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Cultural Calendar, February 10-17, 2005
THURSDAY,
February 10
ART
Double Parking: Landscape designer Michael Van
Valkenburgh speaks on "Two Parks in New York City and the
Wellesley College Landscape." 5pm. Room 153, Campbell Hall.
982-2921.
Mysteries of the Mandapa: Dr.
Darielle Mason of the Philadelphia Museum of Art speaks on
"Re-Investigating Philadelphia's Indian Temple Hall," at the
Architecture School's Campbell Hall (Room 153). 5:30pm.
924-3592.
FAMILY
Tales for Tots: The 5 and under crowd can hear some
favorite picture book stories about Valentine's Day at
Barnes & Noble's preschool story time. 10:30am. Free.
Barracks Road Shopping Center. 984-6598.
WALKABOUT
Ninja Yoga: Toward a revolution of consciousness. Free
yoga classes today at 9:15am. Bring a mat. Silent meditation
8am. Suitable for all levels of expertise. Free and open to
the public at "Better than Television," a new community
center at 106 A3 Goodman St. 295-0872. Yoga classes also
offered at the Downtown Library, Market St., today at
5pm.
Be a SHE Volunteer: The Shelter
for Help in Emergency offers twice-weekly training sessions
Tuesday and Thursday nights through March 3. Volunteers are
needed to staff the Shelter Hotline as well as work as
managers, court monitors, children's program assistants or
office staff. 6-9pm. 293-6155.
Floral Demonstration: Kick off
your Valentine's celebration with the Flowers for all
Humanity design demonstration and auction at the Gentle
Gardener in Gordonsville. Benefits the Habitat for Humanity
of Louisa. 6-8pm. $10/person; $15/couple.
540-832-7031.
Bird Business: The Monticello Bird
Club's monthly meeting features Ruth Burch presenting a
program on plant selection and garden design to create
habitats for butterflies and moths. 7:30pm at the Ivy Creek
Natural Area. Open to the public. 971-9271.
Gender and Popular Culture: The
UVA Women's Center sponsors this discussion about fatherhood
in cinema. 6:30-8pm. Minor Hall Conference Room 225.
982-2361 or womenscenter.virginia.edu.
Landscape Discussions: Learn all
about the gardening business at the Central Virginia
Landscape Management Seminar. Topics include perennials,
water gardening, turfgrass, and the role of landscaping in
crime prevention. 8am-5pm. Albemarle County Office Building
Auditorium. Open to the public. Registration at the door.
263-4022 x103.
PERFORMANCE
Taming of the Shrew: Long seen as the ultimate battle of
the sexes, this robust comedy is just as much an
illustration of how nonconformists can outwit society.
Shenandoah Shakespeare blends romance and outlandish farce
to give us a story of psychological liberation. 10:30am
school matinee. Blackfriars Playhouse, 10 S. Market St.,
Staunton. $14-26. 540-885-5588
Highway Child: Piedmont Virginia
Community College presents Highway Child, a modern fable
incorporating American Indian mythology into a contemporary
landscape, by Sean Harvey and Drew Bergman. A "heavily
staged" reading. Tonight is opening night. 7:30 pm. Maxwell
Theatre (Black Box), 500 College Road. $8-10. 961-5376.
See
Performance feature.
The Dazzle: Obsessive meets
compulsive in this new Richard Greenberg play loosely based
on New York's Collyer brothers and the 136 tons of
uncontrolled clutter they filled their mansion with. A
high-stakes sibling rivalry in which zinging epigrams do
battle with existential despair. 8pm. Live Arts UpStage, 123
E. Water St. $10. 977-4177.
WORDS
History, Race, and City Schools: The Charlottesville PTO
Council hosts a panel discussion on the history of
segregation and integration in Charlottesville. 7pm. Walker
School Media Center. 293-5516 or 979-1111.
TUNES
Travis Elliott at Atomic Burrito: Radiohead, Weezer, and
his own folk stylings inform Elliott, but the young man is a
true original, with the pop tunes to back up that claim. No
cover, 10pm.
David Rogers at the Prism:
Classical guitarist Rogers also performs early music for
those wacky sounding instruments, the lute and vihuela.
$10/Students $5, 8pm.
Karaoke Night with DJ Wild Wes at
Buffalo Wild Wings. Free, 9pm
Danny Beirne (piano-man) at Coupe
DeVille's. No cover, 10pm.
Karaoke Night at Damon's Sports Bar.
Free, 9-12am.
Chicken Head Blues Band at Dürty
Nelly's. $4, 9pm.
Karaoke with Ron Courtney at Fat Daddy's.
No cover, 8-11pm.
Peter Markush (piano) at Gravity Lounge.
Free, 12:30pm.
Vulgar Bulgars and Las Gitanas at Gravity
Lounge. $5, 8pm.
Darrell Rose and Matthew Willner Duets
(Afrikan percussion, nylon string guitar, bass, synths ,
loops, and devices) at Michael's Bistro. No cover, 9pm.
Rocket Queen at Outback Lodge. $3,
10pm.
Satisfaction with Noel Sanger (18 and up
dance party) at Rapture. $3/Ladies free, 10:30pm.
Middle Eastern Belly Dance Class at
Rapunzel's Coffee & Books. Free, 6:30pm.
Dirty Dozen Brass Band with Oregon Hill
Funk Allstars at Starr Hill. $14/$12 advance,
8pm.
FRIDAY,
February 11
ART
Paul's a Hit: "Installations/Abstractions," new work by
Paul C. Hitopoulos, opens today with a reception, 6-8pm.
Newcomb Hall. klg2a@virginia.edu.
Small Wonders: The Kluge-Ruhe
Collection sponsors a reception to open its new show of
Aboriginal art miniatures. 5:30-7:30pm. 400 Worrell Drive,
Peter Jefferson Place, Pantops Mountain. 244-0234 or
kluge-ruhe@virginia.edu.
FAMILY
For the Love of Children: Renowned child development
specialist Joseph Chilton Pearce presents a lecture and
workshop at the Charlottesville Waldorf School.
See Family
feature.
Ahoy, Matey: Old Michie Theatre
brings Robert Lewis Stevenson's classic children's tale to
the stage with a new main stage production of Treasure
Island. Pirates, sailors, and the infamous Long John Silver
sail the seas on a quest for buried treasure in a
performance that features a cast of local youth. 7pm. $7.50.
221 E. Water St. 977-3690. oldmichie.com.
PERFORMANCE
Drum Circle: No experience needed. All welcome. Bring
drums and other instruments and prepare to dance and groove.
Free. 8pm. Better than Television, 106 Goodman St., Apt. A3.
295-0872.
I Do! I Do! Just in time for
Valentine's Day, ThornRose Theatre Company presents a dinner
theater production of this musical on marriage. The show
begins with Michael and Agnes on their wedding day and
traces their life together over a period of 50 years. Doors
open 6pm. Show at 7:30. Clock Tower Tavern, 27 W. Beverley
St., Staunton. $35 includes dinner and dessert.
540-248-3224. thornrosetheatre.com.
The Dazzle: See Thursday, February
10. Tonight's show is at 8pm.
Organ Concert: The Westminster
Organ Concert Series continues its 25th anniversary season
with Sound the Trumpet, a program of French and English
baroque tunes. This month's concert is dedicated to the
memory of Ben Sturgill, a longtime supporter of the series.
8pm Westminster Presbyterian Church, 190 Rugby Road. Free.
963-4690.
King's Singers: Founded in 1968 at
King's College in Cambridge, the King's Singers are one of
the world's most acclaimed vocal ensembles, a group that can
handle Renaissance madrigals as deftly as folk and pop
music. $33-39. 8pm. Paramount Theater, Downtown Mall.
979-1333.
Tamer Tamed: This is John
Fletcher's hilarious sequel to The Taming of the Shrew,
written 20 years after Shakespeare's play. Petruchio marries
a second wife, who seeks revenge on behalf of Kate (and
browbeaten women everywhere) by denying her husband earthly
pleasures-- a reversal of roles that recalls the sex strike
in Aristophanes's Lysistrata. Opening night. 7:30pm. Attend
a pre-show lecture at 6pm. Blackfriars Playhouse, 10 S.
Market St., Staunton. Pay what you will.
540-885-5588.
Highway Child: See Thursday,
February 10.
Hip-Hop Workshop: Studio 206
offers a beginner's workshop on hip-hop dance. 6:30-8pm.
Studio 206, 206 W. Market St. $8-10, no registration needed.
510-681-8255 or tiffsanchez@hotmail.com.
WALKABOUT
A Taste of Jewish Mysticism: Heena Reiter presents this
fascinating look at the intricacies of the Jewish faith.
10am in the Senior Center Board Room. No fee, but
registration is required. 974-7756 or
seniorcenterinc.org.
Public Service & the Law:
Students, faculty, attorneys, local residents, and
policymakers come together to explore public interest issues
facing today's legal community. 8:30am-6pm at the UVA Law
School. 296-4539. See
Walkabout feature.
