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Cultural calendar, January 29-February 5, 2004
THURSDAY, January
29
ART
All the finer things: Shake the blues with a trip to
Richmond for Art After Hours at the Virginia Museum of Fine
Arts, this week featuring the Michael Clark Blues Band, plus
poetry by Darren Morris and an "All Dolled Up" art tour.
6-9pm. $10. 2800 Grove Ave., Richmond.
804-204-2704.
FAMILY
The fun of art: Young artists ages three to six can work
with paint, clay, and collage at the Village Playhouse with
an internationally experienced art educator. Classes are
seven weeks long, and the first lesson is free. 3-4pm. $180
(includes drop off care, supplies, materials, and
instruction). Pre-registration required. 313 Second St. SE.
296-9390.
Tales for tots: The five-and-under
crowd can hear stories about frogs and toads at Barnes &
Noble's preschool story time. Stickers and cookies are part
of the fun. 10:30am. Free. Barracks Road Shopping Center.
984-6598.
PERFORMANCE
Swing swap: The Charlottesville Swing Dance Society
hosts this weekly Thursday-night swing dancing session, with
an hour of east coast swing, an hour of west coast swing,
and a DJ taking requests. 7-9pm. Albemarle County Office
Building Auditorium, 401 McIntire Road. Free.
980-2744.
Acting studio for teens-- monologue
study: Designed for teens, this weekly workshop focuses
on actors' vocal production and physical movement, skills
that are put to practical use in work with monologues.
Students explore language, character, and physicality.
Amanda McRaven. Runs until February 19. 5-7pm. Live Arts,
123 E. Water St. $60 Live Arts members/$75 general.
977-4177x100.
WORDS
Albemarle: Barnes & Noble hosts author Avery
Chenoweth and photographer Robert Llewellyn for a discussion
and signing of their beautiful photo essay, Albemarle,
published by University of Virginia Press. Barracks Road
Shopping Center, 984-0461, 3pm and 7pm. Event is part of the
book fair for the recording for the Blind and
Dyslexic.
WALKABOUT
Feeling sleepy?: "What is hypnosis?" is the topic of a
lecture by hypnotherapist Roxanne Louise at Ivy Commons
Chiropractic. Clarify what hypnosis is and whether it can
help you. 7pm. 361-1969 or roxannelouise.com.
Eyes down!: Bingo game every
Thursday night at the Gordonsville VFW Post. 7pm. 10271
Gordonsville Ave., Route 231. 540-832-2439.
TUNES
Jim Waive (country-folk) at the Blue Moon Diner. Free,
8pm (W)
Karaoke Night with DJ Wild Wes at Buffalo
Wild Wings. Free, 9pm (W)
Chicken Head Blues Band at Dürty
Nelly's. $4, 9pm. (W)
Boots of Leather at Gravity Lounge. $5,
8:30pm.
Thompson/ D'earth and friends (freeform
jazz) at Miller's. $4, 10pm. (W)
T.O.W. and Sake (rock) at Outback Lodge.
$3, 10pm.
Game Night at Rapunzel's Coffee &
Books. Free, 5 pm. (W)
Middle Eastern Belly Dance Class at
Rapunzel's Coffee & Books. Free, 6:30pm. (W)
The Clarks (rock) and Ari Hest
(singer/songwriter) with Stephen Kellogg at Starr Hill.
$12/$10 advance, 9:30pm.
FRIDAY, January
30
FAMILY
Swimming against the tide: Old Michie Theatre presents a
musical version of story of "The Little Mermaid" featuring a
handsome prince, many merry mermaids, a witch, the king's
musicians, and a kindly old grandmother. 7pm. $7.50. 221 E.
Water St. 977-3690. oldmichie.com.
PERFORMANCE
Moliere Than Thou: The Illinois-based company Moliere
for the People brings the French master of farce back to
life as part of Shenandoah Shakespeare's Commonwealth
Theater Festival. 10pm. Blackfriars Playhouse. 10 S. Market
St., Staunton. $15. 540-885-5588.
One-Act Play Festival: Tandem
Friends School presents its second annual one-act festival,
featuring Tandem student actors and guest directors from
around Central Virginia. Community Hall, 279 Tandem Lane.
$5. 296-1303.
Hamlet: Shakespeare Theatre of New
Jersey presents a brisk adaptation of the Bard's dramatic
masterpiece as part of Shenandoah Shakespeare's Commonwealth
Theater Festival. 10pm. Blackfriars Playhouse. 10 S. Market
St., Staunton. $15. 540-885-5588.
No Shame Theatre: Up for a
theatrical nightcap? Join performers at this alternative
venue for original material by anyone about anything. The
first 15 people who show up get a spot on stage. Or you can
just watch the carryings on. Complete guidelines can be
found under "How to No Shame" at
noshame.org/charlottesville/. 11pm. Live Arts UpStage
Theater, 123 E. Water St. $5. 977-4177.
Boston Marriage: Live Arts
presents David Mamet's latest play, a quick-witted Wildean
comedy about female lovers in turn-of-the-century America.
8pm. Closes February 7. Live Arts, 123 E. Water St. $10-15.
977-4177x100.
African-American Odyssey: Two
actors from Richmond's Living Word Stage Company perform a
staged realization of the work of Langston Hughes, Paul
Laurence Dunbar, James Weldon Johnson, and others. The
production, part of Shenandoah Shakespeare's Commonwealth
Theater Festival, weaves poetry, prose, monologue, and
music. 7:30pm. Blackfriars Playhouse. 10 S. Market St.,
Staunton. $15. 540-885-5588.
WORDS
Vietnam redux: Miller Center hosts David Maraniss,
Washington Post correspondent, recipient of every journalism
award under the sun, and author of books on subjects ranging
from Vince Lombardi to Bill Clinton. He speaks on war and
peace in Vietnam and will sign copies of his latest book,
They Marched into Sunlight. 2201 Old Ivy Road, 11am.
924-0921.
Pre-Emption Priority: UVA
professor Melvyn Leffler discusses American foreign policy
post 9/11. Miller Center. Free, and lunch is served! 12pm.
Call 924-4694 to reserve a space. 2201 Old Ivy
Road.
TUNES
Ex-Porn Stars at Outback Lodge: A favorite local act,
Ex-Porn Stars combine jazz, funk, and pop songwriting with
an almost amazing virtuosity for their instruments. $7,
10pm.
Stephen Bennett at the Prism:
Flatpicker Stephen Bennett, one of the few existing
performers of the harp guitar, has recently released his
tenth solo recording, Ten. $12/$10 advance, 8pm.
African Percussion Ensemble at Twisted
Branch Tea Bazaar. $4, 9pm.
Vernon Fisher ("romantic side of jazz")
at Bashir's Taverna. No cover, 6:30pm. (W)
E.M.T. (Emergency Music Theater) with
Stratton Salidis and Friends (custom songs designed to
audience specs) at the Garden of Sheba. No cover,
8pm.
Andrew McKnight at Gravity Lounge. $8,
8:30pm.
The Rogan Brothers (rock) at Miller's. No
cover, 10:30pm.
Josh Mayo (acoustic pop) at Mudhouse. No
cover, 8pm.
Progression (house, progressive, breaks,
trance) with DJ Chris Mocella featuring Kris Murphy at
Rapture. No cover, 10:30pm.
