REVIEW: 2019 Stamps Undergraduate Juried Exhibition

The 2019 Stamps Undergraduate Juried Exhibition opened amidst great excitement and contemplation on Friday, November 22nd, as most gallery receptions do. The exhibition consisted of over 50 Stamps undergraduate pieces, including both personal and course-related work, spread relatively evenly among each graduating class. I was pleasantly surprised with the diversity of subject matter, artistry, style, and media – which ranged from two-dimensional mediums like printmaking and collage work to three-dimensional and even four-dimensional mediums like embroidery, upcycled materials, and animation. Not only is the this annual Stamps Gallery tradition an excellent opportunity for students to showcase their work, but it additionally bridges the Stamps undergraduate community to Stamps alumni. All three of the visiting jurors, Parisa Ghaderi, Cynthia Greig, and Cosmo Whyte, are Stamps MFA graduates, as well as nationally and internationally recognized creatives.

 

Beyond the award-winning pieces, a couple of other works piqued my interest after after catching my eye for their emotionality and aesthetic appeal. Anna Cao’s Flowing Water and Falling Spring immediately stuck out for its vivacity, in both its rich imagery and allusions to Japanese aesthetics. From a distance, the serene scenery seems to surrealistically flow together in a seamless fashion, as if painted on one canvas. Yet as the viewer closes that distance, the rippling waters, snowy mountains, and familiar figures setting down water lanterns reveal to be collaged paper elements from different contexts – each vivid in their individuality yet still cohesively merged in dialogue with one another.

 

 

Gray Snyder’s Abstract Self Portrait, a monochrome, triptych timeline of the artist’s emotional growth and development, evoked within me a sense of peace yet empty solitude. I thought Snyder’s universally interpretable linear forms, spiraling shapes, splatters, and shadows that seemed to fall across the tapestry were ingeniously effective in portraying emotional transformation and the various stages of grief.

 

 


Another tapestry work imbued with the artist’s emotional histories, this one of embroidered, dyed, and woven cotton, was Brook Eisenbise’s Carrying All of This. Each aesthetic aspect of this work was carefully chosen by the artist to communicate her grandmother’s complex experience with her husband’s Hodgkin’s lymphoma diagnosis. Even without reading the accompanying information about the piece, the tension created from Eisenbise’s graphic color scheme, typographic elements, and jostling French knots was highly evocative of stress and human experiences of pain.

 

 

 

 

 

This exhibition will be on view until December 15, 2019 at the Stamps Gallery on S Division – I highly recommend making a trip down to experience the diverse, exceptional talent and hard work concentrated in the Stamps student body!

PREVIEW: A Midsummer Night’s Dream

Midsummer Night’s Dream is a classic Shakespeare comedy following the king and queen of the forest, four runaway lovers, and a troupe of actors as they cross paths in a forest full of comedy, confusion, and some dark consequences.

This showing of the play is a National Theater Live broadcast, being screened at the Michigan Theater. This means that it is being performed live at the Royal National Theater in London, and we will be watching it being filmed on screen.

I am very excited to see this show, as it is one that I have only read and never seen. The show is playing Sunday evening, November 24 at 7 pm in the Michigan Theater Auditorium.

Link to info/tickets: https://www.michtheater.org/show/nt-live-a-midsummer-nights-dream/

PREVIEW: Stew & The Negro Problem

In case you missed Tony Award-winning playwright and singer Stew last night, you have another chance tonight! Don’t miss out on a homage to the art and activism of James Baldwin in a music and theater experience through a contemporary commentary on Baldwin’s 1955 collection of essays on being Black in America. Notes of a Native Song is an irreverent and spirited rock ‘n’ roll song cycle that uses Baldwin’s work to explore race, love, class division, and politics through an exciting mix of rock, jazz, and soul. Catch Stew & The Negro Problem at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre tonight at 8!