Ice Action: The Virginia hockey
team takes on Georgetown at the Downtown Ice Park tonight at
10pm. UVA students free, general public, $6.
uvahockey.com.
WORDS
Getting Over It: In time for Valentine's Day, editors
Mary Esselman and Elizabeth Ash Vélez introduce their
new collection of poems, You Drive Me Crazy: Love Poems for
Real Life. Meet the editors and join the discussion of
romance good and bad. Noon. New Dominion Bookshop. 401 E.
Main St. 295-2552. See cover story .
TUNES
SoulBone at Fellini's No. 9: Another local super-group
pops up from the netherworld0-- starring Art Wheeler, T.A.
Anderson, Tony Fisher, and Spencer Lathrop playing "Soul
Jazz, Blues & Rave-Ups." No cover, 10pm.
George Turner and Mike Rosensky (jazz
guitar duets) at Bashir's Restaurant. No cover, 7pm.
Richelle Clayborne and Ezra Hamilton with
Devereaux Nash at Gravity Lounge. $5, 8pm.
Jackass Flats at Gravity Lounge. No
cover, 10:30pm.
Vernon Fisher ("romantic side of jazz")
at Keswick Hall. No cover, 6:30pm.
Full Circle (country) at Miller's. $3m
10:30.
Intenebris at Outback Lodge. $6,
10pm.
King's Singers at the Paramount Theater.
$33-29, 8pm.
Open Mic Night at Rapunzel's. No cover,
8pm.
Pietasters with the Stabones, Star City
Wildcats, and Lucky So Far at Starr Hill. $12/$10,
9pm.
Guitarist George Turner with Greg
Nossaman on Hammond organ and Phil Riddle on drums (soul
jazz) at Vivace Restaurant. No cover, 10:30pm.
SATURDAY,
February 12
WALKABOUT
Trails Workday: Help the Rivanna Trails Foundation build
a trail network around Charlottesville, and get dirty in the
process! 8:45am. 923-9022 or rivannatrails.org.
Tracing the Past: Gayle Schuman
and Caruso Brown discuss funeral home records at the monthly
meeting of the Virginia Genealogical Association. 1:30pm at
Northside Library. 973-7471 or avenue.org/cvga.
Public Service & the Law: See
Friday, February 11. 8:30am-6pm at the UVA Law School.
See Walkabout
feature.
Wintergreen is for Lovers:
Celebrate with your Valentine at the Wintergreen Winery.
Complimentary candlelight tastings, Belgian chocolates, wine
shop specials, long stemmed roses, and door prizes.
10am-5pm. No fee. 361-2519 or
wintergreenwinery.com.
Ice Action: The Virginia hockey
team takes on George Mason at the Downtown Ice Park tonight
at 4pm. UVA students free, general public, $6.
uvahockey.com.
Jefferson's Valentine: Kick off
the official release of Jefferson Vineyard's Chardonnay
Reserve '03 with your sweetheart and tastings, light hors
d'oeuvres, and a complimentary corsage. 1-4pm. $15 per
person, advanced reservations required. 800-272-3042 or
jeffersonvineyards.com.
Oyster Fest: Forget about
chocolates, oysters are the perfect Valentine's Day fare.
Seriously. Rappahannock River Oysters shows how to enjoy
fresh oysters, while live music from Junior Moment and a
variety of wine tastings round out the day. 11am-5:30pm. $7
fee, reservations recommended. 540-456-8400 or
cardinalpointwinery.com.
Sweethearts Weekend: Warm up your
sweetie with traditional honeymoon wine, soup, and hors
d'oeuvres at Hill Top Berry Farm and Winery in Nellysford.
11am-5pm. Fee. 361-1266 or hilltopberrywine.com.
Day of Dialogue: Sit down for an
in-depth discussion on race and society with the UVA Women's
Center. 9am-5pm at Newcomb Hall. No fee. Call 982-2361 or
womenscenter.virginia.edu.
Couples Run: This brisk, annual 5K
winds through several Downtown neighborhoods and features
teams of two competing for the best combined time. 8am
start. $15 entrance fee per runner. 293-3367 or
avenue.org/amnesty/race.html.
St. Valentine at Barboursville:
Bring your sweetheart to celebrate with Phileo and
select desserts from Palladio Restaurant. 11am-4pm. $12 per
person. No reservations required. (540) 832-3824 or
barboursvillewine.com.
Red Wines & Valentines: Join
the 10 Blue Ridge WineWay wineries for a Wine Lover's
Weekend at Farfelu Vineyards. Live music, an outdoor fire,
wines, and chocolate. 11am-5pm. $5 per person. 540-364-2930
or farfeluwine.com.
Get Ready to Rumble: Banner and
sign-making party for upcoming rally to protest Nuclear
Reactor Plan and hearings about same on February 17.
noon-2pm. Call 970-2026 or email cristamor@aol.com for
information and directions.
Disaster Discussion: Come to a
public talk on the subject "Dominion's Plans for New Nuclear
Reactors-- Will These Reactors Be Safe?" 2-3pm. Louisa
County Library. 540-903-9343.
WALKABOUT AND FAMILY
A Year to Crow About: The Piedmont Chinese Association
celebrates the Year of the Rooster with a Chinese New Year
Festival at Fashion Square Mall. This festival of Chinese
culture and tradition features interactive displays and
activities, a raffle, live performances and samples of
Chinese cuisine. 1-5pm. Free. Sears Court.
924-2336
Animal Stories: Kate and Hub Knott of the
Living Earth School search for signs of wildlife in the
fields at Ivy Creek Natural Area. Outdoor adventurers are
welcome to join them and learn how to read the story animals
record in the landscape. Meet at the barn at 9am. Free.
Earlysville Road. 973-7772.
FAMILY
For the Love of Children: See Friday, February 11 and
Family
feature.
Hot off the Griddle: Those who
come to confess their devotion for pancakes in poem,
picture, dance, or song shall have their love requited with
hot cakes right off the griddle at Scottsville Library.
11am. Free. Registration required. 330 Bird St.,
Scottsville. 286-3541.
If I Had a Hammer: Carpenter Judy
Cahill brings her popular woodworking workshop to Crozet
Library. Participants ages 5 and up will be introduced to
the joys of building and leave with a finished project.
Adult helpers are encouraged to come along. 1pm. Free.
Registration required. 1500 Gordon Ave. 296-5544.
Royal Engagement: A prince travels
the world in search of a proper princess, but will any young
lady be able to pass the Queen's test? Old Michie Theatre
presents a puppet play adaptation of Hans Christian
Anderson's fairy tale the Princess and the Pea. 11am, 2 and
4pm. $5. 221 E. Water St. 977-3690.
Giving Your Heart: Northside
Library gives people lovers in grades 5-12 the chance to
make someone else's Valentine's Day a little bit brighter.
Materials are supplied so kids can create extra-special
Valentines to donate to a good cause. 10-11:30am. Free.
Albemarle Square. 973-7893.
Ahoy, Matey: See Friday, February
11.
Digging up Dirt: A morning
workshop at Monticello focuses on what archaeology has
revealed about plantation life at TJ's big spread. Aimed at
children in grades 4-7 accompanied by an adult. 10am. Free,
but reservations required. 984-9853.
FAMILY AND PERFORMANCE
Tricky Tales: Coyote and his amigos come to town for a
performance of Coyote Tales. Presented by Dallas Children's
Theatre and brought to Charlottesville by Community
Children's Theater, this is a rescheduling of the
performance originally scheduled for January 30. 2pm. $10.
Martin Luther King, Jr. Performing Arts Center, CHS,
Melbourne Road. 961-7862. avenue.org/cct.
PERFORMANCE
I Do! I Do!: See Friday, February 11. Same times,
includes dinner and dessert.
Taming of the Shrew: See Thursday,
February 10. Today's show is a 2pm matinee.
The Dazzle: See Thursday, February
10. 8pm tonight.
Tamer Tamed: See Friday, February 11.
(prices: $14-26)
Highway Child: See Thursday,
February 10.
Give it A Try (out): The ThornRose
Theatre Company announces auditions for The Foreigner by
Larry Shue. Auditions will be held at the Clock Tower Tavern
in Staunton, and all positions are paid. 2pm. At
thornrosetheatre.com, click on auditions.
WORDS
Sneaky Pie: Rita Mae Brown reads from her new Sneaky Pie
detective adventure, Cat's Witness, at Barnes & Noble.
7pm. Barracks Road Shopping Center. 984.6598.
TUNES
Darrell Rose and Friends at Gravity Lounge:
Percussionist Darrell Rose, founder of the Afrikan Drum
Festival, brings a cornucopia of his friends for an evening
that is sure to be heavy on the beats. $7, 8pm.
Thomas Gunn, John Rimel, Jay Pun &
Morwenna Lasko, and Andy Waldeck at Live Arts Downstage:
Join some of Charlottesville's best acoustic performers
for another edition of the continuing saga of Acoustic
Charlottesville-- saving the environment by conserving
energy. $6, 8pm.
