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April 04, 2008

Polis Is This: Charles Olson and the Persistence of Place

Polis Is This: Charles Olson and the Persistence of Place
A film by Henry Ferrini & Ken Riaf
7:00 p.m., Thursday, April 17, 2008
Fine Arts Theatre, 36 Biltmore Ave., Downtown Asheville
Admission: $7 BMCM+AC members + students with ID / $9 non-members

Filmmaker Henry Ferrini will be in town for the screening and will answer questions afterward.

"A beautifully composed homage to one of the few truly monumental American poets of our times." -- Jack Hirschman, Poet Laureate of San Francisco

“The best film about an American poet ever made.” -- Bill Corbett, The Boston Phoenix

"...an impressionistic, yet informative and moving document about the act of creation that neither shies away nor oversimplifies." -- Michael Kelleher, ArtVoice

Just in time for National Poetry Month in April, the Black Mountain College Museum + Arts Center, The Captain’s Bookshelf and Western Carolina University present a striking new film about Charles Olson, poet and charismatic leader of Black Mountain College during its final years, at 7:00 p.m. on Thursday, April 17th. Polis is This: Charles Olson and the Persistence of Place wrestles with the six foot eight inch 275lb colossus of poetry through a visually and intellectually exciting mix of word and image. Filmmaker Henry Ferrini will be present at the April 17th screening at the Fine Arts Theatre to answer questions following the film.

Charles Olson saw Gloucester, Massachusetts as the perfect modern reflection of the ancient Greek city-state, a polis — 30,000 people shaped by their own geography and pulled by their own powerful sense of history. His poetry transformed the isolated fishing town into a microcosm of America energized by extraordinary confluences that connected it to all other places. For Olson, all time was likewise contemporaneous. By taking his readers back to the beginnings of history, he returned to the present with fresh understanding of how to create things anew. Polis Is This illuminates Olson’s life and work by exploring such connections and imaginative journeys. The film traces Olson’s process of self- discovery and makes it clear why Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg and many other literary figures traveled to Gloucester to sit with the father of post-modernism — the man they called the “big fire source.”

Polis Is This combines interviews, archival footage, commentary and animation into a single voice full of insight and visual beauty. The film allows the audience access to the subject even as it captures the zeitgeist of a formative era in literary history. The 60-minute documentary features John Malkovich, as well as interviews with poets and scholars Robert Creeley, Ed Sanders, Diane di Prima, Gerrit Lansing, John Sinclair, Pete Seeger, Chuck Stein, Anne Waldman, Charles Boer, Susan Thackrey, Amiri Baraka, Robin Blaser, Michael Rumaker, Jonathan Williams, Ammiel Alcalay, John Stilgoe, Vincent Ferrini and the poet’s son, Charles Peter Olson. An eclectic soundtrack puts together Boston’s grandfather of punk rock Willie “Loco” Alexander with Black Mountain College avant-garde composer Stephan Wolpe along with a little banjo picking from Pete Seeger. The film has screened to enthusiastic audiences in New York, Cambridge and San Francisco.

Director's Statement

All my life I’ve heard about Charles Olson. As a child around the holiday dinner table I’d listen to tales of a giant who walked the midnight streets of Gloucester, Massachusetts. In school, poets and writers asked if I was related to the Ferrini in The Maximus Poems.

"Back home in Gloucester, I’d crack the 600 plus page Maximus Poems to learn a little something about myself and my place in this place. I wondered why Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, Stan Brakhage, Diane di Prima, and Amiri Baraka made pilgrimage to Olson’s $29-a-month flat. What was it about this postman’s son, a Harvard trained historian, and the power of his imagination, that made a generation of poets and artists see him as 'the big fire source.'

"How and why America’s first fishing town became the portal to Olson’s world became a mystery to solve. The poet’s methodology, one that he borrowed from the Greeks, became my investigative technique as well. Istorin means to find out for oneself. It is the root of our word history and it became the route that I followed.

"In 1995, during the first Charles Olson Festival held in Gloucester, writer Ken Riaf and I put shoulder to oar and set out to find out what all the fuss was about. We talked to professors in the academy and people on the street. We searched in university archives and found Olson’s friends and family. In Polis Is This I’ve focused decades of filmmaking experience to address an even longer held question about our relationship to the place that contains us."

Henry Ferrini, Gloucester
January 25, 2007

Co-Sponsored by the Black Mountain College Museum + Arts Center, The Captain’s Bookshelf and the College of Fine and Performing Arts & Fine Art Museum, in collaboration with the Stage and Screen Motion Picture and Television Production program, Western Carolina University.

For more information contact Alice Sebrell at 828-350-8484.

2nd Annual Burlesque & Sideshow Festival

Future of Tradition Productions, in association with Arts 2 People, presents Asheville's second annual Americana Burlesque and Sideshow Festival (ABSFest). In 2007, ABSFest awakened the spirit of the bawdy, bold and satirical arts with resounding success. Over 500 festival attendees were dazzled!
For 2008, ABSfest is back: bigger, bolder and bawdier. This event is most deliciously Asheville.

FESTIVAL EVENTS

Red Carpet Vaudeville Gala: the event kick-off party

What: ABSFest kicks off with the rolling vaudeville theatre Asheville adores, LAZOOM Watch for LaZoom as they spirit the glamorous stars around downtown, passing out goodies, selling tickets, and stunning the tourists. Follow the stars to the Fine Arts Theatre, as they walk the red carpet, brave the Paparazzi, and join the throng at the ABSfest Vaudeville Gala. The evening offers scintillating live performance AND the Southeast Premiere of 'Underbelly', a documentary about international burlesque and bellydance superstar, Princess Farhana that contains footage of ABSfest 2007.
When: Friday, June 27th 2008. Downtown 8-9 PM; Fine Arts Theatre doors @ 9:30 PM
Where: downtown, then to the Fine Arts Theatre, Biltmore Avenue
Cost: Red Carpet Vaudeville Gala: $12

