Archive for August, 2011

Help Beck Center Reach Their Goal

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Beck Center Needs Your Help!

The end of August is a special time for The Beck Center for the Arts. They are just shy of their annual goal, and need your help to put them over the top.

Help support first class theatre and educational programs for kids of all ages.

Your donation of any size would be gratefully appreciated.

To make a secure online donation, please click here: https://co.clickandpledge.com/advanced/default.aspx?wid=36616

Or mail your contribution to Beck Center for the Arts, 17801 Detroit Avenue, Lakewood, OH 44107

WIN $500 by using the free Cool Cleveland app now available for your iPhone, iPad & iPod Touch by clicking here, and for your Android smartphone or tablet by clicking here.

[Click here to return to the current issue of Cool Cleveland]

Performance Art Festival 25th Anniversary

Performance Art Festival 25th Anniversary

The Cleveland Performance Art Festival + Archives began in 1988 as a project of Cleveland Public Theatre, and continued as a separate 501(c)3 presenting annual festivals through 1999, featuring over 100 artists per year. All total, over 1000 performance artists from 27 countries were presented in the Cleveland area, making it the largest festival of performance art in the world. The Festival has the distinction of presenting each of the infamous “NEA Four” (Karen Finley, John Fleck, Holly Hughes, Tim Miller) who were banned for homoerotic content, and as one of the first to present an unknown Blue Man Group, months before they began their run in NYC.

In 2003, the Archives of the PAF were moved to the Cleveland State University Library Special Collections, with an exhibition, performance series and public events. Over 2000 hours of video and 6000 photographs, along with artist documentation and ephemera make the Archive one of the largest repositories of it’s kind in the world.

The Spring of 2013 will mark the 25th Anniversary of the inception of the Performance Art Festival, and a number of major arts institutions and smaller groups are collaborating on a region-wide project to celebrate performance art and examine it’s impact on popular culture and the art world. Simultaneously, efforts are underway to preserve the Archives and make them accessible. Dubbed Project 25, this interdisciplinary collaboration is expected to feature live performance, installation, talks, educational programs and street actions.

Festival Director Thomas Mulready, who went on to create CoolCleveland.com and co-found IngenuityFest, has been invited to perform in Glasgow, Scotland in March, 2012 as a featured presentation of the International Festival of Live Art. While there, he will also participate in a panel entitled, “The How; Developing a network, producing exhibits, and existing as a performance artist in a Capitalist society,” along with Charles Garoian, Martha Wilson and Suzanne Lacy, and moderated by Jamie McMurray.

This video, entitled, “This Is Performance Art,” outlines the history of the Performance Art Festival and the challenges of preserving its ephemeral Archives.

Those interested in participating in Project 25 or learning more about the Performance Art Festival are encouraged to contact Info@Performance-Art.org.

http://www.Performance-art.org

Watch the video “This Is Performance Art” here.

 

WIN $500 by using the free Cool Cleveland app now available for your iPhone, iPad & iPod Touch by clicking here, and for your Android smartphone or tablet by clicking here.

[Click here to return to the current issue of Cool Cleveland]

Hollywood Bowls Us

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hollywood Bowls Us
By Bert Stratton

My wife, Alice, was one of the many star-struck fans who drove to Rockside Road and I-77  to audition for “The Avengers” movie. I asked Alice, “Did you get the part?  Did you read anything?”

Not only did she not read, she did not even audition. The traffic was so horrendous around Rockside Road, she turned right around. Thousands of people showed up for the audition.

There was another Hollywood movie, “Fun Size,” filmed a few weeks earlier, several blocks from us in Cleveland Heights.  That’s when Alice got star struck. Catering and make-up trucks were around our neighborhood.

I heard about it.  I didn’t want to go see the trucks.  I have a bias against Hollywood.

Hollywood guys have too much fun.  They should be making radiator valves, or PVC pipe fittings, like the rest of the world.  Not blowing things up and eating from catering trucks.

My wife’s school gym (where she teaches elementary-school physical education) was turned into a vast make-up room for Fun Size.  She said the school board got $500,000 for the rental.

I didn’t believe that. Alice’s source — the school janitor — had told her the five-hundred grand figure.

Make that $50,000.  I’d accept that.  Better yet, $5,000.  Who would pay half a million to rent a school building for a couple days? Hollywood is a funny ballpark, but not that funny.

Hollywood’s latest tax-abatement haven/heaven is Ohio.  Used to be Michigan.

I would like to be in a movie too.   But I would demand some lines and star food.  No way am I going to do a man-in-crowd scene, not at this point in my career.   I was an extra in a crowd scene in “Those Lips, Those Eyes,” United Artists, Cleveland, 1980.

I want to blow up something.  Grab a lighter, Alice.  You’re in.