John Cephas and Phil Wiggins at the
Prism: Winners of the W.C. Handy blues award, the
Piedmont duo bring their acoustic guitar and harmonica back
to the Prism for another go at greatness. $18/$15 advance,
8pm.
King Wilkie with Justin Jones at Starr
Hill: Back from a much needed hiatus, King Wilkie
continue to reach for the golden ring this year with their
bluegrass intensity. $10/$8 advance, 9pm.
See Tunes feature.
The Virginia Ramblers (formerly Virginia
Cut-ups), M.D. Mallory, and Charlottesville Grass at
Albemarle High School auditorium. $10, 7pm.
Victor Cabas (blues) at Basic
Necessities. No cover, 6:30pm.
Populist Dancing at Club Rio. $10, 9pm.
.
The Star City Wildcats (rockabilly) at
Durty Nelly's. $3, 9pm.
The Red Hot Chilly Pickers
(old-time/bluegrass) at Fabulous Foods in Crozet. No cover,
1-2:30.
Vernon Fisher ("romantic side of jazz")
at Keswick Hall. No cover, 6:30pm.
The Red Hot Chilly Pickers
(old-time/bluegrass) at Miller's. $3, 10:30pm.
Las Gitanas (gypsy tunes) at Odell's,
212-214 N. Main St., Gordonsville, $5. 8 PM.
The Vagina Monologues at Rapunzel's. $5,
8pm.
Vocalist Lori Derr and the George Turner
Trio with Bob Hallahan on piano (jazz standards and bossa
novas) at Starry Nights Valentine's at Veritas Vinyards.
Free, 7pm.
SUNDAY,
February 13
ART
Dignity & Despair: Carbon pigment images of Iraq by
Craig Spaulding are on view during February. A reception at
noon today honors the artist. See the show Sunday-Friday,
9am-2pm. Thomas Jefferson Memorial Church, 717 Rugby Road.
977-5411.
Rosenberg Rocks: Meet Janice Dunn
Rosenberg and enjoy her pastel and oil paintings at a
reception 3:30-5:30pm today. Sevenoaks Pathwork Center, 403
Pathwork Way, Madison. 295-8315.
Sampler: A Valentine Sampler
Concert of recorder music featuring the Shenandoah Consort
happens today at Sage Moon Gallery. 3:30pm. Free. Downtown
Mall. 591-0762.
FAMILY
Sweets for the Sweet: Chocoholics in grades 6-12 can
make their own yummy chocolates and a gift box to match.
Give it as a present or keep for yourself, but sign up at
Central Library soon. Space is limited. 2-3:30pm. Free. 201
E. Market St. 979-7151.
Ahoy, Matey: See Friday, February
11. 3pm today.
PERFORMANCE
Taming of the Shrew: See Thursday, February 10.
Tonight's show is at 7:30pm.
Tamer Tamed: See Friday, February
11. Prices for today's 2pm show are $14-26.
The Dazzle: See Thursday, February
10. Today's show is a 2pm matinee.
I Do! I Do! See Friday, February
11. Doors open today at 1pm. The 2pm show includes
dessert.
Barhoppers Audition: Help make
performance in a bar as fun as Tina Fey and Dave Matthews
did. Offstage Theatre holds auditions for its 15th
anniversary Barhoppers Series. Cold readings from the
scripts. 2-5pm. Culbreth Theatre. 244-8432.
Big Band Swing: The Jefferson
Heights senior community on Pantops hosts an afternoon of
live big band swing. Cut a rug to the tunes of
Charlottesville's Swingtime Orchestra with vocalist May
Robinson. Refreshments and prizes. Donations benefit the
American Red Cross tsunami relief fund. 2-5pm. 1550 Pantops
Mountain Place, off Route 250. Free. 977-4094.
WORDS
Don't Speak: Nationally known artist Reanae McNeal performs
her one-woman play Don't Speak My Mother's Name in Vain as
part a public awareness campaign to stop domestic violence
and sexual assault. The play-- part oral history, part
dance, part song-- brings to life eight female characters
with common bonds of oppression under racism and sexism.
5pm. Mt. Zion Baptist Church, 105 Lankford Ave. Free.
963-4676. See
Words feature.
WALKABOUT
American Sweethearts Tea: It's the Valentine season, but
it's also James and Elizabeth Monroe's wedding anniversary
(February 16, 1786). Today, interpreters portraying the two
receive visitors in their home at Ash Lawn-Highland for tea
and cookies. 1-4pm. Included in regular admission. 293-9539
or ashlawnhighland.org
Wintergreen is for Lovers: See
Saturday, February 12. 10am-5pm. No fee. 361-2519 or
wintergreenwinery.com.
Oyster Fest: See Saturday,
February 12. 11am-5:30pm. $7 fee, reservations
recommended.
Sweethearts Weekend: See Saturday,
February 12. 11am-5pm. Fee.
Red Wines & Valentines: See
Saturday, February 12. 11am-5pm. $5 per person.
Soften Up: Informative discussion
of natural and organic skin care and free trials of
products. 1:30pm. Body, Mind, Spirit. Preston Ave.
540-932-8585.
TUNES
The UVA Chamber Music Series at Old Cabell Hall: UVA's
performance faculty present Mozart's "Quartet, K. 465,"
Colgrass's "Variations for Viola and Four Drums" among other
works. $10/$5 students. 3:30pm. 924-3984.
Evan Mook (jazz pianist) at Fellini's No.
9. No cover, 6-9pm.
Ellis Paul with Anna Wolfe at Gravity
Lounge. $12, 7pm.
Barling and Collins (cello-pop) at
Miller's. No cover, 10:30pm.
The Vagina Monologues at Rapunzel's. $5,
3pm.
Irish Music Session at Shebeen. No cover,
3-6pm.
MONDAY,
February 14
WALKABOUT
Defend Yourself: Self-defense workshops run for six
Monday nights at 7 Tigers Tae Kwon Do. $5/class. 7:40-9pm.
3335 Seminole Lane across from Wal-Mart.
831-1292.
Barboursville Valentine Dinner:
Romance the season at Barboursville Vineyard's award-winning
Palladio Restaurant. 7pm. $110/person, reservations
required. 540-832-7848 or barboursvillewine.com.
Talk About It: Black Women, White
Women, All Women In Dialogue holds its monthly meeting in
the Madison Room at the Central Library downtown.
5:45-7:15pm. Open to all. 295-2612.
Paws To Ponder: Caring For
Creatures presents a free community lecture series designed
to enhance your relationship with the animal in your life.
This month's focus is on understanding your pet's emotions.
7pm. No fee (except for dinner). Wild Greens Restaurant,
North Wing Barracks Road. 591-6113 or visit
caringforcreatures.com.
All Aboard: The National Railway
Historical Society- Rivanna Chapter convenes at Golden
Corral for their monthly meeting. The program features two
videos concerning Colorado's narrow gauge railroading.
Pay-as-you-go dinner/social at 6pm followed by the meeting
at 7. Visitors welcome. 978-7980 or
avenue.org/nrhs.
Valentine Wine Dinner: Join King
Family Vineyards for a candlelit five-course dinner prepared
by Chef Pierce McCluskey. Limited seating available in the
barrel room. 7pm. $100/person, pre-paid reservations
required. 823-7800.
NAACP Meeting: The local chapter
of the NAACP meets on the second Monday of each month. 7pm.
Tonsler Park Community Center, Cherry Ave. near Fifth St.
293-4044.
Senior Center Anniversary: Join
Senior Center member and guest speaker Betz Gleason as the
center celebrates 45 years of involving, enriching, and
empowering seniors in our community with a reception and
live music. 1pm. RSVP at the front desk.
974-7756.
Women Voters: Hear from two
members of the Fluvanna Planning Commission at the monthly
meeting of the Fluvanna League of Women Voters. 4:30pm at
the Public Safety Building on Route 53 in Palmyra.
589-4886.
Winemakers' Dinner: Dial up the
romance at First Colony Winery's four-course Valentine's
wine dinner. Reception at 6:30pm, dinner at 7.
$70/all-inclusive. 877-979-7105.
Rick and Elsa: The Center for
Christian Study presents a viewing and discussion of
Casablanca. 7:30pm. 1530 Rugby Ave. Free. 817-1050.
studycenter.net.
PERFORMANCE
Bitter-Sweet Honey: Spend this Valentine's Day with
Sweet Honey in the Rock. A vital and innovative presence in
the music world for over 30 years, Sweet Honey is rooted in
the rich textures of African-American song. Their stunning
vocal prowess captures elements of blues, spirituals,
traditional gospel hymns, hip hop, reggae, African chants,
ancient lullabies and jazz improv. 8pm Paramount Theater,
Downtown Mall. $37-43. 977-1333.
Get Lucky: Lucky Supremo graces
Club 216. Show hosted by current Miss Gay Charlottesville,
Kristina Kelly. 11pm. Water St.
