Tuesday, February 15, 2011

The Long Island Violin Shop

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The Long Island Violin Shop
 
On Friday, February 25th at 7 pm at the 
Long Island Violin Shop:  

!Flamenco!  

Features the flamenco-themed poetry of Sandy McIntosh and Annabelle Moseley, 
and the Spanish guitar of Gerry Saulter.
It will be the February event of our Fourth Friday Studio Series, 
sponsored by String Poet.


It will be an exciting night, filled with a tribute to everything Spanish/flamenco. 
 
We will fill the studio with sounds and images of duende to heat the chills of winter.  
Admission is $5  
Open mic poetry to follow.
 
The Long Island Violin Shop
8 Elm Street
Huntington, NY 11743

 
You May Like the Long Island Violin Shop on facebook
 

Friday, February 11, 2011

PARRISH ART MUSEUM

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT:  Mark Segal
                  631-283-2118, ext 22
                  segalm@parrishart.org

RIGOLETTO AGAIN?
PARRISH PRESENTS NEW VERSION FILMED IN THE STREETS AND PALACES OF MANTUA, WITH PLACIDO DOMINGO IN THE TITLE ROLE


SOUTHAMPTON, NY 2/11/2011 — Giuseppe Verdi’s opera Rigoletto is one of the best known and most performed works in the opera canon. As part of Emerging Pictures’ Opera in Cinema series, the Parrish Art Museum is presenting a unique interpretation of Verdi’s masterpiece on Sunday, February 20, at 2 pm. This version, also known as Rigoletto in Mantua, was filmed not in an opera house but in the streets, alleyways, palaces, and courtyards of Mantua over a two-day period in 2010 by noted Italian film director Marco Bellocchio.
          The real Palazzo Ducale of Mantua, replete with Andrea Mantegna’s early Renaissance ceiling frescoes, is only one star of this production. Placido Domingo, who has performed the tenor role of the Duke of Mantua many times, here undertakes the baritone role of Rigoletto. According to Domingo, “When [producer] Andrea Andermann invited me to interpret the part of Rigoletto, I replied that there were so many good baritones in the world who could sing it. But Andrea said that he wasn’t looking for a baritone, but rather for the Rigoletto whom I, Placido Domingo, could bring to life.” The role of the Duke is played by tenor Vittorio Grigolo, who is one of the hottest young opera stars performing today.
          According to Anne Ozorio of Opera Today, “Realism never comes more authentic than this Rigoletto filmed live on location in Mantua, Italy…Just as Verdi indicated, each Act unfolds at the correct time of day, in the place indicated in the libretto. No ordinary theatre has the capacity to create a production as loyal to the composer’s instructions as this.” Tickets to Rigoletto are $14 for Parrish members, $17 for nonmembers. The running time is 153 minutes.

The Museum's programs are made possible, in part, with public funds from the New York State Council on the Arts, celebrating 50 years of building strong, creative communities in New York State's 62 counties, and the property taxpayers from the Southampton School District and the Tuckahoe Common School District.


About the Parrish Art Museum

The Parrish Art Museum is an American art museum located in Southampton, New York. Founded in 1897, the museum celebrates the artistic legacy of Long Island’s East End, one of America’s most vital creative centers. Since the mid 1950s the Museum has grown from a small village art gallery into an important art museum with a collection of more than 2,600 works of art from the nineteenth century to the present. It includes such contemporary painters and sculptors as John Chamberlain, Chuck Close, Eric Fischl, April Gornik, Elizabeth Peyton, as well as such masters as Dan Flavin, Roy Lichtenstein, Jackson Pollock, Lee Krasner, and Willem de Kooning. The Parrish houses among of the world’s most important collections of works by the preeminent American Impressionist William Merritt Chase and by the groundbreaking post-war American realist painter Fairfield Porter. A vital cultural resource serving a diverse audience, the Parrish organizes and presents changing exhibitions and offers a dynamic schedule of creative and engaging public programs including lectures, films, performances, concerts, and studio classes for all ages. On July 19, 2010, the Parrish broke ground on a new building designed by internationally acclaimed architects Herzog & de Meuron. The 34,500-square-foot facility will triple the Museum’s current exhibition space and allow for the simultaneous presentation of loan exhibitions and installations drawn from the permanent collection.