The Improffesionals (improve comedy) at
Rapunzel's Coffee & Books. $5, 7:30pm.
SATURDAY, January
31
FAMILY
Magical art: Artistic types ages 9-16 can learn about
the Op Art movement at Crozet Library. Students will study
the optical illusions of artist M.C. Escher and use last
year's calendars to create their own original illusions.
10:30am. Free, reservations required. In the old Crozet
train station on Three Notch'd Road. 823-4050.
The better to see you with: A
grandma, a little girl, and a not too, too scary wolf dance
onto the stage in the Old Michie Theatre's latest marionette
puppet show, "Little Red Riding Hood." 11am and 2 and 4pm.
$5. 221 E. Water St. 977-3690. oldmichie.com.
Ka-ching: What is money and how
does it work? Enterprising folks can enter the vibrant city
of Moneyville and embark on an exciting hands-on tour
through a money factory and an anti-counterfeiting forensics
lab at the Science Museum of Virginia. The exhibit opens
today and runs through April 25. Included with the price of
admission. 2500 W. Broad St., Richmond. 800-659-1727.
smv.org.
The fun of art: See Thursday,
January 29. Time today is 10-11am.
Swimming against the tide: See
Friday, January 30.
WALKABOUT
Feeling sleepy?: See Thursday, January 29. Today's
lecture is at the Rockfish Valley Community Center, Route
635, Afton.
Stamp Show: Here's an opportunity
to find a buyer for those old stamps with upside-down
airplanes without having to travel too far from home.
10am-5pm. Holiday Inn and Conference Center, 1901 Emmet St.
10am-5pm. 703-273-5908.
PERFORMANCE
Live Arts Actor's LAB for Adults: Work with acting coach
and director Carol Pedersen in this weekly class to sharpen
your acting tools and prepare for the season ahead. Join the
one-hour drop-in session for an intense actor workout or
stay for the full session and put your skills to work.
Drop-in weekly: 10-11am; full session, January 10-February
28: 10-1pm. Live Arts, 123 E. Water St. $10 drop-in rate
(10-11am), $160 for full eight-week session.
977-4177x100.
African-American Odyssey: See
Friday, January 30.
Tom Sawyer: Middletown's Wayside
Theater present an adaptation of Mark Twain's classic novel
as part of Shenandoah Shakespeare's Commonwealth Theater
Festival. 11am. Blackfriars Playhouse. 10 S. Market St.,
Staunton. $5-7. 540-885-5588.
Top Dog/Underdog: Live Arts
presents Suzan-Lori Parks' Pulitzer Prize-winning drama
about sibling rivalry, three-card monte, and imitating Abe
Lincoln. 8pm. Closes February 6. Live Arts, 123 E. Water St.
$10-15. 977-4177 x100.
One-Act Festival: See Friday,
January 30. Today's shows are at 2 and 8pm.
Audition workshop: Carol Pedersen
offers tips and techniques for actors planning to audition
for Live Arts' upcoming production of Tony Kushner's Angels
in America Part I: Millenium Approaches. Come find out how
to stand out. Auditions February 1-2. Performances June 4 to
26. Cast: three men (20s-60s), four women (20s-60s). 1-3pm.
Live Arts, 123 E. Water St. $10-15 977-4177.
Weird Sisters: The Baltimore
Shakespeare Festival presents a one-woman show about Susanna
Shakespeare's efforts to publish her father's works as part
of Shenandoah Shakespeare's Commonwealth Theater Festival.
3pm. Blackfriars Playhouse, 10 S. Market St., Staunton. $15.
540-885-5588.
PERFORMANCE AND TUNES
Charlottesville and University Symphony Orchestra: Carl
Roskott conducts Dvorak's 6th Symphony and Paul Kim conducts
Schubert's 6th Symphony in the orchestra's first concert of
the new year. A pre-concert lecture by Professor Milos
Velimirovic starts 45 minutes before each concert in nearby
Minor Hall. 8pm. Old Cabell Hall Auditorium. $11-22.
924-3984. See
Performance feature.
TUNES
Acoustic Charlottesville: Blue O'Connell, Michael
Cvetanovich, Jim Gagnon, and Mary Gordon Hall at the new
Live Arts Upstage: Singer/songwriter Blue O'Connell,
fingerstyle guitarist Michael Cvetanovich, digeridoo player
Jim Gagnon, and Acoustic Muse co-founder Mary Gordon Hall
join you for another Acoustic Charlottesville-- local and
organic. $5, 7:30pm.
Valerie Smith and Liberty Pike at the
Prism: This six-piece bluegrass band from Tennessee is
fronted by Smith, known for her explosive live performances.
$14/$12 advance, 8pm.
Ted Stryker's Drinking Problem at
Tokyo Rose: The last TSDP show ever, thanks to their
impending breakup. See the neo-new-wave local legends before
they ride into the sunset forever. $5, 10pm.
Fest Full of Rock at UVA: Oh lord!
The Unicorns, Ted Stryker's Drinking Problem, Pretty Girls
Make Graves, and RJD2 all under one roof? And a number of
others? This is the show to get you caught up on what the
hip-kids are listening to. Student Activities Building, UVA.
$12/$10 students, 12:05-11:30pm. See
Tunes feature.
Andy Waldeck with The Dirty Dishes
(pop/rock) at Gravity Lounge. $5, 8:30pm.
King Hippo at Orbit. No cover,
10:30pm.
Modern Groove Syndicate (jam) at Outback
Lodge. $6, 10pm.
Omar (dance) at Rapture. No cover,
10:30pm.
The Guano Boys (reggae) with Las Gitanas
at Starr Hill. $6, 9:30pm.
Scott Varney (funk, jazz, folk, etc.) at
Miller's. $3, 10:30pm.
Valerie Smith and Liberty Pike at the
Prism. $14/$12 advance, 8pm.
The Pones (folk/rock) with Cathryn Caine
at Rapunzel's Coffee & Books. $5, 7:30pm.
The Fair Weather Bums (bluegrass) at
Shebeen. No cover, 9:30pm. (W)
SUNDAY, February
1
ART
Waking Dreams: "Book Art and Literary Art from the
Collection" is the title of a gallery talk by Stephen
Margulies in the Graphics Gallery of the University of
Virginia Art Museum. 2pm. 924-3629.
PERFORMANCE
IMoliere Than Thou: See Friday, January 30. Today's show
is at 7:30pm.
Sunday salsa: Charlottesville's
Salsa Club sponsors a weekly opportunity to learn and
practice salsa and other dances in a smoke-free nightclub
atmosphere. A basic lesson (usually salsa) gets the evening
started at 8pm. Complimentary water and sodas. The Outback
Lodge, 917 Preston Ave. 8pm-midnight. $3-5.
cvillesalsaclub.com or 979-7211.
A Midsummer Night's Dream:
Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey presents an exuberant
adaptation of the Bard's comic masterpiece as part of
Shenandoah Shakespeare's Commonwealth Theater Festival.
7:30pm. Blackfriars Playhouse. 10 S. Market St., Staunton.
$15. 540-885-5588.
Boston Marriage: See Friday,
January 30. Today's show is at 2pm.
Top Dog/Underdog: See Saturday,
January 31. Today's show is at 7pm.
