasty series. Sponsored by PlacerArts. Tickets $20; $15 for PlacerArts members. At 7 p.m., The Arts Building, 808 Lincoln Way. For details, call (530) 885-5670, ext. 111. Ongoing: Auburn Contra Dance, every third Saturday. Friendly, smoke-free environment. No experience necessary. 7:30 – 11 p.m. at Masonic Hall, 956 1⁄2 Lincoln Way. For details, call (530) 888-9052. Dutch Flat Ongoing: Old Time Mountain Music, jam session in the Dutch Flat Hotel every second Sunday, 1 – 4 p.m. For details, call (800) 836-3500. Truckee/North Tahoe July 20 – August 12: Lake Tahoe Music Festival. A variety of music – classical orchestral, jazz, bluegrass, country, pop and Broadway hits – at a variety of beautiful North Tahoe settings. July 20: Gala Opening Night. July 22: Anna Maria Alberghetti; July 27, Sha Na Na,; July 29, Juice Newton; Aug. 3, Family Night with the Festival Orchestra; Aug. 5, The Greencards; Aug. 10, Serenade for Strings with guitarist Chris Kachian; Aug. 12, Season Fanale with the Festival Orchestra. For a complete schedule and tickets, call (530) 583-3101 or visit www.tahoemusic.org. “Minna,” ceramic sculpture by Heidi Murray. Roseville July 4: Capitol Pops, a patriotic concert following the 4th of July parade. Presented by Music in the Park, Perfornimg Arts of Roseville. Free at Royer Park. For details, call (916) 786-7380. July 16: 80zAll Stars, New Wave & 80s Rock, back by popular demand. Presented by Music in the Park, Perfornimg Arts of Roseville. Free concerts every third Sunday through Sept., 6:30 p.m. at Royer Park. For details, call (916) 786-7380. August 20: Jay Rolerz Band, Classic Rock. Presented by Music in the Park, Perfornimg Arts of Roseville. Free concerts every third Sunday through Sept., 6:30 p.m. at Royer Park. For details, call (916) 786-7380. September 17: Mumbo Gumbo, World Beat music. Presented by Music in the Park, Perfornimg Arts of Roseville. Free concerts every third Sunday through Sept., 6:30 p.m. at Royer Park. For details, call (916) 786-7380. Lincoln Outside Placer County Through July 3: Summer Fest 2006, Music in the Mountains. July 1, The Glory of the Wunderkind – Mozart; July 3, Happy Birthday, USA, Americana music, jazz, and an Andrew Lloyd Webber medley performed by the Festival Chorus and Orchestra under Maestro Paul Perry. For details and tickets, call (530) 265-6173 or visit www.musici nthemountains.org. Ongoing: Mondavi Center Presents. World-class performances of music, dance, and drama; also, well-known speakers’ presentations and concerts for children. On the UC Davis campus. For a complete schedule of events, call (530) 752-1915 or visit www.MondaviArts.org. Museums For more information visit July 15: Mick Martin & the Blues Rockers, one of the region’s most popular blues bands. Free Summer Concert Series 7 – 10 p.m. at Beermann’s Plaza. Presented by Lincoln Arts. For details, call (916) 645-9713. Auburn the California Arts Council at www.cac.ca.gov July 9, 16, 23 & 30: Auburn Summer Music Series. July 9: Michael 24 May/June 2006 Perspectives Roseville Roseville Telephone Co. Museum Exhibits detail the history of telephone communications and of Roseville Telephone Company. Displays include old-style switchboards and telephones; models range to present day.106 Vernon St. (916) 786-1621. Maidu Interpretive Center Offers frequent tours of ancient Southern Maidu village site featuring over 300 bedrock mortars, petroglyphs and evidence of thousands of years of Maidu occupation. Exhibits, nature trail tours, family weekend programs, campfires, “old ways” classes, camps, and more. Open Tuesday-Saturday, 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. 1960 Johnson Ranch Dr. (916) 774-5934. Carnegie Museum A central exhibit area houses changing shows. One wing features a scale model of the local Southern Pacific Railroad yards and the Pacific Fruit Express icing facilities; another features changing Roseville history. A small but quite complete Roseville reference and research library is open by appointment. Open Monday - Friday, noon - 4 p.m. or by appointment. 557 Lincoln St. (916) 773-3003. Rocklin Sierra Nevada Virtual Museum A multimedia, interactive online museum presenting the rich history, culture, and natural history of the Sierra Nevada. A project of Sierra College students, faculty and staff. Visit www.sierranevadavirtualmus eum.com Rocklin History Museum Houses a history timeline, Whitney family items, Indian artifacts, quarry tools and display, Ruben Ruhkala paintings, a Rocklin Jubilee display, and Rocklin’s Centennial quilt. The small Victorian home that houses the museum is typical of many early 1900’s Rocklin homes. 3895 Rocklin Rd. (916) 624-2355. Penryn Griffith Quarry Museum Founded in 1864, the quarry was major supplier of granite for many California buildings, including the State Capitol. Exhibits reflect the history of the region’s granite industry. Three miles of nature trails offer views of old quarry sites. Taylor and Rock Spring Rds. (916) 663-1837. Tours (530) 889-6500. “River Levee,” painting by Wayne Thiebaud. Auburn Placer County Museum Exhibits represent the chronological history of Placer County, from the Pleistocene era to contemporary times. Also houses the Pate Native American Collection of over 400 items. Docents offer free walking tours of Old Town Auburn Saturdays, 10 a.m. Placer County Courthouse, 101 Maple Street. (530) 889-6500. Bernhard Museum Complex Built in 1851 as an inn called Travelers Rest. The house, one of the oldest wooden structures in Placer County, was added in 1868. Now restored, it is furnished with late Victorian pieces. The complex also includes an 1874 winery, one of the state’s first, a vineyard, and a reconstructed carriage barn. Docent tours, permanent and seasonal exhibitions. 291 Auburn-Folsom Road. (530) 889-6500. Gold Country Museum Chronicles the rich history of gold mining in the region. Exhibits include gold panning demonstrations, a walk through a mine shaft, an operational stamp mill model, and displays depicting the lifestyle of Gold Rush residents. Gold Country Fairgrounds, 1273 High Street. (530) 889-6500. Foresthill Foresthill Divide Museum Displays portraying the history of the Foresthill and Iowa Hill Divides include a model of the Foresthill Logging Company, firefighting equipment, depictions of life during the Gold Rush and of early modes of transportation. 24601 Harrison Street. (530) 889-6500. Dutch Flat Golden Drift Museum The colorful history of the “Golden Triangle” -- Dutch Flat, Gold Run, Alta/Towle -- is shown in exhibits depicting boom days of hydraulic mining, the rise of the county’s timber industry, the coming of the transcontinental railroad, and the growth of communities. Tour the town and all its historic buildings. 