WORDS
Eros Rules: Rapture's seventh annual Valentine's Day
erotic poetry festival combines open mic readings by
participants and of original works by Moira Egan from her
new volume, Cleave. Open mic sign-up begins at 7:15. Readers
are encouraged to come early to sign up for a 5-10 minute
spot. Readings should relate to the topics of the erotic,
sensual, romantic, amorous. Free admission; $5 suggested
donation. 7:30-10:30pm. Club R2 inside Rapture on the
Downtown Mall. 293-9526. See
Words Feature.
TUNES
Paul Curreri and Devon Sproule at Gravity Lounge:
Charlottesville's first musical couple, Curreri and
Sproule dazzle with their country-folk harmonies and knowing
glances. $10, 7pm.
Open Mic Night with Charles Davis at
Baja Bean. No cover, signup 8:30pm/9pm.
The Rusticators (acoustic) at The
Biltmore Grill. Free, 10pm.
George Turner (solo guitar renditions of
jazz standards) at Fellini's No. 9. No cover, 5:30-9:30pm.
Crooked Road at the Lafayette Hotel, Main
St., Stanardsville. Free, 8pm.
Matthew Wilner at Miller's. No cover,
9pm.
George Melvin (piano merriment) at South
Street Brewery. No cover, 9:30pm.
Travis Elliott (pop) and John Figura at
the Virginian. No cover, 10pm.
TUESDAY,
February 15
ART
No Carpet Bombing: Elizabeth Fentress speaks on
"Islamizing the Berbers: Excavations at Volubilis and the
first centuries of the Arab conquest of North Africa."
5:30pm. Campbell Hall, Room 160. 924-7648 or
mbell@virginia.edu.
PERFORMANCE
Barhoppers Audition: See Sunday, February 13. Tonight
7-10pm, in Room 107 of the Living Education
Center,
WALKABOUT
Civil War Round Table: Join Civil War enthusiasts for an
evening of historical discussion with noted authors and
professors. 7:30pm at the UVA JAG School, North Grounds.
Public welcome. 295-9463 or avenue.org/cwrt.
TUNES
Josh Scolaro at Atomic Burrito. Free, 10pm.
Karaoke Night (what you make of it) at
Baja Bean. Free, 8pm.
Glen Mack (rock) at Coupe DeVille's. No
cover, 10:30pm.
The Red Hot Chilly Pickers (old-time) at
Dr. Ho's. No cover, 7pm.
Tom Proutt at Fat Daddy's. No cover,
8:30-11pm
Alan Rashid (guitarist) at Miller's. $3,
9:30pm.
Rule of Thump at Orbit. No cover,
10:30pm.
$2 Tuesdays with Big Circle at Outback
Lodge. No cover, 10pm.
Adelyn at Starr Hill Cocktail Lounge.
Free, 8pm.
WEDNESDAY,
February 16
FAMILY
Bears in Our Backyard: Wildlife biologist Ron Hughes
talks about bears in Albemarle County and how to avoid
common problems. He'll distinguish fact from fiction at Ivy
Creek Natural Area in the Education Building. 10am. Free.
Earlysville Road. 973-7772.
What's for Dinner?: Who's eating
whom? Nancy Newman from the Virginia Museum of Natural
History talks about nature's food chain and brings some
taxidermied specimens and skulls for show and tell. 4pm.
Free. Gordon Avenue Library. 296-5544.
More Tales for Tots: The 5 and
under crowd can hear some favorite picture book stories
featuring monkey tales at Barnes & Noble's preschool
story time. 10:30am. Free. Barracks Road Shopping Center.
984-6598
Music in the Air: The Youth
Orchestra of Charlottesville-Albemarle and the Evans
Orchestra perform a concert of classics at Burley Middle
School Auditorium. Carolyn Bancroft conducts. 7pm. 901 Rose
Hill Drive. 974-7776. yoca.org.
PERFORMANCE
Taming of the Shrew: See Thursday, February
10.
The Dazzle: See Thursday, February
10. Tonight's pay-what-you-will performance is at
8pm.
WALKABOUT
Masculine Moviegoers: Documentary filmmaker Byron Hurt
hosts a screening of his film, I am a Man Black Male
Masculinity in America Today, followed by a discussion of
the issues it raises about society. 8-9:30pm at the Newcomb
Hall Theater. No fee. 924-7923.
Sierra Club Meeting: The Piedmont
Group of the Sierra Club meets to discuss environmental
issues facing central Virginia. 7:30pm at St. Mark Lutheran
Church. 973-0373.
WORDS
Tantalus in Love: Poet Alan Shapiro comes to the Medical
Center Hour to talk about his work. 12:30-1:30pm. Jordan
Hall Auditorium.
TUNES
Josh Mayo and Dane North at Fat Daddy's: Mayo's sweet
voice goes with his sweet original songs- nice pop, the kind
you could take home to mama. No cover, 8:30-11pm.
Salsa night at Berkmar: Beginning and
intermediate lessons offered from 8 to 9:15 p.m. Free,
8-10pm. 652 Rio Road W. 975-4611.
Cheesy Trivia with M&M Express at
Buffalo Wild Wings. No cover, 8:30pm.
Benny Dodd (rock covers) at Coupe
DeVille's. No cover, 10pm.
Open Mic Night at Dew Drop Inn. No cover,
7:30pm.
Country Dance Night (couples and line) at
Fry Spring Beach Club. $7/$4 students, lessons 7-8pm,
dancing 8-11pm.
The Mike Rosensky Jeff Decker Quartet
(jazz) at Miller's. No cover, 9:30pm.
Snug at Orbit. No cover,
10:30pm.
Stable Roots (reggae) at Outback Lodge.
$5, 10pm.
Open Jam at Rapunzel's Coffee &
Books. Free, 7pm.
Middle Eastern Belly Dance Class at
Rapunzel's Coffee & Books. Free, 6:30pm. .
Jimmy O at the South River Grill in
Waynesboro. No cover, 7:30pm.
Neko Case with Visqueen & the Sadies
at Starr Hill. $17/$15 advance, 8pm.
Jim Davies (acoustic rock and blues) at
the Virginian. No cover, 10pm.
Karaoke Night at West Main. No Cover,
10pm.
THURSDAY,
February 17
FAMILY
Black History Heroes: Northside Library tells the
stories of the heroic men and women of the African Diaspora,
their brave feats and contributions to humanity. 4pm. Free.
Registration required. Albemarle Square. 973-7893.
Conflict Resolution: Parent
Resource Center offers parents with special ed students help
in understanding how to work with the system with a workshop
called "Resolving Disagreements: Dispute Resolution in
Special Education Complaints, Mediation, and Due Process" at
the Albemarle Resource Center. Presenters are Jonnell Lilly
and Patrick Andriano from the state Department of Education.
Refreshments served. 6-8pm. Free. Registration requested.
1200 Forest St. 975-9400, ext. 2342.
More Tales for Tots: See
Wednesday, February 16.
PERFORMANCE
Taming of the Shrew: See Thursday, February
10.
The Dazzle: See Thursday, February
10.
Highway Child: See Thursday,
February 10.
Tamer Timed: Tonight there's a
pre-show lecture at 6pm. Chat with the cast after the show.
$14-26.
WORDS
Less Lewis, More Clark: Landon Y. Jones, author of
William Clark and the Shaping of the West, discusses the
book at a meeting tonight of the Lewis and Clark Trail
Heritage Foundation. 7:30pm. St. Paul's Church, Ivy.
296-5162.
WALKABOUT
Be There or Be Radioactive: Rally (6pm) to oppose new
nuclear reactors in North Anna. Immediately following the
rally (7-10pm) the Nuclear Regulatory Commission hosts a
public hearing to discuss the draft version of the
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for building new
reactors at the North Anna site in Mineral. Louisa Middle
School. 1009 Davis Highway. 296-2494 or
citizen.org/cmep/VARally/
Monticello Wine Dinner: Indulge in
this five-course dinner in the Old Mill Room at the Boar's
Head Inn featuring Monticello wines paired with the cuisine
of Chef Douglas Knopp. 6pm. $80/person, plus tax and
gratuity. 972-2230 for reservations.
Memory Medicine: Join the
Alzheimer's Association of Central and Western Virginia as
they explore practical suggestions on Alzheimer's treatment.
1-3pm in Room B at the Senior Center. No fee. 973-6122 or
seniorcenterinc.org.
Know Your Rights: The UVA Women's
Center's free legal clinic offers 30-minute advising
appointments with a lawyer, available to University faculty
and staff and Charlottesville community members. Clinics
take place the third Thursday of every month at the Women's
Center in the Corner Building on the corner of 14th Street
and University Ave. 7-9pm. 982-2902 or
gpl3b@virginia.edu.
TUNES
Gráda at the Prism: Contemporary Irish group
Gráda includes Alan Doherty, solo flutist on the Lord
of the Rings soundtrack. $18/$15, 8pm. $15 advance/$18 at
the door or online.