Improv Lab &endash; Fundamentals:
Join Live Arts resident improv expert Rush Howell as he
brings his immense improvisation and teaching experience
from Second City, Improv Olympic, and Annoyance Theater to
Live Arts. This class covers the basic principles of scene
work and group interaction, and focuses on the critical
concepts of agreement, relationships, and truth in improv.
Sundays until February 29, 3-5pm. Live Arts, 123 E. Water
St. $50 Live Arts Members, $65 General. Ages 16 and up.
977-4177.
One-Act Festival: See Friday,
January 30. Today's shows are at 2 and 7pm.
Audition notice: Come audition for
Live Arts' upcoming production of Tony Kushner's Angels in
America Part I: Millennium Approaches. Performances June
4-26. Cast: three men (20s-60s), four women (20s-60s). 7pm.
Live Arts, 123 E. Water St. 977-4177.
Charlottesville and University
Symphony: See Saturday, January 31. Today's show is at
3:30pm. See
Performance feature.
FAMILY
Read on: Literacy is an important part of Black History
Month, and Charlottesville will be joining over a million
readers from all over the world in celebrating African
American literature in the 15th annual National African
American Read-In Chain. Selections will be read aloud by
distinguished guests from the community at Central Library.
2pm. Free. 201 E. Market St. 979-7151, ext. 3.
jmrl.org/children.
Swimming against the tide: See
Friday, January 30. Time today is 3pm.
TUNES
O Coen Brothers: Where Art Thou? (Double-Feature on the
Big Screen) at Rapture. No cover, 8pm.
The Hogwaller Ramblers (bluegrass mayhem)
at Escafé. No cover, 10pm. (W)
The Zing Kings (multi-genre local
explosion) at Miller's. Free, 11am-2pm.
Barling & Collins (cello-pop
darlings) at Miller's. No cover, 10:30. (W)
MONDAY,
February 2
PERFORMANCE
Playwright's lab: Live Arts hosts this twice-monthly
workshop that gives local playwrights the opportunity to
develop new work. Meets the first and third Mondays of every
month. 6:30pm. Live Arts, 123 E. Water St. Free.
977-4177x100.
TUNES
The Oratorio Society of Charlottesville-Albemarle holds
auditions at the Municipal Arts Center for its upcoming
concert, Bach's "B-Minor Mass." Call Joy Tobias at 882-1738
for an appointment or information.
Open Mic Night with Charles Davis at Baja
Bean. No cover, signup 8:30pm/9pm. (W)
Jackson Gibson at Coupe DeVille's. No
cover, 10:30pm. (W)
Swell with The Lilas (angsty pop/rock) at
Gravity Lounge. $7, 8:30pm.
Travis Messinger at Miller's. No cover,
10pm. (W)
George Melvin (piano merriment) at South
Street Brewery. No cover, 9:30pm. (W)
Jim Ryan (jazz bass and love songs)
upstairs at Tokyo Rose. Free, 9pm. (W)
Travis Elliot (pop) at the Virginian. No
cover, 10:30pm. (W)
TUESDAY, February
3
PERFORMANCE
Boston Marriage: See Friday, January 30. Today's show is
at 7:30pm.
Live Arts Scriptshop: Calling all
teen actors and writers to join forces in a series of weekly
workshops featuring improvisations and writing exercises
designed to sharpen acting skills and develop new works for
LATTEHOUSE VI. Runs Tuesdays, February 3-March 2 5-7pm. $60
members/$75 general. Scholarship opportunities available.
123 E. Water St. 977-4177.
ART AND TUNES
Didja ever hear one?: Master didjeridu player Ash Dargan
brings his multi-media performance, Territory: 13 Sacred
Jounreys into the Dreamtime, to Newcomb Hall Theater. Dargan
combines the mysterious sounds of the didjeridu with
recordings of Australian wildlife and images from the
Australian environment to transport viewers to the land down
under. Sponsored by the Kluge-Ruhe Collection and Newcomb
Hall. 7pm. Free and open to the public. Park at the Central
Grounds Parking Garage on Emmett Street.
244-0234.
PERFORMANCE AND TUNES
The Tuesday Evening Concert Series presents Windscape Wind
Quintet with pianist Jeremy Denk at Cabell Hall
Auditorium: On the program are J.C. Bach's "Quintet in C
Major, Op. 11, #4," Mozart's "Quintet in E-flat Major for
Piano & Winds, K. 452," J.S. Bachrgan's prelude
"Liebster Jesu, wir sind hier, BWV 731, " J.S. Bach's
"Fantasia & Fuge in g minor," and Mozart's "Serenade No.
11 in c minor, K. 405." $24 orchestra, $20 loge and balcony,
$10-students, partial-view seats, and standing-room only,
8pm. 924-3984. See
Performance feature.
TUNES
3rd Sara White and the Pearls at Twisted Branch Tea
Bazaarr. $3, 9pm.
Karaoke Night (what you make of it) at
Baja Bean. Free, 8pm. (W)
Jamie and Rolland (partial bluegrass
mayhem) at the Blue Moon Diner. No cover, 8pm.
(W)
Glen Mack at Coupe DeVille's. No cover,
10:30pm. (W)
Peyton Tochterman (of Fair Weather Bums)
and Jesse Harper (of Old School Freight Train) at Gravity
Lounge. $5, 8pm.
Fair Weather Bums (bluegrass) at
Miller's. $3, 9:30pm.
Vernon Fisher (mellow jazz) at Shebeen.
No cover, 7pm. (W)
Chris Whitley (blues) with Ezra Hamilton
(intelligent pop) & Joe Lawlor at Starr Hill. $15/$12
advance, 9pm.
WEDNESDAY,
February 4
PERFORMANCE
The Last Session: Richmond's Triangle Players present "a
musical for people who don't like musicals," which follows a
fading pop star's last shot at greatness. 8pm. Fielden's
Cabaret Theater, 2033 W. Broad St., 2nd floor, Richmond.
$12-14. 804-346-8113.
Top Dog/Underdog: See Saturday,
January 31. Today' s show is at 7:30pm.
Country dance night: Couples and
line dancing at Fry's Spring Beach Club. Dance lesson free
with cover. Lesson 7pm, dancing 8-11pm. 2512 Jefferson Park
Ave. $7 cover, $4 full-time students. 977-0491.
WALKABOUT
Sweets and talk: Folks 23-33 can meet new friends during
an evening of chocolate tasting and conversation at Crozet
Library. Tim Gearhart from Gearhart's Fine Chocolates
discusses chocolate making and offers a taste. 6:30pm. Free,
reservations suggested. In the old train station on Three
Notch'd Road. 823-4050. See
Walkabout feature.
Something to yell about: People
interested in knowing more about Howard Dean, a Democratic
Presidential candidate, can meet other Dean supporters at
Starr Hill Restaurant/Art Gallery (across from the Amtrak
Station) and also at the Buford Middle School on Ninth
street SW at Cherry Avenue. 7pm. 296-3442.
Rape and race: A local serial
rapist, high-profile rape charges against Kobe Bryant, talk
of assault and prejudice in the air. Join Pat McGann and
Neil Irvin of Men Can Stop Rape in Washington, D.C. and
members of the UVA community in a frank discussion about
these issues sponsored by the Sexual Assault Education
Council. 7:30pm. Room 108 in UVA's Clark Hall.
924-7116.