32820 Main Street. (530) 889-6500. Truckee/North Lake Tahoe Gatekeepers Cabin Museum Houses artifacts of Lake Tahoe history, including paneled history Perspectives May/June 2006 25 displays, illustrated pioneer stories, hundreds of historical items, and a research library. One wing contains the Marion Steinbach Indian Basket Museum, filled with a collection of more than 800 rare baskets from 85 tribes, collections of Indian dolls, and Southwestern pottery. 130 West Lake Blvd., Tahoe City. (530) 583-1762. The Watson Cabin Living Museum An outstanding, preserved, turn-of-the-century log cabin, built in 1908 by Robert Montgomery Watson, Tahoe City’s first Constable. 560 N. Lake Blvd., Tahoe City (530) 583-1762. Emigrant Trail Museum Located in Donner Memorial State Park, this museum focuses on the theme of the Donner Party. A 26-minute movie on the Donner Party is shown on the hour. Exhibits portray the lives and arts of the Washoe Indians, early explorers, the building of the railroad through the Sierra Nevada, and Truckee’s the early days. 12593 Donner Pass Rd., Truckee. (530) 582-7892. Events & Festivals Roseville July - August: Events, campfires, camps, exhibits, and shows for children and families at Maidu Interpretive Center. Old Fashioned Campfires, July 7 & Aug. 4, 8 p.m. Live Animal Show, Aug. 5, 12, 19, & 26, 2 – 3 p.m. 1960 Johnson Ranch Dr. For details, call (916) 774-5934. Lincoln August 13: Poet Lariat of the Greenhorn Creek Jim Nolt, featured ���������������� ������������������������ ���������������������� ● ● ● ��������������������������������� ������������������������������� ������������������������������ ���������������������������� ���������������������������������� ��������������������������������� �������������������������������� ����������������� � ��������������� ����������������������������������� ���������������������������������� Newcastle August 19: 20th Annual Dance Under the Stars, a benefit for the Literacy Support Council of Placer County. Spaghetti dinner prepared by the Newcastle Golden Spike Lions, 6 – 8 p.m., and dancing to the music of Thicker Than Water, 8 – 11 p.m. Don Chaddock, Auburn Sentinel’s executive editor is Master of Ceremonies. Proceeds the Placer County Library’s PALS program providing free and confidential literacy tutoring for adults. Tickets are $8 each, available at county libraries and at the door. For details, call (530) 878-2070 or (530) 637-4267. Auburn August 10: Auburn Art Walk, a stroll through three dozen Downtown and Old Town venues featuring local and regional artists’ work in a wide variety of media. Free admission, free shuttle bus, live music at three locations. Brochures with maps available at PlacerArts, 808 Lincoln Way. Art Walk is held on second Thursdays April, June, August, and October. For details, call (530) 885-5670. August 27: TalkStory with the Foothills Storytelling Guild. Event opens at 2 p.m. with a three-hour introductory workshop on the art of storytelling led by Joan Stockbridge, professional storyteller and national workshop leader. Following will be a meal and discussion about the vision and purpose of the Foothills Storytelling Guild. A storytelling performance begins at 7 p.m., with stories told by guild members and invited guests. Both the workshop and performance are open to the public. At 12005 Norman Lane. For details, contact Joan Stockbridge at (530) 823-3282 or joan@stockbridges.net. October 7: Hidden Gems of the Foothills, Auburn Symphony League’s Homes Tour, featuring custom homes designed by Auburn architect Michael Kent Murphy. For details and tickets, call (530) 637-4508. October 8: Placer County’s Farm & Barn Tour. Explore working farms & ranches, a historic country schoolhouse, wineries, produce markets and the AGROart competition. 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. For tickets & map, call (530) 889-7372 or visit www.placerfarmandbarntour.com. ������������������������������������� ���������������������������������� ������������������������������������ �������������������������������� ������������������������������ ● reader at the Lincoln Poets Club, 3 – 5 p.m., at McBean Perk, 427 A St., Ste. 400. For details and information about monthly readings, call Sue Clark at (916) 434-9226. Truckee/North Lake Tahoe ����������������������������� ���������� �������������������� ������������������������� ��������������������������� ���������������������������������������� ��������������������������������������� ��������������������������������� �������������������������������� ��������������������������������� ������������������������������������ ������������ June 29: Blazing the Trails, a fundraiser for Trails and Vistas includes a four-course dinner prepared by award-winning chef Mark Estes and performance by Jessica Felich of InnerRhythms Dance Theatre, live music, and silent auction. At Moody’s Bistro and Lounge, Truckee, 5:30 – 9:30 p.m. For details and tickets, call (530) 550-8464. July 7 – 9: ARTour 2006, a free self-guided tour of more than 30 North Lake Tahoe artists’ studios. Media presented includes oils, acrylics, watercolors, glass, metal furnishings, sculpture, gourds, photography, ceramic and fiber. Artist studios located throughout North Lake Tahoe and Truckee. Opening Reception with art, wine, and food, July 6, 5 – 8 p.m. at North Tahoe Art Center, 380 North Lake Blvd., Tahoe City. For details, call (530) 581-2787 or visit www.northtahoearts.com July 7 & August 4: First Fridays Celebrations, evenings of art, wine, shopping, dining, and music. Tahoe City shops and exhibits at North Tahoe Arts stay open late. For details visit www.visittahoecity.com. July 22: 5th Annual Squaw Valley Art, Wine & Music Festival. Fine arts, crafts, performances, live music, a benefit wine tasting, and children’s activities. 