ABSfest Spectacular Cabaret: the main event & showcase extravaganza! Sure to titillate!
What: a fresh display of nationally acclaimed burlesque performances, sideshow freakiness and vaudeville flair. Burlesque, hula wonders, pain management, glass walking, brisk bullwhips, Siamese twins and more a luscious cabaret ruckus after party. Headlining is Baltimore's award winning acrobatic burlesque super duo, Trixie Little & the Evil Hate Monkey, Syrens of the South, Panty Raid, Big Mama D, and much more. Emceed by Mab, Just Mab. Complete with mystics, vendors and more carnie appeal. After party with The Mezmer Society. Last year's show sold 500 tickets! The Not-to-Miss show of the year.
When: Saturday, June 28, 2008. Doors 7 PM; show 8 PM.
Where: The Orange Peel
Cost: $25 advance, $30 at the door

Workshops
What: Get your freak on! Workshops in: beginning burlesque, advanced burlesque, boylesque, hula hoop, bullwhip, stage makeup, costuming, creating an arts-based business, acrobatic balance, stagecraft, swashbuckling, fire performance, and more
When: Saturday & Sunday June 28 & 29 2008 from 10 AM – 5 PM
Where: French Broad Co-op Movement & Learning Center, 90 Biltmore Avenue; select workshops @ the Orange Peel, TBA
Cost: $20 per workshops; $90 for a day's worth (5)
All access festival passes available for $200 – includes admittance to everything !
Party Pass: both parties/shows: $35

www.sideshowburlesque.org

www.myspace.com/aabsfest

Some tantalizingly promising clips:

Headliners Trixie Little & The Evil Hate Monkey
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=92pGLRQpqFs&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_G3qsbv5Ths&feature=related

Whips Robert Dante & The Daring Tina
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tl31GTf-xhk&feature=related

Award winning Panty Raid
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A1UyXjBYUeQ

Juicy documentary Underbelly trailer
http://www.dikenga.com/films/underbelly/Trailer/default.asp

About Burlesque, Sideshow & Vaudeville

The satirical performance arts brought comedic entertainment and empowerment to the lower classes of American society throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. A mockery of the higher and more socially conservative classes, the vitality of Vaudeville and Burlesque were slowly eclipsed by mid-century morality laws and the advent of modern media. Sideshow harkens back to less commercial carnival days, glorifying human oddity and strange feats of willpower.
The Vaudeville Revival is a huge international movement with festivals around the world, exploring women's empowerment, questioning mainstream paradigms of 'normal', and offering unforgettable, good old fashioned American entertainment to those bold enough to pass thru those striped curtains to the midway beyond...

March 19, 2008

Honoring the Earth Series, A Benefit Art Show and Sale, at Blue Spiral 1

A benefit art show and sale, Honoring the Earth Series, will be held at Blue Spiral 1 gallery in downtown Asheville, April 1 – May 11. The opening reception, featuring a multi-media presentation, will be held at 4:30 pm on Friday, April 4, at the Fine Arts Theatre on Biltmore Avenue next door to the gallery. The cost is $20 per person to benefit the Carolina Mountain Land Conservancy (CMLC) and the Southern Appalachian Highlands Conservancy (SAHC). Reservations can be made by contacting CMLC at (828) 697-5777.

The project was designed to honor the memory of regionally recognized ceramic artist Clara "Kitty" Couch, and to raise money for land conservation in Western North Carolina. Couch was killed in an automobile accident in January 2004 while traveling overseas. Her four daughters inherited her final body of work entitled the Earth Series, large organic vessels inspired by natural forms.

After Couch’s death, her daughters worked with the Southern Appalachian Highlands Conservancy to put a post-mortem conservation easement on their mother’s beloved home in Burnsville, NC. “I have been dreaming for a few years about honoring my mother in this way, so it is truly a thrill to make it happen. Combining the show with protecting land in our precious mountains means so much to me,” said Couch’s daughter, environmental activist Katie Breckheimer.

Fifty friends and colleagues of the deceased artist have donated artwork for the show. “The response was overwhelming. My mother had a charismatic spirit that drew people into her good energy. Her friends didn’t hesitate to honor her in this way. Every art medium, from jewelry to photography, is represented in the show, and many of the artists are tying into the earth theme. The fact that the Blue Spiral 1 gallery is hosting the show during Earth Day month ties it all together,” Breckheimer said.

The opening reception for Honoring the Earth Series will include a life-of-the-artist presentation; a reading by Couch’s friend, teacher, and colleague Paulus Berensohn; and a short film by videographer and friend Jeff Goodman. Paulus Berensohn is author of Finding Your Way With Clay, a classic ceramic arts primer that inspired Couch’s career. Refreshments will be served.

March 12, 2008

Portfolio Workshop & Critique for Visual Artists

WHAT: Wendy H. Outland of WHO KNOWS ART will offer specific
guidelines for creating or strengthening your portfolio (résumé,
artist statement, price list and images). Learn proper formatting,
what to include & exclude on your résumé, and how to prepare your
documents if you are an emerging artist. Also discover how to
write an effective statement, and get tips for submitting to
galleries, festivals and juried exhibitions.

The workshop will begin with a presentation which includes handouts,
followed by Q&A and critiques with artists that bring materials.
Artists at all levels are welcome.

WHEN: 9am-11am, Saturday, March 22, 2008

WHERE: Critics' Lounge (upstairs), Fine Arts Theatre,
36 Biltmore Avenue, Asheville NC

COST: $25 cash, check or card (PayPal). Seating is limited; call
828.686.5219 to register.

Please phone or email if you have any questions.

Wendy H. Outland (aka "WHO")
WHO KNOWS ART
Consultant for Visual Artists & Arts Organizations
Post Office Box 1382, Asheville, NC 28802
Phone: 828.686.5219 office or 828.231.5355 cell
Email: info@whoknowsart.biz
Website: www.whoknowsart.biz

February 20, 2008

Portfolio Workshop & Critique for Visual Artists

WHAT:
Wendy H. Outland of WHO KNOWS ART will offer specific
guidelines for creating or strengthening your portfolio (résumé,
artist statement, price list and images). Learn proper formatting,
what to include & exclude on your résumé, and how to prepare your
documents if you are an emerging artist. Also discover how to
write an effective statement, and get tips for submitting to
galleries, festivals and juried exhibitions.

