Category Archives: Past Events

Penny Jones & Co Puppet Theater presents More Mother Goose Tales with the Three Little Pigs

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Sundays until Christmas!
More Mother Goose Tales
with the Three Little Pigs

CELEBRATING 40 YEARS IN THE VILLAGE

“Very simple, and perfect as an introduction to theatre.” -New York Magazine
“Charming.” -The New York Times

Sundays in November and December 2016 until Christmas

More Mother Goose Tales
More Classic Tales and Fables.

Toby returns with more fun for the very young including The Three Little Pigs and the story of Boswell, the Polar Bear (who happens to drift south on his iceberg to chance upon friendly southern animals before he is blown back to the North Pole).

“I like it that such care went into the making of these shows.I was struck by the fullness of detail and the surprising elaborateness of the sets. The three little pigs really looked piggy for a change, with pink, rotund bodies and the right shaped ears and snouts.”
-Village Voice

“Warm, friendly atmosphere for the beguiling presentation.”
-Gannet Newspapers

WESTBETH Home to the Arts
155 BANK STREET
between West and Washington Street in the West Village
Tickets on sale at pennypuppets.org and Eventbrite
or CASH ONLY at the door starting 20 minutes before the show

Tickets are $10 for everyone
Show Times: 11 AM & 2:30 PM
All Ages – Great for 3 to 8
Stroller Parking
Shows Run about 45 Minutes

Information: (212) 924-0525
http://www.pennypuppets.org

BUS AND SUBWAY: M14A, M11, M20, (2 blocks)
A, C, E, L, 1, 2, 3 (5 or 6 blocks)
“A Child’s first experience with theater is important and forming. Quality counts.” – Penny Jones

PENNY JONES & CO. PUPPETS has been a mainstay of children’s theater in New York since the 1970’s. The company specializes in informal puppet shows for children aged three to eight, and puppet ballets with live music for audiences of adults, children or both. The company performs in collaboration with chamber ensembles and orchestras. The repertory includes adaptations of classical works as well as original stories and scores. In schools, the company has performed hundreds of times, and Penny has a wide variety of programs from puppet pageants with a cast and crew of 30 to 90 school children, to workshops for small classes, and Penny’s “One on One” – interweaving puppetry, storytelling, movement and arts.

The company has appeared on television, in the Henson International Puppet Festival at the Public Theatre, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, at BAM with the Brooklyn Philharmonic, at City Center, Avery Fisher Hall, and in museums including The Museum of the City of New York, The Children’s Museum of New York, the American Museum of Natural History, at Emelin, Wave Hill, the Washington Square Music Festival, at venues from Macy’s to Barnes & Noble, and with orchestras at Bargemusic, Casa de España, Greenwich House Music School, with the New Jersey Symphony, and many more.

11 Westbeth Artists in
NEW YORK/Canadian Dialogues
Chazou Gallery
Kamloops, British Columbia

Participating Artists:

Bill Anthony (works on paper)
Beverly Brodsky (monotypes)
Robert Bunkin (paintings)
Sandra Caplan (paintings)
Elisa Decker (archival pigment prints)
Jayne Holsinger (works on paper)
William Kennon (etchings)
Robert Ludwig (paintings)
Christina Maile (polyester plate lithography)
Lucille Rhodes (film)
Barbara Rosenthal (video)
Hugh Seidman (poetry reading)

Curators:
Jayne Holsinger and Tricia Sellmer (director of Chazou Gallery)

Show Dates
July 5 – July 29, 2016

Location: Chazou Gallery, Kamloops, British Columbia, Canada

Chazou Gallery is a private, contemporary art gallery located in Kamloops, British Columbia.It is considered one of the cutting edge, contemporary art galleries in the interior of British Columbia, exhibiting contemporary Canadian and International visual artists.

Chazou Gallery curates and rotates solo, group or collaborative exhibitions at least six times a year, and selects work from emerging, mid-career and established visual artists.

A component of Chazou’s mandate is to document a number of the exhibitions in published catalogue form.

