Author Archives: SeanOngley

PROJECT MASCOW

Moving in to The House Formerly Known as Yellow has been a tremendous experience. With partner in renovation and offices, Anisha Scanlon (PDXOP), it is almost like training wheels for domestic partnership. She is a force to be reckoned with. However, I am living alone in this household, perhaps only for one year. It will require six months simply to get this place whipped in to shape! And at the end of my tenure, maybe I can hand it over to an artist for residency, acting like a sort of monk and steward of the building. Conceived between Anisha and Myself is an idea, initially called Project MASCOW (MusicArtStudioCommunityOfficeWorkshop). But that’s not really the name. We’re still deciding what to name it.

For all of those people whom I owe something or places I have to go to, but am not getting to them, I am sorry, but you can now see what I’ve been dealing with. Upon arrival to this household on October 1st, it was alarming that almost no garbage had been removed, piled, swept, picked up, or cleaned at any time. Not only did we have plans to paint all interior and exterior, carpet, re-floor, and re-design this entire household, but we had years upon years of randomness left behind. Some of it was salvageable, some if it was garbage.

Here are some progress shots from October 1st through 19th. It starts with the household as The Yellow House, then in to the Post-Yellowism stage.

T:BA Digest, Days 1-8.

For reviews on Big Art Group, Miguel Gutierrez, Lagartijas Tiradas Al Sol, Nora Chipuamire, Kota Yamazaki, Perforations, Keith Hennessy, Ten Tiny Dances, Brainstorm, and Future Cinema, authored by Me, go to www.seanongley.com.

DANCE+ by Conduit Dance, A Review

Dance+ Program Image

This weekend, July 26-28, Conduit Dance hosted their first annual DANCE+ series. Different sets of performances were featured from July 19-21, but it was only last night I had the opportunity to see the final run. The purpose of this series is to perpetuate new talent by featuring collaborative performances by young artists. On July 28th, I witnessed A Moment of Your Time by Friendly Pheromones Dance Co., advantAGE by Gregg Bielemeier, Keyon Gaskin, and Philippe Bronchtein, and The Loveliest Landscape, by Danielle Ross and Christi Denton. A performance by Luciana Proano Dance entitled Tsunami was cancelled for unstated reasons. The purpose of this article is to highlight The Loveliest Landscape. But I will devote a paragraph to the first two shows.

The first run of the evening was A Moment of Your Time, a lively trio dance featuring live music from Wave Clamor Bellow. There are frequently male and female dancers sharing the stage in dance performance, naturally the dynamics of relationship can be expressed through that duality. Striking me first was the physical difference between the leading dancers, being male and female. She is a small thing, capable of crawling all his austere form; she embraced him the way light creeps in to open spaces. He supported her with concentration and nothing sexual was at play. These two begin the piece but a third woman enters, bringing the struggle, competition, and confusion to the story. But when they go in to unison, making a triangle, it suggests that when we are alone, we are really together. With the music of WCB, playing electric guitar and electrified viola powered by warm amplifiers and an array of electronic foot pedals/loopers that allow for advanced orchestration while contributing their own movement to their own work — the soundtrack became emotional and helped fuel life in to an already dynamic dance.

Something that makes me happy in contemporary performance is humor. I really do find that experimental art is a big joke; the artist takes the traditional form and gives the unexpected, precisely what a punch line provides. advantAGE is quite fun, a duo performance by the elderly balding gray haired white man, Gregg Bielemeier, and the young vibrant selectively hairy black man, Keyon Gaskin; just make one of them female and you have a complete duality, but I think we can see the irony already. In a rather competitive way, the duo begins by opening and slamming the venue doors, walking on stage and performing their solo, separately together. You watch Bielemeier’s masterful steps and you know he is a teacher, choreographer, but you watch Gaskin, and you know he is a student, dancer; both are great talents. Music is comprised of effected-looped blues and pop tunes manipulated live by a single young man looking geeky in glasses seated at a small desk with his Macbook Pro, contributing to the humor and surrealism of it all.  The duo coalesces in their funny ways while removing and adding clothing, making vocal declarations. In the end, they put on these strange fabrics that sort of look like a dress, each helping the other “zip up” in the back, meandering off stage while creepily singing off-time snippets of the psychedelically treated sounds of “Ain’t No Stoppin’ Us Now” by McFadden and Whitehead. Fade out and end: applause.

Danielle Ross, Choreographer, and Christi Denton, Composer, have been working together for a little more than one year. The Loveliest Landscape is their latest and most collaborative work and they are beginning to find intimacy in the creative process. Christi explains that in the past several projects, sound and movement were territories dominated by their creators, but for this, the collaboration deepened with Ross hearing ideas on movement and Denton hearing ideas on sound; the trust has been formed, now they let each other into personal space.

