Volume I No.10 | March 5, 2019
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ARTS NEWS
& PROFILES
FROM
FLORIDA'S
TREASURE COAST & BEYOND
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Sharing our wealth of arts and culture.
We're having an ARTS BLAST!
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In This Issue
Under the Oaks - Lighthouse Plein Air Festival - Anita Prentice - Barn Theatre - The Press Journal and Vero Beach at 100
Calendar Listings
EASY LINKS
Guidelines for submitting to ARTS BLAST
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Welcome to the third month of ARTS BLAST!
I'm still having fun and don't see that ending any time soon. Let me know if you like what you're reading.
This week I got to interview two old-timers at TCPalm. (Sorry Larry and Kelly, but you can't deny it when the number hits 30.) I got some tips on plein air painting and somehow figured out how to stop Auto-correct from changing it to plain air. Full disclosure: I didn't figure it out. It just gave up.
Anita Prentice satisfied my curiosity about handling those huge mosaic benches she creates and I got the lowdown on this year's Under the Oaks. And don't get me started on Sanibel and the annual Shell Festival, this week's Road Trip!
By request, I've listed guidelines and suggestions for submitting information to Arts Blast and community calendars at the end of the page. In case you don't get that far: For those submitting events to calendars that allow you to input the information online yourself,
make sure to include all dates and times in the Description as well as wherever else they're called for. On some community calendars, a three-day event could be listed on each of the days but if a reader doesn't know it's three days and you don't add it to the body of the announcement, you might be losing visitors.
Limited advertising is now available in Arts Blast! Email about the end-of-season special.
Recycling works. Help reach more readers and spread the word. Please share.
Arts Blast! is dedicated with gratitude to Helen Miller, Angelina Christaldi, and Bill Miller.
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To opt out of receiving this newsletter, "unsubscribe" at the bottom of the page or
send an email to willi@willimiller.com with "unsubscribe" the subject.
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A note from Community Church of Vero Beach: The
Imani Milele Children’s Choir
concert scheduled for March 24 has been canceled.
Terry Barber fans and friends on the Treasure Coast: He's back and will be at the Lyric Theatre March 9 at 7 p.m.
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Under the Oaks in Vero Beach
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One of the Treasure Coast’s iconic events returns this weekend for its annual three-day art bash.
Vero Beach Art Club’s Under the Oaks Fine Arts & Crafts Show
draws hundreds of applicants and tens of thousands of visitors to Riverside Park every March. The club’s first outdoor show was held in 1947, even before the name was Vero Beach Art Club. That show became Under the Oaks Fine Arts & Crafts Show in 1951.
Categories this year run almost from A to Z. Watercolor and wood round out the list that includes acrylic, glass, graphics/pastels, jewelry, mixed media/other, oil, photography/digital art, pottery/ceramics, printmaking, and sculpture.
As usual, applicants sent slides of their work and show displays from all over the country and other parts of the world for the jurying process. Quite a few of last year’s award winners will be back in their booths, joined by a fair number of new faces, according to a club spokesperson. A portion of the available spots is saved for Vero Beach Art Club members every year.
Alicia Quinn and Jodi Woodall are co-chairs for the 2019 show. They understand that looking at and buying art can be hard work that requires sustenance and have lined up almost a dozen vendors for the food court. Wild Thyme Catering, Wilke’s 14 Bones, Toti’s Homemade, and Toni’s Gyros are among them and, of course, the Kettle Corn Cabin. The full list is on the
Art Club’s website
.
There will be two packing and shipping services on site to make handling even the largest purchases easy to deal with. Leave it to the experts and enjoy the day.
If you go:
Vero Beach Art Club’s Under the Oaks Fine Arts & Crafts Show
Riverside Park, 3001 Riverside Park Dr., Vero Beach
Friday March 8 - Saturday March 9 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Sunday March 10 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Under the Oaks is free and open to the public; however, Riverside Park is a city-regulated property.
Please note:
The Art Show does not allow animals in the park or left unattended in vehicles, so remember to leave your pets comfortably at home, please.
