During the 2008 Seal Bay Festival, composers and instrumentalists will interact with grammar school students and local artists in workshops that explore the creative links between verbal narrative, visual imagery, physical movement, and music composition. The workshops will use musical improvisation as a starting point for discussion and discovery. Participants include students from Vinalhaven and North Haven schools and visual artists at Belfast’s Waterfall Arts Center. The workshops will take place on June 5 and 11; for details, please visit www.sealbayfestival.org.
Back to the TopFran Houston, a photographer and writer who moved to Peaks Island in 2003, attended an oral history workshop funded by the Maine Humanities Council in December 2007. Since then, she has interviewed many older Peaks residents about their memories and stories from childhood. Her work comes together in “For the Love of Peaks,” an exhibit of black and white portraits and writings at the Gem Gallery on Peaks Island. The exhibit will open on June 6 and run for two weeks. For gallery hours, please call (207) 766-2456.
Back to the TopPortland Harbor Museum will convene a full-day conference, “Defending the United States in a Time of Turmoil: The 1808 Fortification Program in the District of Maine,” to acknowledge the 200th anniversary of Forts Preble and Scammell. Historians, archaeologists, and preservationists will discuss the legacy of the forts and consider the challenges to the forts’ survival. The conference will include walking tours of both forts. For details or to register, please call (207) 799-6337 or visit www.portlandharbormuseum.org.
Back to the TopThe first music festival of Maine’s summer season celebrates American music at the historic Shaker Village in New Gloucester. This year’s festival includes two chamber music concerts and a day of workshops for amateur ensembles. Among the composers represented will be Mendelssohn and Hayden; performers include the Portland String Quartet and the carbon-fiber cellist Luis Leguia. An evening devoted to Shaker culture and history will feature performances of Shaker hymns and a tour of the art exhibit “The Human and the Eternal.” For tickets or details, please call (207) 926-4597.
Back to the TopThe Classical Association of New England (CANE) Summer Institute brings people interested in ancient cultures together with New England’s most accomplished scholars for a six-day collegial program of lectures and mini-courses on the campus of Dartmouth College in Hanover, NH. The 2008 program, “Revolution and Reaction,” will explore revolutionary change in government, thought, art, and literature in the Classical world, and how these changes resonate in today’s world. In addition to lectures and courses, the Institute will take advantage of an exhibit of ancient sculpture at Dartmouth’s Hood Museum of Art. Portions of the program are open only to paid registrants, but morning lectures are free and open to the public. In addition, scholarships are available to Maine residents (primarily teachers) who would not otherwise be able to attend. For a detailed schedule and scholarship information, please visit www.dartmouth.edu/~classics/CANE/2008/Index2.html.
Back to the TopUnder the leadership of scholar Don Lord, a group of citizens will study the numerous “yardsticks” that have been developed by historians such as Arthur Schlesinger, Sr., and Thomas A. Bailey to evaluate past presidents. The group will discuss whether the criteria for greatness has changed over time, or just the perspectives of the historians. In evaluating greatness, how important are the unique obstructions or opportunities afforded by the historical moment? Can a really average person make a great president? What qualities does a bad president lack? By studying past lists, the group will develop criteria for its own list of presidential greatness. Two different groups will meet over six weeks in July and August, one in Waldoboro and the other in Damariscotta. For details, please contact the Waldoboro Public Library at (207 832-4484 or the Skidompha Library at (207) 563-5513.
Back to the TopDuring this year’s Bates Dance Festival, filmmaker/dance scholar Joan Frosch will conduct a one-week residency including a lecture on choreographers Gregory Maqoma and Nora Chipaumire (July 25) and a screening of her award-winning film “Movement (R)evolution” (July 24). Frosch will also contribute contextual program notes about Maqoma, who is from South Africa, and Chipaumire, who is from Zimbabwe. Finally, Frosch will moderate the Festival’s Global Exchange Panel Discussion (July 22), which brings together participating artists from Africa, Asia, and Latin America. For more information on the Bates Dance Festival, please visit www.batesdancefestival.org.
Back to the TopThe Kittery Art Association will host a day-long symposium on the early 20th century artists of southern Maine to complement exhibitions of Kittery artist Russell Cheney’s paintings at the Portsmouth Athenaeum and Portsmouth Historical Society. Speakers will explore Yankee Modernism in Maine through the artistic careers of Russell Cheney and his contemporaries: Marsden Hartley, F.O. Mattiessen, and the Ogunquit School painters. Special components of the symposium include a tour of the Cheney studio in Kittery and a new website devoted to the artist, www.russellcheney.com. To register for the symposium, please call the Portsmouth Athenaeum at (603) 431-2538.