The workshop will begin with a presentation which includes handouts,
followed by Q&A and critiques with artists that bring materials.
Artists at all levels are welcome.

WHEN: 9am-11am, Saturday, February 23

WHERE: Critics' Lounge (upstairs), Fine Arts Theatre,
36 Biltmore Avenue, Asheville NC

COST: $25 cash, check or card (PayPal). Seating is limited; call
828.686.5219 to register.

Please phone or email if you have any questions.

Wendy H. Outland
WHO KNOWS ART
Consultant for Visual Artists & Arts Organizations
Post Office Box 1382, Asheville, NC 28802
Phone: 828.686.5219 office or 828.231.5355 cell
Email: info@whoknowsart.biz
Website: www.whoknowsart.biz

January 25, 2008

Mana: Beyond Belief February 28th

The Fine Arts Theatre and the Asheville Art Museum will present a special screening of Mana: Beyond Belief, February 28th at 7:00 pm.

Mana is "a journey leading from a Navajo medicine man's mud-covered hogan to the eternity of space, from the most ancient of technologies to the most complex, from the concrete world of objects to the projected world of values, and from the individual's attempt to comprehend the secret powers surrounding him to the power our own minds give us to shape our experiences . . ."

Roger Manley, an independent curator and writer will introduce the film and will be on-hand afterwards for a question and answer session.

$10 General Admission
$9 Asheville Art Museum Members and Seniors
$7 Students

The Fine Arts Theatre is cash only with no advance ticket sales.

For more information about the film visit www.mana-the-movie.com/mana.html.

November 09, 2007

Harvest Records to Sponsor Free Screening of Sigur Ros Documentary

(Asheville, NC) – Harvest Records will sponsor a free screening of the Icelandic group SIGUR ROS' first documentary feature film on Monday, November 19th at the Fine Arts Theatre (36 Biltmore Ave) in downtown Asheville. The screening will be held at 9:30pm, and tickets will be distributed on a first-come, first-serve basis at the box office, which will open 30 minutes before screening.

Heima -- which translates as both "At Home" and "Homeland" in Icelandic -- chronicles a series of free concerts Sigur Ros played in their native country over the course of summer 2006. Combining both the biggest and smallest shows of their career, the entire tour was filmed, and now provides a unique insight into one of the world's most fascinating and inscrutable bands captured live while exploring their natural habitat like never before.

Material from all four of the band's albums is featured, including many rare and notable moments. Among these are a heart-stopping rendition of the previously unreleased "Gitardjamm", filmed inside a derelict herring oil tank in the far West Fjords; a windblown, one-mic recording of "Vaka", shot at a dam protest camp subsequently drowned by rising water; and first time acoustic versions of such rare live beauties as "Staralfur", "Agaetis Byrjun" and "Von".

Harvest Records will also be selling Sigur Ros cd's for purchase following the film, as well as taking preorders for the 2xDVD edition of Heima, due out in early December.

For more information on this event, please contact Harvest at 828.258.2999 or the Fine Arts Theatre at 828.232.1536. For more information on Harvest Records, contact co-owners Mark Capon and Matt Schnable at 828.258.2999 or harvestrecords@gmail.com.

October 29, 2007

Disappearances - A Film by Jay Craven

Disappearances
Jay Craven (filmmaker is available for discussion following the film)

Fine Arts Theatre, 7 PM
Wednesday, October 31st

Wear your costume... $5 Door, FREE to UNCA and WCU Students

In Disappearances, Craven brings a number of these characters to life on the silver screen: Kris Kristofferson as Quebec Bill Bonhomme, a wild irrepressible “feral patriarch” with a history as both a smuggler and abuser of alcohol; Charlie McDermott as Wild Bill Bonhomme, his young son eager to take up the same path as his father; and Genevieve Bujold as Cordelia, Wild Bill’s enigmatic and prophetic aunt who seeks to save her grandson from the terrible fate she sees for him.

These characters and others dance through gripping tale of high stakes whiskey smuggling along the Vermont Canadian border, involving mysterious French backers, dangerous bandits, and the Bonhomme family’s mysterious history.

This is a part of the prestigious Southern Circuit Film Series. The MAP presents Jay Craven and his film with help from the following generous sponsors: The Fine Arts Theatre, Western Carolina University, University North Carolina Asheville, Advantage West and the WNC Film Commission.

Asheville Design Center - Film Event

Film Event

Please join the Asheville Design Center for a Film Event at the Fine Arts Theatre Thursday November 1, 2007 @7:00pm. The movie Radiant City, which has received critical acclaim for its theatrical as well as its topical merits, is being shown in this single airing for the purpose of community awareness and discussion. Set in suburban Canada, the film is a documentary format commentary on conventional development patterns in North America. The focus is on the physical, as well as social, impacts of what is typically referred to as "Suburban Sprawl". There will be a brief discussion period afterward in the theater.

Running Time: 85 minutes

Tickets will be available at the Fine Arts Theatre the night of the showing.
For additional information or ticket reservations email Hamilton Cort at hcort@ashevilledesigncenter.org. Advance tickets will be available at the AshevilleDesign Center (8 College St.) during our regular open house hours which are Wednesdays 5:30-7:00pm.

The Asheville Design Center is a multidisciplinary volunteer design group whose mission is to engage all of Western North Carolina in quality design and planning solutions to promote livable communities. Current projects include the I-26 Connection across the French Broad River, and the Patton Ave redevelopment corridor. Entering their second year, the non-profit organization is actively seeking citizen participation on these projects, and input on future projects. The Design Center is open to the public every Wednesday night from 5:30-7:30pm at8 College St.

Film Website: http://www.radiantcitymovie.com/

Event Website: www.ashevilledesigncenter.org (Click on “Participate”).

