PREVIEW: Basement Arts Presents Captive Babries

If you aren’t familiar with Basement Arts, they are a series of FREE student-run plays and performances that typically run in the evenings at the Walgreen Drama Center.

This weekend you have a chance to see the production Captive Barbies, the Hopwood Award-winning play by Levi Stroud and directed by Leia Squillace.

The summary:

Captive Barbies is a fast-paced black comedy that explores the story of the anti-hero, Lee, a criminal that lives in deluded realities, as he attempts to escape the law after committing a serious crime. Along the way to freedom, however, his journey clashes with a love triangle between a (kind of) married couple on the brink of collapse and a closeted cop. His quest for escape becomes impossible as their stories become increasingly entangled and emotions and motives develop. The piece is a meditation on notions of maleness, masculinity, and the conflict that erupts between the true self and the performance of self while facing the restrictions of normativity.

PERFORMANCES
Runs February 26-28
Thursday, Friday, and Saturday at 7pm
Thursday at 11pm

All performances take place in Studio One of the Walgreen Drama Center, North Campus.

Cost: PERFORMANCES ARE FREE!

www.basementarts.info

REVIEW: Jose Miguel Sokoloff (Penny Stamps Speaker)

Jose Miguel Sokoloff is many things; first and foremost, however, he is an advertiser who loves his home country of Colombia.

For roughly an hour, we experienced a condensed version of Colombia’s history and its war with the guerrilla movement. Beginning with the Cold War, Sokoloff laid the groundwork of the guerrillas’ ideological foundation, followed by a gradual shift to an economical role after the fall of the Soviet Union.

The key to ending Colombia’s war with the guerrillas, he stressed, was realizing that the members were as much victims of the organization as the general populace.

We watched the growth of the advertising campaign against the guerrilla’s–from it’s missteps at the beginning to the enormous successes it has achieved in recent years. Always, the message remained the same: “Demobilization is the way out” / “desmovilización es la salida”

What struck me most was how successful Sokoloff and the nation of Colombia was with its advertising campaign, and its intersection of art and politics. Realizing that genuine testimonies were more important than professional actors, the campaign would always “speak to the human” in an effort to convey the message that the war would eventually end anyway.

The government concentrated on Christmas and family, because that was when the members were most vulnerable. Soldiers decorated trees in the jungle with Christmas lights. Glowing balls with heartfelt messages floated down the waterways that the guerrillas used for travel. The military sent soccer balls all over the country to remind the guerrillas what they were missing.

Most touching of all was a campaign involving mothers, in which they stated “Before being a guerrilla, you are my son” / “Antes de ser guerrillero, eres mi hijo”

Eres mi hijo

Overall I loved this talk. This was explicit proof that we don’t need extensive peace talks or military campaigns to dissolve the potency of a violent movement. Instead, this advertising campaign appealed to the hearts and humanity of the guerrillas in the jungle, and it worked.

PREVIEW: Jose Miguel Sokoloff at the Michigan Theater

As part of the Michigan Theater’s Penny Stamps Speaker series, humanitarian and civil rights activist Jose Miguel Sokoloff will be coming to speak.

Where: Michigan Theater

When: Thursday, February 19 @ 5:10 PM

FREE TO THE PUBLIC

As the Michigan Theater states in their description, Sokoloff has led a wide campaign against the FARC guerrillas to demobilize in Colombia and end the war.

Even better, you can view a TED Talk, titled “How Christmas lights helped guerrillas put down their guns” to get a better idea of what you can look forward. In the process of advocating peace, he has won a slurry of awards and never stops working.

Additional Appearance at MOCAD: Friday, February 20th at 7 PM.

 

REVIEW: Misha Friedman’s Photography

http://i.huffpost.com/gen/996904/thumbs/o-MISHA-FRIEDMAN-11-570.jpg?2

Misha Friedman’s talk about photography began with the timeline of what led him to the practice.  His story begins as an immigrant from Moldova.  He then studied economics and eventually started working for Doctors Without Borders.  This inspired his first photo series on tuberculosis.  He was interested in photographing the disease in a manner that communicated the story of the people and invoked interest.  The unchanging day to day events of the patients made this difficult, and this prompted Misha Friedman to see what other observations could be meditated on through photography.

