Art

TAKE ACTION: Support Transportation Sustainability Champion - Shop #1 Ohio City Cycles for holidays

Submitted by Norm Roulet on Mon, 11/22/2004 - 02:59.

At the E4S awards party, transportation sustainability champion Jim Sheehan stressed that Ohio City Cycles has lots of great gift for the holidays - from recycled bikes to cool eco-cycle art objects and other great stuff so after you shop local and organic at Champion Basketeria, at the West Side Market, swing by Ohio City Cycles for all your other holiday shopping... if you see a solar and biofuel powered van parked out front, that's probably the other transportation champion, Matthew Harris - great people!

The Largest Outdoor Flower Show in North America

Submitted by Ed Morrison on Sat, 11/20/2004 - 22:46.

The Cleveland Botanical Garden Flower Show returns to University Circle on May 27 - 30, 2005. This show is the largest outdoor flower show in North America.



Cleveland Botanical Garden is the country's first urban garden center.

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CIA Student Holiday Art Sale

Submitted by Norm Roulet on Tue, 11/16/2004 - 00:31.
12/03/2004 - 13:00

Student Holiday Art Sale December 3rd, 6-9pm; December 4th, 10am-9pm; December 5th, 1-5pm, Gund Bldg., Room 111, 11141 East Blvd

Location

Cleveland Institute of Art - Gund Bldg., Room 111, 11141 East Blvd
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CIA Presents STELARC - Australian-based performance artist

Submitted by Norm Roulet on Tue, 11/16/2004 - 00:23.
11/18/2004 - 18:00

Thursday, November 18th at 7pm - STELARC is
an Australian-based performance artist whose work explores and extends
the concept of the body and its relationship with technology through
human-machine interface incorporating medical imaging, prosthetics,
robotics, VR systems and the Internet. The interest is in alternative,
intimate and involuntary experiences, Ohio Bell Auditorium. More info
at www.stelarc.va.com.au/. See image.

Location

CIA - Ohio Bell Auditorium
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What I Learned From School - The First Annual Cleveland Institute of Art Design Summit

Submitted by Norm Roulet on Mon, 11/15/2004 - 23:49.
11/20/2004 - 05:30

The First Annual Cleveland Institute of Art Design Summit
FREE AND OPEN TO
THE PUBLIC

What I Learned From School

Location

Cleveland Institute of Art - Aitken Auditorium
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Now at CIA: Shimon Attie's "History of Another" visualizes Structural Violence for NEO

Submitted by Norm Roulet on Sun, 11/14/2004 - 02:09.

Rarely have I been as overwhelmed by the visual impact and
intellectual excellence of an art exhibit as I am with the current photography
show at Reinberger Galleries, Cleveland Institute of Art: Shimon Attie: The History of Another: Projections
in Rome from November 10 through December
23, 2004.

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At CIA, Mel Chin offers "Spectrum of Survival" as defense against the WMD poverty

Submitted by Norm Roulet on Sat, 11/13/2004 - 14:05.

Mel Chin's presence at the CIA
"Aesthetics and Consumer Culture" symposium showed art and artist at
their very best, inspiring attendees to make Cleveland a more
valuable community...help save the world. Some concepts he presented from his work that we should embrace in our community include:

  1. Use art to give all Clevelanders a voice throughout the community
    and beyond
  2. Create collaborations of art, science and technology for
    environmental good
  3. Realize our poverty is a Weapon of Mass Destruction and use art to
    go to war against that
  4. Add more cultures to our "Cultural Gardens" and interconnect them all with all our people

Transcending the artfulness of the event was the reality of art as social activism, which
inspires a more intelligent vision of the human role in Earth's future, being for global benefit. Chin’s impact
is that important - as is the realization everyone here may be as impactful. Read on and learn from the best of art...


 

Cleveland Institute of Art - One of NEO's Greatest Forces in Economic Development

Submitted by Norm Roulet on Sat, 11/13/2004 - 13:30.

Art and creative industies represent $ billions in economic activity in Northeast Ohio, and the CIA is the greatest fuel we have for that wealth engine. Not only does the CIA provide the region with great creators - fine, design, graphic and craft artists and entrepreneurs - but CIA brings to town monumental art and events that generate cash for our economy. Most important, CIA is developing programs that raise awareness of social issues essential to improving the quality of life and prosperity of all our residents. Read and contribute insight gained from experiencing CIA enlightenment here.

Those who are not involved in local economic development are the Quiet Crisis

Submitted by Norm Roulet on Thu, 11/11/2004 - 21:21.