CHRISTINA MAILE Choking Victim  polester plate litho and linocut

CHRISTINA MAILE Choking Victim polester plate litho and linocut

BILL ANTHONY  You're the Cream in my Coffee oil and graphite on wooden panel

BILL ANTHONY You’re the Cream in my Coffee oil and graphite on wooden panel

ROBERT BUNKIN Untitled oil on canvas

ROBERT BUNKIN Untitled oil on canvas

ROBERT LUDWIG Untitled oil on canvas

ROBERT LUDWIG Untitled oil on canvas

ELISA DECKER The Other Side of the Mirror archival pigment print

ELISA DECKER The Other Side of the Mirror archival pigment print

Call for Exhibition Proposals 2017 for Westbeth Gallery

Correspondence Show 2015, curator Steve Clorfeine.  Photo Christina Maile

Correspondence Show 2015, curator Steve Clorfeine. Photo Christina Maile

Background
The Westbeth Gallery is a nonprofit fine arts gallery located within Westbeth Artist Housing in the West Village in Manhattan. The mission of the gallery is to offer the opportunity for the general public to see the work of the residents of Westbeth and to serve the larger community by presenting work of emerging artists, work of mid-career or senior artists, work that is under-represented in commercial galleries or curated shows that present work in new and interesting ways. The gallery is operated by the Westbeth Artists Residents Council which is a volunteer organization elected by the residents of the building. As such, exhibitors are given latitude in the content and arrangement of their work once it is selected and are expected to work independently to curate, promote and install their exhibition professionally.

The gallery is seeking proposals from institutions, curators or individual artists for public exhibitions in 2017. Each exhibition is approximately three weeks in length and must use all four rooms of our 2900 square foot gallery. Preference is given to proposals that highlight under-served artistic communities; which frame traditional artistic forms in new ways or which contextualize some aspect of Westbeth’s artistic or architectural history. Preference is also given to resident artists for at least half of the exhibition slots each season. Proposed exhibitions should be composed of artwork that is the product of professional artists. Student or community-made artwork is not being presented by Westbeth Gallery at this time.

Application Requirements
Please submit the following:
• 500 word statement of your proposed exhibition including title
• A C.V. of the curator and/or featured artist(s)
• Any visual support materials you feel are relevant
• Submission must be sent by June 30th, 2016

Gallery Information
Guidelines for the gallery and floor plans can be found at www.westbeth.org under About/Westbeth Gallery.

Selection Process
Once we have received your application, it will be reviewed members of the Visual Arts Selection Sub-Committee. Proposals that are accepted will be notified by August 31st.

EXHIBITION PROPOSAL COVER SHEET

Name of Featured Artist(s) and/or Institution: ___________________________________

Contact Name: ____________________________________________________________

Contact Email Address: _____________________________________________________

Contact Phone Number: ____________________________________________________

Proposed Title: ___________________________________________________________

Medium(s) (sculpture, mixed-media, painting, video, etc): ___________________________

Expected total number of works: __________

Size of works (range): ________________

Special Requirements for the Exhibition: __________________________________

Number of Participating Artists: ___________

Are your artists from New York City? Tri-State Area? International? ___________

Do you plan on hosting artist talks or other special events during your exhibit? Please describe:

___________________________________________________________________________

Please submit this application cover sheet along with:
• 500 word statement of your proposed exhibition including title
• A C.V. of the curator and/or featured artist(s)
• Any visual support materials you feel are relevant. Up to ten 72dpi jpegs or printout or up to two URLs. Support materials will not be returned.

SUBMIT IN ONE OF THREE WAYS:
• Email your proposal to westbethgallery@gmail.com
• Mail it to Westbeth Gallery, 55 Bethune Street, New York, NY 10014

AVRI OHANA
Paintings from the
Biomorphic Series, Part 2

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Avri Ohana is a multi style painter. His Biomorphic paintings are central to his art, and it is through that style he honed his special technique and voice as a unique artist.

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As a young man, Avri Ohana was influenced by the painter, Eric Brauer, co-founder of the Vienna School of Fantastic Realism, whom he met at Ein Hod, the artist village of Israel.

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In my Biomorphic Paintings I am trying to create an imaginative world. I engage with my curiosity relating to nature, and forms that cannot be seen by the naked eye.