10 a.m. – 7 p.m., at the Village at Squaw Valley USA. Free; benefit wine tasting $20. For details, call (530) 581-7111. July 30: Bad Women Being Good, a mixed-media presentation about 26 May/June 2006 Perspectives the music and history of Etta James, Aretha Franklin, and Tina Turner, by Buzzy Jackson, author of the book Bad Women Being Good. Presented by Squaw Valley Institute, 7 p.m. at PlumpJack Conference Center, Squaw Valley. A no-host social hour hopns at 7:30 p.m. A $10 donation requested. For details, call (530) 581-4138. August 13: The Making of “Walk the Line,” the film biography of Johnny Cash. Screenwriter Gil Dennis will describe the making of this Academy Award-nominated film. Co-sponsored by the Squaw Valley Community of Writers and Squaw Valley Institute. For details, call (530) 581-4138. August 27: Origins and Elements, a celebration of the environment through the arts, is an original art production integrating dance, music, and installation art on a hike through the beautiful landscape of the Sierra. The hike features Chief Red Hawk, who performed at the Opening Winter Olympic Ceremony in Utah, and will include more than 20 dancers, musicians, and artists. At Donner summit. For details and tickets, call (530) 550-8464. Colfax July 15 – 16: 36th Annual Classic Wildlife Art Festival – sculpture, fine art, contemporary carvings, antique decoys. Includes dinner and auction.Ppresented by Pacific Flyway Decoy Association at Double Tree Hotel, Sacramento. For details, call (925) 754-4978. July 21 – 23: Sierra Storytelling Festival 2006, featuring award-winning, multi-talented storytellers to entertain adults and children with imaginative tales, drama, and lively music. This year’s tellers include Patrick Ball, Carol Birch, Rosyln Bresnick-Perry, James Bruchac, Steven Henegar, Susan Klein, and bobby Norfolk. Festival begins Friday, 8 p.m. with a concert performance by all tellers. Saturday, starting at 10 a.m., hour-long sessons by each teller. Sunday, a Children’s Show at 10 a.m, including aCeltic Harp Concert. At North Columbia Schoolhouse Cultural Center, Nevada City. For details and tickets, call (530) 265-2826 or visit www.sierrastorytellingfestival.org. August 1 – September 30: Annual Antique & Vintage Clothing Show. More than 40 heirloom quilts and fance diresses from the 1920s and ’30s at Folsom History Museum, 823 Sutter St., Folsom. For details, call (916) 985-7288. August 19: Nevada County Poetry Series. Well-known poets read from their work. 7:30 p.m. at Center for the Arts, 314 W. Main St., Grass Valley. General admission $5 per person; refreshments included. For details, call (530) 432-8196. July 2: Fourth of July Festival, Parade and Fireworks on Sunday. Downtown Colfax, Main Street. Co-sponsored by Colfax Pride and Kiwanis Club of Greater Colfax. For more information, www.colfaxpride.com/independenceday.html (530) 263-5969. July 14: Blue Cat Studio Ribbon Cutting on Friday at 2 p.m., 55 South Main Street in Colfax. Studio expands! Come and visit the location where, in additon to sign and banner production and fabric printing, this newsletter is designed and laid out. For more information, (530) 346-7160. September 23 & 24: Folsom Gourd & Arts Festival, featuring more than a hundred artists from all disciplines, and quality craftsmen. Supply vendors will provide books, tools, beads, feathers, papers, dyes, and thousands of gourds. Demonstrations, refreshments, and entertainment. Sat., 9 a.m. – 5 p.m.; Sun. 9 a.m. – 4 p.m. Folsom City Park, Natoma & Stafford Streets, Folsom. For details, call (916) 608-4545. Trips Outside Placer County Deadline August 15: Photography Trip to San Miguel de Allende, Mexico with Susan Nielsen. October 28 - November 7 & November 9 -18. Join a professional photographer/teacher and a few other joyful souls on a journey of art, photography, play, fine dining, and discovery to the beautiful colonial city of San Miguel de Allende. The first trip will include celebrations of the Day of the Dead. Both trips include visits to the grand market at Guadalajara, excursions to Guanajuato, the birthplace of Diego Rivera, the intriguing old mining ghost town of Pozos, and an art and pottery tour of the famous Talavera pottery factories, along with plenty of free time for enjoying the many visual pleasures of San Miguel de Allende. For trip details please contact Nielsen at (530) 583-4552 or E-mail susancosmicdance@aol.com. Deadline August 15. July 19 – 31: Painting Trip to South of France with Sandy Delehanty. Join the watercolor and oil artist on a trip to the lovely medieval villages along the French Riviera. Painting sites include Renoir’s garden, the walled villages of Tourrette, St. Paul, Vance, and the ancient port city of Antibes. Trip includes visits to the homes and work places of Picasso, Matisse, Dufy, Modigliani, and Chagall. Trip planning by Art Tour Director Sunny Reeves. To receive a detailed brochure call Sandy at (916) 652-4624 or visit www.sandydelehanty.com September 16 – 23: Paint in Tuscany, Italy, with Victoria Brooks. Seven-day oil painting workshop, studio and plein air, in Cortona, Italy, site of the book Under the Tuscan Sun. Cost: $2,499 includes workshop fee, seven nights private room and bath in 3-star hotel, meals, daily wine tasting, local museums, two-day trips to Florence and Siena, English-speaking guides and admission fees, Tuscan cooking class. Airfair not included. For details and to register, contact Brooks at (916) 768-1751 or vbrooksart@hotmail.com. Perspectives May/June 2006 27 Film Loomis August 17 – 19, 24 – 26: The Apple Tree, three lighthearted oneact musicals about men, women, and a little thing called temptation. Presented by Del Oro School’s Summer Theatre Academy directed by Bryan Marshall. Performances at 7:15 p.m. each day; Saturday matinees Aug. 19 & 26 at 2:15 p.m. Tickets $8 & $12. At Del Oro Performing Arts Theatre, 3301 Taylor Rd. For tickets and details, call (916) 652-7243. Auburn July 1: Silver Screen Classic Movie Series: “Yankee Doodle Dandy,” a 1942 patriotic musical with James Cagney. Shown at 2 and 7 p.m. Presented by Auburn Library in library’s Beecher Room, 350 Nevada St., Auburn. Suggested donation: $4 seniors, $5 general admission. For details, call (530) 878-7938, or visit auburnsilverscreen.com. North Tahoe/Truckee August 5: Silver Screen Classic Movie Series: “The Spiral Staircase,” a scary movie for adults with Dorothy McGuire and Ethel Barrymore. Shown at 2 and 7 p.m. Presented by Auburn Library in library’s Beecher Room, 350 Nevada St., Auburn. Suggested donation: $4 seniors, $5 general admission. For details, call (530) 878-7938, or visit auburnsilverscreen.com. July 13 – August 20: Lake Tahoe Shakespeare Festival. Performances of Othello, Twelfth Night, and The Compleat Wrks of Wllm Shkspr (abridged) at Sand Harbor State Park. For details and tickets, call (800) 74-SHOWS or visit www.laketahoeshakespeare.com/ September 2: Silver Screen Classic Movie Series: “Stage Door,” the quintessential backstage story with Katharine Hepburn, Ginger Rogers, Eve Arden, and Lucille Ball. Shown at 2 and 7 p.m. Presented by Auburn Library in library’s Beecher Room, 350 Nevada St., Auburn. Suggested donation: $4 seniors, $5 general admission. For details, call (530) 878-7938, or visit auburnsilverscreen.com. Through August 13: The Compleat Wrks of Wllm Shakspr (Abridged). In less than two hours, this high-speed clown car of a play runs over all 37 of Shakespeare’s plays and a