Ticket Price: $8.00

Event Contact:
Hamilton Cort
(828) 251-5100
hcort@ashevilledesigncenter.org

Written & Directed by Gary Burns and Jim Brown

Sprawl is eating the planet. Politicians call it growth. Developers call it business. The Moss family call it home. Gary Burns - master of dystopian comedy - hooks up with journalist Jim Brown to tell a startling family chronicle of the Late Suburban Age. Welcome to Radiant City.

Starring: DANIEL JEFFERY, BOB LEGARE, JANE MACFARLANE, and ASHLEIGH FIDYK

Interviews with: JAMES HOWARD KUNSTLER, ANDRÉS DUANY and others

October 12, 2007

New Documentary Film about Influential Ceramic Artist to be Screened

From the Inside: The Work of Karen Karnes
A film by Lucy Phenix

Thursday, Oct. 25 at 7:00 pm
Fine Arts Theatre, 36 Biltmore Ave., downtown Asheville.
Admission: $12 / $9 BMCM+AC members/students w/ID
Advance tickets available at BMCM+AC

The Black Mountain College Museum + Arts Center is pleased to present a sneak preview of From the Inside: The Work of Karen Karnes, a new documentary film about influential studio potter and former Black Mountain College teacher Karen Karnes at the Fine Arts Theatre on Oct. 25th at 7:00 pm. Award-winning filmmaker Lucy Phenix will be in attendance and will answer questions from the audience following the film.

From the Inside explores the poetry, rhythm and mystery of the creative process, reflecting the life of a master clay artist who has worked with unbroken focus for over 60 years. This is an intimate portrait of an artist whose strength, grace and astonishing newness is evident in the remarkable evolution of her body of functional and sculptural work. The film captures the involvement of Karen Karnes at Black Mountain College in the beginning of the crafts movement in the early 50's up to the present as she continues to work in her Vermont studio.

Karnes has influenced generations of potters and is widely recognized as a ceramic educator, although not in an institutional sense. Through her role as curator of clay shows around the country she has brilliantly brought potters to the public and helped to make ceramic artists accessible to their audience.

The daughter of two immigrant garment workers from Russia and Poland, Karen Karnes began life in a cooperative housing project in the Bronx. She studied at Brooklyn College in the Art Department under Serge Chermayoff, an architect, who taught his students in a Bauhaus-inspired fashion. Karnes didn’t lay hands on clay until after she married David Weinrib; he brought home “a great lump of clay” for her to play with on the deck of the couple’s home. Though she didn’t arrive as a potter through the usual academic channels, Karnes soon became an independent force in the realm of studio pottery.

In addition to being a Potter in Residence at Black Mountain College, Karnes also taught at the Penland School of Crafts and at Haystack. She was an integral part of the Stony Point, N.Y. artist community, where she lived and worked for 25 years. Karnes was also a working member of the Craft Guild of the Southern Highlands, beginning with her time at Penland.

In one of the film’s most astonishing sequences, the day after the fire that destroyed her house and studio in l998, Karen, surrounded by the charred remains of her life, opens
the kiln door to see shelves full of shining pots intact. She says, “Oh, they are just as I had hoped they would be.”

This film screening is presented in conjunction with the exhibition BREAKING NEW GROUND: The Studio Potter + Black Mountain College at BMCM+AC. The show gathers together work by potters who taught or studied at Black Mountain College including celebrated 20th century ceramicists Peter Voulkos, Karen Karnes, Shoji Hamada, Marguerite Wildenhain, Robert Turner and Bernard Leach. The show runs from Sept. 21 to Jan. 19, 2008. Gallery hours are 12-4 Wed-Sat and by appointment.

Photograph of Karen Karnes at Black Mountain College by Edward Dupuy, courtesy of the North Carolina State Archives.

The Black Mountain College Museum & Arts Center preserves and continues the unique legacy of educational and artistic innovation of Black Mountain College for public study and enjoyment. We achieve our mission through collection, conservation, and educational activities including exhibitions, publications, and public programs.

For more information contact Alice Sebrell at 828-350-8484.

October 05, 2007

Local Film to Premiere at the Fine Arts Theatre

Papercookie is pleased to present the WORLD PREMIERE of their second feature picture, NEUTRAL.

Neutral was filmed entirely in and around Asheville in the summer of 206 by local film production company Papercookie. Filmmakers John Ferrer, Aubrey Curtis, and Joe Chang left the North Carolina School of the Arts behind in 2004 and relocated to Asheville to make films on their own.

Scrapping together a smal budget with savings, they made Grownups, a feature comedy about kids who never grow up, written and directed by Ferrer and shot on video. Looking to up the ante with their next project, Joe lived in his truck for a year and worked two jobs in order to save a modest budget for Neutral, their second feature film.

Neutral is made up of a series of loose-knit vignettes which flow from one to another without a traditional story line over the course of a day. Encountering over 70 characters, the film drifts in surreal directions and parades along with playfully absurd comedy, looking at people's attempts to connect, create, and share moments with one another.

Examples of scenes include the shadows of a boy and girl discussing the favorite shapes they become, a chance encounter between a young woman and the author of her life, and a father taking his family trip far out of the way to return a friend's five pack of diet soda.

The world premiere of neutral will take place on Thursday, October 18 at 7:00 PM at the Fine Arts Theatre. The film will run from Friday, October 19 through Thursday, October 25 at 9:30 PM. There are a limited number of tickets available in advance for the premiere.

For more information, visit papercookie.net or fineartstheatre.com.

MAP Presents "The Guestworker"

Asheville, NC – The Media Arts Project (MAP) presents Cynthia Hill as part of the Southern Arts Federation’s Southern Circuit Tour of Independent Filmmakers at The Fine Arts Theatre on Wednesday, October 10th at 7 PM. Following a screening of The Guestworker, Cynthia Hill will engage the audience in a discussion about the film and her work as a filmmaker.

Once a producer and editor for health education media in New York City, Cynthia Hill moved to Durham, North Carolina to develop her career as an independent filmmaker. The challenges that farmers and the community face are what first caught Hill’s eye as she filmed her first documentary Tobacco Money Feeds My Family. Having grown up in a tobacco farming community, Hill brought a grounded perspective to her film. It is her unique perspective as well as her subject’s relevance that has carried her documentary The Guestworker around the world to screen at numerous festivals, including the Los Angeles Latino Film Festival, Full Frame International Documentary Film Festival, and the Globians Film Festival.

