Archive | August, 2011

Generation Next: Bustin’ Out on the Hilltop

21 Aug

Scratchin' an itch at Fabitat.

Last Thursday was party time in T-town, and not just because it was one of the few scant days of decent weather we’ve had this summer. No, not even crazed climatological activity could’ve checked the migration of artists and Third Thursday faithful who made their way to the Hilltop to celebrate Spaceworks’ first anniversary. Since last summer, this award-winning project linking artists with vacant retail space has supported more than 60 art exhibits, residencies and performance spaces; helped out scores of artists with rent (they don’t pay any); and energized downtown Tacoma in the process.

Fabitat offers computer instruction in their creative lab.

In case you’ve been holed up in the proverbial cave, a cluster of new Spaceworks art and performance venues have sprung up like mushrooms in the fertile soil around 11th St. and Martin Luther King Way (long-time stomping grounds of the Fulcrum Gallery). Scads of young people crowded the sidewalk at Fabitat, Fab-5‘s headquarters for the urban arts. Tacoma, meet Generation Next! It took about five seconds to grasp what an important and electric scene Eddie Sumlin, Chris Jordan, Kenji Stoll and Katie Lowery, the collective genius behind Fab-5, have hatched on the Hilltop through their non-profit, arts mentoring and instructional lab. The Fabitat program is a magnet for youth who on this night were celebrating with art- and music-making outside, while talking art and clicking away on computers inside. The place looks fantastic; what had been a lifeless commercial space has been beautifully reanimated with art and dance studios, and throbbing wall-size murals by local youths.

An added treat: guest performances by a Fab-5 neighbor, DASH Center for the Arts. DASH (“where Dancing, Acting, and Singing are always in Harmony!!”) offers affordable performing arts education to the youth and families of Tacoma.

P.R. specialist Hayley Hilmes works the green room at Toy Boat Theatre.

Next up on this hot strip of Hilltop was Toy Boat Theatre (TBT) entertaining visitors with short stage readings, stand-up comedy and stage combat. The acting troupe, headed by Marilyn Bennett, has been feeling flush after a mostly sold-out run of the play, Dakota’s Belly, Wyoming. It’s hard to describe what a terrific transformation TBT’s performance space has undergone during their Spaceworks residency, thanks to a lot of elbow grease and help from partners at the University of Puget Sound. And it’s paid off: around 200 people attended a recent opening, says Bennett. TBT’s only wish is that they had constructed the interior with “a smaller lobby and a bigger house [for audience seating].”

Rounding out the Hilltop hive, at N. Dybevik Co., musician/composer Nate Dybevik jammed with Fritha Strand Davern, Gary Kawamura, and Olympia band You are Plural, pulling in gallery goers with honky tonk and blues. In Dybevik’s mainspace, visitors were allowed to get up close and personal with the exquisite antique pianos Nate is restoring for his Spaceworks residency, under the tutelage of internationally known expert, Obi Manteufel. Classical instruments and devil’s music make intriguing bedmates at this studio, where Dybevik’s Jekyll/Hyde range of musical interests is allowed to run wild.

Nate Dybevik rocks the keyboards at his studio.

Next door at Fulcrum, gallery owner Oliver Doriss opened his cavernous back room for Hilltopatomic, a 21+ night of music and poetry. The Taqueria Las Torres taco truck and Jeff’s Ice Cream were keeping people well-fed and happy as we headed downtown to check out more Spaceworks art.

James Sinding's "Words": the medium is the message.

First stop: Tollefson Plaza, where James Grayson Sinding has transformed T-town’s most overlooked open space into a giant message board with his art installation, Words. This valentine to Tacoma is an ambitious riff on his award-winning 2010 work, Letters. Though it opened barely two weeks ago, when Sinding drove a dumptruck’s worth of handmade signage (resembling refrigerator magnets) to the plaza, about half the words have already been absconded with – a sign of the public’s ongoing obsession with his work.

Folks were snapping pictures on Broadway, where three excellent and diverse installations fill the long bays across from the Pantages Theatre. Seattle artist Rebecca Maxim‘s tribute to the struggle of HIV/AIDS patients – a translucent couture gown made from pharmaceutical packaging – is as seriously campy as the nom de guerre she has adopted, “Alotta De Tritus.” Anette Lusher makes an argument for reclaiming/reusing/recycling with her ingenious sculptures made of straws – more than 200,000 of them that quiver at the touch of a hand. And Julia Barbee‘s bulbous, hanging cloth sculptures covered with glittering white crystals become all the more fascinating when one learns she grew them herself…

Ivan, the B & I gorilla, immortalized in a Wayzgoose steamroller print.

At the Woolworth Building, we were pleased to see viewers walking (not driving) around the building’s window exhibits. It’s worth taking the time for a close look at work by artists including photographer Jennifer Adams, and a gaggle of talented Wayzgoose printmakers whose bold Tacoma-centric posters span seven years. We overheard bus commuters talking about the mysterious caribou filling a Commerce Street installation, CODA (“Did you know the deer is an archetype?” asked one bus rider, after noting that his father was a hunter). Michiko Tanaka‘s MODblog emitted a lonely glow at the Tollbooth Gallery. It was a full night of art viewing, from breakdancing at Fabitat to making the circuit of Woolworth’s. If we could’ve picked two words from James Sinding’s Words installation, they would be, “Tacoma Rocks.”

Reading between the lines at James Sinding's "Words."

A wild mystery: CODA.

Takin' it to the street at Fabitat.

Julia Barbee's cantaloupe-size sculptures encrusted with crystals seems unnaturally at home in this industrial space.