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Images from UNDER THE OAKS 2018
Photo Credit Vero Beach Art Club - Karen Marsh
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Lighthouse ArtCenter Plein Air Festival
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Here in Florida, we know a lot about being outside in the open air. We fish, hike, swim, sail, surf, even jump out of airplanes into it.
For almost three dozen painters, in the open air will have another meaning this weekend as they gather at the Lighthouse ArtCenter in Tequesta for the 6th annual Plein Air Festival. Of that group, 10 are Florida artists, from as far south as you can get, Key West, to Jacksonville. Chris Kling will be there from Stuart; Karen Leffel-Massengill, Port St. Lucie; and Hugh O’Neill, Palm Beach Gardens. The complete list of artists and where they’re coming from are on the Lighthouse website,
LighthouseArts.org
. You’ll also find links to their individual websites.
The co-chairs of the the eight-day event, Jane O’Neill and Laurel Brower, have set up what they say is the largest of its kind in South Florida. Cash awards are more than $15,000. The judge is last year’s grand prize winner, Jeff Markowsky. The artists won’t be the only winners, though. There’s a raffle with proceeds benefiting the Plein Air Festival and winning tickets with unique prizes, one-on-one plein air painting sessions with artists Chris Kling and Manon Sander. A third ticket wins a framed, original Leffel-Massengill plein air painting.
The artists will be painting all week in different locations in Martin and Palm Beach County, with demonstrations by an artist at each one. Wet paintings will be on display and for sale at Lighthouse ArtCenter Gallery. A ticketed VIP Collectors gathering is at the gallery Friday evening. VIP and general admission tickets are available.
If you like a little more action than watching someone else painting the lush outdoors, try Battle of the Brushes Saturday, March 16, at the Gallery. Jennifer Chaparro, Lighthouse spokesperson, said three of the artists will paint the same picture while chatting back and forth. Well, maybe it isn’t as exciting as jumping out of an airplane but Chaparro said it was so much fun last year, “we’re bringing it back again.”
The deadline for the March 9 Kids’ and Teen Paint Out registration has been extended until March 7. It’s at the Lighthouse ArtCenter School of Art in Tequesta and is something new for “serious art students in middle and high school (ages 13-18),” Chaparro said. Supplies are included with registration and participation is free. Artists Markowsky and Ralph Papa will take the kids outside and teach them how to paint en plein air like the pros.
The Quick Draw contest is at Flagler Park in Stuart March 10, 9-11 a.m. Registration for all artists begins at 8. They get set up and ready to raise their brushes for a two-hour painting session, with judging and prizes at high noon. Get the full schedule online at
LighthouseArts.org.
Lighthouse ArtCenter
373 Tequesta Drive
Tequesta
561-746-3101
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Images from the 2018 Plein Arts Festival
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Unless you know Anita Prentice, you’d probably be hard pressed to find an artist who hopes you’ll sit on her work. Prentice is the Fort Pierce artist responsible for about 175 mosaic benches found in St.Lucie County at bus stops, in parks, and tucked away in spots where someone might need a place to stop and ponder life’s meaning. She said, “I like the idea that my art can bring about rest for someone.”
Prentice always knew she wanted to be creative. As a youngster, she made up plays and was lucky enough to have a good art teacher in high school. In her coastal Michigan hometown she was surrounded by artists and musicians. “I always felt a yearning,” she said.
Studying theater and music in college didn’t keep her from going off on a different track. “Somehow, mosaic was a natural for me,” she said. Prentice’s work with bits of broken glass and tile began “with a fish mount in a dumpster. I refurbished and covered it with broken mirror.“ She’s quick to point out that a broken mirror is bad luck only if it’s an accident. “I break it with a purpose.”
That was 20 years ago. Her life in mosaics took an interesting turn after she did one with trees, plants, and animals on 10 feet of wall at an old swimming pool. “After the pool I was asked to mosaic Alfred Hair’s grave marker, the first of five of The Highwaymen grave markers I have done to date.”
Then came the benches. Prentice said, “Through grants, the arts council and some creative commissioners I was offered the project of 50 benches, then 50 more, and the numbers grew from there.”