The Guestworker is a thought-provoking testament to the efficacy of the US Government’s H-2A Certification for Temporary Agricultural Work Program. Hill features the perspective of both the farmers who turn to the contract employment program because of local labor shortages and the Mexican migrant workers who travel to the US to perform the backbreaking labor. The documentary focuses on the program’s oldest member, Don Candelario Gonzalez Moreno, a 66-year old Mexican farmer who has spent the last 40 years of his life harvesting crops. While the H-2A Certification guarantees safe passage into the US for ‘Don Cande,’ who in the past had to immigrate illegally, he still has no hope of citizenship due to his age; yet, ‘Don Cande’ returns year after year to work and provide for his family in Mexico.

The Southern Circuit Tour of Independent Filmmakers is a program of the Southern Arts Federation, a not-for-profit regional arts organization making a positive difference in the arts throughout the South since 1975. The MAP hosts the Southern Circuit for the community with help from their sponsors: The Fine Arts Theatre, Western Carolina University, University of North Carolina Asheville, Advantage West and the WNC Film Commission.

September 08, 2007

Experimental Filmmaker Brings Unique Show to Asheville

The Media Arts Project (MAP) presents Eric Patrick as part of the Southern Arts Federation’s Southern Circuit Tour of Independent Filmmakers at the Fine Arts Theatre this coming Wednesday at 7 PM. Following a screening of his short film collection, Ritualized Etchings: The Experimental Shorts of Eric Patrick, the filmmaker will engage the audience in a discussion about his work. Tickets are available for five dollars and free to UNCA and WCU students.

Eric Patrick has been a major player in experimental film for the last ten years. His work has been screened extensively throughout Europe, Australia, Asia and the Americas. Patrick’s films have won numerous awards both domestically and internationally. In 2007, his new film Startle Pattern won the Spirit Award at the Brooklyn International Film Festival as well as the Best Animated Short Award at the Victoria Independent Film & Video Festival. Now in Ritualized Etchings: The Experimental Shorts of Eric Patrick, audiences have the opportunity to see a collection of this award-winning filmmaker’s work spanning a decade.

Drawing from the past ten years of Patrick’s film career, Ritualized Etchings is tied together by the marriage of concept and technique that Patrick achieves in each short film. These films are driven by Patrick’s use of a low-tech shooting style and his utilization of stop-motion animation, 16mm and 35mm film, time lapse photography, and hand edited frames. Of these low-tech methods, Patrick says, “They impose a certain amount of ritual into the process, thereby forcing me to ‘be’ the film for a certain amount of time. The small repetitive acts of creating the frames for [one of his short films] are like saying a rosary or even a form of alchemy.” The result is a collection filled with a variety of eerily beautiful visual effects.

The MAP brings this series to WNC with the help from the Fine Arts Theatre, WCU, UNCA, Advantage West and the WNC Film Commission. The Southern Circuit Tour of Independent Filmmakers is a program of the Southern Arts Federation, a not-for-profit regional arts organization making a positive difference in the arts throughout the South since 1975.

For more information about the MAP, visit www.themap.org. For more information on the Southern Arts Federation and its programs visit HYPERLINK www.southarts.org.

Slavery

Wasn’t it abolished in 1865?

Imagine 27 million current slaves worldwide. That is the number of human trafficked slaves on our planet in 2004. The latest current figure is around 30 million (www.concerttoendslavery.com); the figure is comprised of everything from child labor to forced domestic labor to sex slavery, the most inhumane of them all. There will be 800,000 new victims this year and nearly 20,000 of them trafficked into the United States for the purpose of making money for their perpetrators and sometimes used thirty to forty times a day. Human Sex Trafficking completes with Drug Money today. (FSU center for the Advancement of Human Rights)

Cinebarre and Asheville Fine Arts Theater will host the premier of A Dance For Bethany, produced by Asheville filmmakers, Marion and Yvonne Williams September 24th through the 30th. The fictional story depicts the struggle between idealism and materialism, between money and personal worth. Bringing a current social issue (human sex trafficking) to national attention, it makes a simple statement: We are worth more as human beings. The film was completely produced on location in Asheville in 2006 with twenty- one locations some of which include The Asheville Citizen Times, the Drhumor Building, Asheville Arts Center, Broadway Arts and the Tarmac at Asheville Regional Airport.

“I wanted to create characters that the audience could relate to especially the youth, twelve and thirteen, which are prime targets for sex traffickers although the film is for general audiences. If we created an R rated film then the audience that most needs to see the film would be left out completely”, said Williams.

In April, the filmmakers held a screening of about 150 audience members ranging from ages nine to seventy. “The reaction was overwhelming”, said Williams. “A Dance for Bethany touched the hearts of all ages. I saw an older gentleman (sixtyish) standing next to the concessions after the film and noticed his eyes were red. He was still tearing. He said. ‘I really had no idea what this was all about’. I said, "You're crying" and he started again. ‘Yvonne it's absolutely wonderful’.

A nine-year-old female who came with her mom said, “I’m going to bring all of my friends to see it”. Since she was nine years old, Yvonne asked her if the scene where Bethany was beat up bothered her and she said no. Her mom said, "She’s seen a lot worse on television. We both think it is a wonderful movie”. The little girl added a final statement, “This is a movie that we (young girls) need to see”. Williams added the teenage runaways are the prime targets in America and they need to be educated on the issue.

Lead Actors include: Robyn Lively (Young Indiana Jones, Karate Kid, III and the recent Johnny Kapahala: Back on Board and has been featured in Strong Medicine and Crossing Jordan); William McNamara (NYPD Blue, Law and Order), Loribeth Edgeman (Warm Springs, 3: The Dale Earnhardt Story and the Lifetime premier of Army Wives); Frank Hoyt Taylor (The List, Talladega Nights, Walk the Line, Dreamer, June Bug and Ann Mahoney (Big Momma’s house II, Frankenstein and Snow Wonder). The all SAG (Screen Actors Guild) cast of 23 were exceptional in the portrayal of their characters.