People who complain there aren't leaders in Northeast Ohio fighting each day to improve our economy and quality of life are themselves ignorant and to blame for the problems in this community. Innumerable exceptional, dedicated, capable and effective leaders fight day in and out to improve everyone's lives here, every day - it is the people who do not participate actively in this process who are our region's "quiet crisis"?. Each day we have opportunities to be solutions - visit the REALNEO calendar frequently to get up to speed and learn where, when and how to make differences in the future of this community, participate in forums on-line, find and share insight with our community leaders, and take personal responsibility, now.

11.09.04 NOTES: Tuesday@REI Forging our future with the metal of creative industries

Submitted by Norm Roulet on Wed, 11/10/2004 - 23:39.

For the past several years, one of the hottest topics in NEO economic development circles has been the value and future potential of our "creative class" - Cleveland State recently estimated Playhouse Square's contribution to the economy at $43 million per year, and CPAC finds just arts and culture creates $1.3 billion a year in econopmic activity in Cuyahoga County alone - but creative class guru Richard Florida only ranks our creative class at 30th out of the 49 largest regions in America, and all local economic development thinkers think we have lots more value to capture. REI Director Ed Morrison projects that "Creative" industries are in fact our next "Steel", and he and other creative leaders here are doing lots about forging more value in this sector of the new economy, including hosting a session at REI November 9 about harnessing more of its horsepower. Here are my notes from the session:

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Building Creative Industries in NEO

Submitted by Ed Morrison on Tue, 11/09/2004 - 07:00.

Building a creative industry base in Northeast Ohio requires us to think in new ways. We're lucky, in that a number of other regions -- mostly in the U.K, Australia, and New Zealand -- have been moving in this direction.

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11/06/04: 12-12:30 PM - Shipibo Designs: Hybridism and Commodification in the Peruvian Amazon

Submitted by Norm Roulet on Sun, 11/07/2004 - 06:24.

11/06/04: 12-12:30 PM
Katia
Almeida-Tracy, Case Western Reserve University
Shipibo
Designs: Hybridism and Commodification in the
Peruvian Amazon

 

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11/06/04 - 11:20 AM - 12 PM - Plains Tipis, Kitsch, and the Fashioning of American Identity

Submitted by Norm Roulet on Sun, 11/07/2004 - 06:04.

11/06/04 - 11:20 AM - 12 PM
Adrianne
Santina, University of North Texas
Plains
Tipis, Kitsch, and the Fashioning of American
Identity

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11/06/04 - 10:30-11:30 AM - Object and Icon: The Farnsworth House as Architectural Collectible

Submitted by Norm Roulet on Sun, 11/07/2004 - 04:09.

11/06/04 - 10:30-11:30 AM Presentation by Irene Sunwoo, Architectural Association, London
Object and Icon: The Farnsworth House as Architectural Collectible

We were fortunate to have join us, from London, England, architecture historian Irene Sunwoo, discussing an innovative concept, being a house as an art object desired by collectors and brokered as a collectible - in this case she profiled the controversial Farnsworth House of Mies Van der Rohe, 1946 - 1951, which was sold in 2003 as lot 800 in an auction at Sotheby's, for $7.5 million. The winning bidder was the Landmarks Preservation Council of Illinois, which will now operate the house, hailed as an architectural masterwork.

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Introduction to this book on the CIA Symposium "Aesthetics and Consumer Culture"

Submitted by Norm Roulet on Sun, 11/07/2004 - 03:38.

INTRODUCTION:
The Cleveland Institute of Art (CIA) brought to Cleveland a remarkable
symposium on the Aesthetics and Consumer Culture which explored diverse
historical, sociological and locational aspects of art, in the modern
context of the consumer culture. Topics ranged from the commoditization
of the image of the tipi as Kitsch in Anglo American society, and the impacts of
commercialization on Peruvian Amazonian Shipibo designs, to the delegation of the
Farnsworth House as an architectural collectible, the globalization of
nothing, and the astounding life work to date of the inspirational artist Mel Chin -
bringing to fortunate attendees a breathtaking, mind-expanding
saturation of truly unique, world-class intellectual insight of great
value to our region, as we seek identity and value in the
commercialization of our art and artists.