Prentice’s materials list includes stained glass, tile, metal, rocks, found objects, and some of her original clay pieces. She paints the grout between the pieces, making it “an element of the design and not just filling in between the glass.”
The benches are molded, cured and assembled in Prentice’s studio in a historic building in Fort Pierce. Weighing about 1,500 pounds each, they could present a moving problem, but she said, “My contract always says whoever buys the benches picks them up and installs them.”
Prentice said she still doesn’t know where this art form will take her. “Saying yes to new projects is a vehicle. I still feel like a student. I know I will always want to stay out of the comfort zone … I will always want to challenge myself.”
Her public art can be seen throughout St. Lucie county and she does several shows each year. One of those is March 29 at Heathcote Botanical Gardens. She’ll also be on hand for Heathcote’s plant sale March 30 - 31.
Prentice knows her St. Lucie County neighbors “really have taken possession of these benches and feel protective. What a lovely feeling for an artist.”
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Another 100th Anniversary
Vero Beach at 100 as captured by the Press Journal, also 100
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Is it a coincidence that Vero Beach is turning 100 at the same time as the newspaper that has documented its growth? Probably not. People tend to depend on a free press to let them know what’s happening around them. The Press Journal was born from a merger of the Vero Press, first published Sept. 13, 1919, and the newer Vero Journal.
At 100, a healthy dose of nostalgia is called for and a couple of longtime newspaper staffers were up for the job. Larry Reisman, community editor and columnist for 34 years, and Kelly Rogers, who began her career at the Press Journal 30 years ago and is now visuals editor, did the research and pulled out what they felt had to be included in a city and newspaper retrospective.
Reisman said, “It was not easy to narrow 100 years of a community to about 144 pages.” They began by looking at a timeline of major events. “Did we have pictures or pages that covered the story? We wanted a diverse set of images, representing many groups, events and traditions.”
Quality photojournalism was import, he said. That’s where Rogers comes in. Things have changed a since her first day on the job as a darkroom technician. “I hand-developed black-and-white film every day, and hand printed those as well. We had a small machine that developed color slide film, 5 rolls at a time. It took about 45 minutes for that film to process.” This might sound like science fiction history to young digital photographers but consider that it was only 30 years ago.
Around 2000, Rogers said, the newsroom went fully digital. “Today, as part of our digital-first effort, all of our photographers are outfitted with two camera bodies that shoot both pictures and video, a variety of lenses/focal lengths, a laptop, microphones, wires, wires and more wires.”
Reisman’s view of the area has broadened by necessity. “When I got here, if you were a mile or two outside city limits, you were in the middle of nowhere – citrus, cows and snakes. It’s quite different (now).” The growth has been fairly orderly from the centers of Vero Beach and Sebastian, he said. Still, “Despite county leaders’ best intentions, traffic the past couple of years seems to have outpaced some roads’ ability to handle it.”
There’s a bright side to the growth, Reisman said. “Many wealthy people have moved to our community and been philanthropic, building amazing things at such amenities as Riverside Theatre, the Museum or Art, Cleveland Clinic Indian River, McKee Botanical Garden and more.” They’ve also helped many people in need through community agencies.
With 65 years of service between them, neither Reisman or Rogers is hinting at retirement, although they probably won't be around for the next commemorative book.
With the development of a 24/7, digital first newsroom, what might a bicentennial book look like? Rogers wonders if there will still be books at all, or something that hasn’t even been developed yet. “I sure hope we still have books. If nothing else, I hope that in the last 30 years, I’ve organized enough visual content within our organization that some of it can be used to help remember this time in our beautiful little city by the sea.”
Reisman and Rogers will be at the
Vero Beach Book Center
March 7 at 4 p.m. with their look back in time,
Press Journal: 100 Years Covering Indian River County 1919-2019
. Everyone’s invited to bring personal memories to share.
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Press Journal through the years
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The Barn Theatre in Stuart got its start, in a way, because of censorship and some of that good old “We can do it, kids!” attitude seen in a few Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland movies of the 1930s and ‘40s.