Raise The Bar Productions, Inc. has recently changed their S Corp to a 501c3, something quite unique in the film industry, in order to return a portion of the revenues to organizations that garner social awareness related to the story lines of their films. BSCC of San Diego, CA; Soroptomist of Philadelphia, PA and the New York Coalition Against Sex Trafficking; and Humantrafficking.org are just a few of the organizations that the Williams are working with to promote A Dance For Bethany and help those organizations who work with rescue and restoration of the victims.

The Production Company produces family genre films in High Definition at lower budgets with high production values. “We believe movies can effect behavior and attitudes of their viewers, stimulate the fulfillment of dreams and provide an increased sense of living. We believe that good stories rooted in timeless values such as family, community, integrity, love, compassion and personal growth have always had universal appeal. In fact, one might even argue that in times of political and economic uncertainty, good stories, like a good physician, have the power to heal”.

Williams has a unique quality of creating a story and characters that make her films entertaining while touching us at the core whereas the “in your face” style of producing films tend to leave the viewer with a sense of helplessness. “When you can relate to a character as if it’s your next door neighbor or best friend at school you want to do something”, Yvonne said.

A Dance For Bethany premieres at the Asheville Fine Arts Theatre, September 27th at 7:00 PM and the 28th through the 30th at the 1 PM matinees. Advanced tickets can be purchased by calling 828-251-8333 in Asheville or by email at tickets@adanceforbethany.com. Please come out and support faith-based filmmakers who are making a difference.

August 24, 2007

Fully Awake, the first feature documentary film on Black Mountain College, returns to Fine Arts Theatre

August 15, 2007: With the Fine Art Theater’s April premiere of Fully Awake: Black Mountain College sold out hours before the screening, we are pleased to bring back this highly regarded full-length documentary film on Black Mountain College. North Carolina natives and filmmakers Cathryn Davis Zommer and Neeley House utilized community funding and volunteer efforts to make this important new documentary about the legendary experimental college based in Black Mountain, North Carolina. The college, founded in 1933 and closed in 1957, shaped the direction of modern art, music and dance in America and embodies one of the most fascinating stories in 20th century education.

Fully Awake: Black Mountain College Screening
Wed + Thursday, September 12 + 13* @ 7pm
Saturday, September 15 @ 1pm
Fine Arts Theater, 36 Biltmore Avenue
COST: $10
*Q & A with the filmmakers will follow the Wed & Thursday night screenings.

Fully Awake (60 minutes) is a documentary film about Black Mountain College and covers important events at the college, including Buckminster Fuller's geodesic dome in 1948 and John Cage's multimedia happening in 1952. However, the documentary’s primary exploration is the unique educational style of Black Mountain College and how that influenced collaboration, exploration, and ultimately, contributed to the school’s current fame. Fully Awake weaves interviews with students, teachers, and historians with black and white archival photography to tell the inspired story of a school that existed only 24 years, but whose spirit lives on. More information on the film is available at www.bmcfullyawake.org.

The college has achieved its mythic status in part because of the famous names associated with it (Cage, Cunningham, Rauschenberg, de Kooning, Kline, Motherwell, Fuller, and many more), but it is important to remember that those individuals were not famous at the time. They were talented; they were experimental; they were courageous; but they were virtually unknown outside of a small circle of likeminded mavericks. Black Mountain College provided a place where all individuals felt free to experiment, to collaborate, and to risk failure. Some of them found fame, and others did not, but everyone present was fundamentally changed.

To arrange interviews with the filmmakers Cathryn Davis Zommer and Neeley House, please email: cathrynzommer@earthlink.net
Photography and logos are available upon request.

July 19, 2007

Fully Awake Returns in September

Due to the huge success of our last screening of Fully Awake, BMC will be bringing their film back to the Fine Arts Theatre Details are below:

Wednesday, Sept 12 at 7pm
Thursday, Sept 13 at 7pm
Saturday, Sept 15 at 1pm
Fine Arts Cinema, Asheville, NC
$10 per ticket / filmmakers in attendance Wed & Thurs for Q & A

The film will also be playing in several other locations:

Sunday, July 29 at 4pm
Skidompha Library Screening Room
Main Street in Damariscotta, Maine
Voluntary donation, for information call Gallery 170 at 207-563-5098
(in association with Black Mountain College exhibit in Gallery 170)

Thursday, September 6 at 7pm
Rome International Film Festival, GA
Filmmakers Q & A, Gala Event to Follow
Rome City Auditorium, Opening Night Film

Saturday, Sept 15 at 3pm
North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh, NC
Filmmaker Q & A to follow screening
Free, ncartmuseum.org

Sunday, Sept 16 at 8pm
"Under The Oaks", Elon University
Elon, NC
Filmmakers in Attendance - Free

Saturday, Oct 20, BMC Barns / Evening
LEAF Festival, Lake Eden, Black Mountain, NC
Filmmaker in Attendance
(great opportunity to see FULLY AWAKE at the former location of Black Mountain College)

New York screenings are being finalized, and Fully Awake DVDs will be available for purchase in August 2007.

June 08, 2007

Robert Rauschenberg: Man at Work

Thursday, June 21, 7:00 p.m.
$7, $5 for BMCM+AC members and students w/ID
Fine Arts Theatre, 36 Biltmore Ave. downtown Asheville

The Black Mountain College Museum + Arts Center is pleased to present an exceptional film documentary about the American artist Robert Rauschenberg on Thursday, June 21st at 7:00pm at the Fine Arts Theatre in downtown Asheville. Robert Rauschenberg: Man at Work is director Chris Granlund's fine profile of the enormously influential artist who spent some of his formative years as a young artist at Black Mountain College.

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March 30, 2007

Plathstock 2007

The first annual celebration of Women and Words in Asheville, NC…

CALENDAR OF EVENTS

Sunday, March 25th:
Poetry Reading and Opening Reception
Venue: The Asheville Area Arts Council
Time: 4:00-6:00pm
Cost: Free to the Public

Asheville-area actors perform poetry in a casual setting, followed by a brief reception. Performers include Asheville favorites David Hopes, Ann Dunn, and Kay Galvin.