Yiddishe Cup’s bandleader, Bert Stratton, is Klezmer Guy. He knows about the band biz and – check this out – the real estate biz too. So maybe he’s really Klez Landlord. You may not care about the real estate biz. Hey, you may not care about the band biz. His blog Klezmer Guy (http://www.yiddishecup.com/blog) has a gamy twist. It features tenants with snakes and skunks, and musicians with smoked fish in their pockets. Klezmer Guy was a reporter for Sun Newspapers. He has written for Rolling Stone, the Cleveland Plain Dealer and the New York Times. He won two Hopwood Awards.

 

Illustration by Ralph Solonitz http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=812350928


 

 

 

 

 

 

WIN $500 by using the free Cool Cleveland app now available for your iPhone, iPad & iPod Touch by clicking here, and for your Android smartphone or tablet by clicking here.

[Click here to return to the current issue of Cool Cleveland]

MANSFIELD: Will the Fat Lady Sing?

Will the Fat Lady Sing?

 

 

The acquittal of two Cleveland police officers, Adonna Perez and Lyndsey Bissell, by Muny Court Judge Marilyn Cassidy on charges they roughed up a handcuffed woman should be the end of this case… but then again, it just might not be. The Fat Lady could be tuning up her pipes to sing an aria widely known as a “Civil Rights Violation.”

Rest assured, in light of the plethora of other incidents of brutality involving Cleveland officers, the Feds are carefully reviewing the video of the incident, and will not hesitate to file federal charges if they are deemed appropriate. This is the pickle Cleveland’s Police Department finds itself in due to the years of blowing off all brutality complaints: virtually everything an officer does, virtually every complaint — justified or not — is going to come under close federal scrutiny for a long time to come… which is probably a good thing.

Unlike the Edward Henderson case, where four officers are accused of viciously brutalizing a suspect once he was in custody and under control (an accusation attorneys for Henderson say will clearly be supported by the video of that incident), the case of Lejerrica Welch is not as clear-cut. City prosecutors were definitely right to indict the officers and let the Court render a decision on the merits of the case… something that might not have happened before the Feds started investigating how policing is done in Cleveland. Bringing this case forward was a CYA move by the City — Cover Your Ass.

And, given the fact this wasn’t Ms. Welch’s first rodeo, Judge Cassidy’s decision — in spite of the fact the handcuffed woman was body-slammed to the floor — isn’t all that egregious. No doubt the fact these two officers seemingly don’t have a history of physical contact with suspects probably bode well in their favor also.

It could reasonably be said that a drunk broad and brawler simply “got what her hand called for.” Let’s face facts… you’ve got to be cutting up real bad to get thrown out of a nightclub in the Flats. Joints down there are usually trying to pull drunks in, not throw them out.

Allegedly, Welch has a reputation for being a nasty, mean drunk, and when someone gets their jollies by getting hammered and then becoming a shit-starter, they really should learn to just take their lumps and dust themselves off; it goes with the territory. If she wants the reputation of being a “bad bitch” then filing charges should never enter into her liquor-besotted little mind.

There’s a real danger, given the heightened level of scrutiny Cleveland officers will no doubt be under from the Feds, some clowns will attempt to take advantage of the situation and try to get away with behavior they otherwise would not engage in. Indeed, some jerks simply love confrontations with police officers… I guess they’re trying to prove how tough they are.

A word to the wise: federal scrutiny aside, no police officer, man or woman, is going to allow some cluck — drunk or sober — to get too far out of pocket… before they step off in their ass. And the Courts, in most cases, will (and should) back officers up… just as they should drop the hammer on officers when they are clearly wrong.

In the case at hand the Judge obviously felt the facts just didn’t bear that allegation out, and we should all be cool with that. We should also hope this decision doesn’t lead police officers to feel they can get away with just about anything… those days, hopefully, are in the past here in Cleveland.

 

From Cool Cleveland correspondent Mansfield B. Frazier mansfieldfATgmail.com. Frazier’s From Behind The Wall: Commentary on Crime, Punishment, Race and the Underclass by a Prison Inmate is available again in hardback. Snag your copy and have it signed by the author by visiting http://www.neighborhoodsolutionsinc.com.

WIN $500 by using the free Cool Cleveland app now available for your iPhone, iPad & iPod Touch by clicking here, and for your Android smartphone or tablet by clicking here.

[Click here to return to the current issue of Cool Cleveland]

Beecology on CNN Money

Money features a video of “accidental beekeepers” Dave and Amy Rzepka of Solon speaking about their business Beecology, which creatures natural care products. The video is connected to Money‘s coverage of 100 best small cities and towns in America (Solon made the list). Always nice when a local biz receives the national attention it deserves.

http://Money.cnn.com

WIN $500 by using the free Cool Cleveland app now available for your iPhone, iPad & iPod Touch by clicking here, and for your Android smartphone or tablet by clicking here.