The Loveliest Landscape is a solo performance by Danielle Ross. You see her leaning against the back wall underneath the studio window, body contorted in dim light before migrating, pressed against the wall, to the other side under the other window, stopping and looking dead on to the audience. She moves over to a spotlight on wheels and spins it slowly until the stream of photons strikes each audience member. The light goes out, sound goes out. The music is that surreal, arrhythmic, electronic sampling and synthesis you can expect from a Mills graduate (Denton), making the bed for impressions of imagery via projection. Images are projected against the back wall: stucco, automobile tire, moss on concrete, metal grating, painted brick, etc. urban images. The slides go out; this is when Danielle picks up her step.

Ross tends to follow impulses across the stage, and in my naïve interpretation, I can’t really place the symbolism or emotion with all of it; a solo is not as easy to interpret because the artist deals only with their self. I contemplate what her background in dance is and I assume she brings martial arts to contemporary techniques. After the show, I ask her. She studied at Berkeley, CA, going in as an athlete but later studied performance, ballet, and Capoeira, alongside Political Science. So that explains it.

Floating on the bed of sound ala Christi, and set on a stage developed by the duo, the piece continues along those themes laid out above: light and texture. Ross pulls a string of LED lights out of a small case into a snake-like curve. Then she forms mounds of flour on the floor, each to its own independent LED light. The piece unfolds with the continued sounds, movements, and images that were established in the first half of the piece, it ends with compressed air blowing the mounds of flour across the stage, making a messy plume. Ross slowly returns to the original position she started with, under the window against the wall, and resigns to a half-fetal position, laying in the dust of her own flour mounds.

It was closing night for the DANCE+ series and if I hadn’t been tired, I could tell you about getting drinks with the dancers. I can tell you that I slept well last night, but that’s about all. For more information on this and other programs, you can visit www.conduit-pdx.org.

SEEKING BLOGGERS

InterArts is a website for promotion and distribution of new ideas and happenings, not just in Portland but anywhere! Please email admin@interarts.us if you are interested in posting your writing, videos, or photos about the Arts. An InterArts blogger may host their own blog and utilize our traffic to help generate your own. As this site develops in to a media hub, with your help, you can utilize our umbrella to gain press access to events and become an official member of the media.

The next opportunity that we can specifically offer is CPJazz 2012. By attending the event and composing blogs on our behalf, you will enjoy VIP access backstage and interview artists. If you are a video or photo blogger, we would LOVE you!

OPEN ENGAGEMENT: Art and Social Practice at PSU

May 18-20, Free Registration, openengagement.info

Open Engagement is a free annual conference on socially engaged art. Directed and founded by Jen Delos Reyes and planned in conjunction with the Art and Social Practice program.

Each year the conference themes are directly related to the current research and inquiry of the students in the Art and Social Practice program at Portland State University. Students and faculty work together to select the featured presenters, who then also become faculty in the Art and Social Practice MFA program.

Open Engagement fosters both local, national and international dialogue and partnerships around socially engaged art making.

Past presenters and institutions involved in Open Engagement include: Watts House Project, Nato Thompson, Darren O’Donnell, Bad at Sports, Mark Dion, Hideous Beast, Amy Franceschini, David Horvitz, InCUBATE, Henry Jenkins, National Bitter Melon Council, Parfyme, Lisa Radon, Shannon Stratton, Temporary Services, Ted Purves, The Hammer, The Portland Art Museum, Linda Weintraub, Future Farmers, Pacific North West College of Art.

Review of Compagnie Kafig Presented by Whitebird by InterArts’ Sean Ongley

I bring my humorous arts journalism from my personal blog mostly to make an example out of how to help promote the arts. I am an individual writer who’s trying to gain exposure and entry in to events out of my love for writing and the arts; perhaps there is a career in it. I would enjoy being able to comment on and present my blog through a secondary community media site like the one here, even if were not managing the site myself.  So if you are interested in posting here, please contact me. Thanks.

FROM THE BLOG:

It wasn’t before several minutes in to the performance that I actually recognized a certain move as a break step; I like going in with a clean slate and definitely a touch naïve. Regardless of my naiveté, the great thing about this group is their originality and energy, not the fact that it’s world-class hip-hop dance. Perhaps what threw me at the beginning was the utter lack of hip-hop music, or maybe it was three men on their shoulders doing the bicycle. Either way, Kafig is your indicator, meaning “Cage.” Take it ironically because I witnessed no limitations in this Compagnie…. [READ MORE]

“Under New Management”

I feel like one of those small cafe owners that open up without a thorough plan for sustainability, and to save myself from mounting stress, debts and declining sales, I have to sell the business to someone with greater vision and abilities. But when I pass by my old shop, I have to look at that vinyl banner that proudly announces, “Under New Management.” Fortunately, it’s not that bleak. We had to go dormant for a few months and nearly slip in to defunct status, only to find ourselves anew with a team of visionaries that compliment each other’s existence and humbly allow each other to thrive. On May 3rd, a Special Meeting convened to make a big wave of changes. They are as follows.