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I thus connect with aspects of the unknown world that exists somewhere there – whether in the cosmos, the depth of the sea, the air we breathe, or the cellular and microscopic structures of the human body.

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Avri Ohana Biography
Avri Ohana was born in Casablanca, Morocco and immigrated to Israel at the age of 13. As a young man, he was an early member of Ein Hod, Israel’s first Artist Village at the foot of Mount Carmel. It was there that he developed his unique voice as an artist. Since then, he has traveled and worked extensively in Europe, Latin America and the United States, where he is a citizen. Ohana’s work reveals a restless temperament that is both in love with nature but also in constant pursuit of perfect abstraction.

Ohana’s exhibitions include solo and group shows in Israel, Europe and the United States.,

Ohana’s works are a playland of old with new, the primitive with the sophisticated, the ordinary with the fantastic. (Gerrit Henry, critic for Art in America.)”

Contact Info:
Website: www.avriohana.com
Email: avriohana@gmail.com
Tel: 212-691-1568

STORIES AROUND THE TABLE. An evening of stories from 7 extraordinary women

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A powerful, surprising and fascinating evening of stories from Karen Ludwig, Joyce Aaron, Dawn D ‘Arcy, Nancy Gabor, Christina Maile, Shami Chaikin, and Diane Spodarek.

Bios
Karen Ludwig , actor, director, writer, teacher .
Performs, directs, writes and teaches in NYC. Her B’way credits include PRELUDE TO A KISS with Steve Guttenberg and John Randolph, BROADWAY BOUND with Joan Rivers, THE DEVILS with Anne Bancroft, THE BACCHAE with Irene Pappas and many plays at the Public Theater.
She was a member of Andre Gregory’s Manhattan Project for two years and performed THE SEAGULL and Wallace Shawn’s OUR LATE NIGHT with the company throughout the United States and Europe. Her first film was Woody Allen’s MANHATTAN, (Meryl Streep’s lover) THIRTEEN DAYS opposite Kevin Costner and most recently, THAT AWKWARD MOMENT.
TV includes NYPD BLUE, ER, ELEMENTARY, and many LAW AND ORDER episodes. Ms. Ludwig is very proud of her work as Ethel Rosenberg in HBO’s CITIZEN COHN opposite James Woods after which she helped raise money for the Rosenberg Foundation for Children. She just completed her solo show, WHERE WAS I? directed by Dorothy Lyman.
She produced/directed UTA HAGEN’S ACTING CLASS/DVD; available on Amazon.

More info on Karen Ludwig here

Joyce Aaron is an actor, director and teacher. She is a graduate of The Neighborhood Playhouse where she studied with Sanford Meisner and Martha Graham. She received an Obie in 1975/76 for her performance in Acrobatics which she directed and co-wrote with Luna Tarlo. She was a member of the Open Theatre for many years, working closely with Joseph Chaikin and touring internationally. She lived and worked with Sam Shepard after he cast her in his first play, Up to Thursday, at the Cherry Lane Theatre. She was in the original production of America Hurrah by Jean-Claude Itallie and played it at the Royal Court Theatre in London. She worked with Peter Brook at the Bouffes in Paris and Jerzy Grotowski in Denmark. She lived in Amsterdam for a number of years where she taught and directed in the Dutch theatre and TV and ran her own private workshops. In 2002 she performed in Happy Days by Samuel Beckett, directed by Joseph Chaikin at the Cherry Lane Theatre.
Working with Joseph Chaikin was a source of un-ending inspiration.

Diane Spodarek is a Canadian-American artist & writer who grew up in Detroit. Her creative work is archived in The New Museum and she is the recipient of numerous awards including an NEA and three NYFA artist’s fellowships.