sonnet or two. Presented by the Foothill Theatre Company at the Nevada Theatre, Nevada City. For tickets, call (530) 265-8587. July - August: Old State Theatre: Independent, Art, Limited Release, & Foreign Films. Small tables and lots of leg room create a comfortable, intimate film-viewing atmosphere. Serving Italian sodas, soft drinks, desserts, and, of course, popcorn. Two screens showing; special family nights scheduled. Open nightly. In Downtown Auburn. For schedule and times, call (530) 888-7936. Outside Placer County August 25 – September 10: Shakespeare Under the Stars – Othello and Twelfth Night. Presented by the Foothill Theatre Company, location to be announced. For tickets, call (530) 265-8587. Classes and Workshops Roseville July 9 & August 13: Watercolor Painting with David Lobenberg. July 9: Koi Fish Workshop; August 13: Tree Workshop. Each workshop: $125. At La Provence Restaurant, 110 Diamond Creek Place. For details and to register, call (916) 789-2002. Theatre Auburn August 11, 12, 18 & 19: A Musical Voyage Through Time, a variety show featuring entertainment through the decades presented by Placer Community Theater. A comedic story line pulls together Broadway show tunes and classic television skits. Directed by Leslie Holland. A portion of the proceeds will go to the Auburn Placer Performing Arts Center effort. Performances at 8 p.m. at Theatre Pamelot, 540 Wall St. For tickets and details, call (530) 852-2708 or visit www.placercommunitytheater.org. Ongoing: Creative Mystique in Collage guided by Deidre Trudeau. Intermediate. Four classes per month; $75 per four-class session; materials included in a $20 lab fee. At Artful Blend Gallery, 22 S. Grant St. To register, call (916) 773-2242. July & August: Music & More Arts Academy productions at De Witt Theatre, 11596 D Ave. For details, call (530) 885-0594 or visit www.musicandmore.net/ Ongoing: Watercolor Classes with Howard Stover. Beg/Interm. Thursdays, 10 a.m. – noon. At Artful Blend Gallery, 22 S. Grant St. To register, call Stover at (916) 434-0717. Roseville Ongoing: Drawing with Howard Stover. Beg/Interm. Wednesdays, 1 – 3 p.m.At Artful Blend Gallery, 22 S. Grant St. To register, call Stover at (916) 434-0717. July 7 – August 5: Piano Men, a new musical review celebrating such great piano players as Billy Loel, Barry Manilow, Elton John, and Ray Charles, written and structured by Robert C. Gerould. A Magic Circle Theatre production. Playing Fri. & Sat, 8 p.m.; Sun., 2 p.m., Tower Theatre, 421 Vernon St. Tickets, $20 general; $18 seniors & students, $10 children 11 and under. For tickets, (916) 782-1777. Ongoing: Mono-Printing with Howard Stover. All levels. Threehour session one Saturday a month. For details, call Stover at (916) 434-0717. Ongoing: Dream Board Collage guided byDeidre Trudeau. Beg/ June 30 – July 29: The King and I, Rodgers and Hammerstein’s musical telling of the story of Anna and the King of Siam. Playing Fri. & Sat, 8 p.m.; Sun., 2 p.m. at Roseville Theatre, 241 Vernon St. $20 general; $18 seniors & students, $10 children 11 and under. For tickets, (916) 782-1777. July 8 - 29: The Enchanted Forest, dramatized by adult members of Magic Circle Theatre’s Children’s Repertory Theatre Company. For details and tickets, call (916) 782-1777. 28 May/June 2006 Perspectives Support for the Arts Resources, grants, publications, funded projects, partnerships Interm/Adv. Every 4th Friday. $25 for two workshops. At Artful Blend Gallery, 22 S. Grant St. To register, call (916) 773-2242. techniques for the creation of 3-dimensional forms. At artist studio, 350 Big Ben Rd. For details, call (916) 645-3173. Ongoing: Creative Mystique in Collage guided by Deidre Trudeau. Interm. Thursday evenings. At Artful Blend Gallery, 22 S. Grant St. To register, call (916) 773-2242. Ongoing: Lincoln Arts classes for children and adults. For details, call (916) 645-9713. Ongoing: Maidu Interpretive Center. Classes, events, and nature, programs for children, adults, and families. For details and to register, contact Maidu Interpretive Center, 1960 Johnson Ranch Dr. (916) 774-5934. Ongoing: Roseville Parks & Recreation Cultural Arts Classes. For a full schedule, call (916) 774-5950 or visit www.roseville.ca.us, Parks & Recreation Department, Activity Guide. Rocklin Ongoing: Watercolor and Drawing Classes with Barbara Roth. All ages. Students learn skills needed to successfully paint in watercolor. Lessons structured to meet students’ individual needs. For details, contact Roth at (916) 624-7572. Ongoing: Sierra College Community Education. Day, evening, and weekend classes. Sierra College, 5000 Rocklin Rd. (916) 781-0590 or visit www.sccommed.org. Ongoing: City of Rocklin Community Education. A variety of cultural arts classes for children and adults. (916) 632-4100. Lincoln Ongoing: Beginning China Painting with Andrea Simeral-Boyer. Classes limited to six students, adults only. For details, call Lincoln Arts at (916) 645-9713. Ongoing: Art & Clay Classes with C. Kerley Pflueger. All levels welcome. Continuing four-week sessions. Handbuilding and wheel Arts Council of Placer County Presents FACES Paintings by Rudy Browne June 8 – August 4, 2006 The Arts Building Conference Room 808 Lincoln Way Auburn, CA 95603 Purchase inquiries: (530) 878-3972 (530) 885-5670 Tuesady – Sunday 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. OF JAZZ 2 Ongoing: Poetry Class with Sue Clark. Thursdays 3 - 4:30 p.m. Anyone can join at any time. Beginning poets are welcome. Class fees: 10 weeks - $62. Location: Lincoln Arts. To register, call Clark at (916) 434-9226. Loomis Ongoing: Two-day Plein Air Painting Workshops with Victoria Brooks. Class size limited to seven. 