FAMILY
Look it up: Young adults don't always know where to
start. A two-session workshop at Northside Library
introduces middle and high school students to the ins and
outs of library research. Kids ages 13-18 can learn how to
find what they need to know through the online catalog,
magazine and newspaper databases, and free Internet search
engines. Students should plan to attend both sessions, today
and next Wednesday. 4-5:30pm. Free, registration required.
Albemarle Square. 973-7893.
FAMILY AND WORDS
Listen to your Parent: Storyteller Michael Parent tells
tales-- folktales and original stories-- and sings songs
spiced with his French-Canadian heritage and trademark wit
at Gordon Avenue Library. 4pm. Free. 1500 Gordon Ave.
296-5544.
He's everywhere!: Join local
storytellers Kathy Coleman and Eve Watters as they welcome
back their favorite Mainiac, Michael Parent, for an evening
of stories, songs and tomfoolery. Guaranteed Fun for adults
and kids 12and up! 8pm. $8. Prism Coffeehouse, 214 Rugby
Road. 977-7476.
WORDS
As the bird spies: Local mystery scribe Andy Straka
discusses the craft of mystery writing, hosted by the
Charlottesville Chapter of the Virginia Writers' Club.
Discussion and book signing at Barnes & Noble, 7pm,
984-0461. Event is part of the book fair for the recording
for the Blind and Dyslexic.
TUNES
Man Mountain Jr. at South Street Brewery. No cover,
10pm.
Plum Jam with Mark Rock at Gravity
Lounge. $5, 8pm.
The Mike Rosensky Jeff Decker Quartet
(jazz) at Miller's. No cover, 9:30pm. (W)
Open Jam at Rapunzel's Coffee &
Books. Free, 7pm. (W)
Middle Eastern Belly Dance Class at
Rapunzel's Coffee & Books. Free, 6:30pm. (W)
Scott Miller and the Commonwealth at
Starr Hill. $10, 9pm.
Kathy Olsen Trio (jazz) upstairs at Tokyo
Rose. No cover, 9:30pm. (W)
Stop the Future Series: Plasmodium at
Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar. $3, 9pm. (W)
Jim Davies (acoustic rock and blues) at
the Virginian. No cover, 10pm. (W)
THURSDAY,
February 5
WALKABOUT
Eyes down!: Bingo game every Thursday night at the
Gordonsville VFW Post. 7pm. 10271 Gordonsville Ave., Route
231. 540-832-2439.
PERFORMANCE
Copenhagen: Catch this preview of Live Arts' new UpStage
production, Michael Frayn's philosophical detective story
about a secret WWII meeting between two atomic physicists.
Call office for ticket info. Live Arts, 123 E. Water St.
977-4177x100.
Swing swap: The Charlottesville
Swing Dance Society hosts this weekly Thursday-night swing
dancing session, with an hour of East Coast Swing, an hour
of West Coast Swing, and a DJ taking requests. 7-9pm.
Albemarle County Office Building Auditorium, 401 McIntire
Road. Free. 980-2744.
Boston Marriage: See Friday,
January 30. Today's show is at 7:30pm.
Acting studio for teens-- monologue
study: Designed for teens, this weekly workshop focuses
on actors' vocal production and physical movement, skills
that are put to practical use in work with monologues.
Students explore language, character, and physicality.
Amanda McRaven. Runs until February 19. 5-7pm. Live Arts,
123 E. Water St. $60 Live Arts members/$75 general.
977-4177x100.
FAMILY
The fun of art: See Tuesday, January 27. Time today
3-4pm.
More tales for tots: See
Wednesday, January 28.
TUNES
Weekly Dance Party with Stroud at Rapture. No cover,
10pm.
Clarence Green and Chameleon Project at
Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar. $3, 9pm.
Jim Waive (country-folk) at the Blue Moon
Diner. Free, 8pm (W)
Karaoke Night with DJ Wild Wes at Buffalo
Wild Wings. Free, 9pm (W)
Chicken Head Blues Band at Dürty
Nelly's. $4, 9pm. (W)
Thompson/ D'earth and friends (freeform
jazz) at Miller's. $4, 10pm. (W)
Prom Queen (hard rock), 33 West, and
Almost Always at Outback Lodge. $3, 10pm.
Satisfaction (dance party) at Rapture. No
cover, 10:30pm. (W)
Game Night at Rapunzel's Coffee &
Books. Free, 5 pm. (W)
Middle Eastern Belly Dance Class at
Rapunzel's Coffee & Books. Free, 6:30pm. (W)
Upcoming and
Ongoing
WORDS
On in ten: VABook is sponsoring a comic poetry contest.
Ten lines or fewer to make the grade. Make former poet
laureate and funny-man George Garrett belly-laugh to take
the prize. Deadline February 10. Details on the VABook.org.
See Words feature.
Ya gotta pray to win: The Free
Poetry Contest invites submissions of religious poetry (one
per person) to compete for a grand prize of $1,000 and other
prizes totaling $5,000. Deadline for entries February 14.
Enter poems of 21 lines or fewer on a religious theme to
Free Poetry Contest, 103 N. Wood Ave., PMB 70, Linden, N.J.
07036 or enter on-line at www.rainbowpoets.com.
ART
Get the date right: The Charlottesville Center for Peace
and Justice invites artists working in any medium to submit
works themed "February 21, 2004" for display during an
evening of art and music. Deadline for consideration is
February 13. 456-6028 or lanzbrod@cstone.net.
FAMILY
Move that heavenly body: The Virginia Discovery Museum
gets moving with its latest back gallery exhibit. "The Earth
in Motion" explores the movements of our solar system and
how they affects life here on Earth. Kids can move the
planets, create a rainstorm, and journey through the
seasons. Free with museum admission. East end of the
Downtown Mall. 977-1025.
Eat or be eaten: Adventurous types
can step into a dog-eat-dog world and find out "Who's for
Dinner?" at a new exhibit at the Virginia Museum of Natural
History. See Family
feature.
Martian chronicles: The Virginia
Discovery Museum gets into the Mars mania with a new display
in the Discovery Corner. Maps, globes, artifacts, and new
NASA images let earth-bound explorers probe the Red Planet.
Included in the price of admission. East end of the Downtown
Mall. 977-1025.
Write a winner: WHTJ
Charlottesville PBS invites creative types in grades
kindergarten through third grade to participate in the
annual Reading Rainbow Young Writers & Illustrators
Contest. The deadline is March 1 for kids to submit original
stories they write and illustrate to this local contest.
Free. Call for entry forms and guidelines: 295-7671, or get
them on-line: ideastations.org.
World beat: Discover how rhythm
and movement link different cultures, locations, and musical
traditions in the new IMAX film "Pulse: A Stomp Odyssey" at
the Science Museum of Virginia. Two long-time Stomp
performers guide visitors through grand landscapes and
cultural celebrations in Brazil, South Africa, Spain,
England, Japan, India, the United States, and various
countries in Africa to learn how people from around the
world experience music and dance. Runs through July 16. Call
or see website for schedule and cost. 2500 W. Broad St.,
Richmond. 800-659-1727. smv.org.
Blizzard business: On the first
weekday on which there is significant snowfall and city
schools are closed, snow bunnies can win prizes for artistic
creations sculpted from the icy white stuff in the
Charlottesville Recreation and Leisure Services' annual Snow
Sculpture Contest. Call the Rec office before noon to check
on the date and register. Must be within the city limits.