Barling and Collins (cello-pop) at Atomic
Burrito. No cover, 10:30pm.
Karaoke Night with DJ Wild Wes at
Buffalo Wild Wings. Free, 9pm
Danny Beirne (piano-man) at Coupe
DeVille's. No cover, 10pm.
Karaoke Night at Damon's Sports Bar.
Free, 9-12am.
Chicken Head Blues Band at Dürty
Nelly's. $4, 9pm.
Peter Markush (piano) at Gravity Lounge.
Free, 12:30pm.
Mark Erelli at Gravity Lounge. $15/$10,
8pm.
Thompson / D'earth and friends (freeform
jazz) at Miller's. $4, 10pm.
Fletcher Bridge at Outback Lodge. $5,
10pm.
Satisfaction with Noel Sanger (18 and up
dance party) at Rapture. $3/Ladies free, 10:30pm.
Middle Eastern Belly Dance Class at
Rapunzel's Coffee & Books. Free, 6:30pm.
Donna the Buffalo at Starr Hill. $16/$14,
8pm.
Ongoing
and Future
FAMILY
Knitting for Felting: Stony Mountain Fibers offers a
class February 26-27 to help with the winter doldrums. Using
textured yarns, students will knit a small bag out of wool
and novelty yarn and then felt it in the washing machine.
Pre-registration required. $75 includes all supplies.
295-2008.
Spelunking: The Virginia Discovery
Museum goes underground with its latest Back Gallery exhibit
"Under the Earth: A Cave Exploration." Through May 22, young
children can squeeze through tiny spaces to explore caves
and critters from deep inside the earth. Included in the
price of admission. East end of the Downtown Mall.
977-1025.
Get Moving: Move your body, free
your mind, lift your spirits and have loads of fun at
Dancefit Movement Center. Cardio Hip-Hop (Mon 5:30pm);
Cardio-Flex (T/Th 5:30pm and Sat 12:30pm); Dancefit (T/Th
6:30pm and Sat 1:30pm); Yoga Being (T/Th 7:30pm and Sat
2:30pm) and Kids Dancefit (ages 3-7, Sat 10:30am; ages 8-12,
Sat 11:30 am). Classes and coaching in pageantry, image
& style, and modeling available. Beginner through
advanced; no experience required. 609 E. Market St., Studio
110 (across from Market St. garage). 295-4774.
dancefit@mindspring.com or njira.com/dancefit.
Boning Up: Find out what you're
really made of at the Science Museum of Virginia's new
exhibit, Bones: An Exhibit Inside You. Visitors can examine
bone biology, find out how proper diet and exercise keep
bones healthy, explore how technology helps us "see" our
bones, and learn the ways bones are used as tools, jewelry,
art, and musical instruments in cultures around the world.
Through May 1. Included in the price of admission. 2500 W.
Broad St., Richmond. 800-659-1727. smv.org.
Write On: WHTJ's annual Reading
Rainbow Young Writers & Illustrators Contest is now on.
Authors and artists from kindergarten through third grade
are encouraged to get creative with words and pictures and
submit their stories for the prize. All contest
participants, their friends, and families are invited to a
celebration on Saturday, March 19 at the Jefferson Theater
on the Downtown Mall, and every participant receives a
certificate signed by Reading Rainbow host LeVar Burton.
Winners will read their stories aloud. Entry deadline is
February 28. Entry forms and guidelines can be downloaded at
ideastation.org. 295-7671.
PERFORMANCE
Dances of the Divine Feminine: Instructor Kimberly
Gladysz focuses each week on a different goddess from around
the world. Drawing on yoga as well as Tahitian and West
African dance, these workshops claim to inspire an awakening
of "primal energies in a sacred circle." No experience
necessary. Wednesdays, 7:30-8:30pm. Studio 206 Belmont.
960-1092 or naturedances.com.
Practice Swing: The
Charlottesville Swing Dance Society hosts weekly practice
sessions for beginners and intermediates Thursdays. Singles
and couples welcome. DJ takes requests. 7:30-9pm. Auditorium
of the Albemarle County Office Building, 401 McIntire Road.
Free. 980-2744.
Contra Dance: Monthly contra
dances with live music held 8-11pm every second Saturday at
the Dayton Learning Center, 90 Mill St. in Dayton, about 4
miles southwest of Harrisonburg off Route 257. Free
beginner's workshop starts at 7:15pm. Alcohol-free,
smoke-free. $5. Call Lisa McCumsey, 540-234-8379, or Mike
Williams, 540-269-2035.
Sunday Salsa: The Charlottesville
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 8. DJ'd music is 80 percent salsa mixed with
other Latin styles. Complimentary water and sodas. The
Outback Lodge, 917 Preston Ave. 8pm-midnight. $5 (members
$3). 979-7211.
Country Dance: Couples and line
dancing at Fry's Spring Beach Club. Dance lesson Wednesday
7-8pm, dancing 8-11pm. $7, students $4. (students $2 every
fourth Wednesday). 2512 Jefferson Park Ave.
977-0491.
Belly Dance and More: Get kinky at
the Berkmar Ballroom with lessons in everything from exotic
dance to salsa and tango. Classes, schedules and prices
vary. Visit www.bermarballroom.com for a complete listing or
call for more information. 652 Rio Road W.
975-4611.
More Belly Dance: Studio 206
Belmont offers one-hour belly dance lessons every Tuesday
with instructor Amalia Habibi. 7:15pm. 501 Monticello Road
(above Mas tapas bar). $9-12. 296-6250.
Keep Rotating those Abs: Studio
Bijoux's Leila offers Egyptian belly dance for advanced
beginners (permission required) at 7pm Mondays and 7:15pm
Wednesdays. A technique course open to dancers of all skill
levels takes place at 8pm Mondays. Ages 15 and up welcome.
All courses at ACAC Albemarle Square. $10-12. 978-3800 or
studiobijoux.com/dance.
WALKABOUT
Glassy Classes: Among the weekend and weekday classes
offered by the Glass Palette through March are kiln forming,
fusing and slumping, glass jewelry with precious metal clay,
and stained glass. Class sizes limited. Call 977-9009 to
register, or visit the shop at 110 Fifth St. NE on the
Downtown Mall.
City Garden: City residents who
did not rent a plot in the Charlottesville City Garden last
year may sign up for a new plot starting February 14. Garden
plot rentals will be open to everyone beginning February 22.
970-3592.
Water Watchers: StreamWatch needs
volunteers interested in stream ecology and willing to
collect aquatic organisms for the purpose of evaluating
stream health. See streamwatch.org for info, then call
923-8642.
Green Gatherings: Explore the
spiritual side of nature with NatureSpirit. Explore the
spiritual teachings of earth-centered traditions and learn
how to live in harmony with the rhythms of nature. Meets the
first Sunday of the month at Thomas Jefferson Memorial
Church at 6:30pm.
243-6421
Parla italiano? If you don't,
Christina Ball of Ecco Italy offers "Italian for Beginners"
lessons on Wednesday mornings (9:30-11am; $15 drop-in fee).
If you do, why not drop by for the Tavola italiana
(Wednesdays 11:30am-12:30pm) for a free chat hour in
italiano? Or what about "Cinema Chat," a series of
intermediate Italian conversation classes inspired by
Italian films. ($55 for five-week chat series or $15 single
class drop-in; Thursday 7L30-9pm). All classes held in the
Verity blue Tower Lounge at the Main Street Market 406A W.
Main St. Contact christina@eccoitaly.com or 825-4390.
Fair Volunteers: The Albemarle
County Fair is looking for volunteers, not only at fair
time, but also for planning and promotions throughout the
coming year. 293-6396.
Alliance Dinner Meeting:
Interfaith Gay Straight Alliance of Central Virginia, a
faith-based group working for full civil rights for lesbian,
gay, bisexual, transgenders and their families, meets the
first Thursday of each month. 7pm. St. Paul's Memorial
Episcopal Church, 1700 University Ave. Brown bag supper at
6pm. 220-0970.
Bead Business: Studio Baboo
presents weekly classes in bead stringing and jewelry
making. The winter class schedule continues, with "Basic
Bead Stringing," "Embellished Spiral Bracelet," "Fashion
Earrings," "Bead Crochet," Maggie Meister's "Hercules Knot
Bracelet," and "French Beaded Flowers" on the docket. Call
the shop for specifics. 106 Fifth St. Downtown Mall.
244-2905 or studiobaboo.com.
Early Music Meeting: The
Shenandoah Recorder Society meets on the third Sunday of
every month to discuss the recorder and early music in
general. Open to all. For more information, call 295-1395.
Mindfulness Meditation: Tuesdays
12:15-12:45pm. UVA Hospital Chapel. Meditation practice with
guidance. Free. No experience necessary.
924-1190.
WORDS
Got Forgiveness?: Len Worley invites those who have a
personal account of forgiveness of self and others to share
it as part of the Forgiveness Project. Anonymous
voice-recorded interviews are being sought for the upcoming
Psychology of Forgiveness Seminar, planned for early summer.