Nancy Gabor, director and acting teacher. Directed ‘Lost and Found,’ by Paul Binnerts, an on-site performance at Westbeth after Hurricane Sandy. She collaborated with Joseph Chaikin for years and directed him in ‘The War In Heaven,’ Sam Shepard/Joe Chaikin, and ‘Texts for Nothing,’ Samuel Beckett. She has taught and directed internationally and is a Master Teacher at the Amsterdam Theater School. She was an Associate Professor in the theater program at Princeton and offers private coaching and weekend workshops. Nancy is the creator of ‘The Core Technique

Dawn D ‘Arcy is an actor, writer and bass player. She joined Karen Ludwig’s earlier incarnation of this group, at the time called Word of Mouth, almost 20 years ago where she wrote, collaborated and performed under Karen’s wonderful direction. Acting credits include “The Queens”, performed at Alliance Francaise and directed by Estelle Parsons. Stage managing credits include Yeats’ translation of Oedipus at the Actor’s Studio with Al Pacino, Dianne Wiest, David Strathairn and Mary Beth Hurt.

Bass playing highlights include a performance on the lower East Side with the Detroit punk band, The Dangerous Diane Band. She is filled with gratitude to be spending her Wednesdays writing with these brilliant, beautiful women.

Christina Maile co-founded the Westbeth Playwrights Feminist Collective, one of the first feminist theater companies in New York City. Her landscape architecture work has been published in Garden Magazine, and Landscape Architecture Magazine, as well as ON- Site Journal in Canada. As a printmaker, she is a recent recipeint of among others, a Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant as well as Joan Mitchell Foundation Studio grant. Her print work was featured in the juried exhibiton at the 2016 International Print Center in New York City, and published in the Fall 2016 issue of San Francisco Journal of Peace. She is included in the online database of the Elizabeth Sackler Center for Feminist Art and the Brooklyn Museum.
More info on Christina Maile here and here

ALISON ARMSTRONG
OLD GOLD

Passage to China

Passage to China


Alison Armstrong
came to Westbeth Artist Housing in 1981 as a published author; since then she resumed her interest in painting and began to exhibit at Westbeth in 1989. A member of Japanese Artists Association of New York for more than ten years, she also exhibits annually at Tenri Gallery. Her art is held in private collections in England and North America . She has an M.Litt. from Oxford University and Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from NYU, teaches writing and art history at School of Visual Arts and BMCC, and continues to speak and write about art and aesthetics as well as to make art.

ALison Armstrong Artist Statment for OLD GOLD EXHIBITION

This series of textured gold paintings arose from various interests. I have painted in other ways, including the use of Sumi-e, Japanese brush painting studied with my late Sensei, Koho Yamamoto. However, I also became interested in other forms.
Antique gold screens from the Meiji period, Russian orthodox religious icons, and gilt bronze used in 18th-early 19th century Federal style household furnishings are uses of gold as a reflecting method in interior spaces. The metal itself is very special in comparison with other precious metals. As a metaphor in literature and in museum collections I have pondered my attraction to the qualities of gold: ancient gold artifacts such as bronze age gold torques, earplugs, and other jewelry dug from the bronze age bogs in Ireland and similar objects found in bronze age Greek, Trojan, Persian, and Egyptian cultures and later in Rome and to our present day, all point to the special qualities of gold. Gold does not oxidize/rust/tarnish, gold is very heavy but soft enough to be beaten into feather-light gold leaf. It has the associations of the eternal, the perfect. When a sculptor friend gave me several pounds of steel dust from the floor of his studio, and a painter friend gave me a jar of marble dust, and then I began to collect quartz pebbles and sand from the beach, I experimented with thickening and texturing gold oil paint in order to enhance its reflective qualities and give it the depth and illusion of age.

–Alison Armstrong
Westbeth
October 1st 2016

Peter Ruta Latest Work

peter-ruta-in-front-lobby-2016

“Why is the background in your still life paintings blue?”, a viewer asked Peter Ruta recently, and then the asker answered herself, “Because the sky is blue and you used to be a landscape painter.”

In fact Peter Ruta, 98 this year of 2016, never stopped being a landscape painter.

His work of the last few years, done in his 7th floor Westbeth studio could be called indoor landscapes.

He began this long ambitious series in 2001, after losing his priveleged perch in the communal studio on the 91st floor of the North Tower, World Trade Center. An early resident of Westbeth, for many years he also painted the twoeres and their surrounding neighborhood, from the roof of the building. Several of these city views are in museum collections in New York and in Europe.

These still lives are shown here for the first time.