Free. 970-3260.
Horse sense: The herds thunder
across the screen in a really big way in the IMAX film Young
Black Stallion at the Science Museum of Virginia. Visitors
can join the adventures of a girl named Neera and the wild
horse she calls Shetan in Walt Disney Pictures' first
dramatic movie made specifically for the giant screen.
Through March 13. Call or see website for schedule and cost.
2500 W. Broad St., Richmond. 800-659-1727.
smv.org.
WALKABOUT
Voices of Hope and Women in Transition: Two free support
group for women whose lives have been affected by sexual and
domestic violence. Voices of Hope meets Tuesdays 6-8pm,
beginning February 10. Call Kristina Hall at 295-7273 to
schedule a pre-screening appointment. Women in Transition
meets Wednesdays 12-1:30pm starting February 11. Call
Crystal Whitlow at 293-6144 to schedule a pre-screening
appointment.
Montpelier: Special guided tours
of the Montpelier mansion, including rooms not regularly
open to the public. These spaces provide further insights
into the Madison era at Montpelier. Offered at 10 and 11am,
and 1, 2, and 3pm. Included with regular Montpelier
admission; second floor is not wheelchair-accessible. Tours
are offered on first-come, first-served basis; visitors
should sign up when they arrive at the mansion.
540-672-7365.
Monticello events:
"Feast of Reason: The Enlightenment of Jefferson's
Monticello." Thomas Jefferson's deep involvement with this
influential school of thought is explored on these extended
tours of the house. Included in price of general admission.
984-9822.
"Thomas Jefferson and the Origins of
American Political Parties." Rare printed materials
illustrating early U.S. politics are on exhibit at the
Jefferson Library. 9am to 4:30pm weekdays.
984-7540.
Winter recreation classes: Adult
classes are offered in Beekeeping, Fencing, Waltz, American
and Latin Ballroom Dance, Sign Language, Handbuilding,
Potter's Wheel, Creative Writing, Beading Workshops and
Swimming. Prices range from $30 to $180. Charlottesville
Recreation and Leisure Services. 970-3260.
UVA Personal Enrichment Classes:
Classes in everything from French to Chinese history
begin the week of January 26. Call 982 5313.
Separation Support Group for Lesbians
and Gay Men: If you have experienced a break and need a
safe place to cope with your loss. Meets Thursdays 7-8.30pm.
978-2195.
Join in the conversation: English
as Second Language learners interact with native English
speakers at the Dialogue Café. In the Adult Learning
Center at 1000 Preston Ave. Thursdays 11:30am&endash;1pm.
245-2815.
Seminar on Stained Glass: Every
Saturday, geared to the beginner but open to anyone. Call by
Friday to reserve a spot. Blue Ridge Glass &Craft,
McIntire Business Park at 1724 Allied St. Free. 3:30-5pm.
293 2876.
Settling down: Midday Meditation,
Tuesdays 12:15-12.:45pm and Thursdays, 12:15-1:15pm. Free,
but donations are accepted. Gesher Center, 1824 University
Circle. 970-7836.
Habitat for Humanity: Volunteers
with a yen to build or paint for a good cause urgently
needed. 293-9066.
Canine Companions for Independence:
The national, nonprofit organization that trains
assistance dogs for people with physical and developmental
disabilities is looking for people interested in becoming
volunteer puppy raisers. 800-572-BARK or cci.org
Charlottesville/Albemarle Chapter of
Families Anonymous: A free, self-help fellowship for
anyone concerned with the destructive behavior of loved ones
(emotional problems, drugs, or alcohol, etc.) meets at 7pm
each Monday at Aldersgate Methodist Church at 1500 Rio Road
E. behind the Fashion Square Mall, rear lower level
entrance. 923-7929.
Narcotics anonymous: Meets daily.
Call for information and meeting place:
434-979-8298.
Help with re-entry: Virginia
NeuroCare Inc. seeks volunteers to provide re-entry services
to people with acquired brain injuries. Help operate a used
book store. Former Kincaid building on the Downtown Mall and
on E. High Street near Juvenile Court. 220-4596.
ART LIST
The Charlottesville/Albemarle District of VSA (very
special arts) of Virginia, a nonprofit organization
dedicated to artists with disabilities, presents its annual
art show in the lobby of The Charlottesville Performing Arts
Center through March 8. 1400 Melbourne Road. 970-3265 or
296-3518.
The University of Virginia Library swings
with "Portraits of the Golden Age of Jazz: Photographs by
William P. Gottlieb," on display, along with other items
related to the Harlem Renaissance, through March 5 in the
McGregor Room of Alderman Library. 924-3025.
The Second Street Gallery inaugurates its
brand spanking new space with "30 Years: Three Decades of
New Art," featuring recent works by 55 artists from SSG's
past. Through February 1. City Center for Contemporary Arts,
corner of Second and east Water streets.
977-7284.
The University of Virginia Art Museum
presents "American Collage," featuring work by Andy Warhol,
Adja Yunkers, and Robert Motherwell, among others, through
August 24. In association with this exhibit, multimedia
artist Christian Marclay's "Telephones," a collage of edited
film clips of telephone conversations ranging from Alfred
Hitchcock's Dial M for Murder to Kevin Smith's Clerks, is on
view through February 29. The Graphics Gallery features
"Waking Dreams: Book Art and 'Literary Art' from the
Collection," on view through April 4. Also on display
through February 29, "Ink/Stone: The Art of Stephen Addiss,
Mark Fletcher, Wonsook Kim," an exhibition by three artists
who infuse their work with Asian sensibilities. "The Moon
Has No Home: Japanese Color Woodblock Prints from the
Collection" runs through March 7. 155 Rugby Road.
924-3952. See Art
feature.
New Dominion Bookshop displays Marion
Reynolds' "Paintings from Belmont Avenue" on its mezzanine
through January 30. 404 E. Main St. 295-2552.
The University of Virginia Health Systems
presents "Studies in Light and Texture: Tuscany to
Provence," paintings by Paul Dettenmaier, in the Main
Hospital Lobby, through March 12. 924-0211.
During January, the
Charlottesville-Albemarle Art Association displays the
paintings of Bob Stirling in the Second Floor lobby of the
County Office Building. McIntire Road. 295-2486.
Even if you're not catching a flight,
check out the paintings by Charlottesville-Albemarle Art
Association artists Karen Collins, Judy Ely, Cindy Haney,
Mercedes Lopez, Trilbie Knapp, and Vidu Palta at the
Charlottesville-Albemarle Airport through January.
295-2486.
View a career-spanning exhibit of work by
Nelson County photographer Stephanie Gross at the PVCC
Gallery through February 11. V. Earl Dickinson Building,
Piedmont Virginia Community College. 961-5203.
At the C&O Gallery, John Wade's
photographs of southern Tuscany fill the gallery with "a
landscape from another planet" for the month of January.
Next door to the C&O Restaurant, 511 E. Water St.
971-7044.
Shake off the chill with a visit to
Angelo Jewelry, where Ann Therese Verkerke's "Hot Flashes--
Tropical Images in Oil" is on display through February 29.
220 E. Main St. on the Downtown Mall. 971-9256.
Through January, CODG presents
photographs by Richmond's Aimee Wade, as well as prints and
paintings by Gracey Sessoms, and new work by CODG artists in
the members' gallery. 112 E. Main St., under the Jefferson
Theater. 242-4212.