The intention behind Misha Friedman’s work is what I found most interesting.  He uses a method of informed story-telling.  “You only have one motherland.  You have only one mother,” Misha said, when discussing why he decided to make a trip to Russia to photograph a series centered around the concept of ‘corruption’.  There is no denying where you come from.  His series on patriotism focused on this.  He found this nagging feeling of patriotism, which inspires feelings of pride or allegiance or united ideology, prevalent in Russia in its ambiguity.  The country of Russia is physically large, which is part of the reason for the many differences in belief across the regions.  Another part is the segregated belief systems that have come to dominate Russia over the years.  Now Russians feel not only a confused sense of patriotism but a pressure to feel a certain way about their country because of the strictness of the political structure.  Friedman aims to capture the clandestine nature of political sentiment in the country through his series on patriotism.  In his talk, Friedman discussed how the way of displaying photographs in a gallery is not always ideal because different galleries have different set ups and the lay out of a series is never quite the same in a different space.  His solution to this was to have his photos on an interactive website.  On the website is a series of portraits of Russians he interviewed, and the accompanying recording of those interviews begins to play when the portrait is clicked on.  To make the series a more direct response to the question of “what is patriotism to Russians” Friedman has the portraits organized by age group and by questions asked.

Another aspect of Friedman’s work that assists in his story-telling is his use of black and white.  He points to color as a complicated factor to use in photography, and that is why he uses black and white in many of his photos.  It brings the viewer a finer focus on the subject matter and eliminates concerns that might interfere with the story of the image.

After the talk, there was a strong sense of intention in his work which is something I am not used to hearing from talks on arts in other mediums.  As someone not too familiar with photography, I found there to be a strong focus on content for Misha’s work, as it all has ties to the political.  His work is also strong in the sense that it has the communicative goal of telling a clear story, which makes his work read as informational.  It is easy to perceive the message in his work, and because of that the viewer’s relative take away from the work is relatively singular and successful in bringing together a community of people to observe and process the same information.

 

REVIEW: Oscar Nominated Short Films – Documentary (Program B)

I apologize ahead of time for not being able to review all of the films. In a perfect world I would have infinite time to watch and review ALL of the Oscar nominated short films, but alas, I am a student and have to budget my time accordingly.

Luckily, I had the pleasure of viewing “Program B” of the Nominated Documentary Short Films. These included: Our Curse, a heartwrencher about a young couple caring for their newborn son who has a rare disease;  The Reaper, following the life of a slaughterhouse executioner and the kind of emotional turmoil it entails; and White Earth, detailing life in the oil fields of North Dakota.

While watching these films, I had to smile–each of them is infinitely better than any given Transformers film. In a short time frame, each film I saw captured raw emotional power in almost every single shot. Many of the sequences were long and drawn out, but this wasn’t boring because they had power.

In The Reaper, we experience a long take of a bull as it is executed. With help from the voice over of the protagonist, we come to see the bull as a human and we share the fear it feels just before it is shot.

In White Earth, constant images of cycling oil wells remind us of life’s neverending march onwards, as well as humanity’s unquenchable thirst for oil.

Our Curse goes even further: we watch a newborn child, unable to breathe when he goes to sleep, struggle to live day by day with the aid of his parents. Each shot of the breathing apparatus and the haggard parents on the sofa remind us how lucky we are to be able to breathe without thinking about it.

Another wonderful motif throughout the evening was the lack of diegetic (onscreen) dialogue. Location sounds and ambient music dominated most of the films, punctuated by voice over narrative. This method is more common for documentary and art-house films, but it was also a good reminder of narrative film’s potential as well. Not all films need constant dialogue to tell a story.

I would recommend any and all of the films I saw in this short program. The link here has trailers for all of the films; hopefully the filmmakers that made them will go on to make more great films.

 

PREVIEW: Oscar Nominated Shorts at State Theater

Oscar season is right around the corner, and while it is relatively easy to view all of the nominated films at local theaters, seeing the short film versions is not as simple.

Luckily for us, you have the opportunity to see ALL of the short films if you go this week: The nominated live-action films, the animated films, and both halves of the documentary films.

Where: State Theater

When: Right now! Films play 2/6 – 2/12

Cost: $10

To save you time, below are the links for each of the films sections:

Documentary

Live Action

Animated