It all began in an adult education class that became the Martin County Players. The drama class came under the school board’s jurisdiction and when a play that involved drugs was selected by the group, they were told it couldn’t be performed at the Instructional Center of Stuart. They were offered a temporary home at what is now Florida Institute of Technology, known then as St. Joseph’s College. the production was a success and the Martin County Players became The Renegade Players.
Back at the Instructional Center, the troupe felt frustrated by the physical limitations of the space as well as the censorship. Luck was in their corner when a small piece of land with a barn on it became available and the seller and board of directors took a huge leap of faith.
The owner, a Mr. Bussert, agreed to hold a mortgage that stipulated he would receive half of the proceeds from the shows for three years and then the balance would be due. The board of directors personally signed for a loan to make the down payment.
It was a rocky start but the residents of Martin County stepped up and donated time and hard work and offered loans. The barn had been used in the Bussert Rose Farm business for packing flowers, so the first thing to go were the refrigeration rooms.
Everything that goes into a theatre was done by volunteers. The last row of seats, bought for $2 each, literally at a fire sale, was installed the day before the first show. That show, “I Do! I Do!,” opened at the beginning of 1971 and could well have been titled “We Did It!
We Did It!
”
1974 was a big year for the newly named The Barn. The mortgage was paid off and the Summer Theatre for Young People was created. These days, it’s the Camp Barn Theatre, where young people learn the ins and outs of theatre onstage and behind the scenes.
The all-volunteer crew in the theatre’s 48th year produces six 11-performance shows every season as well as special events. The next show at the Barn is Jekyll & Hyde The Musical, March 7-24. Jeanette Mazzella has put out a call for directors for the 2019-2020 season. If that’s up your alley, send her an email at
JazzyMazzy@comcast.net
by March 21 with a letter of intent and a resume. It’s a little more complicated for anyone interested in directing a musical. Details are on the website.
https://www.barn-theatre.com/2019-2020-season-directors
.
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Auditions for Just a Little Crazy are March 17-19.
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If you go:
The Barn Theatre
2400 SE Ocean Blvd.
Stuart, FL
772-287-4884
barnth@barn-theatre.com
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ROAD TRIP! Sanibel Shell Festival
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Something that intrigues people of any age who are within reach of a shoreline has been celebrated annually for 82 years on Sanibel, a small island off Florida's west coast near Fort Myers. Travelers, note that the causeway connecting the island and the mainland is a toll road going to Sanibel-Captiva but it's free to leave.
This is Shellebration Week! on Sanibel, where shell seekers and shell crafters will gather for a festive three-day event. The 82nd annual Shell Show and Festival is a combined effort of two non-profit organizations, the Sanibel Community Association and the Sanibel-Captiva Shell Club.
The Sanibel Community Association (SCA) will sell local shells and shell art outside the Sanibel Community House, which benefits from a raffle and revenue earned through those sales.
The show and competition are inside, with more craft and specimen shells, books and anything shell related for sale. For those serious about shells, José Leal, curator and science director at the Bailey-Matthews National Shell Museum, will hold shell I.D. clinics Thursday and Friday mornings.
Joyce Matthys, who exhibits in the scientific division of the shell show, said the number of exhibits is determined by the space available. The majority of artistic division exhibitors are not from Sanibel. They’ve come from as far as Japan, New Zealand, the Caribbean and Europe, Matthys said.
While talking to people for this Road Trip!, I learned that I was as wrong as I could be in thinking sailors of the 1800s made the Sailors Valentines for their sweethearts back home. I have no idea why I thought they would have the time and opportunity to gather all the tiny shells needed and then glue them into a delicate pattern while working the lines on a heaving wooden sailing ship. Just a romantic notion, I guess.
As I’ve recently learned, Sailors Valentines were generally purchased in souvenir shops, mainly in Barbados, a heavily trafficked seaport for ocean-going ships of the time. From the
Nantucket Sailors Valentines
website: “The Valentines were made in octagonal wooden shadow boxes from the local seashells. Traditional designs include hearts, flowers, star shapes, rosettes, pictures and sentimental messages such as, ‘To My Sweet-Heart’ and ‘Forget-Me-Not’.”