Go lightly boutique displays the oil
paintings of local newcomer Beth Herman through February.
101 W. Water St. 244-7400.
David Cochrane's abstract/geometric
paintings and Matisse- and Picasso-influenced portraits are
on view at the architectural firm of Stoneking/Von Storch.
Fifth and Water streets. 295-4204.
Galerie LaParlière is showing
"Impressionist Bouquets," new works by French artist
Maryvonne LaParlière. Also through January, "Angels
on Wood," frescoes. 414 E. Jefferson St. 245-1365.
laparliere.com.
Beatrix Ost explores contributions to the
formation of identity in "Intimacy: 15 Minutes of Drawing,"
on display at Les Yeux du Monde@dot2Dot through January. 115
S. First St. 973-5566.
Thomas Jefferson Memorial Church shows
the abstract relief acrylic paintings of sculptor David
Breeden. 717 Rugby Road. 293-8179.
View Vicki Havill's painting and batiks
at The Village Playhouse through January 30. Beginning
January 31, Maria Lennik's acrylics, Rob Bossi's pen and
inks, and Tara Reid's batiks will go on view and continue
through February. 313 Second St. in the Glass Building.
296-9390.
Mike George shows his minimally colored
acrylics at Mudhouse in January. W. Main St. on the Downtown
Mall. 984-6833.
L'étoile Restaurant displays
paintings by local artists Barry Gordon and Malcolm Hughes.
Gordon's abstract works feature interiors and everyday
objects; Hughes portrays landscapes in the Impressionist
style. Through January. 817 W. Main St. (across from the
Amtrak Station). 979-7957.
Take a stroll through the 57 acres of
Virginia's first-ever Sculpture Park, located on the grounds
of Baker-Butler Elementary School. 2740 Proffit Road.
974-7777x1402.
Paintings by Gloria Mitchell are on
display at The Artful Lodger, 1807 Seminole Trail.
970-1900.
View recent sculpture by Jonathan Durham
at UVA's Fayerweather Gallery through February 6.
Fayerweather Hall, Rugby Road. 924-6123.
In January, Christine Rich displays her
watercolor exhibition entitled "Architectural Fragments" at
Art Upstairs. 316 E. Main St., above The Hardware Store, on
the Downtown Mall. 923-3900.
"Art and the Natural World," an exhibit
featuring science themes, is on display at the Science and
Engineering Library's new reading room. The exhibit is a
highlight of the library's grand opening in Clark Hall, and
will be up through the academic year. The exhibit features
work by UVA art faculty. 924-3628.
Jerry O'Dell's paintings and stained
glass creations are on view at Blue Ridge Glass &
Crafts. 1724 Allied St. 293-2876.
The McGuffey Art Center presents Frederic
Crist's "The Pillar Series," an exhibition of forged metal
abstractions of controlled chaos through January. Also on
view, McGuffey's New Members Group Show. Beginning February
3, on the second floor, see how others view your
neighborhood when ArtinPlace presents C2D, Views of the
City, a juried show of two-dimensional art, hung according
to the neighborhood depicted. And on the main floor, visit
painter Steve Taylor's self-exploration, "From There to
Here," along with "Mutability," a show of work using
alternative processes by photographer Fleming Lunsford and
other members The International Photography Institute. 201
Second St. NW. 295-7973.
It's wild and woolly (not to mention
surreal) in a mammoth kind of way at Hotcakes, which is
displaying the paintings of Mary Atkinson through February
1. Barracks Road Shopping Center. 295-6037.
The Bozart Gallery presents Pamela
Reynolds' textural paintings during January. 211 W. Main St.
296-4669.
The John Ruseau Watercolor Gallery
features paintings by John Ruseau, along with art and
objects from the Connecticut-based Mystic Seaport Museum.
York Place on the Downtown Mall. 977-0627.
Martha Jefferson Hospital presents "3
Views of Landscape," featuring work by Robert Llewellyn,
Scott Smith, and Barbara Southworth, through March 1. 459
Locust Ave. 982-7000.
Radar
Charlottesville artist Elizabeth Geiger
displays her paintings at the Williams School of Commerce at
Washington and Lee University. Lexington.
540-458-8602.
On January 31, the Shannon Farm Community
Center opens painter Christopher Mason's exhibition,
"Celebration in Color," which runs through February. Call
for directions and a viewing appointment. Nelson County.
434-361-0083.
The Fluvanna County Community Center
presents the stained glass work of Michelle Gamage and the
pottery of Fei Putnam. Fork Union. Highway 15. 34-842-3150
or comcen@ntelos.net.
Sunspots Studios in Staunton offer live
glassblowing demonstrations every day by master glassblower
Phillip Nolley and art glass artist Minh Martin, both in
residence. Corner of Lewis and Middlebrook streets in
downtown Staunton, across from the train station.
540-885-0678.
Caffé Bocce shows wall hangings by
Charlottesville quilt artist Kate Karsen through January.
Beginning February 2, Anne DeLaTour Hopper and Sean Flaherty
display their "Classic and Romantic Realism," an exhibition
of traditional-style paintings. 330 Valley St., Scottsville.
286-4422.
Other
The Boys & Girls Club of
Charlottesville/Albemarle seeks artists and crafters to
conduct workshops and demonstrations with youth ages 6-18.
Resulting artwork will be displayed at the Spring 2004
Exhibition. Contact Janel Turk, 466-8343 or
j_e_turk@hotmail.com.
The Charlottesville Center for Peace and
Justice invites artists working in any medium to submit
works themed "February 21, 2004" for display during an
evening of art and music. Deadline for consideration is
February 13. 456-6028 or lanzbrod@cstone.net
The Arts Center In Orange is seeking
exhibits for their growing Satellite Gallery program that
currently includes Not the Same Old Grind, a coffee shop on
Church St., and The Virginia National Bank on Main St.
Please send no more than five slides (two-dimensional work
only) and an artist bio to The Arts Center In Orange
Satellite Gallery Program; 129 E. Main St., Box 13, Orange
22960. 540-672-7311, artcenter@nexet.com.
FEATURES/FEATURES/FEATURES
ART
Asian fusion: Accessing
"Ink/Stone"
BY LAURA PARSONS ART@READTHEHOOK.COM
Sometimes you get lucky. I was sighing in
frustration as I made my way through the scrolls, pottery,
and paintings of "Ink/Stone," an exhibition of work by
Stephen Addiss, Mark Fletcher, and Wonsook Kim currently on
display at the University of Virginia Art Museum. I knew
Asian traditions were key to each artist's vision and
practice-- in fact, that's the crux of the show-- but
lacking familiarity with Chinese, Japanese, and Korean art,
I felt lost in the midst of artistic intentions.
Then I overheard a woman speaking
authoritatively about one of Fletcher's ceramic pieces. I
decided to tag along as she moved to a large, double-sided
stoneware vase. The knowledgeable woman turned out to be the
artist's wife, who explained that the realistic, wizened
face, sculpted in relief on one side of the vase, depicts
Hamara, a famous Japanese potter; on the opposite side, the
simple two-dimensional face represents Haniwa, a ritualistic
Japanese artifact.
By addressing the two ceramic
traditions-- one refined, the other rudimentary-- Fletcher
has intertwined the two strands into one piece, entitled
"Hamariwa."