REVIEW: Orchestre Métropolitain de Montréal

Last night, Hill Auditorium hosted the Orchestre Métropolitain de Montréal with singer Joyce DiDonato.  The concert started out with the overture to Mozart’s La Clemenza di Tito.  They performed this work with a smaller orchestra that only took up about half the stage.  The instrumentation consisted of strings, a few winds, a couple trumpets, and timpani.  Once Ms. DiDonato joined the orchestra, the trumpets and timpanist left and a clarinetist made their way to the front of the stage to be featured alongside her.  I had heard of Ms. DiDonato many times, but I had never actually heard her sing live.  She was incredible.  Her voice sounded exactly like you would expect an opera singer’s to sound.  This is likely because she has set a standard in singing that others strive to match.  The interplay between her and the clarinetist was fascinating the watch as they alternated similar phrases.  She was able to perfectly match the articulation and timbre of the clarinet using just her voice.  In addition, she mimicked the other winds flawlessly, especially in the first aria.  There was a moment where she had a run of doubled notes that the flute played at a different time where she embodied the character of a flautist to a T.  As an encore, she joined the orchestra for a rendition of “Voi che sapete” from The Marriage of Figaro.  She used an iPad for the arias from La Clemenza, but she had this one memorized.  It was clear she had performed it many times.  She really took control of the stage by incorporating some acting into her performance and having some fun with Maestro Nézet-Séguin and the assistant principal first violinist.  Overall, the first half of the concert was great, especially for those who are big fans of opera.  On the second half, the orchestra played Anton Bruckner’s Fourth Symphony.  Bruckner’s music is best known for it’s epic, massive moments and this symphony had plenty of them.  The size of the orchestra seemingly doubled between the first and second halves with a full brass section, a timpanist, and about half a string section joining the chamber orchestra from the first half.  I thought the orchestra performed the piece very well, overall.  There were some questionable moments where the horns might have had an off night or the timpani might have been too loud for my liking, but mistakes happen in performances and everyone has their own opinion as to what sounds best.  The piece seemed to follow a structure of peaks and valleys which, honestly, gets pretty old in a symphony that’s over an hour long.  We’d hear a couple minutes of really loud, awesome music, followed by some softer, prettier stuff.  I feel like most great symphonies have a few moments that are really special and people immediately think of them when they think of that symphony.  This one had so many big moments that I can’t remember any of them because, even though they were awesome when I heard them, they all blended together.  None of this is the fault of the orchestra, of course.  They played it in a very convincing manner and Maestro Nézet-Séguin commanded the podium with an incredible energy.  They closed the night with a really cool encore by Violet Archer, a composer I had never heard of.  I really enjoyed the piece and was grateful that Maestro Nézet-Séguin exposed the audience to it.  I have seen him perform twice at Hill now, and he has been fantastic both times.  I will surely be going back if I see his name on the UMS schedule again next year!

REVIEW: Kittel & Co.

I found myself back at the Ark Sunday night, listening to the five piece band that goes by the name of Kittel & Co. Combining elements of classical, jazz, celtic, and bluegrass music, the group played music spanning from Bach to Charlie Chaplin, adding new arrangements and spin to these pieces. They also played many new compositions which can be found on the band’s album “Whorls.”

 

The show featured Jeremy Kittel on fiddle, Josh Pinkham on mandolin, Ethan Jodziewicz on bass, Quinn Bachand on guitar and Simon Chrisman on hammer-dulcimer. I had never seen this combination before, let alone seen a hammer-dulcimer in concert, and I was blown away by the skill and communication shared between all of the players. 

 

Kittel & Co. define themselves as a contemporary string band who progressively fuse together elements of folk, classical, Celtic, bluegrass, and jazz. Their first album “Whorls” was released in 2018, and the track “Chrysalis” composed by Kittel, was nominated for a Grammy that year. 

 

Starting off with a set of tunes called the Boxing Reels, the band brought an exciting energy to the stage. The first reel started with the mandolin with the fiddle joining in on the second time around to build up for the much faster second reel. The two tunes flowed effortlessly into each other, carefully building excitement and interest for the audience. 

 

Kittel looked comfortable on the stage of the Ark, having played there many times before. As a U of M grad, his roots tie back to Michigan, and the venue was packed with friends, family and familiar faces. A picture of Kittel hangs on the Ark wall in direct eyeline with the stage which he remarked was the best marketing he could have ever asked for:) He had many stories about their experiences at the Grammys (including a run-in with Cardi B), and really connected with the audience. 

 

As a fiddle player myself, I find Kittel’s tunes catchy and distinct. He is a technical player with lots of control, but sounds free on stage. I am amazed by how he is able to fuse genres and create his own new identity through his compositions. I am excited for what he will compose next and for what’s to come with Kittel & Co. 

 

Band Website:

https://jeremykittel.com/pages/kittel-co

 

Purchase Whorls:

https://store.compassrecords.com/products/whorls

 

Artist Spotify:

https://open.spotify.com/artist/3uRqP5x3yw7M7lLOD4oRLz

PREVIEW: CSEAS Film Screening–Thai Movie Night. How to Win at Checkers (Every Time) / ‘พี่ชาย My Hero’

As we come up on our long-yearned for Thanksgiving break, it can be hard to stay focused without occasionally giving our minds some time to rest. People are simply not meant to exist as machines that continuously churn.

Grease your gears with another great selection of film in CSEAS’s Thai Movie Night series. This time it is the intriguingly-titled How To Win At Checkers (Every Time). It tells the story of a recently orphaned young boy as his older brother and new caretaker must submit to the country’s draft lottery. The troubling  uncertainty and personal growth of the brothers raises questions about the justice of the structure of society.

The movie will be presented at 7pm on Thursday, November 21 in 1500 North Quad (the Video Viewing Room in the Language Resource Center). There is no charge for admission.