Wednesday, July 31, 2019

Kantu Inka Performs in Silver City Saturday August 3

Silver City, Nevada- The historic Comstock town of Silver City hosts another free, family-friendly public event on Saturday August 3. Bring a chair and a picnic and enjoy classic songs from Latin American folkloric music with an emphasis on Peruvian Andean music. Kantu Inka will perform on the town’s outdoor stage, the Silver Pavilion, starting at 6:30pm. Kantu Inka is a duo including Carlos Ocampo and Julie Lozada Ocampo. They bring Peruvian culture alive with dance and traditional instruments such as zampoñas, quenas, charangos, bombos, chacchas, and cajón.

Kantu Inka was selected for inclusion in the Nevada Arts Council’s “Artists in Schools + Communities Roster 2019-2022.”

When: Audience members are invited to arrive around 6pm. The concert begins at 6:30pm and ends at 7:30pm.

Where: The Silver City Park is located at 385 High Street, next to the Silver City Schoolhouse/community center. Parking is on the south side of the building. Silver City is on the Comstock, 3 miles from Virginia City.

The August 3rd concert is funded by the Silver City Historic Preservation Society and other Silver City donors.

Summer Arts and Science Series: A number of different groups sponsor an annual summer series of public events in historic Silver City. This summer, events include the free concert by Kantu Inka, visits from award-winning visiting artists and writers, kids science and engineering activities, plus a floral design class, lectures and more for adults and teens. One of the most popular summer events, a free Robotics Mini-Camp for kids ages 8-14 and their parents, takes place on Tuesday, August 6th from 10am – noon at the Silver City School House. The annual event is led by the Society of Women Engineers and First Nevada. For adults and teens, there’s a free Floral Design Class on Tuesday, August 20 from 10am-noon at the School House with floral designer Lynnette Edmondson of Community Roots & Shoots. For more information, contact Quest Lakes at quest@theodata.com.

Sunday, July 21, 2019

Shaun Griffin Gives Reading in Silver City on July 28

Originally published as a MVN column (Silver City Neighbors) by Quest Lakes, July 2019

Silver City, Nevada - I’ve known poet and human rights advocate Shaun Griffin for many years, beginning way back in the 1980s when I worked at a preschool and after school program that his sons attended. Years later as an employee at Healthy Communities Coalition of Lyon and Storey Counties, I worked with him on collaborative projects with Community Chest Inc, which he co-founded. And a few years after that, he joined the Healthy Communities board of directors and still serves as a board member today.

Years ago during a meeting, I was being irritable because I’d missed breakfast. I hadn’t mentioned being hungry, and was trying to hide my petulance, but Shaun noticed. He quietly reached into his briefcase, found a little bag of peanuts, and slid them to me without missing a beat in his presentation. I always use this story to describe Shaun. He will notice your suffering, whether it’s insignificant like mine was, or real and enormous, and he will have no judgement about it. He will simply try to alleviate it. He’s like a walking manifestation of the Buddhist prayer, “May all sentient beings have happiness and the causes of happiness; May all sentient beings be free from suffering and the causes of suffering.”

Many know Shaun Griffin as a poet, translator, editor and teacher with many well-deserved awards - he was inducted into the Nevada Writers Hall of Fame in 2014, received the Rosemary McMillan Lifetime Achievement in Art Award from the Sierra Arts Foundation in 2006, was awarded the Silver Pen from the Nevada Writers Hall of Fame in 1998, and received the Governor’s Award for Excellence in the Arts in 1995.

But some may not know about the other work he’s done as the co-founder and former director of Community Chest Inc, and as a long time board member with Healthy Communities. Quietly, gently, but persistently and with determination, he's always fighting for Nevada's people, especially the people of Nevada's rural communities.

Behind the scenes, he's in meetings with elected officials and policy makers, making them hear the stories of rural Nevadans and what it means, for instance, to have a ratio of 3,772 to 1 for primary health care providers in Lyon County, or what it means for a rural community to have no grocery store within 100 miles.

When others can't be bothered to care about Nevada's smallest communities, Shaun is there. I've watched him sit through hours of Lyon County Commissioner's meetings way out in Yerington, finally getting a chance to testify on behalf of Silver City, just one of many things he did to voice support for the town's survival in 2014.