As we stepped over to a plate, a bowl,
and another two-sided vase, the artist himself joined us.
Discussing his approach, Fletcher, who studied in Shigaraki
and Kyoto, Japan, said, "I use the syncretic method to try
to unify things we often think of as separate."
In the three stoneware "Heaven and Earth"
pieces, which spring from the circle-encompassing-square
symbol for the cosmos, Fletcher has played with Zen-unified
duality not only through shape but also via dimension and
space. The round vase, for instance, has a square of
emptiness tunneling through its middle, which, from within,
forms the solid walls that define the hard-angled center of
the circular cavity.
With Fletcher at my side, I poured out a
torrent of questions about the other artists' work. Yes, the
figures on Addiss' large calligraphic scrolls are actual
Japanese characters, but the painter has experimented with
ink weight and brush stroke. Fletcher noted that even
Addiss' black- and silver-spattered (which I'd
dubbed "Jackson Pollock goes to Japan") tests but does not
break calligraphic parameters.
Looking at Kim's multi-part
acrylic-on-wood "Thousand Mountains" installation, Fletcher
noted that its ink-wash-like elements are only 12 pieces of
an ongoing, larger project. I asked about the significance
of the arrangement, and Fletcher replied, "It's for the
audience to read."
Ultimately true. But occasionally it's
good to have help.
"Ink/Stone: Art of Stephen Addiss,
Mark Fletcher, Wonsook Kim" is on view at the University of
Virginia Art Museum through February 29. 155 Rugby Road.
924-3592.
WORDS
On in ten: Ready for some groaners?
BY ELIZABETH KIEM
WORDS@READTHEHHOOK.COM
If you thought the Virginia Festival
ofthe Book was all about serious memoirs, breathtaking
novels, and scholarly reviews of Lewis and Clark and the
soul of our nation, breathe a sigh of relief. The organizers
are not averse to some amateur light humor, and by way of
proving it, are inviting you to lick the pencil tip and
start to scribble.
It will only take you about 15 minutes,
but it could win you a spot in a limited edition
chapbook.
What's a chapbook, you ask? Read
on.
First, the challenge of light verse. The
Greeks, as in many endeavors, were said to have pioneered
the genre and passed the torch through the ages. From John
Dryden to Dorothy Parker, humor and poetry have found a
felicitous mix. Ogden Nash held the beacon particularly
high, pulling off a two line coup with: The cow is of the
bovine ilk/ One end is moo, the other milk.
Intimidated by the genius as you may be,
here's some comfort. For this contest, you can employ up to
10 lines to produce your chuckle.
The contest, a celebration of VABook's
10th anniversary, is called "On in Ten." Submissions can be
10 lines or fewer and can cleave to the time-honored format
of limerick, quatrain, epigram, or a brand new format of
your own invention. But it must be funny. At least to
win.
Whose funny bone are you aiming for? None
other than that resident wit and former laureate, George
Garrett, who will select 10 winners, one of whom will be
crowned the light verse champion by an anonymous aficionado
of knee-slappers.
That distinction comes with a $100 prize,
by the way.
Kevin McFadden of the Festival of the
Book says entries are already copious (you can send in more
than one, by the way, if you just can't turn the tap off),
with examples of both traditional and new
formats.
Here are a few hints to get you
started:
Not all limericks are about Irishmen. If
you can't figure out the last line of your limerick, leave
it off and call it a clerihew. When in doubt, poke fun at
serious poets, like Dorothy Parker did:
Byron and Shelley and Keats
Were a trio of Lyrical treats.
The forehead of Shelley was cluttered with curls,
And Keats never was a descendant of earls,
And Byron walked out with a number of girls
A chapbook is a small book of poems, popular tales
etc.
Entry guidelines for On in Ten can be
found at vabook.org/contest/index.html. Entries must be
postmarked by February 10 and each must be accompanied by a
$5 check. More information at 924-6890.
WALKABOUT
Check it out: Chocolate comes
to the library
BY SOPHIA COUDENHOVE
WALKABOUT@READTHEHOOK.COM
"Let any man of wit who feels himself
temporarily become stupid, let any man who finds the air
damp, the time long, and the atmosphere difficult to
tolerate, let any man who is tormented by an obsession that
prevents him from thinking clearly, let all those men dose
themselves with a good half-liter of amber-colored
chocolate
and they will see a miracle."
Thus spoke the French gastronome
Jean-Anthelme Brillat-Savarin about 200 years ago, and who
can deny his words are just as true today? Lest there be any
doubt, on Wednesday, February 4, the obsessed, the
befuddled, the temporarily stupid, the hungry, the bored,
the lonely, and the merely curious can test his observations
at a free chocolate-tasting at Crozet Library.
The form will be solid, not liquid, and
the quantities smaller, but supreme will be the quality of
the confections accompanying a talk by Tim Gearhart of the
eponymous chocolate shop at Main Street Market.
The former pastry chef will describe the
origins of chocolate in Mexico, where the Aztec emperor
Montezuma had xocoatl of different colors served in gold
cups at the end of a meal. The hoi polloi consumed theirs as
a thick paste, often thickened with corn flour. But as the
mixture contained chillis, it held little allure for the
conquistador Cortez, a fact which surprised the Aztecs,
since they had mistaken him for the god Quetzalcoatl,
gardener of Paradise and maker of the great cocoa tree.
Even though Cortez, of course, was more
interested in gold, after his return to Spain in 1527, he
always kept a full chocolate pot on his desk. Meanwhile,
missionary nuns in Central America were replacing the Aztec
spices with vanilla, sugar, and cream, and the resulting
concoction quickly caught on among the Spanish aristocracy.
Gearhart gets his chocolate from
Venezuela. He boils some cream and infuses it with a flavor
such as tea or mint; then he adds the cream to the
chocolate, along with butter and other ingredients, sets it
in a frame, cools it, cuts it, dips it, and decorates it by
hand.
Now in its third year, Gearhart's Fine
Chocolates looks as though it might sell fine old miniature
manuscripts. It's a small dark-red room with a heavenly
smell and a counter where the exquisite, very expensive
chocolates that are crafted right above the shop are
sold.
Gearhart's talk is one of a series at
Crozet Library aimed at attracting 23-33 year-olds,
particularly those new to the community.
"Once you enter the workforce it's easy
to become dissociated from the community," says branch
manager Wendy Saz, who has seen too many lonely souls
combing through the stacks.
"We want to build a community of friends
without a cover charge."
Tim Gearhart talks about and presents his
confections at Crozet Library on Wednesday, February 4, at
6:30pm. The talk is open to anyone between the ages of 23
and 33. Please call the Library to register at 823-4050.
Admission is free.
FAMILY
It's the law: Critters-- diners or
dinner?
BY LINDA KOBERT FAMILY@READTHEHOOK.COM
Don't be scared. That leopard prowling
the halls at the Virginia Museum of Natural History at UVA,
that grey wolf that freezes you to the spot with its
transfixing stare, that immature bald eagle about to take
flight
they won't hurt you.
These perfectly life-like creatures are
taxidermied specimens, some as much as 70 years old. The
folks at VMNH-UVA have pulled from the dusty corners of
their collections dozens of samples of such predators and
the critters they most like to munch. They've also borrowed
from others in putting together their new exhibit, "Who's
for Dinner?"