#1) New Board (well… sort of). The only true newbie is Mary-Sue Tobin as Vice President, bringing with her a rich history as a saxophonist, educator, and sat on the Board of Creative Music Guild. Luke Lefler, co-founder of Show and Tell Gallery 501(c)(3) joined roughly six months ago but simply watched us go dormant, and he is now Secretary. Rolf Semprebon rejoined after taking leave, he’s the founding Treasurer and brings years of experience on the KBOO finance committee as well as tax preparation services. And finally, the person both resolving and causing some of these challenges, founding President, Sean Ongley remains in his chair at the Board, up for reelection this September. Also, joining as the Program Committee chairman, Paul Evans, another jazz player with a great long list of musical instruments he can play as well as professional accomplishments, including ownership of two small businesses.

#2) New Festival (no No.Fest). Saving Cathedral Park Jazz Festival while parting from No.Fest Music and Arts is panning out to have its caveats and challenges. It’s going to be a large task for InterArts to successfully swing round 32 of CPJazz, starting from a zero budget and a spotty last few years. Meanwhile, independent from any organization, Jeffrey Helwig has rebranded “No.Fest Music and Arts” by calling it simply “NOFEST” while simplifying the concept to mostly experimental and pop, ala 2008, but much larger. Meanwhile, Cathedral Park Jazz Festival Committee 501(c)(3) is being dissolved by an attorney as we speak, and InterArts has been selected by 18 Year veteran Gary Boehme to absorb the assets. We thank Mr. Helwig for connecting us initially.

#3. Revision 2.2 (connecting a purpose). InterArts hasn’t taken on a narrative of its own because it was simply the organization presenting No.Fest, but we had more in mind than that. Our Mission out the gate was grandiose and ideal but shed little light on the intent driving our operations. In the long scheme of InterArts, you can imagine festivals starting and passing on, like a nest for industrious creatives to develop their work and honor the non-profit tradition in its wake. You can imagine our website being a convergence of new artists to promote and bloggers to gain exposure for the purpose of covering the arts.  Therefore, we will focus on umbrella  and community outreach to produce cultural and educational programming; by reaching out to artists and producers to offer the umbrella, assistance with grant writing, planning, and budgeting, we can do greater good for more artists while securing our financial outlook. That’s why we will be promoting the annual election in September to expand our current Board and help CPJazz and more productions gain momentum toward independence.

InterArts Presents…

FOURTH ANNUAL NO.FEST UPDATES: LINEUP AND HIGHLIGHTS

When: June 24 7pm-Late, June 25 10am-Late. Visual exhibition through July.
Where: Historic St. Johns PDX at Multiple Sites
Cost: $1 Suggested Donation

UPDATES  6.12.2001
Doug Theriault replaced Daniel Menche. Alma Brasileira replaced Na Mesa. Virginia Jones and Nathan Brannon were added to the stand-up showcase. Hoop Dreams (collaborative multimedia piece) replaced Brenna Murphy. Steele+Currin dropped from the lineup, and other minor changes. The final bill of seventy-nine visual and performance works in nineteen St. Johns sites is below.

MUSIC HIGHLIGHTS
The new and inspiring Portland Peace Choir opens. Local chapter of the Zulu Nation, Oregon Universal mainlines the hip hop stage. Psych-twang of Michael Hurley, Indian classical violin by Rasika School of Music, the live film score of SNDTRKR, electronic booms of Gulls and White Rainbow, the annual return of Smegma’s Dr. Id, the eastern dance music of KBOO’s DJ Anjali and The Incredible Kid with Dr. J, plus Moodring, Doug Theriault, Right On John, The Architects, and so much more, total up to more than forty musical performances at No.Fest!

VISUAL HIGHLIGHTS
Main stage will be adorned with a Mega*Tent inspired by ’09 headliner Mega*Church and a cardboard sculpture-map called Mini-No.Fest. Hip hop stage presentation by Mannequinhead, plus a live graffiti exhibition will take over vacant space. And a hefty dose of multimedia from artists like Chris Lael Larson, Ron Mason Gassaway, and more, totaling sixteen visual works.