After the financial downturn in 2009, Silver SPRINGS, about an hour away from Shaun's home in Virginia City, was experiencing severe food insecurity, Shaun was key to finding a grant that would fill some of that gap, and to providing employment specialists onsite at Healthy Communities’ food pantry to help connect people with job training and job opportunities.

And it was Shaun who helped make sure rural Tonopah - far distant from the Comstock - got a Classroom on Wheels bus (known as the COW Bus), to expand early childhood education there.

Shaun also does physically and emotionally demanding work that would be tough for most people to even hear about. For instance, he volunteered to stand through long days, translating for hundreds of farm workers and their families as they endured hours of much-needed, painful dental procedures at free 3-day pop up clinic in Yerington a few years ago. He stood by them, translating, explaining, holding their hands, telling them it would be ok, even holding and rocking babies while their mothers were getting medical care.

You can hear Shaun reading from his new book of essays, Because the Light Will Not Forgive Me, at the Silver City School House on Sunday July 28,2019 at 2pm during a free, public event. The book is described as “luminous and moving essays” that “weave together a poetic meditation on living meaningfully in this world. Anchored in the American West but reaching well beyond, Shaun Griffin recounts his discoveries as a poet and devoted reader of poetry, a teacher of the disadvantaged, a friend of poets and artists, and a responsible member of the human family.” Copies of the book will be available during the Silver City reading.



Saturday, July 6, 2019

Artist Morgan Craig Paints the Effects of Avarice

Silver City, Nevada - Philadelphia-based artist Morgan Craig captures the monumental space of abandoned industrial buildings like Bethlehem Steel in his vibrant oil paintings. His large canvases are in great demand in the U.S. and beyond. In the last few months alone, Craig has had shows in Virginia, Florida, and Colorado. In addition to being in exhibitions around the U.S., his artwork has been exhibited in Canada, Europe, and Australia.

Craig also paints sites that have been impacted due to man-made disasters. His painting of an abandoned classroom in Prypiat, Russia, a city lost to contamination from the meltdown of the Chernobyl reactor, is haunting.

He writes, "My work is not merely a method of documentation, but a sociopolitical/ socioeconomic commentary on the effects of hubris, avarice, free trade, outsourcing, deregulation, deterritorialization, neoliberalism, obsolescence, and international-finance-capital upon communities throughout the world."

Silver City and the Comstock are naturally of interest to Craig. I was delighted when he applied for a spot at the Resident Artist Program in Silver City. When he arrives in July, he’ll see historic sites like historic mining mills and the hazardous waste Superfund sites some of them are located within. The industrial sites may serve as inspiration as he begins work on new, large scale oil paintings in the studio at McCormick House.

Craig has received numerous awards including the Pollock Krasner Foundation Grant, the Elizabeth Greenshields Foundation Grant (2007, 2011), and the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts Individual Artist Fellowship for 2006 and 2008.
Rhizome, Morgan Craig's 72 " x 54" oil on linen painting, is based on historic mining mills on the Comstock in Gold Hill and Silver City.

You can view some of his latest artwork online on his own website, and also on the websites of various galleries. For instance, he had a solo exhibition titled Identifying with Artifice: the Specter of Capitalism at ArtSpace in Richmond, Virginia this spring. For that show, he wrote, “I believe that architectural structures acting as both repositories and as vehicles for memory profoundly influence culture and identity by providing a tangible framework through which facets of a society can be expressed. Consequently, I have been inspired to build a body of work dealing with how identity is influenced by the types of architectural edifices present in a given landscape.”

Also this spring, Morgan Craig and Andrew Leventis exhibited their paintings together in the Curfman Gallery at Colorado State University in a show titled Forgotten Spaces.

Currently, Craig has a solo show at the University of Central Florida titled Specters of Capital: An Exploration in Architecture and Identity. He writes, “Within the realm of Jacques Derrida’s theory of Hauntology, the paintings speak of the slow disintegration of the future, and the abysmal fragmentation of the past.”

You might see Morgan Craig out and about on the Comstock this summer, looking for places of interest to paint. If you’d like to meet him and learn more about his work, he will speak about his creative process in an illustrated lecture at the Brick in Carson City on July 25 from 5pm-6:30pm, along with NYC artists Adrian Landon and Ewelina Bochenska, visiting artists at the Buffalo Creek Art Center near Minden, Nevada.