Amazing grace: a breakdancer wows visitors at Fabitat.

Update! Spaceworks 1st Anniversary Party

16 Aug

Here’s a little more info about the block party this Thursday, August 18. It’s 5pm-8pm, 1310-1316 MLK, followed by a 21+ show at Fulcrum Gallery, 1308 MLK. Performances will start around 6pm and last into the night…

Grab a treat from Taqueria Las Torres taco truck or Jeff's Ice Cream, cash only.

Performances by:
DASH Center for the Arts: music and dance by DASH teams

N. Dybevik Co.: music by Fritha Strand Davern, Nate Dybevik, Gary Kawamura, and Olympia band You are Plural.

•Toy Boat Theatre: stand-up comedy, stage combat, short stage scenes

•Fab-5: DJ, break dancing, live painting

Plus…take a look back at all of the projects Spaceworks has supported since starting last summer. Over 60 projects in 21 spaces!!

After the public party, head over to Fulcrum for a night of music and poetry.  Doors at 8pm, 21+, $7 cover.

Performers include: 6 Deep the Messenger (Spoken Word, Tacoma), Miz Floes (Poet, Seattle), Makeup Monsters (indie music, Tacoma), Tallest Tree (indie music, Tacoma), Jalen (DJ, NYC), BROAM (DJ, Hilltop), E.S. (DJ, Tacoma), Chonie Diego (DJ, Electronic)

DONT’ MISS IT!!

________________________________________________________________

ABOUT THE SPACEWORKS HILLTOP PROJECTS
•Fab-5 is a team of graffiti artists whose goals extend far beyond physical walls: the non-profit group provides local youth with mentoring in the arts. This summer, Fab-5 is launching FABITAT, a creative enterprise that connects diverse youth with practicing arts professionals in a multi-purpose instructional lab provided by Spaceworks Tacoma. www.fab-5.org.
•Theater pros Marilyn Bennett, Jen Davis and Alex Smith have joined forces with the University of Puget Sound and Spaceworks Tacoma to develop a number of performances through fall 2011. Keep an eye on future performances and readings at www.toyboattheatre.com.
•Nate Dybevik is a musician, a composer and a visual artist; he is also learning the fine art of piano rebuilding – a skill he is acquiring from internationally renowned expert Obi Manteufel and fine-tuning in a space provided by Spaceworks.

ABOUT DASH CENTER FOR THE ARTS
•D.A.S.H. Center for the Arts, where Dancing, Acting, and Singing are always in Harmony!!  D.A.S.H. Center for the Arts offers quaility, affordable performing arts education to the youth and families of Tacoma.  Classes such as ballet, jazz, hip hop, breakdance, voice, acting for stage, piano, drums, guitar, creative writing, studio recording…just to name a few, are all available to you, at the D.A.S.H. Center.  Classes are open to everyone, every background, age 4 and above!!  For more info: (253) 507-9466 or info@thedashcenter.org

Celebrate Spaceworks Tacoma’s First Anniversary

9 Aug

Did you know that Spaceworks is one year old this summer? Help us celebrate a year of installations, residencies, and creative enterprises at our newest location.

Aug. 18, 5 to 8 p.m., 1310-1316 Martin Luther King Jr. (MLK) Way.

Four new storefront spaces will open with performances and demonstrations throughout the evening including dance, theatre, music, visual art and a few surprises by current Spaceworks projects Fab-5, N. Dybevik Co., Toy Boat Theatre Company and neighboring arts organization DASH Center for the Arts.

Food from Taqueria Las Torres taco truck and Jeff’s Ice Cream will be available for purchase throughout the evening, cash only.

After the public celebration, Fulcrum Gallery will host Hilltopatomic, an evening of live video, fine art and performance featuring indie music, poetry, spoken word and urban electronic music. The gallery is located at 1308 MLK Way. Doors open at 8 p.m. – $5 cover charge, 21+.

We’ll be posting more details soon!

Words drop in Tollefson Plaza August 6!

2 Aug

Sinding's 2010 installation, "Letters", being dropped on Tollefson Plaza

Words, a new temporary installation by Tacoma artist James Grayson Sinding will drop in Tollefson Plaza August 6 at 2pm. Come be part of the installation as Sinding dramatically dumps hundreds of hand-painted wooden words, refrigerator-magnet-style, onto the plaza out of the back of a shiny dump truck. The public is invited to create messages, climb, stack, and otherwise interact with the new installation. Words will be in Tollefson Plaza through the end of August 2011. Tollefson Plaza is located in downtown Tacoma at Pacific Avenue and S. 17th Street.

"Words," like "Letters," will be an interactive installation.

In 2010, Sinding presented his colorful, award-winning installation, Letters, in Tollefson plaza. Letters was recently recognized by the prestigious Americans for the Arts 2011 Public Art Network Year in Review as an example of an outstanding public art project. This year a record 430 projects were submitted from across the country and only 47 were selected. A full list of projects and more information about Year in Review can be found at www.PublicArtNetwork.org.

Words is supported by Spaceworks Tacoma and the Tacoma Arts Commission’s Tacoma Artists Initiative Program (TAIP). The installation is presented in conjunction with the Tacoma Art Museum’s “Free Summer Community Festival: Best of the Northwest.” The event runs Saturday, August 6, 10 am-4 pm. Admission to the museum is free during the festival.

For more information, visit www.SpaceworksTacoma.com, www.TacomaArtMuseum.org or www.JamesGraysonSinding.blogspot.com or e-mail rsolverson@cityoftacoma.org.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 34 other followers