Thursday, April 25, 2013

Springing into Green Landscapes


 Photo of Wine Bar on St. Clair

It’s spring but you wouldn’t know it as I piled on my winter running apparel this morning. After volunteering at the Cleveland International Film Festival, I was ready to hit the streets and breathe in that crisp, fresh morning air. In just two weeks, I was tired and out of shape. But, I was determined to stick it out and run my usual route - Euclid Beach Park. 

It seems to me it has been a long winter season. Not too long ago, I was running along the pier and was faced with giant, frozen sculptures that were once waves. Hurricane Sandy, and blizzard conditions where I ran in place trying to make my way forward.  Everyone was in hibernation; Not a sole in the streets where I would run past. My only friend was the howling wind and snow gusts saying Hello.

Now, the waves cautiously glide along the littered, rocky beach. I was curious so I ran to the water’s edge; to my surprise, the lake was not too cold. Soon, families will pull out their blankets and sit and watch those waves move rhythmically along the beach. A smile will appear on every child’s face as the blistering sun warms their skin as they walk out of the water.

What I love about spring is the lush green lawns that have appeared out of nowhere; the daffodils already in full bloom and the tulips not far behind; the cherry blossom trees so heavy with flowers that you just stare in awe. The birds chirping and geese swimming along the lake as though winter never occurred. The earth awakens in breathtaking color.

It’s those small things that fills me with joy. The winter helps me appreciate the spring thaw when nature wakes up - turning our landscape from brown to green to yellow to pink. Everyone is in the yard raking up dead leaves and filling the lawnmower with gas for that first cut - I love the smell of freshly cut grass. Images of growth and revival that nature provides us; life cycles over and over again.

Not thinking that Cleveland’s weather changes daily. I enthusiastically planted seeds in my tiny garden - string beans and peas. A few days later, snow flurries appeared. That is the way it goes but it’s April and it won’t last. The warmth will cycle again as it always does.  

Why I adore the warm weather - everyone is out and about. Neighbors walking around and exchanging ideas. The lawnmower sounds fill the air. Everyone is in a good mood; parties and festivals are all over town. And, it doesn’t get dark until 9PM, where your energy level is over the top. There is something to do every single day; if you can’t find something to do you can always walk to your neighborhood eatery and sit outside.

The warm weather is a precursor of being friendly even if you don’t feel like it. You walk or ride your bike, and you just feel alive breathing in those new smells. Make a new friend, and/or go to a new place you haven’t been. Spring and summer is a time to get out there and explore. If you can’t find anything to do, you haven’t tried hard enough.

What I’m looking forward to the this year: Wade Oval Wednesdays; GardenWalk; Waterloo Arts Festival; North Collinwood neighborhood lake concerts; Beach Blast; The Cleveland Museum of Art Solstice Party; - that is a very small sampling of the cool things coming up.

I can’t wait.

Wade Oval Wednesday June 12
http://www.universitycircle.org/events/2012/06/wow-wade-oval-wednesdays

Garden Walk June 22 & 23
http://www.gardenwalkcleveland.org/

The Cleveland Museum of Art Solstice Party - June 22
http://www.clevelandart.org/events/special-events/solstice/solstice-2013

11th Annual Waterloo Arts Festival - June 29
http://artscollinwood.org/waf-2013/

Beach Blast - August 3rd - Euclid Beach - Like the facebook page
https://www.facebook.com/euclidbeachblast

Friday, April 19, 2013

37th Cleveland International Film Festival



April 13, 1977 was the first day the Cleveland International Festival began its run at the Cedar Lee Theater. Now thirty-seven years later, it has become one of the must do events in Cleveland: 180 feature films and 165 short subjects. Moreover, Tower City is literally busting at the seams with the thousands of people walking up and down the concourse. If you haven’t experienced it yet, it really is something you need to experience for yourself.

What I enjoy most about this festival year after year is the enthusiasm everyone has as they grab a ballot and find their seat. This is the time where like-minded people (film buffs) “buzz” about their favorites or stinkers. It can be a “crap shoot” when you read the brief synopsis in the film guide and try to discern what “grabs you” in picking something fantastic that you can’t stop thinking about. As a friend of mine has eloquently stated to me many times, “If you haven’t seen something you didn’t like, then you haven’t stretch yourself.” Touché !

Volunteering is another thing I enjoy doing at the festival. I like hearing the positive comments about the films so I can markup my program guide that’s already littered with notes. Sometimes, however, when you hear the positive “buzz” it might be too late to get your ticket. But, there are so many films to choose from that you can’t get too upset by the ones that you’ve missed.