Tuesday, March 27th:
Performances of The Bell Jar
Venue: Malaprops Bookstore and Café
Time: 7:00-8:00 pm
Cost: Free to the Public

Come prepared for an explosive evening of entertainment, as local teenagers from Asheville and surrounding area high schools perform monologue selections from Sylvia Plath's classic teen angst novel, The Bell Jar.

Wednesday, March 28th:
Sylvia Film Screening
Venue: The Fine Arts Theatre
Time: 9:30-11:00 pm
Cost: $5 Adults / $4 Students

Academy Award Winner Gwyneth Paltrow and "the new James Bond", Daniel Craig, star in this independent feature exploring the trials and tribulations of American poet Sylvia Plath and her British poet husband, Ted Hughes.

Thursday, March 29th through Sunday, April 1st:
Wish I Had a Sylvia Plath
Venue: The BeBe Theatre
Times: Thursday, Friday & Saturday @ 7:30pm and Sunday @ 5pm
Cost: $16 Adults / $8 Students

With the help of music and multimedia, this moving and darkly funny play uses the last ten seconds in the life of a suicidal housewife to lay open the heart and soul of one of the most elusive and unsettling American icons of the 20th century, Sylvia Plath.

For more information, contact Elisabeth Gray at 828-335-2979.

March 26, 2007

An Evening of Art and Film to Honor Survivors of Sexual Violence and to Benefit Our VOICE, Inc.

Our VOICE, Inc., Buncombe County's rape crisis center, will partner with the Fine Arts Theatre to present an evening of art and film to honor survivors of sexual assault and to benefit Our VOICE.

The event will be held at the Fine Arts Theatre on Thursday, April 12th, beginning at 5:30 p.m. with the opening the 7th Annual Survivors' Art Show. We sponsor this event to acknowledge the power of creative expression in the healing process. Art will be displayed in the Critics' Lounge at the Fine Arts Theatre for one night only. Light refreshments will be served. This part of the event is free and open to public.

At 7:00 p.m. the event will move to the downstairs theatre for a debut screening of Esma's Secret, a film about one family's efforts to heal in Sarajevo. This will be the only screening of this film. A $15 donation is requested for this part of the event. Advanced tickets are available by contacting Our VOICE at 252-0562 and will also be sold at the door on the night of the event.

March 09, 2007

Fully Awake: Black Mountain College to screen at Fine Arts Theatre

Fully Awake: Black Mountain College is a documentary film about the experimental college based in Black Mountain, North Carolina from 1933-1957 whose legacy influenced modern art in America. Black Mountain College sought to educate student’s head, heart, and hand – head through academics, heart through community life, and hand through the work program.

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Poetry Reading with Robert Bly at UNCA

UNCA, in collaboration with The Prama Institute, a newly established educational retreat center in Marshall, NC, is presenting a poetry reading with Robert Bly at UNCA’s Humanities Lecture Hall on Wednesday, April 25, 7.30 PM.

Robert Bly’s program is The Soul Is Here For Its Own Joy: An Evening of Sacred Poetry. Bly, one of America’s most popular and influential contemporary poets, will read from and talk about his own works as well as the poetry of Rumi, Hafez and Mirabai.

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Palestinian director to screen award-winning film at Fine Arts Theater

The award-winning Palestinian film, The Olive Harvest, will be shown at the Fine Arts Theater in Asheville on Thursday, April 26 at 7:00 PM, and Sunday, April 29 at 1:00 PM.

Both screenings will be followed by Q and A with the film’s writer/director, Hanna Elias. General admission is $8, tickets for students and seniors are $6. The screenings are co-sponsored by the Fine Arts Theatre and The Prama Institute.

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Documentary Comes to Asheville

Asheville, NC -- Southern Circuit's presentation of Steven Ross’ films Liberia: A Fragile Peace and Fishers of Dar will be on display at the Fine Arts Theatre this Monday, March 12th at 7 pm.

Liberia: A Fragile Peace explores the civil war between the wealthy minority of former American slaves and the indigenous, rural tribes across the country. Filmmaker Ross calls it a “happy accident” that he met the graduate student who wanted to make a documentary about the Liberia situation and needed help with the filmmaking. During his first trip to Liberia, after the exit of a tyrannical Charles Taylor and the entrance of the United Nations in 2003, Ross said their experience was like classic news-journalism. He and his student colleague had only one contact in the whole country, stayed in a convent because the only hotel in Monrovia was charging $350 a night, and “filled a bag with footage.” They went back again a few years later, “I wasn’t there during the carnage,” assures Ross, “I was never fearful for my life. The people saw my camera and wanted to talk. They needed to tell the world their story.”

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March 08, 2007

UNCA's GLBT Benefit Screening

On Thursday, March 22nd, The Fine Arts Theatre, in collaboration with UNCA's GLBT Conference will present a benefit screening of The Saint of 9/11, winner of the best documentary award at the 2006 Philadelphia Gay and Lesbian Film Festival.

Father Mychal Judge, chaplain to the New York City Fire Department, is best remembered as the faithful Franciscan priest who was killed on 9/11. The beloved friar lived a fulfilling life helping the needy and wasn't your ordinary man of the cloth: he battled alcoholism and was a privately gay man. Through interviews, archival footage and Sir Ian McKellen's narration, Glenn Holsten documents this extraordinary man's life until his untimely death.

Saint of 9/11 weaves interviews with friends, colleagues, congregants and archival footage with Mychal's words. The film portrays Mychal's life as a spiritual adventure and an honest embrace of life, where alcoholism and sexuality were acknowledged. Saint of 9/11 is the story of a life's journey interrupted. Inspired by his life, the documentary embraces Mychal's full humanity.