9 a.m. – 4 p.m., starting at Brooks’s Loomis studio. Painting at nearby scenic areas. Fee: $175 (equipment and supplies not provided). To register, call (916) 768-1751. Ongoing: Private Music Lessons at McLaughlin Studios. Teaching the art of music- making and performance. Two dozen instruments taught in private lessons. Also, classes in chamber orchestra, clarinet choir, flute choir, brass ensemble, music exploration, intermediate rock, advanced rock, adult rock, and jazz. At 3415 Swetzer Rd. For details, call (916) 652-6377 or visit www.mclaughlinstudios.com. Newcastle Ongoing: Beginning East Coast Swing with the Foothills Swing Dance Society. Dance lesson 7 – 8 p.m.; DJ’d swing dance 8 – 11 p.m. All ages, alcohol-free. Every 4th Saturday at the Portuguese Hall, 920 Taylor For details, contact (530) 887-8117 or emma@intheswingofthings.com. Ongoing: Piano School with Music Exchange’s Keyboard Kollege. Accepting new students ages 6 to adult. Newcastle Town Center. For details, 916) 624-2733. Auburn Ongoing: Dance Flow Class with Suzanne Grace. Using the technique of modern dance ballet, the core strength of Pilates and the ecstatic release of tribal/improvisational dance. Fridays, 9 - 10:30 a.m., at Foothill Community Church in DeWitt Center. For details, call (530) 637-5088 or visit www.graceyoga.com. Ongoing: Piano lessons at Jerelen Bartone Piano Studio. All ages. Lessons on fine pianos. Studio near I-80/Foresthill Exit. For details, call (530) 886-8490. Ongoing: Swing Dance Classes with Chris & Emma of InTheSwingOfThings. Beg. classes Fri. evenings. Classes available for teens and adults. At the Courthouse Athletic Club, 1121 Maidu Dr. For details, call (530) 906-2048 or visit www.intheswingofthings. Ongoing: Pastel Classes with Reif Erickson. Classes are through Placer Adult Education. Erickson also presents monthly Pastel Demonstrations at his studio in The Arts Building, 808 Lincoln Way. For details, (530) 887-9565. Ongoing: Painting Classes with Juan Pena. Portrait classes, Monday & Tuesday 9 a.m. - 12 noon. Eight consecutive classes $100. Landscape classes, Friday, 9 a.m. – 12 noon. Twelve consecutive classes, $125. (530) 887-0312. Ongoing: Handbuilding in Clay with Gerda Francesca. Beginning and advanced students. At the Old Library Art Studio, 175 Almond St. (530) 887-8216 or (530) 885-9928. Ongoing: CLAYart Classes with L. Luis Ortiz. The Arts Building, 808 Lincoln Way. For details, (530) 885-2787. Perspectives May/June 2006 29 Ongoing: Digital Photography Classes with Keith Sutter. Classes, workshops, and trips. The Arts Building, 808 Lincoln Way. For details, (530) 889-1451 or www.sutterphoto.com. Ongoing: Music, voice, dance, and drama classes at Music & More Arts Academy & Theatre. For schedule, (530) 885-0594 or visit www.musicandmore.net. Ongoing: Barbershop-style four-part harmony. For women of any age or singing experience. Sierra Gold Chorus (member of Sweet Adelines, Int.), directed by Sharon Hardie. Mondays, 7 p.m., Bill Burback Hall (DeWitt Center), 11577 E Ave. (530) 885-4202. North Lake Tahoe/Truckee Through August 30: Watercolor Wednesdays with Jan Foss, a series of one-day workshops. For a complete description of individual workshops, visit www.watercolorsbyjanfoss.com. For details and to register, call (775) 833-1144. Ongoing: Watercolors by Jan Foss. Watercolor gallery and studio featuring soft landscapes and colorful florals. Sign up for a class at 120 Country Club Drive, #21, Incline Village. For details, call (775) 833-1144. Arts for Children Roseville Ongoing: KidzArt, a unique, inspiring drawing and fine arts program for children, includes after-school programs, camps, birthday parties. Saturday art classes 12 – 1 p.m. & 1:30 – 2:30 p.m. At Artful Blend Gallery, 22 S. Grant St. For details, call (916) 773-5844 or visit www.cakidzart.com. Ongoing: Maidu Interpretive Center. Classes, events, and nature, programs for children, adults, and families. July camps include Incredible Insects, Nature Adventures, Indian Ways, Wild About Animals, Fur, Feathers and Scales, and Games, Jokes and Music. Aug. 19 – 26, Making an Indian Star Drum. For details and to register, contact Maidu Interpretive Center, 1960 Johnson Ranch Dr. (916) 774-5934. Ongoing: Roseville Parks & Recreation Cultural Arts Classes for Children. For a full schedule, call (916) 774-5242 or visit www.rosevilleparks.ca.us. Rocklin Ongoing: City of Rocklin Community Education. A variety of cultural arts classes for children. (916) 632-4100. Outside Placer County July 5 – 26: Beginning Balboa, a 1930s California dance style, a close embrace dance that focuses on connection, leading and following, and footwork. No prior dance experience necessary. $40 per person. A four-week session, 6:30 - 7:30 p.m. Presented by In The Swing of Things at Nevada City Vets Hall, 425 Pine St., Nevada City. For details, call (530) 906-2048. September 16 – 23: Paint in Tuscany, Italy with Victoria Brooks. “Painting Tuscan Treasures,” a seven-day oil painting workshop-studio and plein air in Cortona, Italy, the site of the book and film Under the Tuscan Sun. For details and a brochure, call (916) 768-1751 or visit www.vbrooks.com. Loomis/Granite Bay Ongoing: Private Music Lessons at McLaughlin Studios. Teaching the art of music making and performance. Two dozen instruments taught in private lessons. The studio also offers classes in chamber orchestra, clarinet choir, flute choir, brass ensemble, music exploration (ages 3 – 5), intermediate rock, advanced rock, adult rock, and jazz. At 3415 Swetzer Rd. For details, call (916) 652-6377 or visit www.mclaughlinstudios.com. Ongoing: Art and Music Programs for all Ages at Children’s Creative Art Center, 6210 Douglas Blvd., Granite Bay. For details, call (916) 791-6407 or visit www.childrenscreativeartcenter.org. Ongoing: Watercolor Classes with Jerianne Van Dijk, five-week courses in beg., interm., and challenge class; also some weekend workshops and plein air days. For a brochure, call (530) 271-0676 or visit www.jerianne.net. Or visit the studio at 316 W. Main St., Grass Valley. Ongoing: Impressionist Oil & Introduction to Plein Air Painting with Victoria Brooks. “Alla Prima” or “all at once” is the direct approach Brooks teaches to create fresh spontaneous oil paintings. In this session, Victoria will also be sharing her techniques for plein air landscape painting. Equipment, supplies, as well as choice of subject will be covered. All levels of painters are accepted. Ongoing weekly classes in six-week sessions at the Sacramento Fine Arts Center on Tuesday afternoons. Plein air workshops and classes are also available. Call or e-mail Victoria Brooks for a schedule, (916) 768-1751, vbrooksart@hotmail.com or visit her website at www.vbooks.com. Publicize YOUR Arts Event Send your CALENDAR listings, along with photos — black and white or color — to Perspectives, 808 Lincoln Way, Auburn, CA 95603 Fax to (530) 885-0348 or email to Perspectives@PlacerArts.org Or post online at: Ongoing: One Stroke Painting with certified instructor Sharleen Snow. For project and technique class schedule and sign up information, (916) 508-1458 or sharleen.snow@sbcglobal.net. Ongoing: Color Intensive and Landscape Workshops at the School of Light and Color. Classes include: beginning workshops, pastel landscape, photography & digital imaging, basic drawing, pastel, watercolor, and art classes for youth.10030 Fair Oaks Blvd., Fair Oaks. For class schedule, (916) 966-7517 or sarback@lightandcolor.com. http://www.placerarts.org/cgi-bin/calendar/display.cgi Deadline for the September/October 2006 issue: July 20 Now accepting poetry 30 May/June 2006 Perspectives Lincoln Ongoing: Art & Clay Classes for Children with C. Kerley Pflueger. Continuing four-week sessions. Students explore several art projects, from watercolors to clay. Handbuilding techniques for the creation of 3-dimensional ceramic forms. At artist’s studio, 350 Big Ben Rd. For details, call (916) 645-3173. Ongoing: After School Art Classes for Children/Youth. Held at Lincoln Arts, 580 Sixth St. For details, call (916) 645-9713. Newcastle performance for family and friends. Limited to 12 students. Tuition: $150. Registration deadline: July 10. InnerRhythms Dance Theatre, 12219 Business Park Dr., Ste. 3, Truckee. For details, call (530) 550-8464. July 31 – August 4: Five-Day Summer Dance Intensive with InnerRhythms artistic director Elizabeth Archer along with professional dancers Anett Eichler and Christopher Childers. Intermediate to advanced-level dancers with at least three years dance experience. Dancers explore different dance disciplines including Ballet Technique, Pointe work, Jazz technique, turns, leaps, and repertoire. Limited to 10 students. Tuition: $200. Registration deadline: Ongoing: Piano lessons. Children and adults, ages 6 and up. All levels beginners through advanced. At Music Exchange’s Keyboard Kollege, 477 Main St. For details or to register, call (916) 663-9020. www.musicexchangeonline.com. Auburn July 10 - 14: Summer Workshop with Patty Pieropan Dong. 8 – 9:30 a.m., ages 6 and up; 10 a.m. – noon, ages 8 and up. Drawing & Painting I focuses on a fun approach to the basics of art, color, design, perspective, and composition. Forms from nature, still life, landscape, animals, and portraiture will be explored through colored pencil, pastel, tempera, and watercolor techniques. Crafts will include papier mache, block printing, weaving, rock painting, and more. Classes limited to 12 students. Cost is $40 per week; a $10 deposit reserves spot. Most materials included. Studio is at 460 Old Airport Rd. For details or to register, call Patty at (530) 823-1963 or visit www.jps.net/auburndongs/. July 17 – 28: Summer Workshop with Patty Pieropan Dong. 8 – 9:30 a.m., ages 8 and up, Drawing & Painting I; 10 a.m. – noon, ages 8 and up, Crafts. Classes limited to 12 students. Cost is $40 per week; a $10 deposit reserves spot. Most materials included. Studio is at 460 Old Airport Rd. For details or to register, call Patty at (530) 823-1963 or visit www.jps.net/auburndongs/. Ongoing: Introductory Swing Dance for Teens. 3:30 – 4:30 p.m. Class starts with basic steps of Lindy Hop. The Courthouse Athletic Club, 1121 Maidu Dr. For details, call (530) 906-2048. Ongoing: Art for Preschoolers at Creative Endeavors. Ages 20 months - 5 yrs. Fun, age-appropriate, hands-on classes. At 638 Lincoln Way, Ste. 150A. For schedule, contact (530) 355-3465 or creative endeavors@pacbell.net. Ongoing: CLAYart Classes with L. Luis Ortiz. Students explore handbuilding techniques for the creation of three-dimensional ceramic forms. The Arts Building, 808 Lincoln Way. For details, (530) 885-2787. Ongoing: Musikgarten Classes. Ages birth through 7 years. 10-week sessions. Scholarships available. Keyboard Konnection, 1515 Grass Valley Hwy. For full schedule, (530) 745-0248. Ongoing: Piano Lessons. Group piano classes, ages 6 - adult, and guitar, ages 8 - adult. Keyboard Konnection, 1515 Grass Valley Highway. For details, (530) 745-0248. Ongoing: Music & More Arts Academy: music, voice, dance and drama classes. Classes for all ages in most instruments taught by master teachers. For schedule, (530) 885-0594 or www.musarts.com. North Tahoe/Truckee July 24 – 27: I Can Do Anything Four-Day Performing Arts Camp with actor/director Janet Lazarus. Ages 10 and up. Emphasis on acting, theater games, musical theater performance, monologues, ensemble group pieces, and audition training. Camp will end with a The Romero Guitar Quartet. Sierra Nevada Guitar Society’s Summer Festival August 11 – 13 Headlining — Lito and Celin Romero of the famous Romero Guitar Quartet, often called “the Royal Family of the Guitar,” performing classical guitar duos, including the Vivaldi Concerto in G for guitar duo with strings. www.romeroguitarquartet.com Classical Guitar Competition — The winner will receive a cash prize and will play the Vivaldi Concerto in C with the Toccata Chamber Orchestra Saturday evening, August 12, at St Patrick’s Episcopal Church in Incline Village. Workshops — Belgian guitarist and scholar Jan de Kloe will perform and offer workshops. www.dekloe.be Craig Einhorn, a creative and innovative classical guitar performer, from Oregon, will offer performances and workshops along with an evening of tango music and dance with guitar featuring the Truckee River Tango Society. www.unicornguitar.com Perspectives May/June 2006 31 July 17. InnerRhythms Dance Theatre, 12219 Business Park Dr., Ste. 3, Truckee. For details, call (530) 550-8464. August 7 – 11: Dancin’ Thru the Decades with Padma Rothschild. Ages 8 – 12. 1950-1990s dance styles integrated with ballet, tap, jazz, and swing during a week of creative learning with a professional dancer, choreographer, and competition gymnastics instructor. Class culminates in a performance for family and friends. Limited to 15 students. Tuition: $175. Registration deadline: July 24. InnerRhythms Dance Theatre, 12219 Business Park Dr., Ste. 3, Truckee. For details, call (530) 550-8464. Ongoing: InnerRhythms is accepting enrollment for 10-week sessions. Twenty classes are offered each week in a variety of dance disciplines, including Ballet, Hip-Hop, Jazz and Modern for students ages 7-70. By popular demand, MiniRhythms for mini-dancers ages 18 months – 6 years will be offered on Wednesdays. For details, visit the Training Centre at 12219 Business Park Drive, Suite 3, near the Truckee airport, call (530) 550-8464, or visit www.innerrhythms.org. Outside Placer County July 12 – 16: Jazz Camp 2006. All ages, all instruments, and voice. Eleven faculty members under the direction of Bill Douglass. Most of the faculty comes from the Bay Area for the week. The camp includes daily faculty concerts, sectionals, theory, combos, and a public concert on the final evening. 