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Friday, February 4, 2011

Long Island Black Artists Association

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Long Island Black Artists Association
February 6 – March 25
Molloy College Art Gallery
Artists Choose Artists

The Molloy College Art Gallery will host an "Artists Choose Artists," exhibition. The event is based on the mentoring of established artists with young community artists. 

Artists Reception: Sunday February 6, 2011
3-5 PM
1000 Hempstead Avenue 
Rockville Centre, NY 11571
(516) 678-5000

Monday, January 31, 2011

Jane Leslie Southampton Sunset Piano Solos





Jane Leslie composed several pieces for and played in Artmosphere in 2008 and also, performed at the first Long Island Fringe Festival in 2009. 

We would love to have Jane perform at this year's fringe. FRINGE FORCE 3

Friday, January 21, 2011

Milton Avery at Nassau County Museum of Art


Milton Avery
& THE END OF MODERNISM
January 22, 2011 through May 8, 2011
I try to construct a picture in which shapes, spaces, colors, form
a set of unique relationships, independent of any subject matter.
At the same time I try to capture and translate the excitement
and emotion aroused in me by the impact with the original idea.
- Milton Avery

Milton Avery & the End of Modernism looks at work by the artist who brought the sketch, with its spontaneity, movement and fleetingness, to the status of a finished painting. The exhibition features Avery’s intense saturated color fields, the simplification of form, and figures that emphasize the flatness of canvas surface. Milton Avery & the End of Modernism opens on January 22, 2011 and remains on view through May 8, 2011. It is organized for NCMA by Director Karl E. Willers, Ph.D. The exhibition was organized by the Neuberger Museum of Art, Purchase College, State University of New York. It was funded, in part, by the New York State Council for the Arts, a state agency; the Friends of the Neuberger Museum of Art; and the Westchester Arts Council. For presentation at NCMA, the exhibition was expanded as Milton Avery & the End of Modernism.
This exhibition examines the contributions of Milton Avery as a significant figurative painter from the late 1920s through the early 1960s. Milton Avery & the End of Modernism takes a concerted look at the development of Avery’s signature paintings from his idiosyncratic drawing style that captures the essence of a person, place or time. According to Dr. Willers, this places Avery’s work within a long history of modernist practice that recognizes the artist’s sketch as a “final, complete and a self-sufficient work of art.” Within the emergence of his avant-garde style, said Dr. Willers, Avery can be seen as one of the preeminent American painters of his time, exerting great influence among both his contemporaries and subsequent generations of artists.
Further assessing Avery’s place in American art history, Patterson Sims wrote in an essay for the Whitney Museum of American Art: “Early in Avery's career, when Social Realism and American Scene painting were the prevailing artistic styles, the semi-abstract tendencies in his work were viewed by many as too radical. In the 1950s, a period dominated by Abstract Expressionism, he was overlooked by critics because of his adherence to recognizable subject matter. Nevertheless, his work, with its emphasis on color, was important to many younger artists, particularly to Mark Rothko, Adolph Gottlieb, Barnett Newman, Helen Frankenthaler, and other Color Field painters.”
The museum is sponsoring several informative programs in connection with Milton Avery & the End of Modernism, among them two Tea & Tour events featuring exclusive docent-led exhibition tours with introductions by Dr. Willers; an illustrated talk by art historian Charles A. Riley II, Ph.D.; and a series of three lectures on the exhibition by Dr. Willers. For details, please visit the Events page of this site.