Back to the TopAward-winning writer David Jauss will be an artist-in-residence at Haystack Mountain School of Crafts in Deer Isle from August 2-15, 2008. Jauss is the author of Black Maps, You Are Not Here, and other books of poetry and short stories. He teaches at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock and in the MFA in Writing Program at the Vermont College of Fine Arts. At Haystack, Jauss will interact with workshop participants, present a public program on August 4, and write a monograph interpreting the contemporary craft world. To learn more, visit www.davidjauss.com or www.haystack-mtn.org.
Back to the TopThe theme for the 2008 Summer Reading Program in Lisbon Falls (and many other communities in Maine) is “Wings, Stings, and Leggy Things.” The program begins on June 25 and culminates on August 4 with a performance by Greg McAdams called “Stop Bugging Me, I’m Reading!” The storytelling, puppetry, and audience participation from this program will motivate children to keep reading until school begins several weeks later. For more information, please contact the library at (207) 353-6564.
Back to the TopA symposium on Maine Folk Art, bringing nationally known scholars to engage the public in an exploration of the place of folk art in Maine history and culture, will serve as the culminating event in the statewide Maine Folk Art Trail project. Speakers will cover such topics as scrimshaw, quilts, redware, and hooked rugs. The symposium takes place on September 28 at Bates College; proceedings will be captured on video for future reference. For more information on the Maine Folk Art Trail and its participating institutions, please visit www.mainefolkarttrail.org.
Back to the Top“Some Homes,” a new exhibit at the L.C. Bates Museum in Hinckley, Maine, will stimulate thinking about the meaning of Home through contemporary art and historical context. The project goal is to promote discussion, knowledge, and interpretation that focuses on the experience of Home, specifically Maine homes and the related philosophy of home at Good Will-Hinckley. The exhibit runs from May through October. Accompanying events include a lecture by Earle Shettleworth on domestic architecture in Maine, a panel with artists and representatives from Waterville Main Street and the Margaret Chase Smith Library, and a film screening at Railroad Square Cinema. For details on these events, please call the museum at (207) 238-4250.
Back to the TopThe artifacts on display in Found Treasures, the 2008 exhibit at the Fifth Maine Regiment Museum (located at 45 Seashore Avenue), were “rescued” from the island transfer station or unearthed from basements and attics. They include diaries, documents from island businesses, and an 1879 bible full of mementoes from the life of its owner. Each grouping of artifacts will be connected by provenance or theme, and accompanied by interpretive text. The exhibit is on view from June through October, 2008. To learn more, contact the museum at (207) 766-5514 or fifthmaine@juno.com, or visit www.fifthmainemuseum.org.
Back to the TopThe Bodwell Granite Company Store operated on the island of Vinalhaven from 1858 until 1919. The Vinalhaven Historical Society maintains an extensive collection of receipts, correspondence, payroll tickets, and other documents from the store, as well as glass plate negatives of images of quarry operations, workers, and managers. Based on census, payroll, and union records, the historical society has built a database of quarry workers employed by Bodwell. Public access to this database will soon be available at www.vhhis.org. In addition, the historical society is planning an exhibit that examines the influence of the Bodwell Granite Company and their company store on the history and economy of Vinalhaven through the lives of ten representative workers. The exhibit will be on view during the museum’s 2008 summer season, from June through October. A public lecture will also take place during the summer at the Smith-Hokanson Memorial Hall. For more information, please call (207) 863-4410 or visit the aforementioned website.
Back to the TopThis summer, the General Henry Knox Museum in Thomaston will mount an exhibit of armaments and weapons, centered on a cannon on loan from Fort Ticonderoga, NY. During the exhibit, two lectures will highlight Henry Knox’s career as Chief of Artillery and the nation’s first Secretary of War. On July 1, John D. Bottero will speak at the museum, while Mark Puls will speak on July 22 at the Hutchinson Center in Belfast. For more information, please call (207) 354-0858.
Back to the TopIn conjunction with the exhibition “Textiles/Translations,” featuring the work of Alice Spencer, the University of New England’s Gallery of Art will hold a series of five educational programs. Each program will approach textiles from a different perspective: their cultures of origin, their common themes and symbols, the role of women in their creation, and their ability to inspire artists like Spencer. In addition to the general public, students from the Maine College of Art and local high schools will be encouraged to attend the exhibition and related programming. For more information, please call (207) 221-4499 or visit www.une.edu/artgallery.
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