434-293-3271 or lenworley@visionaryquest.org.
Asian-American Poets Alert:
Kundiman is now accepting applications for the 2005
Poetry Retreat, including workshops led by nationally
renowned poets and one-on-one mentoring sessions. The
retreat, especially for Asian-American poets, takes place at
UVA July 13-17. To apply, send three copies of five to seven
paginated and stapled pages of poetry, with your name on
each page. Include name, address, phone number, email
address, and a brief paragraph describing your goals for
attending the retreat. Mail all, with SAS postcard if you
want receipt acknowledged, to Kundiman, 245 Eighth Ave.
#151, New York, NY 10011. Deadline 3/1/05.
Book Fest Reaches Tipping Point:
New Yorker staff writer Malcolm Gladwell, author of The
Tipping Point and the new book, Blink: The Power of Thinking
Without Thinking, speaks Thursday, March 17 at 7:30am in the
Omni Hotel. Reserved tables, $300. Individual tickets, $20.
Seating is limited, so sign up early by email
althea@virginia.edu or
vabook.org/biz-breakfast/index.html/.
Register as a Community Scholar:
Community members can take classes at UVA as a community
scholar: two courses a semester max, not for credit.
Registration at the School of Continuing and Professional
Studies open through February 4. 924-4789, or
communityscholar@virginia.edu.
ART LIST
Second Street Gallery offers two
shows during February. "Attention Spans: Kinetic Sculpture
by Andy Holtin" sets the main gallery in motion, while the
Dové Gallery ripens with "Tomato Baby," a multi-media
video environment created by high school students who
participated in Light House's 2004 "Video as Art" workshop.
115 Second St. SE. 977-7284.
During February, the McGuffey Art Center
presents "Findings," paintings by Farida Hughes, in the Main
Gallery. On view in the downstairs hall galleries: painter
Randi Hvatum's oil exhibtion "Along Shore," and Will
Kerner's photographs of the village of L'Acul in Haiti.
Upstairs, McGuffey and Second Street Gallery collaborate to
present "Mapping a Day in the Life," 22 photographs by city
school students who took part in a two-week workshop at UVA.
201 Second St. NW. 295-7973.
The University of Virginia Art Museum
presents "Anastasi / Bradshaw / Cage / Cunningham," a major
exhibition exploring the collaborative relationships of the
four artists from the years 1950-2004, on display through
March 27. Also on view: "Corapeake," a visual documentary of
the community of Corapeake, N.C., by photographer and
filmmaker Kendall Messick, which runs through February 27,
and "After Collage," a show of mixed-element work by
contemporary artists, including John Baldessari, Katherine
Porter, and Frank Stella, which continues through August 27.
155 Rugby Road. 924-3592.
See Art feature.
Coinciding with the UVA show of their
work, Bill Anastasi and Dove Bradshaw are the featured
artists at Les Yuex du Monde during February. 115 S. First
St. 973-5566.
The University of Virginia McIntire
Department of Art presents "Dwellings," an exhibition of
works on paper by Dragana Crnjak, on view at the new Off
Grounds Gallery through February 28. 300 W. Main St.
924-6123.
The University Programs Council's
Artspace shows "Installations/Abstractions," new work by
Paul C. Hitopoulos, on view through March 9. Opening
reception, February 11, 6-8pm. Newcomb Hall. Info:
klg2a@virginia.edu.
The Satellite Ballroom features the
photography of fifth-year UVA Aunspaugh Fellow Alice Bailey
during February. Under and behind Michael's Bistro on the
Corner. 1427 University Ave. 825-6914.
The UVA School of Architecture's Victor
and Sono Elmaleh Gallery shows the landscape designs of
Michael Van Valkenburgh and Associates through March 4. Van
Valkenburgh presents a lecture, "Two Parks in New York City
and the Wellesley College Landscape," at 5pm, February 10 in
Campbell Hall, Room 153. 982-2921.
The Main Street Market Galleria displays
"dreams/experiences," paintings by Michal Mitchell through
the end of February. 416 W. Main St. 244-7800.
Transient Crafters presents the
hand-painted pottery of Maggie Stultz during the month of
February. 118 E. Main St. on the Downtown Mall.
972-9500.
Monticello is hosting an exhibition,
"Nathaniel Gibbs Paintings of African-American Life at
Monticello" through February 25, in honor of
African-American history month. 10am-4pm weekdays at
Kenwood, Route 53, two miles beyond Monticello.
984-7500.
During February, The Charlottesville
Community Design Center presents "Postcards from the Field,"
an exhibition of work by the Frederick P. Rose Architectural
Fellows. 101 E. Main St. 984-2232.
Kelly Lonergan displays "Places to
Be/People to See," an exhibition of his paintings and
mixed-media work, at Mudhouse during February. 213 W. Main
St. 984-6833.
Take It Away features "Jazz at UVA,"
photographs by John Mason, on view through the end of
February. 115 Elliewood Ave. 924-6492.
Dorothy Siu-ling Chan displays her
Chinese brush paintings on rice paper at the UVA Cancer
Center through March 2. Hospital Drive. 924-9333.
Nurse Marissa Minnerly shows her oil
paintings in the second-floor Martha Jefferson Hospital
Surgery Lounge through February 28. 459 Locust Ave.
249-7723,
The Renaissance School presents a
retrospective exhibition, "From Prague to Charlottesville,"
featuring the paintings of John Hetzel through February 28.
406 E. Main St. on the Downtown Mall. 984-1952.
Nature Visionary Art displays the dark
and mysterious paintings of Laurel Hausler through March.
110 Fourth St. NE. 296-8482.
CODG's February show, "Color World,"
features the work of three artists: Jennifer Santos, Rob
Grachus, and John Grachus. 112 E. Main St., under the
Jefferson Theater. 242-4212.
The C&O Gallery offers "Discerning
Focus," interpretive and abstract landscapes by Kelly
Gravely Mattox, during February. 511 E. Water St. (next to
the C&O Restaurant). 971-7044.
During February, Fusion displays "Twigs,"
paintings by Nancy Jane Dodge. 412 E. Main St. on the
Downtown Mall. 984-2819.
On February 13, the Thomas Jefferson
Memorial Church opens Craig Spaulding's photography
exhibition, " Dignity & Despair: Images of Iraq." The
show runs through March 6. An opening reception will be held
February 13 at noon. 717 Rugby Road. 293-8179.
The Charlottesville/Albemarle District of
VSA Arts Virginia presents its Fifth Annual Visual Art show,
featuring work by over 70 adult and youth disabled artists.
The exhibition runs through March 6. Martin Luther King Jr.
Performing Arts Center. CHS, Melbourne Road. 970-3264 or
296-3518.
Piedmont Virginia Community College
presents an exhibition of 2-D and 3-D works on paper by 15
Virginia artists through February 16. V. Earl Dickinson
Building. 961-5203.
The 5th Floor Gallery at Keller Williams
is currently showing explorations of realism by painter Tom
Tartaglino, paintings of Italy by Doris daSha, and
photography by Candace Schoner. Ten percent of proceeds from
artwork sold goes to Habitat for Humanity. Suite 500,
Citizens Commonwealth Building (UVA Credit Union), 300
Preston Ave. 220-2200.
Through February, Angelo displays
"Generous Nature," works in watercolor, oil, pencil, and
collage by J. Scott Robinson. 220 E. Main St.
971-9256.
Kluge-Ruhe Collection of Aboriginal Art
presents "Small Wonders: Aboriginal Art Miniatures," which
will be on view through April 16. An opening reception is
scheduled for February 11, 5:30-7:30pm. The exhibition
"Black & White & Red Ochre" has been extended
through February 26. 400 Worrell Drive, Peter Jefferson
Place (off Route 250 East at Pantops). 244-0234..
For its February show, The Gallery @ 5th
& Water offers the fruit pastels of Juliann Godine. 107
Fifth St. 979-9825.
Sage Moon Gallery presents "Ancestral
Footsteps: Vision, Beauty, Courage, Life," works by Hoover
Wantue Major, plus "Mother Nature Double Crossed,"
photography by Karla Berger. Both shows run through
February. 420 E. Main St. on the Downtown Mall.
977-9997.
New work by members of the Central
Virginia Watercolor Guild, featuring watercolors, oils,
pastels, and mixed media are on display at the Albemarle
County Courthouse. 501 E. Jefferson Court Square.
296-8484.
View Coy Roy's exhibition, "Water, water,
everywhere
" at Art Upstairs during February. 316 E.
Main St., above The Hardware Store, on the Downtown Mall.
923-3900.
For the month of February, Bozart Gallery
features "Lowest Common Denominator," a show of works in oil
by Dave Bascom. 211 W. Main St. 296-3919.
Gravity Lounge presents "Reality Bites!,"
two consecutive shows of paintings by Lynn Jangochian during
February and March. 103 S. First St. 977-5590.