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Thursday, January 20, 2011

The First Annual C2 Gallery LONG ISLAND ARTIST INVITATIONAL

  
C2 image both companies
January 22- 2011
LONG ISLAND ARTIST INVITATIONAL
 A show dedicated to established
and up and coming artists
that live and work on Long Island 

PLEASE NOTE
 THIS IS OUR LAST EXHIBIT ON MAIN STREET BEFORE WE MOVE
THE GALLERY TO THE NEW 20 MILLION DOLLAR
ART SPACE FACILITY ON TERRY STREET!!!
C2 Fine Art Gallery
OPENING ARTIST RECEPTION
DATE: January 22-2011
 TIME: 3pm to 8pm
LOCATION: 22 W Main St / Patchogue
Running through February 26 2011
 Mon through Fri
9am to 4pm
Weekends by Appt.



ARTIST SHOWING


Brian Neuberger
Dawn Lee
Jay Varney
Jillian Rennar
Jim Sabiston
Joseph Heidecker
Liz Macchio
Robert Perinuzzi
Sarah Foster
Sharon Way Howard
William Thierfelder




Pop
Liz Macchio
 "Pop"


yearbook series
Joseph Heidecker
 "Yearbook Series"
San Fran
Jay Varney
 "San Fran"




Evening Stroll
Sharon Way Howard
"Evening Stroll"




 Website: www.c2gallery.com





C squared Gallery
22 West Main Street
Patchogue, New York 11772
631-627-6500

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Long Island Fringe Festival

For Immediate Release                                                     Contact –Long Island Fringe Festival
January 2011                                                                                                                 


The Artists Group 
presents

Long Island’s best kept secret is out. Operation “Fringe Force 3” is ready to accept applications for the 2011 festival which will be September 9, 10, 11, on the Campus of Long Island University at C.W.Post in Brookville, hosted by the School of Theater, Film & Dance. Fringe festival participants are chosen on a first come first served basis, by the deadline of May 31, 2011. If the number of applications exceeds the available venue space, a lottery system will be employed.

Visual artists and artisans will have the opportunity to sell their art in a marketplace atmosphere. The public is invited to observe the art & sculpture up close & personal, along with the artists themselves.

Movie makers: apply for outdoor film screenings. Each evening rekindle the nostalgia of Long Island in the heyday of drive-in movies. Paumanok Poets, theater, music, spontaneous improv and dance complete the array of applications that are being received. If you are a performer or artisan, please send in your application by May 31, 2011 to be included in this year’s Long Island Fringe Festival.

This is the only fringe on LI. Long Island’s best cutting edge, avant-garde
entertainment happening.

Participant applications are $75.00 including 10’ x 10’ selling spaces.
Sales from these spaces will remit 10% of the gross sales.
Tables are FREE to NFPs to distribute your information

 Deadline for applications is May 31 - 2011

For more information regarding anything contact – fringe@debbydoll.com

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Photography Club of Long Island


Photography Club of Long Island
First Juried Exhibit - Sale

 January 9 Reception
4-7PM

Haven Art
29 Haven Avenue
Port Washington

944-6765
For more information - 

info@portviewsphotography.com 
516-944-5604

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Friday, December 31, 2010

New Years Eve

Good New Years wishes to ALL

Stay safe - New Years Eve RIDES

Free taxi rides are being offered this holiday season - 

to avoid the dangers of drunk driving. 

 In Nassau: 516-326-9090 

In Suffolk: 631-265-2727 

(Lindy's Taxi)

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New Years Eve

New Years Eve at Cinema Arts Centre

Film, Light Refreshments & Champagne at Midnight!

Friday, December 31
$20 Members / $25 Public / No Refunds
Refreshments: 6pm - Midnight

Watch exciting new films!
(The King’s Speech, Black Swan, Rabbit Hole)

Enjoy tasty light refreshments in the Sky Room Cafe,
& share a Champagne Toast while we all watch the big ball in 
Times Square drop at midnight on the Cinema giant TV screen!
Enjoy a Champagne Toast While We Watch the Ball Drop at Midnight!