9 a.m. – 3:30 p.m. daily. Cost: $350, includes daily lunch. Limited scholarships available for qualified bassists and drummers. Also limited work/study aid available for other instruments/voice on financial need basis. Contact asap about this opportunity. At Nevada City School of the Arts, 13032 Bitney Springs Rd., Bld. 8, Nevada City. For details or to register, call (530) 273-5489 or visit www.SierraJazzSociety.com. Calls to Artists Deadline July 15. Roseville Arts 31st National Open Show, September 2 – 29, at 2237 Gallery in Roseville, CA. Open to all original works of art. This year’s juror is internationally recognized sculptor Tony Natsoulas, who will select up to 45 pieces for the exhibit and identify winners of the $1000 Best Show, $500 Special Judge’s Award, and $100 Merit Awards. Artists may submit up to three Call for Nominations for Arties Awards entries ($15 each; 3 for $30). A complete prospectus is available at www.rosevillearts.org or by SASE to Roseville Arts, 7501 Foothills Blvd., Roseville, CA 95747. Deadline August 4. SureWest is proud to support artists in our community and invites them to participate in our annual program Bringing Art Back to Business. We are seeking artists to submit original, two-dimensional fine art for the cover of the SureWest 2007 Roseville, Citrus Heights, and Granite Bay yellow page directory. For more information about the program and submittal details, contact Jerianne Van Dijk at (530) 271-0676 or visit www.surewest.com/artist for details. Congratulations to Rick Aeschliman, our recently selected artist for the 2006–2007 SureWest Auburn, Grass Valley, Nevada City yellow page directory, and to David Lobenberg, selected artist for the 2006–2007 SureWest Greater Sacramento yellow pages. Deadline August 7. Northern California Arts, Inc.’s 51st Annual Open International Art Exhibition, Bold Expressions, Oct. 3 – 28 at the Sacramento Fine Arts Center Galleries. Open to creators of original art. All media except photography, film, and crafts. Best of Show $750; awards totaling $3500. Juror: Joseph Bellacera. Judged by slides or CD. Fee: $35 (NCA members $25) for up to three artworks, nonrefundable. For prospectus, send SASE to NCA, Inc. Ramona Soto, 7909 Walerga Rd # 112, PMB 1260, Antelope, CA 95843. Forms also available online at www.4NCA.org or www.SacFineArts.org. Deadline September 1. “Utopia,” on display Nov. 5 – Dec. 29 in A Shenere Velt Gallery, in Los Angeles. Artists may submit slides of up to three wall-hung works in any media (except jewelry and ceramics) that speak to the theme of Utopia. Download prospectus at www.circlesocal.org or call (310) 552-2007. Deadline September 15. ArtNetwork, an 80-page fine art directory, is accepting entries for its 15th edition cover contest. Fine artists with two- or three-dimensional artwork may apply. The directory is sent to more than 7,000 art world professionals nationwide. For application, visit www.artmarketing.com/Ency/contest.html or send SASE to ArtNetwork, Cover Contest, P.O. Box 1360 Nevada City, CA 95959. Call 800-383-0677 or email contest@artmarketing.com Major Art-related Event October 1. Fine Art, wine, and beer festival. Open call to artists for affordable booth space. For details, contact Deidre Trudeau at (916) 773-2242 or diedre@artfuli.com. Event November 18 & 19. Mountain Mandarin Festival, Nov. 18 & 19.Applications now being accepted for 150 vendor spaces. Wanted are original art, pottery, quality hand-crafted gifts and home accessories, and gourmet food items. The free festival, held at Auburn’s Gold Country Fairgrounds draws about 30,000 visitors. Interested artists and crafters may send photographs and applications asap. For details or to download a vendor application, visit www.mandarinfestival.com or call (916) 663-1918. The Arts Council of Placer County is accepting nominations for the 2006 Arties Awards. The awards are given to individuals or groups who have made outstanding contributions in the following categories: • Visual/Performing Arts • Arts Education • Arts Administration • Arts Volunteer/Patron • Literary Arts • Public Service to the Arts • Business Support/ Partnership Call to Theater Techs. Non-profit Placer Community Theater is looking for talented artistic people interested in volunteering to work on live stage productions as stage manager, prop master/mistress, stagehand, costumer, and lighting/sound technician. All interested parties please visit the membership page at www.placercommunityth eater.org, email office@placercommunitytheater.org or call (530) 8868569 or (530) 852-2708. For details and nomination forms, contact the Arts Council office at (530) 885-5670, or email@PlacerArts.org, or at 808 Lincoln Way, Auburn. Ongoing. The Artisan Gallery, in Fair Oaks, invites artists to submit proposals for month-long displays beginning with the Second Saturday Art Walk. The gallery is planning its summer, fall and winter 2006 gallery season. For details, call Terry Flowers at (916) 648-0260. Ongoing. New Artworks Gallery is seeking 2-D and 3-D works. Download application on-line www.thenewartworksgallery.com or 32 May/June 2006 Open Call. To exhibiting artists: Great exposure in a historic Auburn Victorian, East-West Galleries at Latitudes Restaurant, 130 Maple Street, Auburn. Artists are invited to submit inquiries for the 2006 exhibit calendar. For details, call Rosie at (530) 885-5670. Perspectives The Arts Council of Placer County would like to than our new, renewed, and business members; patrons and affiliates — and our private and public partners for their continued support. New Members Jim Ames Linda L. Belanger Patricia & Randall Bradley Diane Butler Michael Calero Nancy J. Carr Claudia E. Conner Janet L. Davis Harvey Gorrell Marilyn Heyman Paul G. Honatke Jane L. Hunt Linda J. Husby Barbara Kee Susan King Alice H. Lee Paul & Marie Lehman Rick Litteral May Mah Judy Mayorga Rock A. Meade Barbara Molony Jerry Mountroy & Lynn Meyer-Mountroy Claudia J. Moore Timothy C. Murphy Carol S. Newland Jean Schroeder Pamela Simning Keith & Merridee Smith Denise Surritt Robert L. Van Roo Kathleen Witt New Business Dancing Dog Productions New Patrons Kathryn & Larry Hannah New Benefactor Denny Macko Renewed Memberships William & Caroline Alexander-Furnas Suzanne Blaney Carol Boyd Beth E. Brooks M. Kathleen Butz Dorothy & Haden Crites Diane Friedberg Kathlene L. & Brian Fries Jannelle Gooch Julie Hirota Denese & Brian K. Holden Nancy D. Holt Catherine & Steve Hunter call (916) 962-7362 or e-mail to newartworks@softcom.net, or stop by the gallery at 10239 Fair Oaks Blvd., Fair Oaks, CA 95628. Ongoing. 