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CIA Symposium Agenda

Submitted by Norm Roulet on Sun, 11/07/2004 - 03:34.
The
Cleveland Institute of Art Symposium "Aesthetics
and Consumer Culture" Nov. 4-6, 2004
Thursday,
November 4, 2004
6:30
PM
Symposium
Sneak Preview
Lane Cooper,
The Cleveland Institute of Art
"White
Lightning" and the Subversion of George
Wallace’s Southern White Ideal
  7:00
PM
Cinematheque to
show movie "White
Lightning" (USA, 1973, Joseph Sargent)
in conjunction with the Symposium.
Friday, November 5,
2004
9:00 - 10:00 Symposium
Opening Introduction
Rita Goodman,
The Cleveland Institute of Art
    Session
1
"You’re Keeping That?": Commercialism Disrupted
  10:00 - 10:40 Siobhan
La Piana, The Cleveland Institute of Art
Excess
and Insufficiency
  10:40 – 11:20 Martin
Patrick, Illinois State University School
of Art
Marketing
Matthieu: On Matthieu Laurette’s Creative
Disruptions of the Commercial World
  11:20 – 12:00 Ross
Elfline, U.C.L.A.
Critical
Design and Consumer Culture: From Dada to Searstyle
  12:30 – 2:30 Lunch Break
    Session
2
Mickey,
Martha, and Benetton: Branding Identity
  2:30 – 3:10 Holly
Crawford, University of Essex
Disneyfication
of the Aesthetic Object
  3:10 – 3:50 Michael
Golec, Iowa State University
Do-It-Yourself
Aesthetics: Martha Stewart and the Marketing
of Emersonian Perfectionism
  3:50 – 4:30 Rita
Goodman, The Cleveland Institute of Art
Buying
Politics, Selling Sweaters
  7:00 – 8:00 PM Featured
Speaker
George
Ritzer, University of Maryland
"Art,
McDonaldization and the Globalization of
Society".
Sociology Professor George Ritzer is the
author of numerous books, including The
McDonaldization of Society (1993, 1996,
2000, 2004; translated into a dozen languages);
Enchanting a Disenchanted World:
Revolutionizing the Means of Consumption (1999); McDonaldization: The Reader
(2002); and The Globalization of Nothing (2004). He also edited The Blackwell
Companion to Major Social Theorists (2000), as well as The Handbook of
Social Theory (2001), and is co-founding editor of the Journal of Consumer
Culture.
  8:45 PM Cinematheque to
show film on topic of Symposium (title to be announced)
Saturday, November
6, 2004
  Session
3
Nothing
is Sacred: Dislocating Local Culture
  10:30 – 11:20 Irene
Sunwoo, Architectural Association, London
Object
and Icon: The Farnsworth House as Architectural
Collectible
  11:20 – 12:00 Adrianne
Santina, University of North Texas
Plains
Tipis, Kitsch, and the Fashioning of American
Identity
  12:00 – 12:30 Katia
Almeida-Tracy, Case Western Reserve University
Shipibo
Designs: Hybridism and Commodification in the
Peruvian Amazon
  12:30 – 2:30 Lunch Break
    Session
4
Resisting
Globalization/Resisting Art History
  2:30 – 3:10 Kristen
Baumlier, The Cleveland
Institute of Art
"Combustible
Media: Art to Spark Social Change"
  3:10 – 4:00 Charles
Bergengren, The Cleveland Institute of
Art
The Commodification
of Everything Else
  4:00 – 6:00 Reception with participants
and closing keynote speaker Mel
Chin. To be held in Ohio Bell Auditorium,
Gund Building
  6:00 – 7:00 Closing
Keynote Speaker
Mel Chin,
Internationally-renowned artist
"The
Spectrum of Survival". Mel
Chin is an internationally prominent artist
whose works are in the collections of the
Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Whitney
Museum of American Art, New York; the Weatherspoon
Gallery, Greensboro, North Carolina; and
the Columbus Museum of Art, Ohio. He was
included in the first season of the celebrated
PBS series "Art: 21, Art in the Twenty-First
Century." An influential artist, Chin
is known for his politically engaged and
socially aware site-specific works, including
his multi-sited Revival Field, KNOWMAD,
and Render (2004).

SYMPOSIUM EVENTS ARE FREE AND
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC, EXCEPT FOR CINEMATHEQUE FILMS.

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Arts symposium at CIA: "Aesthetics and Consumer Culture"

Submitted by Norm Roulet on Sun, 11/07/2004 - 02:59.

A book of knowledge dedicated to the CIA "Aesthetics and Consumer Culture" symposium, held Thursday evening, November 4; all day Friday, November 5 and Saturday, November 6, Aitken Auditorium, 11141 East Blvd. A symposium on contemporary art, design and culture. Influential international artist Mel Chin
will present the keynote address on Saturday, November 6 at 6pm. A
public reception with the speakers will be held 4-6pm on November 6. George Ritzer of the University of Maryland is a featured speaker on Friday, November 5 at 7pm. See the schedule. Media page.

