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Cynthia Hopkins is Super Rad

From Marketing intern Cortney…
Today I got the chance to sit in on the rehearsal for Cynthia Hopkins’ final installation of her Accinosco Trilogy. The performance is going to be so rad. This segment, entitled The Success of Failure (Or The Failure of Success), follows the same thematic content of the first two performances, but takes the execution of those elements to the utmost extreme. In a conversation with the interns today, Cynthia explained that her performances interweave truths from her research and actual events with fictions she has created to compliment her explorations into memory and amnesia. Read the rest of this entry »
Posted March 19, 2009 by Brittany Bishop
Filed under Music, Work-in-progress
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They call me mellow yellow
On a weekly basis I go through all of our yellow information slips that patrons have filled out in order to receive a survey after their visit (and perhaps win some MM goodies). Occasionally I find hidden treasures tucked into the pile. For example this week as I was flipping through the stack I noticed the three following slips:
A plea,

a fabulous doodle,

and a special visitor.

Cheers,
Brittany
PS. Information about our 10th Anniversary Ball (featuring Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings) is online and tickets just went on sale. Get yours today!
Posted March 16, 2009 by Brittany Bishop
Filed under Blogroll
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More News from the CRIB
Matt Bua is still working hard on his detailed Kidspace installation.
This guy greets you when you walk in the door.

Some of Matt’s collections:

carrots

rope

luggage

slides
and he’s still unpacking more every day.
Remember the opening is March 21 11 AM – 5 PM.
Posted March 14, 2009 by MASS MoCA
Filed under Exhibitions, Kidspace
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March Madness
Notes from MASS MoCA Director Joe Thompson:
I love March. Outside, early signs of mud amid shrinking piles of black snow (New Englanders know what I mean by that).
But inside at MASS MoCA things are better when art-making reaches maximum density. I just took a stroll across our campus, and here’s a short visual diary of what was going on between 10:15 and 10:30am this morning:
In the B10 theater, a bevy of documentary filmmakers including Christie Herring, Robbie Gemmel, and Luisa Dantas are in residence in conjunction with our four-day Working Films Forum. Hosted in conjunction with Robert West and Judith Helfand’s North Carolina-based Working Films, which plows the fields between documentary filmmaking and social change, this annual conference provides select filmmakers a chance to screen work in progress, plus discuss alternative modes of distribution, financing, and marketing.

That’s Lila Kuth of the L.E.F. foundation (which funds New England-based docs), standing on the right, saying a few words, with Robert on left in the white cap.

On the third floor galleries our own man-of-all-skills Gregg Eastman is putting final touches on what will surely be one of the most amazing videographic venues in the world: a 12′ tall, 35′ diameter cycloramic screen (that’s about 110 feet in circumference if I remember my geometry), onto which Pawel Wojtasik will project a new video about New Orleans at the watery edge of its existence. Pawel is teaming up with Steven Vitiello on sound, and the lush footage, coupled with Steven’s amazing tonescapes promises to be compelling. Getting the eight LCD projectors to properly interlace the 360 degree video has been a tricky technical challenge, but our A/V genius in residence Gian Pablo Villamil has found brilliant software solutions to that, and our own Dante Birch has puzzled out the intricate projection mounting and optics. You can go out and buy this sort of “in the round” filmaking hardware and software if you are Disney and have a spare half million dollars or so to spend: we don’t, so we’ve rolled our own solution, crafting up the cyclorama and video solution by the seat of our pants. I’ve seen test footage, and I think it might work out just fine, though there is still a lot of testing scheduled for this weekend: the video itself is an exquisite visual lamentation, which is apt, as it’s one of the works-in-progress for curator Denise Markonish’s show These Days: Elegies for Modern Times.

George Bolster, Shown here, is also in that exhibition. George has us all in awe at his draftsmanship.


Here are a few details from in ink on birch ply drawings, which will form the lay ceiling of his rather baroque installation, which you see Robert Thomas working on here.