Profits from the show go to a scholarship fund. By last year, grants and scholarships had totaled around $29,000. A self-sustaining fellowship averaging $12,000 annually is given to a graduate student at the University of South Florida College of Marine Science by the Sanibel-Captiva Shell Club/Mary & Al Bridell Memorial Fellowship in Marine Science.
If You Go:
82nd Annual Sanibel Shell Festival
2019
Mar.7-8, Thursday-Friday 9:00-5:00
Mar.9, Saturday 9:00-4:00
For your calendar: The festival is held the first Thursday, Friday and Saturday of March, not the first weekend in March.
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Lenten Poetry and Organ Series
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Join organist Andrew Galuska and nationally recognized poets in preparation for Easter season with organ literature and the spoken word through poetry at
Community Church of Vero Beach
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The annual Lenten Organ and Poetry series begins March 7 at 11 a.m. and continues every Thursday until Easter week.
Guest readers include Alfred Corn, Rhode Island; Gianna Russo, Tampa; Sean Sexton, Vero Beach; Casey Baggott, Vero Beach; Joel Nelson, Texas; and Mia Leonin, Miam.
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On The Calendar
Not
a complete list of things to do - This is a very busy place!
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March 7
, 6-9 p.m. -
A New Language by Pablo and Harak Rubio
at
Raw Space
, 1795 Old Dixie Hwy., Vero Beach.
March 8,
6:30 p.m. - The
Majestic 11
theatre in Vero Beach offers a free screening of "RGB."
Sunday 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Free
NO PETS ALLOWED
March 9-10 -
Indian River Lagoon juried fine art show at Crab E Bill's Indian River Seafood benefiting the Clean Water Coalition of IRC. 11-6 Saturday, 11-4 Sunday.
www.sebastianriverartclub.com
March 9
, 6-10 p.m.Habitat for Humanity's
Jamaican Me Crazy
at Sun Aviation Hangar, Vero Beach.
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Brevard County (cont.)
March 8-10
-
Guys and Dolls
runs at Cocoa campus of Eastern Florida State College.
March 1-17
weekends - "The Best Little Whorehouse" is at
Surfside Playhouse
in Cocoa Beach. 321-783-3127
March 7
, 7 p.m. -
Space Coast Symphony Orchestra
presents a free community outdoor concert, Music of the Night, at Space Coast Daily Park, 6091 Stadium Pkwy., Viera. Parking is $5.
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Pineapple Playhouse
community theatre,
700 W Weatherbee Rd,
Fort Pierce is looking for directors.
March 8,
8 p.m.
- Legally Blonde the Musical is at the
Sunrise Theatre
in Fort Pierce.
March 9
- The Australian Bee Gees Show is at the
Sunrise Theatre
in Fort Pierce, 8 p.m.
The Jazz Market is
every Saturday
, rain or shine, along the waterfront in downtown Fort Pierce.
________________________
Martin County
March 10
, 4 & 7 p.m. - Jay and the Americans are at the
Lyric Theatre
in Stuart.
March 11, 7 p.m. - Jazz in the Sanctuary has the FDO Big Band at Episcopal Church of the Advent, 4484 SW Citrus Blvd., Palm City. Free.
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Information is to
be received in an email no later than the Friday before publication.
Use this format:
Who (organization)
What (Event)
When (dates, time)
Where (Name of venue, address)
Why (a brief description of the purpose)
Web address
Contact for public (for tickets, questions, etc.)
Then add a short, descriptive release if available.
Send only one photo, with caption, until more are requested.
Media contact with email for my followup (not for publication)
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Here's a suggestion for uploading information to calendars that allow you to input your own events.
In the
body
of the listing, sometimes called
Description
, make sure to include all dates in each upload. For example: Performances are on March 12-31; or the exhibit is open March 12, 14, 15, and 17. That information should be in all dates you post individually.
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Copyright
©2019 Willi Miller's ARTS BLAST!, all rights reserved.
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