[Click here to return to the current issue of Cool Cleveland]

Just another highway project

Remember those plans for the West Shoreway? The ones meant to convert a highway into a boulevard (complete with bike paths and lake access)? Well, those original plans are becoming unhinged. (“Too expensive.”) But this doesn’t mean we have to leave the West Shoreway as it is. Can’t we repurpose an unnecessary third lane for a bike path? Or are we stuck with just another highway project?

Read more at GreenCityBlueLake.

 

WIN $500 by using the free Cool Cleveland app now available for your iPhone, iPad & iPod Touch by clicking here, and for your Android smartphone or tablet by clicking here.

[Click here to return to the current issue of Cool Cleveland]

Final Chapter for the LIT?

Big changes for the LIT. After 37 years as NEO’s only organization dedicated to the literary arts, The LIT is now faced with a deficit budget due to funding reductions. In response, the LIT has changed… The organization has been dissolved yet its legacy will continue under the helm of  Cuyahoga County Public Library, which will take on LIT’s programs, workshops, classes and publications.

Read more: http://The-LIT.org

WIN $500 by using the free Cool Cleveland app now available for your iPhone, iPad & iPod Touch by clicking here, and for your Android smartphone or tablet by clicking here.

[Click here to return to the current issue of Cool Cleveland]

Three-Acre Corn Maze @ Lake Farmpark

Open through Sun 10/9

Can you find your way out of the Three-Acre Corn Maze? Encounter endless twists and turns, along with trivia questions. Answer correctly and you’ll be on your way; wrong answers will take you to a dead end. (Don’t worry — you won’t be truly lost!) Maze open daily, 11AM – 4PM.

http://LakeMetroparks.com

WIN $500 by using the free Cool Cleveland app now available for your iPhone, iPad & iPod Touch by clicking here, and for your Android smartphone or tablet by clicking here.

[Click here to return to the current issue of Cool Cleveland]

Cleveland Bike Rack: Open for Business

The Cleveland Bike Rack is OPEN. The Bike Rack is the region’s first full service bike parking and commuter center. For a small fee you have access to indoor secured bike parking [pictured], individual shower/changing facilities, lockers, rentals and a bicycle repair shop — all housed in a LEED certified building located in the Gateway North Parking Facility at the corners of E. 4th and High St. in downtown Cle. So… ride your bike to work and take advantage of this cool space.

http://ClevelandBikeRack.com

WIN $500 by using the free Cool Cleveland app now available for your iPhone, iPad & iPod Touch by clicking here, and for your Android smartphone or tablet by clicking here.

[Click here to return to the current issue of Cool Cleveland]

VIDEO: This Is How Your HeARTworks

VIDEO: HeARTworks Gallery & Gifts Annual Art Show
Works by NEO Artists With Developmental Disabilities

HeARTworks Gallery and Gifts, whose mission is to promote the creative work of local Cuyahoga County residents that have developmental disabilities, is a joint venture of the Cuyahoga County Board of Developmental Disabilities and Solutions At Work (SAW) Inc.

Visit HeARTworks Gallery & Gifts @ the Galleria, 1301 East 9th Street, 10 a.m. – 5 p.m., September 9th. This year the theme of the show is The American Spirit. At the event you will find one-of-a-kind ceramics, jewelry, wall art, fashions, wire wrapping, plush pets, greeting cards and much more.

Support the artistic endeavors of creative citizens of Cuyahoga County who have developmental disabilities. Your HeARTworks purchases demonstrate your personal commitment to supporting local issues that affect many families and the communities they call home.

Find out more @ myheartworks.org or call 216.241.1350. HeARTworks participates in many art shows each year. If you cannot make this featured event, upcoming shows where you can purchase HeARTworks’ creative items include Berea Arts Festival on 9/11, Rocky River Arts Festival 9/17 and Harvest of the Arts 9/18 in Wellington, Ohio.

Watch the video by Cool Cleveland correspondent Carol Drummond.

Carol Drummond has been a professional designer for 25 years. Prior to starting her award-winning graphic design studio 15 years ago, Drummond Design, she graduated from the Art Institute of Pittsburgh, worked at a graphic design studio, a video production company, and a consumer products company. She has been an art docent for Mayfield City Schools and currently serves on the COSE Arts Network Advisory Committee. http://www.DrummonDesign.com

WIN $500 by using the free Cool Cleveland app now available for your iPhone, iPad & iPod Touch by clicking here, and for your Android smartphone or tablet by clicking here.

[Click here to return to the current issue of Cool Cleveland]