Thursday, March 22 at 7 PM
Admission: $8, $6/with student ID
Fine Arts Theatre, 36 Biltmore Ave. in downtown Asheville

February 16, 2007

A Christmas Family Tragedy

On Thursday, March 29 at 7:00 PM, the Fine Arts Theatre will be screening "A Christmas Family Tragedy - Legends of the 1929 Lawson Family Murders: A Southern Documentary." Tickets will be $8.00 ($5.75 for seniors) and the show will be followed by a Q&A session with the filmmaker.

The new film by Break of Dawn Productions, 'A Christmas Family Tragedy', a feature length historic true crime documentary about the notorious Lawson Family Massacre of Christmas Day 1929 in Stokes County, NC, deep in the heart of Mayberry country. The film explores the legends and myths surrounding the murders, and what they mean to the remaining family and community now.

On Christmas Day, 1929, a widely respected, affluent tobacco farmer named Charlie Lawson brutally murdered his wife, 6 of his 7 children, and then himself; his eldest son, Arthur, aged 18, was sent to the store to buy more shotgun shells just before the violence broke out. Never so much a 'who-dunnit' as a resounding 'Why?!', this mystery has inspired classic bluegrass murder ballads, ghost stories, family feuds, and overcapacity
crowds for annual retellings of the story.

But a heritage of silence follows the mystery, often with deadly consequences, in a bucolic rural community unable to come to terms with its darker side. The ballad used to be sung as a warning to the wives and kids in this area to behave or else; now it is starting to be sung as a warning to abusers, to where their malevolent actions could lead.

To demonstrate our commitment to using history as a tool to build a better future, we're setting aside a healthy percentage of the profits of this film to benefit local domestic violence organizations, beginning with Stokes Family Violence Services, where we look to get the county's first battered women's shelter over the hump and into operation before the beginning of the next school year.

The film is available on DVD at www.bodproductions.com and is currently on tour for special screenings throughout the south. For more information on screenings, the film, or the tragedy, visit the website or contact Eric Calhoun at eric.2birds1stone@gmail.com.

January 31, 2007

Josef and Anni Albers: Art is Everywhere

A new documentary film by Sedat Pakay on the lives and work of these artistic adventurers and pioneers of 20th century modernism. The film includes rare footage of Josef and Anni's art, as well as insightful commentary from personal friends of the artists, including architect Philip Johnson, who arranged for them to come to Black Mountain College as refugees from Nazi Germany in 1933.

Thursday, Feb. 15, 7:00 p.m.
$7, $5 for BMCM+AC members and students w/ID
Fine Arts Theatre, 36 Biltmore Ave.

January 08, 2007

The Media Arts Project Presents Karl Staven

The Media Arts Project presents Karl Staven as part of the Southern Circuit tour of independent filmmakers at The Fine Arts Theatre in Downtown on Monday, February 12th at 7pm. Following a screening of a collection of his animated shorts, Staven will engage the audience in a discussion of the film and his work as a filmmaker. The event is free for UNCA and WCU students with ID.

"As an undergraduate psychology major, I only took two animation courses," confesses the animation veteran Karl Staven. His professional collection boasts over 20 films, acclaimed still photography, presentations and articles, as well as a full generation of teaching experience. Staven's name is synonymous with creative and innovative animation. He takes inspiration from all over the world for his animation - even the smallest objects in a dollhouse. He says, "I first had the opportunity to play around with different animation techniques in graduate school, like 16mm cameras and an Oxberry Animation Stand, and I had some fun!"

Staven will screen selections from his large body of work, including the animated short films Abandoned Dolls and Gabriel Goes for a Walk. Abandoned Dolls is a 6-minute puppet/object animation piece displaying two types of dolls vying for dominance in a post-apocalyptic city. "Despite open gestures and forgiving phone calls, it proves difficult to bridge the divide," writes Staven. Abandoned Dolls screened at International Surrealist Film Festival, 1999; Chicago Underground Film Festival, 2000; Ann Arbor Film Festival, 2000; and San Francisco Independent Film Festival 2000.

Staven juxtaposes the dark humor of Abandoned Dolls with the pixelation and optical printing short Gabriel Goes for a Walk. The narrator begins the film, "Gabriel is a large dog who lives in a small loft in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Occasionally he gets to go for a walk. He is generally pretty excited by the proposition." The audience follows Gabriel around the city on his walk seeing the harbor, meeting school children, and sniffing other dogs along the way. Gabriel Goes for a Walk received the Director's Award at the 1997 Black Maria Film and Video Festival.

Created by the South Carolina Arts Commission over thirty years ago, Southern Circuit takes independent filmmakers on a journey into communities across the South. Produced without studio backing and struggling to secure a distributor, many of these films would never be seen on a screen in this area of the country without Southern Circuit. The program also encourages audiences to interact with the filmmakers after the films. The Media Arts Project (MAP) is a proud presenter of this series. To learn more about the MAP, visit their website at themap.org.

Southern Circuit is a program of the Southern Arts Federation, a not-for-profit regional arts organization making a positive difference in the arts throughout the South since 1975.

December 15, 2006

Off the Map Presents Jesus Camp

When: Tuesday, December 26 at 7:20
Where: The Fine Arts Theatre

Hosted by the Media Arts Project and the Fine Arts Theatre.

This is not your usual holiday film. You won’t find Santa and his reindeer or Chevy Chase in a tacky sweater. The award winning documentary, Jesus Camp, is about Pastor Becky Fischer's "Kids on Fire" summer camp in Devil's Lake, North Dakota, where kids as young as 6 years old are taught to become dedicated Christian soldiers in "God's army." The film is a first-ever look into an intense training ground that recruits born-again Christian children to become an active part of America's political future...

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April 11, 2006

Orbit DVD Walk-In Theatre - Time Bandits

It's nearly summer and that means it's time for Orbit DVD's summertime Walk-In Theatre. Each year during the warmer parts, Orbit DVD sets up a little outdoor theatre in their parking lot and projects a cool flick up on the wall for all to view. It's a great way to bring the local film lovers together and have a great time.

This week (the first of the season) they'll be showing Terry Gilliam's TIME BANDITS. Be sure to head out there this Friday and check it out. And also be sure to check out the coolest video store in town. Also be sure to check out Orbit's MySpace page for more info on the store.