L'étoile Restaurant displays
paintings by local artists Barry Gordon, Malcolm Hughes, and
Christian Peri. 817 W. Main St. (across from the Amtrak
Station). 979-7957.
Radar
During February, the Artisans Center of
Virginia presents a show juried, created, and presented by
junior and senior high school students who participated in
the Shenandoah Valley Governor's School Visual Arts Program.
601 Shenandoah Drive (Exit 94 off I-64), Waynesboro.
540-946-3294.
The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts displays
"Selections: 20th Century Latin American Art in the VMFA
Collection" through March 13. 200 N. Broad St., Richmond.
804-340-1400.
Washington and Lee University presents an
exhibition of work by Anne Sherwood Pundyk, up until June.
Lexington. 540-458-8954.
Madison's Sevenoaks Pathwork Center
displays the pastel and oil paintings of Janice Dunn
Rosenberg through February 22. Reception, February 13,
3:30-5:30pm. 403 Pathwork Way, Madison.
434-295-8315.
In celebration of African American
History Month, The Arts Center in Orange presents "Ancestral
Rhythms," paintings by Darrell Rose (yes, that Darrell
Rose), plus "Brown vs. The Board of Education: The Orange
County Experience," a documentary photography retrospective.
129 E. Main St., Orange. 540-672-7311.
Through February 28, Richmond's Rentz
Gallery presents its "Small Works Invitational" of over 150
works. 1700 W. Main St. 804-358-5338.
Noon Whistle Pottery and Art Gallery
presents an exhibition of three local landscape artists,
Will Brown, Mark Collins, and Carol Weiss. Main Street,
Stanardsville. 434-985-6500.
The Barn Swallow features pottery by
Janice Arone and Mary Ann Burke, plus other handcrafted
artwork. Route 682 off 250W. 434-979-4884.
Staunton's Painted Thunder Studios
welcomes the work of equine artist Jennet Inglis. 19 W.
Beverley St. 540-851-0864.
The Ed Jaffe Gallery features paintings
and marble sculptures by Ed Jaffe, plus abstract photographs
by Marc Jaffe. 108 W. Main St., Orange. 540-672-2400.
Staunton's Middlebrook Gallery offers
contemporary art and fine crafts, including sculpture by Ken
Smith. 5 Middlebrook Ave. 540-885-9955.
A winter group show at Barboursville's
Nichols Gallery Annex continues through February 27
featuring paintings by Gray Dodson, Frank Hobbs, Philip
Koch, Frederick Nichols, and others. Intersection of Routes
20 & 33. 540-832-3565.
Other
ArtinPlace invites entries for its annual
Charlottesville in 2 Dimensions Art Show, "Views of
Charlottesville," which will hang at the McGuffey Art Center
during March. Entries due February 26, 1-5pm, on the second
floor of the McGuffey Art Center. $25 prizes for youth: $500
prize for adults. 979-5388.
The Artisans Center of Virginia invites
entries for a national competition/juried exhibition,
"Sacred Icons: A Collective Vision of Symbolic & Ritual
Objects." All media are accepted, but work must have been
completed in the past two years. The entry fee is $20, and
the submission deadline is February 19. 540-946-3294 or
acv@nexet.net.
ART
FEATURE
Conceptual: artists converge at
UVA Musuem
BY LAURA PARSONS
ART@READTHEHOOK.COM
I heard it again the other night. An
otherwise brilliant friend threw out the tired line that
makes my teeth clench: "The problem I have with a lot of
modern art is I could have done it." If you're of that mind,
and you're not an artist (then again, no artist would ever
say that), turn the page. The University of Virginia's
exhibition "Anastasi/Bradshaw/Cage/Cunningham" has little to
offer you.
On the other hand, if you appreciate
artists who push the envelope of what constitutes art, who
openly flirt with aesthetic boundaries, then this tour de
force of work by William Anastasi, Dove Bradshaw, John Cage,
and Merce Cunningham is right up your alley.
Although the show includes several
1980s-era videos of Cunningham-choreographed dances-- for
which Cage composed the music and Anastasi and Bradshaw
designed the sets, lighting, and costumes-- the real
collaboration between these four artists was intellectual.
They shared an interest in exploring the idea of
relinquishing control to see how art might spontaneously
progress. As creative friends, they spurred each other on,
inspired by their respective routes of inquiry.
Cage's and Cunningham's contributions
venture beyond their better-known territories of music and
dance into drawing and printmaking. But it is Anastasi's and
Bradshaw's wildly varied experiments that give the
exhibition its juice.
Beginning in the 1950s, Anastasi was one
of the first artists to thrash around in what later came to
be known as Conceptual Art. His pieces range from a
scribbled "blind drawing" overlaid with snapshots that
reveal the very drawing they obscure ("Without Title,"1964)
to a slab of cement with a small sediment-laden valley at
its center, eroded by the artist's own urine (hey, I warned
you "could-have-done-it-myself" people up there in the first
paragraph, so no eye-rolling).
The latter work, punning-ly named
"Relief" (1961), simultaneously resembles an aerial view of
a desert arroyo and a woman's vulva.
Bradshaw's work primarily revolves around
"convergences," pieces that perpetually change due to
chemical reactions initiated by the artist. Using a
combination of silver, liver of sulfur, varnish, and
beeswax, Bradshaw creates abstract compositions and then
subtracts herself from the process as they evolve on their
own. Her large "Convergency Pour," "activated" in 1994 and
1996, effuses with areas of lichen-like gray and black
blooming across its surface, resembling a telescopic view of
galaxies and nebulae.
"Anastasi/Bradshaw/Cage/Cunningham" will
no doubt irk and challenge many people's notion of what art
is. But that's part of these four artists' synergistic
point.
"Anastasi/Bradshaw/Cage/Cunningham" is
on view at the University of Virginia Art Museum through
March 27. 155 Rugby Road. 924-3592.
FAMILY
Pearce's brainiacs: Scientist
probes kids' heads
BY LINDA KOBERT
FAMILY@READTHEHOOK.COM
I'll admit it: I'm not always confident
that the decisions I make as a parent are the best ones. How
much computer time is too much, for example? Should I let my
son watch television and IM his friends while he's doing his
homework? Do I buy that new toy he's begging for because the
commercials say he needs it?
This weekend, the Charlottesville Waldorf
School's Parent Association gives parents a chance to ponder
some of these questions with a lecture and workshop by an
internationally renowned expert in child development theory,
Joseph Chilton Pearce.
In a two-day program entitled "For the
Love of Children: A Roadmap for Our Future," Pearce uses
findings from the latest research in neurobiology to offer
advice on raising healthy children.
Drawing from his most recent book on
human development and brain research, The Biology of
Transcendence, Pearce describes the evolutionary structure
of the human brain and its dynamic interactions with the
heart. He asserts that human beings are designed by nature
to reach beyond our current evolutionary capacities, but
that some aspects of modern culture interfere with the full
expression of this potential.
The list of factors that he says block
development of the brain's capacity for higher levels of
intelligence is long and disturbing: negative imprinting,
failure to nurture, inappropriate education, television
viewing and early computer use, the corporate exploitation
of the child-mind, and dietary chemical mutations are among
them.
Fortunately, according to this expert,
there are things we can do to counter these
influences.
Pearce presents his ideas in a Friday
evening lecture and a Saturday workshop. Citing numerous
studies in neural development over the last 10-20 years, his
approach is to remove the discussion of child rearing from
any moral, ethical, or self-righteous arena and ground it in
empiric biological research.
The presentation includes a review of the
developmental stages of growth as described by child
development theorists such as Maria Montessori, Jean Piaget,
Rudolf Steiner, and others. It moves into cultural
conformity, the interdependence of biology and spirit, and
adolescents and the future.
My hunch is this weekend's presentation
won't give parents any easy answers, but it will surely give
us lots to think about.
Pearce lectures Friday, February 11,
7-9pm. $20, $15 advance. Saturday's workshop is 9am-4pm.
$40, $35 advance. Lunch available for purchase. 1408 Crozet
Ave. Registration requested; 823-6805.
PERFORMANCE
Coyote's tale: Highway Child
wanders into town
BY ROBERT ARMENGOL
PERFORMANCE@READTHEHOOK.COM
As Sean Harvey remembers it, he and his
buddy Drew Bergman had gone out for drinks after watching
one of those "atrocious" Hollywood flops that come out every
year.
Remember Virus? Probably not. The 1999
flick featured Jamie Lee Curtis trying to save the world
from an electronic alien with plans to wipe out humanity.
Harvey and Bergman, both theater-types with improv
experience in Staunton, told themselves they could write
something better than that, maybe even with their eyes
closed.
"It was just the fact that the movie was
so bad," Harvey says, "and that as a society we're totally
bombarded with all this hallow media, often just for the
sake of marketing a car or a candy bar. We wanted to try to
do something with substance."
Out of that came a play they call Highway
Child, which in its own strange way is also about saving the
world-- from ourselves. This weekend and next, Piedmont
Virginia Community College presents what director Sean
Chandler calls a "heavily staged" reading of the
script.