I met this older gentleman, an Army Colonel, who saw between 5 to 6 films a day. Pretty darn good for a retiree. He bought a “Directors” pass so he can see as many films and any film he feels like on any given day.  When I met him on my volunteer shift, he already watched 40 films and that was the beginning of the week.

This year, however, I have given more “fair” ballots than I have in the past. I’m not sure why but many of the films just “didn’t do it” for me one way or the other. I am a tough film critic because I see a fair number of films; plus as a book reader, I can appreciate if a film has a creative, unique story or something that hasn’t been done over and over. If it doesn’t, then it will be an average film by my standards. I can’t help it.

If I begin to nod off, most likely it didn’t grab my attention hence it’s going into the “average” rating pile. There is also a slim chance that I might just be tired on that day. More often than not, it simply was a generic, okay film. This only happened to me twice. One story just was not compelling enough - “The Coin Bearer” and I nodded off for several minutes. I did however get the basis of the story. As I walked out, I wished that I picked a different film. That is the beauty of the film festival, you can broaden your horizons into new genres.

If you love film, please check out the Cleveland International Film Festival next year, in March 2014. You will meet wonderful like-minded film people. I’ve enjoyed standing in line and conversing with everyone and anyone. In fact, I met a husband and wife who just moved to Cleveland. I couldn’t wait to tell them all the wonderful things going on in Cleveland. This is my favorite event of the year.

Here are a list of the films I saw ranked from Best to Worst

1. Laurence Anyways (a multi-layered story where a man becomes a woman and the struggle he faces in trying to let go of a woman s/he has lived with for years)

2. Pieta (a disturbing film but kept me on the edge my seat the entire time because the story was brilliant along with strong film editing that added to the drama.)

3. Three Worlds (a wonderful story where an accident affects three lives.)

4. Beauty (beautiful cinematography; quiet film how a teenage girl works for another family and the struggles she faces.)

5. The Last Ocean (documentary on the toothfish that is being harvested and slowly becoming extinct; hence this is changing the ecosystem.)

6. Call Me Kuchu (documentary how the Urgandan LGBT community is being jailed for coming out.)

7. Pulzel (narrative how two individuals try to get out of their comfort zones.)

8. The Orheim Company (Narrative how a family struggles with alcoholism.)

9. When Day Breaks (a professor finds a metal box that contains his real parents belongings such as a musical score.)

10. Omamamia (enjoyable, non-thinking film when a grandma travels to Rome hoping to meet the Pope.)

11. Casting By (documentary how Marion Dougherty found talented actors that helped to make  films great; the push/pull that “casting” should be nominated for an Academy Award.)

12. Musicwood (documentary on the future of wood for acoustic guitars and preserving the Alaska Forrest against clear cutting.)

13. Halima’s Path (two lives are intertwined when Halima can’t have children ends up raising her niece’s child during Bosnian wartime.)

14. The Deep (a fishing boat capsizes and one man survives in the bone chilling water; how did he survive?)

15. Out in the Dark (Isreali vs. Palestinian - two men trying to stay together where one guy loses his student visa in conflict; they can’t depend on their families for help.)

16. Red, White and Blueprints ( documentary on how rust belt cities are reinventing themselves.)

17. Kuma (a young girl marries an older gentleman while his first spouse struggles with cancer.)

18. Running From Crazy (Mariel Hemmingway’s honest account of the many suicides in her family and her outreach to bring this issue to the forefront.)

19. La Demora (narrative where a mother is struggling to make ends meet and is faced with  her father’s dementia)

20. I Do (a gay man loses his visa and he marries a Lesbian in order to say in the US. This brings up the issue of what is marriage?

21. My Beautiful Country ( a fictional story about a Serban woman and an Albanian soldier who have to find a way to be together during the Kosovo war - I nodded of but I thought it was a good story.)

22. Salma (documentary on a woman who defies her Indian culture and writes poetry. She is imprisoned for 25-years where men believe woman shouldn’t be educated; disappointed it wasn't as dramatic and I envisioned.)

23. Uprising (documentary on when Egyptians demand Mubarak to step down that erupted into a revolution, fighting for their democratic rights, and how facebook ignited thousands to participate.)

24. A Fighting Heart (interesting to learn how Johnny Kilbane became a champion boxer in Cleveland.

25. Chaos (a twisted thriller where a farmhouse is central to destruction, deceit and intrigue when a boy breaks up a marriage and tries to escape his past. Too many twists and it took too long to get to the point.)

26. Sugar Wars (mafia Godfather Lonardo in Cleveland.)

27. The Almost Man (an immature 35-year old who pulls childless pranks because he just doesn’t want to grow up.)

28. Bad Seeds ( two school kids kidnap a teacher; as time goes on they don’t know what to do with her. This had potential where it could of gone further to become edge-of-your-seat).