Sponsored by the Liberal Arts Dept. For more info contact Dr. Rita Goodman (rgoodman [at] gate [dot] cia [dot] edu) or Ms. Lane Cooper (lane_cooper [at] hotmail [dot] com).

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11/05/04 - 7-8 PM: Art, McDonaldization and the Globalization of Society

Submitted by Norm Roulet on Sat, 11/06/2004 - 07:02.

November 5, 2002 from 7 - 8 PM: Session 2 - Featured Speaker

As part of this exciting event, the CIA brought renowned writer and social theorist George Ritzer to speak about "Art,
McDonaldization and the Globalization of
Society". I had the pleasure to attend, and share the following observations about how his presentation fits our interest of nurturing regional economic development.

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NEO "may show" "Cleveland School" to beat Artsopolis (and Silicon Valley), for our creative class

Submitted by Norm Roulet on Thu, 11/04/2004 - 02:06.

Let's beat Artsopolis (and Silicon Valley) and save NEO artists money. The following article plugs an arts portal in Silicon Valley that they claim is getting the attention of lots of other arts organizations around the country. I do use Artsopolis when in SF and the protal is good, but it is no better than we can do here - and we need this capability to promote one of our greatest regional assets... the arts!!!

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Interesting self publishing site and service from founder of Redhat

Submitted by Norm Roulet on Thu, 11/04/2004 - 01:46.

I received an email today from area economic development leader Kevin Cronin that should be of interest of content creators interested to commercialize books, music and images. Nice service - don't know if it is cost competitive... and wonder, can't folks in publishing here compete with this, as self-publishing will continue to be a growing business (some folks will always want dead trees to read ;-)

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P.S. to all of Cleveland's chronic complainers who like to whine and say...

Submitted by Norm Roulet on Wed, 11/03/2004 - 02:39.

In the words of Northeast Ohio Arts Educator of the Year Mary Beth Matthews:

As a little P.S. to all of Cleveland's chronic complainers who like to whine and say,

"Nothing ever gets done in this city"
"People have no vision here"
"Clevelanders don't know how to work together"
"It's all just a lot of talk"
"New ideas don't stand a chance."
"The Cleveland Schools suck."

At Max Hayes, we refused to get caught up in all of that negativity...We're makin' it happen...Ha!

Ha is right - it has just been announced Mary Beth and her students will install a major public arts project at the Soap Box Track, right down from her school,

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OAC Grant Program Workshop Individual Artists

Submitted by Norm Roulet on Tue, 11/02/2004 - 21:52.
11/06/2004 - 10:00

<>Event:  OAC Grant
Program Workshop Individual Artists

Date:  11/6/2004 -
11/6/2004

Location

Famicos/Notre Dame Apts. 1325 Ansel Road, (Ground Floor)
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Introducing the May Show, for the future

Submitted by Realneo Admin on Sun, 10/24/2004 - 19:29.

Regional leadership has shown conceptual support  to figure out how Northeast Ohio artists may use optimal information technology to enhance their abilities to survive and thrive - live doing what they love. for this desire, and money is being invested to help artists grow an industry around their activities, but the results are not yet optimal.

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Plain Dealer on the Arts

Submitted by Realneo Admin on Sun, 10/24/2004 - 19:25.

Cleveland artists and arts organizer Susie Frazier Mueller published an Op/Ed in the 10/24/04 Cleveland Plain Dealer on the importance of artists as entrepreneurs in Northeast Ohio, which makes important points to consder for deveoping the local economy.

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11.17.04 Community of Minds: Len Steinbach, CIO, The Cleveland Museum of Art

Submitted by Norm Roulet on Thu, 10/21/2004 - 20:44.
11/17/2004 - 16:30

"Community
of Minds,"
Regional Business
& Technology Networking Event, Wednesday, 11-17-04,
5:30PM - 8:00PM, George Dively Building, Case.
Be alert! Listen and exchange insights with speaker Len Steinbach, CIO, The
Cleveland Museum of Art. CMA connects culture, community with
telecommunications technology bridging the gap between business, exhibition, the
internet and new media technologies. Videos & display interactives. Join
us. Meet cool thought leaders in University Circle & learn about changes
affecting technology and business. Co-sponsored by Thompson Hine and
REI. This event is free but you must register online
in order to attend at: http://www.communityofminds.com/LogIn.asp?NextPage=registration.asp?EventID=86.

Location

George Dively Education Building, Case
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