Highway Child, a sexually ambiguous
character (played in this rendition by a woman) wanders the
earth, creating the road she travels with each new step.
Along the way, she encounters the trickster Coyote, drawn
from a liberal reinterpretation of American Indian
mythologies. Coyote tells her the story of the beginning of
time, and prophesizes the end of it.
The burden the child takes on leads her
into a final battle of good vs. evil, but not without a dash
of Jimi Hendrix (from whose song the title is drawn) and a
dose of the postmodern: Highway Child's journeys also take
her to Camp Town, site of a bustling and disquieting
carnival that mirrors the absurdity of our own frenzied
lives.
If this all sounds somewhat psychedelic,
that's by design. Chandler says his biggest challenge as
director has been using sound and light to compensate for
the lack of special effects available to the boot-strap
cinematographer.
"I would love to be able to turn this
into a movie," he says, which is only somewhat ironic
considering the play's underlying message: we've lost a
sense of ourselves by straying from our connections with
nature and with each other. But you've got to tell the story
somehow, right?
As for the playwrights, they have hopes
that this work-- now five years in progress-- might someday
transcend stage and screen, might enter into a new kind of
oral tradition, might become, as Harvey says, "a story kids
tell each other at camp."
Piedmont Virginia Community College
presents Highway Child, a modern fable incorporating
American Indian mythology into a contemporary landscape, by
Sean Harvey and Drew Bergman. Opens 7:30pm Thursday,
February 10. Other shows at 7:30pm February 11-12 and 17-19,
and at 2pm February 20. Maxwell Theatre (Black Box), PVCC.
$8-10. 961-5376.
WALKABOUT
Civic duty: Strossen headlines legal pow-wow
By TIM SPRINKLE
WALKABOUT@READTHEHOOK.COM
The only brush with the legal system for
many of us is when we buy a house or get divorced.
Otherwise, the legal system can seem like nothing more than
a murky maze of regulations.
But these are the codes that shape our
lives. And for anyone working in the public sector, legal
issues like gender bias, financial oversight, and freedom of
speech are day-to-day concerns.
This weekend, interested parties can
learn more about the public side of legal work at the UVA
School of Law's sixth annual Conference on Public Service
and the Law. Featuring two days of workshops, panel
discussions, and a keynote address from Nadine Strossen,
president of the American Civil Liberties Union, the
conference is aimed at attorneys interested in getting
involved in public service, as well as members of the local
community with a curiosity about the legal
system.
"We wanted to reach out to the community
at large this year," explains student organizer Jessica
Blaemire, "to let them know that the conference isn't just
for lawyers, but for anyone interested in legal issues or
becoming a lawyer. It's an open, bipartisan forum where
members of the community can come for academic discussions
on issues that matter right here in Virginia."
Participants have their choice of topics
from mental health law to religion to political issues.
Legal eagles interested in nitty-gritty career details can
enroll in afternoon workshops ("Serving the Public in the
Private Sector" and "Working as a Lobbyist," for example).
Strossen's address and a reception cap the events on
Saturday afternoon.
"These are all very hot topics," Blaemire
says, "and since many of the panels will be talking about
specific issues related to Charlottesville, it's a good
opportunity for the community. The people on these panels
are the ones making the changes."
She's not kidding around. From
"(Re)examining Slavery Reparations" to mountaintop removal
mining, much of this weekend's docket could have been lifted
right from the pages of a local Virginia newspaper, making
this a must event for civic-minded Charlottesville
residents.
The Conference on Public Service and
the Law happens Friday and Saturday, February 11-12, at the
UVA School of Law. All events are free and open to the
public. Registration is available online or at the
conference, and even includes lunch.
student.virginia.edu/~law-conf/2005/home.htm
WORDS
Lotsa love: Take your choice: one or both
By SUSAN TYLER HITCHCOCK
WORDS@READTHEHOOK.COM
This is a personality test.
What will you be doing on February 14,
Valentine's Day?
Choose A or B.
A. You'll be spending the morning and on
into lunch at a workshop with Reanae McNeal. Singer and
songwriter, artist and speaker, McNeal is coming to
Charlottesville as the guest of SARA, the Sexual Assault
Resource Agency. She promises soul food at every level.
A storyteller in the African griot
tradition, McNeal highlights women, and especially women of
color, in her workshops and presentations. She calls herself
a "survivor of so many things"-- including sexual assault in
her college years-- and she uses public presentations to
rouse the spirit and confidence of any women who resonate
with that identity.
She offers "inspirational speaking from
my womb-spirit" and challenges all "to look injustice in the
eye... and say 'You can't win.'" Visit her website,
rmcneal.com, and soon you'll be singing along with her deep,
soothing voice, "I shall not be moved." It's a song that
resounds in your mind long after you click out of the
website.
B. You'll be spending the evening at our
town's annual Erotic Poetry Festival, this year hosted by
Rapture. Sit back and get titillated by poets who step up to
the open mike and share their own rapturous words. Got a few
good lustful verses of your own? Come early to sign up for
your own 5 to 10 minutes of erotic fame.
Poets best known for their sexy words
will be among the guests, including Moira Egan, Baltimore
poet and author of Cleave, a collection of lyrics on love
and longing. "In Cleave," wrote former poet laureate of
Maryland, Michael Collier, "Moira Egan reminds us that the
'wildest things require the strongest cages,'" He calls her
poems "sturdy enclosures--triplets, sapphics, quatrains,
sonnets, and sestinas" in which "the creatures of her
passions perch and sing."
Having a hard time choosing between A and
B? Not sure just which type of lover you are? Have a little
bit of both of these personality types in you?
Not to worry. Given the timing, you can
attend both and make it a day-long love fest.
Reanae McNeal speaks February 14 at
the Mt. Zion First Baptist Church, 105 Lankford Ave.
10am-1pm. $15. Mail or fax 434-293-6614 your registration
form to Shelter for Help in Emergency, PO Box 3013,
Charlottesville 22903. Registrations due by February 11. The
Erotic Poetry Festival is at Rapture. See Cultural Calendar
entry for February 14.
TUNES
Star-studded: A week's stellar lineup
BY MARK GRABOWSKI
TUNES@READTHEHOOK.COM
There's an outbreak of good concerts over
the next week, an itchy sort of rash that one must scratch
to get any sort of relief, and scratch you will if you have
any idea of what's good for you.
The country/folk/pop cult classic Neko
Case comes to Starr Hill on February 16, the contemporary
Irish group Gráda is at the Prism on the 17th, ska
elder-statesmen The Pietasters with those local party-punk
favorites The Stabones rock Starr Hill on the 11th, and that
country-folk troubadour Paul Curreri gets jiggy with Devon
Sproule at the Gravity Lounge on Valentine's Day.
Next week also marks first local concert
in months for my favorite home-grown act, the high-octane
bluegrass sextet King Wilkie, who've been riding the white
lightning (of success) of late. After spending the last few
months in seclusion to write new material, the group's
February 12 show at Starr Hill will not only see them
prematurely shedding their winter coats, but also be awash
in new sounds to add to their already brilliant live
show.
King Wilkie began its near 90-degree ride
into the stratosphere in the buckeye state back in 2000,
where guitarist and vocalist Ted Pitney and mandolinist and
vocalist Reid Burgess got together with the intention of
rocking us like a hurricane, though decidedly in an
old-timey sort of way.
2001 saw the duo moving to
Charlottesville, where they immediately began collecting
cocooned musicians in their bluegrass web, much like your
average band adds members, though with more literary
allusions.
Their independent debut True Songs
followed in 2003 which spurred the interest of bluegrass/old
time-focused Rebel Records, which signed the group and led
to the release of Broke in 2004.
Broke revealed an act reaching for the
big time, reaching, reaching, almost got-it,
almost
A mixture of well-chosen bluegrass
standards and superbly written originals revealed the
group's talents at both performing and contributing
something that smacks of new blood to a genre aged more than
sixty years. From what seems to be their signature song of
late, Burgess' "It's Been A Long Time"-- awash in close
harmonies and a traditional vibe, but with pop edges-- to
Pitney's "Broke Down and Lonesome"-- slower and moodier with
a naturalistic melody-- the disc burns with the fires of
originality.
In the last year, King Wilkie has won the
International Bluegrass Music Associations' Emerging Artist
of the Year Award (a big deal), played the Grand Ole Opry
(I'd rate this as an even bigger deal), performed with the
revered traditional bluegrass practitioners the Del McCoury
Band, and has even been featured in a piece in Acoustic
Guitar magazine.
Though their manager, Rick Easton, has
recently instituted a new policy of emphatically denying
rumors such as "band members have been seen cavorting with
Winona Ryder and Elton John," there is no need for him to go
buy up every copy of Broke around to boost the SoundScan
numbers-- the group just might find out in the near future
that truth is stranger than fiction.
King Wilkie performs with Justin Jones
at Starr Hill, February 12. $10/$8 advance, 9pm.
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