More about Morgan Craig: http://morgancraig.org/www.morgancraig.org/Future.html

*Published originally as a column by Quest Lakes in MVN June 2019

Wednesday, July 3, 2019

Silver City Welcomes Visiting Librettist, Dancer, and Artists

The Resident Artist Program in Silver City is excited to announce the summer 2019 line-up of visiting artists. Please help us welcome UK artists Claire Scully and Stewart Easton; Philadelphia artist Morgan Craig; NYC librettist and playwright David Cote; and dancer Jessica Sanford.

Stewart Easton, an artist from the United Kingdom who works in thread, ink, paint and digital, has shown his unique artwork at the V & A and Tate Modern in London, and the Ashmolean at Oxford University, as well as in galleries in New York, LA and beyond since he was last here in 2016. Stewart will offer an embroidery/ abstract and consciousness workshop on July 13, 2019 at the Holland Project in Reno from 11am-3pm. Website: http://www.stewarteaston.net/about

London-based artist Claire Scully has shown her work at University Nevada Reno, St. Mary’s Art Center in Virginia City, and a number of galleries in the UK. Since she was last here in 2016, she has published a series of popular books full of illustrations of wildlife and landscapes. Her latest book, Desolation Wilderness, is like “jazz for the eyes.” You can get a signed book and meet Claire at Sundance Books in Reno on July 10, 2019 or meet her and learn about her creative process at an artists talk at the Brick in Carson City on July 11th from 5pm-6:30pm (Texas-based artist Russ Connell, who has a summer residency at the Buffalo Creek Art Center near Minden, will also speak). Website:http://www.clairescully.com/

Morgan Craig of Philadelphia has a number of shows this spring and summer, including at Colorado State University, University of Central Florida and ArtSpace in Virginia. He has exhibited throughout the U.S., Canada, Europe, and Australia, including SPACES in Cleveland, the Delaware Center for Contemporary Arts and the Australian National University. He's received numerous awards including the Pollock Krasner Foundation Grant, the Elizabeth Greenshields Foundation Grant (2007, 2011), and the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts Individual Artist Fellowship. If you’d like to meet Morgan Craig and learn more about his work, he will speak about his creative process in an illustrated lecture at the Brick in Carson City on July 25 from 5pm-6:30pm, along with NYC artists Adrian Landon and Ewelina Bochenska, visiting artists at the Buffalo Creek Art Center near Minden, Nevada. Website: http://www.morgancraig.org/

David Cote is a playwright, opera librettist, and theater critic based in New York City. His reporting and reviews regularly appear in the Observer, Theater News Online, American Theatre, etc. His plays include Otherland (finalist, Eugene O’Neill Theater Center’s National Playwrights Conference) and Fear of Art. His opera libretti include Blind Injustice (Cincinnati Opera); Three Way (Nashville Opera and BAM); The Scarlet Ibis (Chicago Opera Theater and Prototype); and the one-act Fade (world premiere: London, 2008). He's written companion books for several hit Broadway musicals, including Wicked. He was the longest serving theater editor and chief drama critic of Time Out New York. His reporting and criticism have appeared in The New York Times, The Village Voice, The Guardian, and Opera News. You can learn more about David's creative process during a talk at the Brick in Carson City on August 22 from 5pm-6:30, along with Chicago-based artist Nicole Beck, one of the resident artists at Buffalo Creek Art Center in Nevada. You can also hear more about David Cote's librettos and the operas they're in at a talk at Sierra Arts in Reno on Aug. 24, 2019. Website: https://www.davidcote.com/about

Jessica Sanford studied dance at Indiana State University and is a popular instructor of Barre at many venues. With a Masters in Social Work from Indiana University, Jessica also offers workshops on Mindfulness and is the Director of Counseling Services at Earlham College, one of the best National Liberal Arts Colleges in the U.S. http://earlham.edu/

McCormick House, the housing for visiting artists with the Resident Artist Program in Silver City, Nevada is located in the historic Comstock region, a federally designated historic landmark 3 miles from Virginia City and less than 30 miles from Lake Tahoe and Reno