Visitors to this yearlong display can get
a good look at groupings of wild dogs, stalking cats, local
omnivores, predatory fish, raptors, even predatory insects.
In the process, they'll learn something about who's having
whom for dinner, and what adaptations make these cunning
creatures so sly when it comes to either sneaking up to snag
supper or hiding out to avoid becoming someone's
entrée.
Part of this exhibit's appeal to
pint-sized explorers is all the hands-on stuff. Games such
as Natural History Roulette give kids the chance to both
test their knowledge and gain some as they spin the colorful
wheel and answer questions to rack up points. Hunting
Strategies is a mix-and-match game where players figure out
which animal uses camouflage to hide (a scorpion fish does
that), or uses herding to bring down its prey (that would be
the pack of wolves).
In the Discovery Room, a sign on the wall
encourages visitors to do the unthinkable: "Please Touch."
And there's a lot to feel good about here: soft, furry
animal pelts, snake skins, deer bones, and beaver teeth, to
name just a few. Adventurous types can also stick their hand
through the sock into the Mystery Box and try to identify
the animal object inside using their fingers as eyes.
Kids can climb into the snag (an old
hollow tree stump that serves as habitat for many woodland
creatures) and answer clues to figure out whose babies are
inside. It's the perfect place for a puppet show, too, using
wild animal hand puppets available there. Or play a sorting
game to separate the stuffed animal predators into one
basket and the prey in another. But where does the black
bear go?
With this exhibit, the Virginia Museum of
Natural History at UVA gives Charlottesville families the
chance to get really up close and personal with
wildlife
without becoming dinner.
The Virginia Museum of Natural History at
UVA is open from 10am-4pm Monday through Thursday. Exhibits
are free. Group tours are available. 104 Emmet St. 982-4605.
virginia.edu/vmnh-uva.
PERFORMANCE
Taking the 6th: Violinists
enliven the weekend
BY STEPHEN BOYKEWICH
PERFORMANCE@READTHEHOOK.COM
Where would we be without our great
public universities in America, those noble institutions
where all commercial concerns are sacrificed to the
intellectual and cultural development of our brightest young
minds? Can there be a more stirring example of this
sacrifice than the history of the arts at UVA?
Oh, that magical day nearly two centuries
ago, when the university's Board of Visitors decreed that it
was time to enrich Mr. Jefferson's creation with schools of
art and music, with a magnificent new library, with a grand
new house of worship.
Then they saw the price tag and decided
they'd give violin lessons in the Rotunda.
But they were very good violin lessons,
I'm sure.
The arts at UVA have come a long way
since the 1820's, especially from the point of view of
bow-and-fiddle types. There's proof enough over the next
eight days, which include the first concerts of the new year
by the Charlottesville and University Symphony Orchestra, as
well as performances by two prominent visiting
ensembles.
UVA's music department has grown from a
few amateurs sawing away in the Dome Room to an institution
of its own. Based in Old Cabell Hall-- at least until the
new $47 million performing arts center is built-- the
McIntire Department of Music boasts a multitude of musical
ensembles, both faculty- and student-led, including
University Singers, the African Drumming and Dance Ensemble,
and John D'earth's Free Bridge Quintet.
The flagship of the bunch, naturally
enough, is the symphony orchestra. This weekend, it offers a
pair of Sixth Symphonies: Antonin Dvorak's and Franz
Schubert's. Both are appealing, accessible works from the
standard repertoire. Schubert, the James Dean of
19th-century German composers (he died at 31), drew on
Rossini and Beethoven for his brisk, buoyant Sixth, also
known as "The Little."
Dvorak, who's best known for his
American-inspired "New World" Symphony, filled his Sixth
with stirring Slavonic folk melodies.
As for visiting ensembles, there's
Windscape with pianist Jeremy Denk Tuesday, February 3,
performing J.S. Bach, J.C. Bach, and Mozart. Watch next
weekend for the renowned Cassatt String Quartet, which will
present a concert of new American string quartets-- one by
UVA composer Judith Shatin-- to cap off a week-long
residency.
And to think we owe it all to somebody
who eked out Three Blind Mice 200 years ago.
Charlottesville and University
Symphony Orchestra performs Saturday at 8pm and Sunday at
3:30pm. Pre-concert lectures 45 minutes before each concert
start in Minor Hall. Old Cabell Hall. $11-22.
924-3984.
Windscape performs February 3 at 8pm.
Old Cabell Hall. $10-24, one-hour student rush seats $5.
924-3984.
TUNES
Mess of a fest: Musical loaves and fishes
BY MARK GRABOWSKI
TUNES@READTHEHOOK.COM
With the best lineup in its history
(which isn't saying much, as the event is only in its second
year), UVA's Fest Full of Rock explodes this Saturday at the
Student Activities Building. To miss it would be to lose out
on an afternoon of cool injected sonically into your
bloodstream.
Even the bands you've not heard of are
going to be great, but I'm going to highlight a few of the
ones I consider the greater of the great. So sit down, relax
a bit, and expand your musical knowledge.
Brought to you by those clever kids at PK
German, UVA's University Programs Committee in charge of
bringing musical acts to the school, this year's Festival is
a leap forward from last year's sold-out show, which
featured such acts as the mostly indie-rock Avail, Q and Not
U, and Denali.
Saturday gets started at 12:05 with the
penultimate show of the local neo new-wave group, Ted
Stryker's Drinking Problem. A four-man blitzkrieg of
infectious pop hooks and '80s synth, TSDP has long been a
personal favorite, but unfortunately the winds of time have
blown the band apart. If you, for whatever lame reason, have
not seen the group yet, go to either this show or the one at
Tokyo Rose later the same evening.
At 3:55, the Magnolia Electric Company
takes the stage, a group that's garnering the most talk on
the street currently-- mainly because people have no idea
what to expect. The new project from Jason Molina, the
brains (and pretty much everything else) behind the
indie-rock band Songs: Ohia, the group's self-titled debut
album came out in early 2003, and featured a more
straight-ahead rock sound than Molina's previous releases.
Lyrics like "While you was gone you must
have done a lot of favors/ You've got a whole lot of things
I don't think you could ever have paid for," continue
Molina's trend of utterly revealing wordplay in a Neil
Youngish sonic universe.
The Unicorns are the band I'm personally
the most excited about seeing live at the Festival. The
group's second album, "Who Will Cut Our Hair When We're
Gone?" came out only a few months ago, but the group
probably has the best buzz of any indie-rock group in
existence right now.
Schizophrenic pop music is the easiest
way to describe "WWCOHWWG." As they switch keys and tempos
in songs of sea voyages and ghosts, there's something
inherently accessible in all the bizarre.
A whole day of (for the most part)
indie-rock? Get out your horn-rim glasses, sweater full of
holes, and Saucony's; it's going to be a nodder.
Schedule at UVA's student activities
building at the corner of Stadium and Alderman roads,
Saturday, January 31.
12pm - Doors open
12:05-12:40 Ted Stryker's Drinking
Problem
1:00 - 1:35 The Out Circuit
1:50 -2:30 El Guapo
2:50-3:25 Engine Down
3:55-4:45 Magnolia Electric Co
5:05-5:55 Broken Spindles
6:15-7:15 Unicorns
7:35-8:35 Hopesfall
8:55-9:55 Pretty Girls Make Graves
10:15-11:30 RJD2
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