29. Piazza Fontana (a complicated Italian story when a bombing occurs killing 17 people and the investigation behind who is responsible. It was long, dry and confusing.)

30. Detroit Unleaded ( two characters fall in love in a gas station that falls short with too many stereotypes and not enough character development or strong dialogue.)

31. The Coin Bearer ( a story of two brothers who make money on casino-style gambling during wakes only; gambling is illegal in the Philippines so this is the only time to do it.)

32. Little World (Documentary on a boy who travels the world on a wheelchair; I was empathetic but a continuous close up on his face should have focused more on the terrain; instead I was bored and annoyed. It needed tighter editing.)

33. The Great Flood (old black and white footage on the 1927 Mississippi flood; no spoken words but interwoven with jazz music that I thought detracted from the imagery; I was bored. It would of been better as still photos.)

34. Up There (why I disliked this film is that I could not follow what it’s really about; a man needs to help a dead person find his way into heaven. Zombies?)

Cleveland International Film Festival

www.clevelandfilm.org



Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Flying Carpet by Beat Zoderer


 Flying Carpet - photo by Anna Chanakas (I appear on far right)

Colorful orange and green aluminum strips were suspended from the ceiling in a woven tapestry at the Reinberger Gallery. This sculptural installation titled, “Flying Carpet” was the Cleveland Institute of Art’s first ever commissioned piece by Swiss-born artist, Beat Zoderer. Zoderer’s piece perfectly commands the space of the gallery in an “Aha” moment as your eyes gaze upon the brilliant, colorful hues. At least that is how I felt when I saw this sculptural masterpiece. It was something I have never seen before that held my attention for more than a few minutes.

I anxiously asked the artist, if his “Flying Carpet” met his expectations. Zoderer enthusiastically replied that it superseded his expectations. I can tell he was very happy with the result.

Before the “Flying carpet” was installed, there were many unforeseen challenges. For one, the colorful paint on each aluminum strip began to flake off. In fact on many of the strips, the paint was worn off on all the edges. This could of been a tremendous set back but the gallery’s curator and the artist decided to work with the material as delivered.

The aluminum strips were cut and painted by Cleveland companies, and it would set the project back if they went back and reordered the material. Through discussions with the artist, Zoderer gave the fabricators exact color specifications and sizes of the aluminum strips. They are different lengths and widths. As a novice painter myself, it looks as though the aluminum was not prepped correctly to allow the paint to adhere to the material. It didn’t seem like the artist was too concerned about this set back.

Regardless of the paint sloughing off, the piece is down-right beautiful. It floats brilliantly off the ground with light streaming through its loosely woven aluminum sheets onto the ground. This light creates another art form where you almost want to lay on the ground. The bright colors keeps your eyes moving up and down and across - left and right. To add more interest to the piece, Zoderer bent the aluminum so it has a feeling of movement even though it is suspended from the ceiling.

Prior to the opening of the show, I attended the artist talk, and Zoderer spoke how he was working with Starbuck’s wooden coffee stirrers to get an idea developed. I have taken a few sculptural classes and the basis of an idea/concept comes to you in many, unconditional ways. You may sketch something out or you may be sculpting something out of clay to get the “creative, juices flowing.”

Moreover, Zoderer shows preliminary small scale ideas in the show that should be looked at as well. For example, he glued tiny rubber bands (I assume those annoying rubber bands you get when you buy produce) on a card, scraps from a sheet of stamps, and the coffee stirrers arranged sculpturally. It was interesting how he took cast-away items and created art or sculptural studies that might be a large scale piece; who knows. Nevertheless, I liked seeing his creative process.

I also spoke to one of the guys who helped install the piece. It did take ten days with Zoderer meticulously laying out each piece on the ground by color before the hard work began - assembling them with a rivet gun. Like any artistic piece, it is the process that you learn from, which turned out differently than Zoderer initially thought.

It’s those “mistakes” or the unintended installation procedures that turn out better than your brain calculated in the first place. I’ve done that many times when I did a design or drawing and my vision changed - throughout the process that turned out even better. I think of the so called, “mistake” as the learning process.  There is no way to perfectly manufacture the piece in your head without some learning taking place - it’s a trial and error. That is the beauty of art.

I would highly recommend seeing the “flying carpet” for yourself at the Cleveland Institute of Art, Reinberger Gallery now until May 4th.

Cleveland Institute of Art

http://www.cia.edu/events/2013/03/beat-zoderer-flying-carpet