2237 Gallery, in Roseville, is accepting portfolios for review. All artists eligible. For information, email green@williamspluspaddon.com. Ongoing. Call for musicians for the Auburn Concert Band. Rehearses September through mid-May. Meets Wednesdays, 7 p.m. at Health for All, 4065 Grass Valley Hwy., #206, Auburn. All instruments needed. Contact Mary Rose Preston at (530) 888-1801 or Wally at (530) 269-2283. www.auburnband.org. Ongoing. The Foothill Farmers’ Market Association seeks crafters and artisans to vend their original works at any of 16 seasonal weekly farmers’ markets around Placer County. For more information about the producers-only markets, call (530) 823-6183. Gerda Francesca Imgrund John F. Johnson Mary Therese Kobashigawa Nancy Lang Andrew & Shana Laursen Jean P. Maxwell Cherrine Murphy Susan Nicholls Richard & Janet Nicholson Rochelle & David PearsDickson Elizabeth Rawson Arlan J. & Ruth A. Welch Renewed Business Delores Bothello Cabin Fever Quilt Shoppe Simply Striking Renewed Patrons Emily L. Leff M.D. Barbara M. Newell Elaine B. Rothwell Affiliates Auburn Branch American Association of University Women Auburn Community Concert Association Auburn Symphony Nevada-Placer County Chapter SPEBSQSA North Tahoe Arts Placer Arts League Placer Community Theater, Brenda Lindley Placer County Visitors Council Sierra County Arts Council Windows Art Project Public Partnerships California Arts Council City of Auburn City of Lincoln City of Rocklin City of Roseville County of Placer Metropolitan Arts Partnership National Endowment for the Arts Placer County Office of Education Placer Union High School District Western Placer Unified School District Auburn BlueGrass Fest October 14, 2006 12 noon – 10 p.m. Five top Bluegrass Bands Tickets $25/$15 teens/12 and under free with adult For details, call (530) 885-9009. Presented by Auburn Placer Performing Arts Committee (APPAC) Perspectives May/June 2006 33 The Learning Curve, or P eople are forever asking what brought me to Fairbanks. I tell them, “A U-Haul truck.” Of course, I know what they’re really asking: What in blue blazes got a middle-aged California girl who hates the cold, who didn’t even go into snow, to the frozen North? What would induce someone to leave a strong circle of friends for a city in which she knows no one? Not to mention the network of writing contacts and freelance guarantees. Why would a former stay-at-home, devotedto-her-children’s-welfare-to-the-exclusion-ofall-else mom move 3,600 miles away, thereby ensuring little contact and lots of tearful phone calls (on my end, not theirs)? What the heck am I doing here? It’s a question I’ve asked myself more than once since I pulled out of Roseville, California, on May 22, 2005. The easy answer is, “I got a job.” Of course, I had a job in California, as a writer, paying well. I had a freelance career going, too, which sort of thing doesn’t transfer — it takes years of contacts and networking and begging and pleading, to get established. The fact that I was offered a newspaper job added a little sweetener to the mix, but as my mother pointed out, I could have gotten a newspaper job in California. And there was the romance of a long-lost friend reconnected with. But all of that is just window dressing. I didn’t have to go to the end of nowhere to get a job or find romance. Why Alaska? If I wanted cold, I could have gone to Chicago, which has long been a dream. If I wanted to get away from my kids, any place that involved driving to would have 34 July/August 2006 Perspectives sufficed — none of them ever has any money for gas. And my ex-husband just isn’t enough of an irritant to entail moving so far away. So why am I here? Like many people — most people — who come to Alaska, I wanted to start a new life. Historically, Alaska has been one of those places you could go to and reinvent yourself, be any one you wanted to. Leave the past — and all its messy implications — behind and start over again. Don’t ask, don’t tell. Accept people as they present themselves. California was once like that, but as it has grown, it’s become less a place where dreams come true and more like a dysfunctional family that doesn’t limit its fighting and messiness to holidays. It’s a year-round dysfunction, that place. Because Alaska is a difficult place to live — cold, snowy, isolated, even in the cities — it takes a certain kind of person to thrive here. It takes strength, strong will, and a certain desire to overcome challenges and fight your way to the top of the mountain, if for no other reason than to say, “Hey, world, look at me! I did it, I did it by myself, and no one can ever say I didn’t!” It takes, in short, the kind of person I’ve always wanted to be, the person I imagined I would have been without housework, mortgage, laundry, carpool and all the other mundane life details that can drag a person down into apathy, acceptance and — shudder — being average. I hate that word. Have always hated it, and never accepted it for myself or my kids. In California, people laugh when you say you don’t want to be average. Or they think Why Would Anyone Move to Alaska? A writer leaves home and California hearth to start a new life by Libbie Martin you’re looking for your 15 minutes of fame, wanting to be on TV or kissing up to celebrity. Not for me. I want to make my way on merit, not schlock. I want to, like Old Blue Eyes, do things my way. And Alaska is the one place you can be you in style, without worrying about what the neighbors will think, or whether it’s politically correct. Definitely for me. And then there’s the writing. Having lived in sunny California for most of my life, my inspiration was beginning to flag. Like the withered grass on the hills of summer, my words were beginning to pale, to be repetitive. I needed to find a Muse (even one cloaked in layers of fur and down). I wanted to see colors other than brown and yellow (which are the colors I see when I think of California). I wanted all the shades of green — the dark green of centuries-old forest and the bright new green of spring buds. Purple fireweed. I wanted a back yard in which moose and foxes and ptarmigans and other critters move freely, leaving only tracks in the snow to announce their passing. I wanted something new. Even if it means I will be slogging through snow and 60 below cold to do it. Libbie Martin is a freelance writer who moved to Fairbanks, Alaska, from Placer County last year. She was a copy editor at the Fairbanks Daily NewsMiner, and is now freelancing on her own. She lives in a neat old house on the Chena River with her chow-chow, Ling, who thinks God invented snow just for her. She can be reached at (907)347.2422 or lmartinburk@yahoo.com. Libbie Martin, freelance writer, and her dog, Ling, as they begin their 3,600-mile journey from Roseville, California, to Fairbanks, Alaska, on May 29, 2005. Perspectives July/August 2006 35 OF People PRINTING Presses Performance AUBURN PRINTERS Printing Partner of the Arts Council’s Perspectives 13020 Earhart Ave. Auburn, CA 95602 530.885.9674 916.632.1946 www.auburnprint.com THE ARTS COUNCIL OF PLACER COUNTY 808 Lincoln Way Auburn, California 95603-4807 Non-Profit Org. U. S. Postage PAID Auburn, CA Permit #150
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