George has plans for mirrors, magnetized iron shavings, music by Radiohead, and a rather intricate plumbing system. And a narwhale (which I had always thought was a unicorn-like mythical creature, but which George assures me is an actual sea mammal). But narwhales are not easy to come by, so George enlisted the help of our head of fabrication Richard Criddle, himself a sculptor, who I found carving away in his studio.

In the earlier photo of George he is making a clay model of the tail, which here Richard is rendering in wood and bondo…that’s right, bondo, which comes naturally to a Vermonter like our Ishmael Richard. The narwhal cometh.
Back in the theater, Cynthia Hopkins (who may hold the record for return appearances as an artist in residence at MASS MoCA – we love her work) is on site developing the third component of a theatrical trilogy.

This last chapter is called The Success of Failure (or, the Failure of Success). If you don’t know Cynthia’s music (most of which is available under the name of her band, Gloria Deluxe), you owe it to yourself to take a listen. Cynthia’s voice is beautiful, and she’s great on accordion and saw. The album Accidental Nostalgia is the soundtrack from first chapter of the trilogy for which the current Success of Failure is a sort of keystone/prequel.
Her costuming table is interesting.

Here’s one of Cynthia in civvies, in our Lickety Split café.

AND, Matt Bua is here working on CRIBS to open March 21 in the new expanded Kidspace.

The art making is humming right along this mad March morning in North Adams.
Posted March 13, 2009 by MASS MoCA
Filed under Exhibitions, Film, Theater, Work-in-progress
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Thoughts from the Filmmaker

Stefan Forbes, the filmmaker behind Boogie Man: The Lee Atwater Story (which won the Polk Award and was a 2008 WGA Award nominee, and a NY Times and Washington Post Critic’s Pick) offers his thoughts about the film and politics in America today. Boogie Man screens tonight at 7:30 in Club B-10 as part of our Larger than Life documentary series. Those who attend will have a chance to win one of 5 DVD copies of the film, signed by Stefan.
As a kid who grew up in Cambridge and watched Governor Mike Dukakis collide head-on with the freight train that was Lee Atwater back in ’88, I’m very excited my film Boogie Man is playing MASSÂ Moca. It’ll bring back some hard-to-believe moments from a campaign which remains seminal in American politics. Lee Atwater wrote the Republican playbook that would defeat not only Dukakis in ’88, but Gore in 2000 and Kerry in 2004.
I’m still fascinated by the legendary American life of Atwater, a complex, often-mischaracterized figure. How did a guitar-picking rascal from South Carolina rise to such heights of power in American politics, becoming a friend and mentor to Karl Rove, and almost single-handedly creating the Bush dynasty? How did a guy who Read the rest of this entry »
Posted March 5, 2009 by MASS MoCA
Filed under Film
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Patron Blog: Miss Rockaway
When a patron visits our galleries we try to give them many opportunities to share their thoughts with us during and after the visit. One of the ways we do this is by giving visitors a chance to write their own blog entry. Below is an entry we received about Being Here is Better than Wishing We’d Stayed, an exhibition by The Miss Rockaway Armada. Feel free to leave a comment about your own experiences and thoughts about the exhibition at the bottom of this post.
Cheers,
Brittany

Photo from albany tim on Flickr
Written by Kim Gutschow
The Rockaway Armada truly sings and shines. What a great space to enage kids, parents, free-form creativity. Finally, a wall in a museum one can scribble on!! For the frustrated artist, tired parent, or jaded museum goer, a visit to Rockaway will refresh and reinvigorate.
But, why oh why, don’t the typewriters work well? I had a poem all set to go, but no ribbon. But myabe that was the point. As Thoreau said, “Much is published, but little is printed” – meaning so little of true worth, true poetry comes to the page.
Posted March 4, 2009 by Brittany Bishop
Filed under Exhibitions, Patron Blog
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