May 03 Friday
Explore the captivating worlds of mystery and wonder in this exhibition featuring highlights from the Norman Rockwell Museum’s Permanent Collection, which now holds almost 25,000 illustrations by prominent artists working across genres and time periods. On display are cover art for award-winning novels and mysteries, children’s book illustrations inspired by classic tales, fantastical anthropomorphic drawings, and heart-stopping editorial images.
Exhibit Link: https://www.nrm.org/2023/12/mysteryandwonder/
March 9 Members Receptionhttps://www.nrm.org/2023/12/mysteryandwonder/RSVP https://tickets.nrm.org/
In “Recycled Art/Art Recycled” the members of the Canton Artists’ Guild imaginatively explore diverse aspects of the meaning of recycling. Some have made art from recycled materials or created art that reflects the idea of recycling. Other artists have taken a previous piece of work and transformed it into something entirely new. Come see these intriguing takes on recycling in prints, drawings, paintings, photographs, sculptures, ceramics, collages and fiber art. In upstairs galleries are two solo shows. “Mind & Nature” features drawings and paintings in which Harriet Caldwell explores the functioning of the human and animal mind. The incredibly intelligent ravens are a particular focus. Caldwell has a BFA from Hartford Art School, University of Hartford, where she taught for 18 years. Her work has been exhibited in galleries and museums in many states. She has received multiple awards for her work, including a 2012 Fellowship from the Connecticut Office of the Arts, a 1996 Painting Fellowship from the Connecticut Commission on the Arts, a grant from the Puffin Foundation and a Millay Resident Fellowship. Caldwell’s work has been included in “Tu non uccidere” [Thou Shall Not Kill] published in Bologna, Italy (2008) and in Poetica Magazine, Holocaust Edition (2014). “Pandora’s Box” series, the second solo show, features abstract and whimsical sculpture of Stephen Klema. Klema describes these as an exploration of “the processes of accretion and loss—one desire to contain against the other desire to expand; the polarization of forces echoing the constant push and pull from order to chaos and back again.” His sculpture is fabricated using abutting, overlapping and interlocking stained and painted elements intricately assembled to yield a coherent and evocative work. Klema received his MFA from the Hartford Art School, and his BFA from the Atlanta College of Art. He is a highly accomplished artist who has had indoor and outdoor sculpture in juried exhibits across the nation, with permanent installations in New York, Ohio, Connecticut and New Hampshire. Within our region Klema’s indoor sculptures have been shown at the Becket Arts Center, Five Points Gallery, Silvermine Galleries, the Mattatuck Museum, Farmington Valley Arts Center, Limner Gallery, Kehler Liddell Gallery, and Real Art Ways. An opening reception is on Saturday, April 20 from 6:00 to 8:00 pm. The public is warmly invited to attend this free reception.
Like a great cup of inky-black coffee, these shorts all pack a kick. Genre-hopping from Thriller to Sci-Fi to Horror to Comedy, each of these moody masterpieces will leave you wanting more. This screening will be followed by a talkback with attending filmmakers, and includes these films (not necessarily screening in this order):
Clone, directed by Ryan M. KennedyClosing Time, directed by Russell GoldmanThe Fast Track Program, directed by Nick Wilkinson *Smile, directed by Mike Sills **You're On Your Own, Kid, directed by Michael Matsui
* Writer/director Nick Wilkinson, producer Lisa Black, and leads Satomi Hofmann and Wally Marzano-Lesnevich plan to attend the talkback and represent The Fast Track Program** Director of Photography Marco Tulio is planning to attend the talkback and represent Smile
Samora Pinderhughes is a composer, pianist/vocalist, interdisciplinary artist and surrealist. His primary body of work, The Healing Project, is an extension of the political commitments that Samora has held throughout his life and work: abolitionist, anti-capitalist, anti-colonialist, internationalist, pro-Black power, intersectional, revolutionary. Pinderhughes has been known in the music world for a while now as somebody who goes past just making songs about issues and is actively involved in the struggle—it’s an everyday, lifelong commitment for him, not just a moment.
May 04 Saturday
Going us for ongoing adult classes and season youth & teen classes at SCDT!
Check out our current offerings here:
Adult Classes: https://www.scdtnoho.com/adult-class-schedule.html
Youth Classes: https://www.scdtnoho.com/youth-class-schedule1.html
Our updated Spring season schedule will be out soon!
The whole family will enjoy these enchanting shorts, which include several kinds of animation, kid actors, talking dragons, sea serpents, engineering mice, and magic marbles. The program will run about an hour, after which we’ll get to meet some of the attending filmmakers, ask them questions, and maybe even touch the dragons! This screening also features the work of three student filmmakers, and includes (not necessarily in this order):
All the Marbles, directed by Melissa McClungBay Creek Tennis Camp, directed by Michele MeekDragon Agent-Wreckers of Boston, directed by Gordon LePage *Dragon Poets of Boston, directed by Gordon LePage *Mariposas, directed by Adrian CareyThe Toad in the Hole, directed by Oliver Brubaker **Today We Climbed a Hill, directed by Gordon LePage *Unsorted, directed by Daniel GönczyWaiting for Sea Serpents, directed by Ben Tobin
* Director Gordon LePage plans to attend the talkback, represent his films, and show the audience some of the puppets he created to make them** Director Oliver Brubaker plans to attend the talkback and represent his film The Toad in the Hole
All of these wonderful short docs were made by Massachusetts-based filmmakers, and they vary in tone from whimsical to breathtaking to inspiring to profound. If you’re interested in local film, you will not want to miss this event and the filmmaker talkback afterwards; plan to stay a little longer for that and enjoy some light refreshments between this screening and the 7pm show. This lineup includes (not necessarily in this order):
Closing the Gap, directed by Maura Smith & Kate Smith *Find the Veteran - The Green River Festival 2023, directed by Dave Sondrini *Finding the Words, directed by Alexandra Wagman *The North Cascades: An Elevated Journey, directed by Ben Avishai *Small Lives, directed by Colin Hodgson *
*All of the filmmakers plan to attend the talkback and represent their films