DANCE/THEATER HIGHLIGHTS
Classical Indian dance with Jayanthi Raman will grace the main stage and contemporary dance  with Jin Camou and Jean-Paul Jenkins. A No.Fest first time stand-up showcase with five of Portland’s most adventurous comics including Richard Bain and Nathan Brannon, plus a special appearance by comedy-magic act Wizardo Stardust (John Simone). For spoken word, the mythical Walt Curtis, a poetry block from Show & Tell Gallery, and a most special (not for kids) puppet act by Cast Iron Carousel Marionette Troupe.

WORKSHOPS HIGHLIGHTS
Grand Detour’s Sound/Image Playground by Ben Popp follows The Early Bird Kidz Fest, kicking off in the square 10am with art, song, and dance! Neil Fegan will demonstrate his truly surreal bicycle designs at the The Bike Lab. Rock will give fencing demos at Salle Trois Armes.

ABOUT
No.Fest is not to be looked at simply as an experimental music event, although that is the roots of this branching tree, there is more. InterArts presents adventurous, up-and-coming artists through No.Fest, and for the second year we have visual exhibition featured in an opening night. Educational programming, dance, comedy, poetry, and almost every area of music can be found at No.Fest 2011. 

Programming No.Fest is a highly intentional and fairly conceptual task. This is easily the most complex and compelling schedule after four years of growth. No.Fest is a curated event and the presenting company is InterArts, a developing non-profit production company.

Full details to become available online at www.nofest.net.

MUSIC (40)
Activity Universal Associates
Alma Brasileira
AnnaPaul and the Bearded Lady
Autumns Done Come
Betacrack
Bison Bison
Cliche Au Lait
Dead Air Fresheners
DJ Anjali and The Kid w/ Dr. J
Doug Theriault
Dr. Id
Evil Doer
Fisher B
Fugue
Gulls
Hawkins Wright
Jon Meyer
Last Prick Standing
Les Tresvinos
Metanoia
Michael Hurley
Mike Fekete
Moodring
Muscle Beach
Oregon Universal Presents…
PartyKiller
Paulie Think
Portland Peace Choir
Rasika School
Right On John
Rustlah
Silverhawk
SNDTRKR
The Architects
The Hand That Bleeds
The Tomorrow People
Valkyrie Rodeo
Way2Hott Presents…
White Rainbow
Wishyunu

VISUAL (16)
Alejandro Ceballos
Chavawn R.Y. Vasquez
Chris Lael Larson
Clint Ganczack
Graffiti Exhibition
Hoop Dreams
Krystal South
Kurtis Hough
Luke Swenson
Mannequinhead Sound System
Mega*Tent
Mini No.Fest
Noah Saterstrom
Ron Mason Gassaway
Spicy T Rock & Roll Exhibit
Todd Norman Guess 

WORKSHOPS
Bike Games with Neil and Friends
Fencing Lessons by Rock
Slackline Demo
Sound/Image Playground

DANCE/THEATRIC (15)
Camou + Jenkins
Cast Iron Carousel
Christian Ricketts
Christopher W. Bush
Danielle Ross
G.M. Holder
Jayanthi Raman
Jennifer Keyser
Nathan Brannon
Philip Schallberger
Richard Bain
Show & Tell Gallery Presents…
Virginia Jones
Walt Curtis
Wizardo Stardust – John Simone
Zulu Jam Breakdancers 

EARLY BIRD KIDZ FEST
Joyfull Noize Kid Jamz
Sing-A-Long-O-Peace
Square Square Dance
Town Square Décor/Craft Activity

NOTE:
Cast Iron Carousel will perform at 7:30pm both Friday and Saturday nights in a location TBA.
Neil Fegan Bike Demo will be based in the Bike Lab with details TBA.
Enjoy the KBOO simulcast on floor pillows at The Yellow House, with installations reopening at 1pm.

MEDIA SPONSORS:
KBOO Community Radio, Redefine Magazine, Radio23

PRINCIPLE CONTRIBUTORS:
St. Johns Business Boosters, St. Johns Neighborhood Association, Home Sweet Home Realty

No.Fest is Coming!!!!!

To be held June 24th and 25th, things are now beginning to shape up. In some respects, this is the best managed No.Fest ever. In other ways, its as last minute as our first year! Good times! Things are looking very exciting, we have never seen the community this engaged with its process and planning. But we need your help. Please email organizer@nofest.net if you are interested helping organize and pull off the best No.Fest ever!

Party at the Yellow House!

Join us for a Last Friday awareness raising fundraiser for No.Fest 2011!
April 29th, 10pm. 9114 N. Lombard.

In the past, we’ve organized big shows for downtown venues to raise awareness and raise cash at the door, but in order to have fun and keep things simple, we’re throwing a house party! So hold the date, and keep a look out for more info. We’ll release a few nuggets of what to expect at No.Fest this year, at the party.