Archive for June, 2017

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Phase VII MALI Leaders Announced

June 13, 2017

Congrats!

CONGRATULATIONS to the 12 PK-12 Maine visual and performing arts educators and 6 teaching artists for stepping forward and taking on the role of “leader” in Maine arts education. The Maine Arts Leadership Initiative (MALI) is launching Phase VII!

Leaders will attend a 3-day summer institute at Thomas College Center for Innovation in Education and focus on their own learning; “teacher centered”. They will explore their own learning and over the next year share their learning using multiple medium. The Phase VII MALI planners are excited about this direction as they put together an agenda focused on growth mindset and hands-on engaged learning sessions.

CONGRATULATIONS to the following new MALI Teaching Artist Leaders and PK-12 Teacher Leaders:

TEACHING ARTIST LEADERS

  • NICOLE CARDANO – Theater
  • BRIAN EVANS-JONES – Creative Writing
  • DANA LEGAWIEC – Creative Theater
  • TOM LUTHER – Music
  • MARIE PALLUOTTO – Visual Arts

PK-12 TEACHER LEADERS

  • KRISTINE BISSON – Music 6-8 Marshwood Middle School, Eliot
  • DAVID COFFEY – Music 6-12 Belfast High School, Troy Howard Middle School, Belfast
  • AMY DONOVAN-NUCCI – Visual Art K-3 Horace Mitchell School, Kittery
  • ADELE O’BRIEN-DRAKE – Visual Art 6-8 Leonard Middle School, Old Town
  • CINDI KUGELL – Visual Art 9-12 Oxford Hills High School, Oxford
  • HOPE LORD – Visual Art 6-8 Maranacook Middle School, Readfield
  • LAURA MANCHESTER – Visual Art K-6 Montello Elementary School, Lewiston
  • LORI SPRUCE – Visual Art 9-12 Brewer High School
  • WILL STECHER – Music PK-4 Newport and Corinna Elementary Schools
  • DANIELLE SULLIVAN – Music PK-8 Etna-Dixmont School
  • DOROTHY TRIPP – Music K-5 Manchester and Readfield Elementary Schools
  • KAITLIN YOUNG – Music PK-8 SeDoMoCha Elementary/Middle Schools, Dover-Foxcroft
If you’d like to learn more about MALI please CLICK HERE. The website created by MALI called Maine Arts Assessment Resources is located at THIS LINK. And, for the Resource Bank please CLICK HERE.

Teacher Leader Jean Phillips, Theatre Wiscasset High School

If you have any questions about the role of teacher leader please contact me at argy.nestor@maine.gov.
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Barton Hills Choir

June 12, 2017

Passion for Music

From Facebook recently… The Barton Hills Choir is a group of 2nd through 6th graders from the Barton Hills Elementary School in Austin, Texas who have a passion for music. The youngsters released a video featuring their take on “Fire On The Mountain,” a Grateful Dead live staple written by Mickey Hart with lyrics by Robert Hunter.

CLICK HERE for the video.

Mickey Hart has long been passionate about music education and quickly shared the inspiring performance of “Fire” on his social feeds. The kids also came up with inventive ways to add percussion to their version, another passion of Hart’s. “It’s videos like this that highlight the importance of music education. Support the arts, encourage creativity, and get your kids involved in music. #DeadToTheCore #StartThemEarly” reads a note from Mickey on Facebook.

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Vox Nova Performance

June 11, 2017

Inscription of Hope

VOX NOVA CHAMBER CHOIR TO PRESENT CONCERT

INSCRIPTION OF HOPE

 Vox Nova Chamber Choir presents the second installment of their Musica Pro Pace: The 2017 Peace Concerts series on Saturday, June 24 at 7:30 PM and Sunday, June 25 at 3:00 PM in the Orion Performing Arts Center in Topsham, Maine.

The concert entitled, Inscription of Hope, memorializes powerful sentiments of hope and love found etched into a Nazi concentration camp wall by Jewish prisoners and presents music indicative of peace and the enduring human spirit. In contrast, music set to the visceral and even appalling prose of Dylan Thomas’ Ceremony After A Fire Raid, reveals brutal realities of the horrors of war. The program is ultimately designed to transport the listener on a journey of mind and spirit as expressed through the prayers and hopes of humanity.

Vox Nova Chamber Choir (Est. 2009) under the direction of Shannon Chase champions the expansive body of modern and contemporary choral repertory and brings performances of new music to Maine audiences. Sponsored by HM Payson.

 Tickets will be available for sale online Monday, June 5, 2017.

$25 General Admission

$20 General Admission in advance online at www.voxnovachamberchoir.org

$10 General Admission for children and college students with ID

Visa, Master Card, Discover or American Express for advance sales and at the door. Cash or check accepted at the door only. All checks should be made payable to: Vox Nova Chamber Choir. 

For more information visit: www.voxnovachamberchoir.org.

CONTACTS

Shannon Chase, Director

voxnovachamberchoir@gmail.com

(207) 200-3995

George Voyzey, Public Relations

georgevoyzey@gmail.com

(207) 409-2134

 

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Unconventional Tap Dancing

June 10, 2017

Dancefloor

Nick Young has just created the @Rythmatic Dance Company in LA, inspired by his mother who is a Tap dancer, he started dancing when he was 5 years old. 20 years later, as Tap dancer and choreographer, Nick is fully dedicate to his passion. We are happy to share their upcoming featuring on JLo’s new show “World Of Dance”on NBC! http://www.nbc.com/world-of-dance?nbc=1

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Married to a Teacher

June 9, 2017

The view

This has been circling around Facebook during the last month – an article called Why People Who Marry Teachers End Up the Happiest written by Kirsten CorleyI’ve been thinking recently about the characteristics of outstanding teachers and how *we do our best to bring out the best in everyone. Even though we provide feedback to our students which includes ways to improve or expand, we still balance that with the accomplishments. Overall the teacher is a GREAT listener, continuous learning about the needs of each student.

So when I read the article of course I shared it with my husband first and you betcha, I reminded him of how lucky he is! I knew I had to share it with the Maine Arts Ed blog post readers. I know that many of you are married to teachers as well as being a teacher yourself. Aren’t you the lucky ones! Whether you agree or not with the article, I recommend it for the end of the year reading! Below is a segment of the article and to read the entire article CLICK HERE.

Being a teacher isn’t just about teaching a subject and hoping the kids do well on a test, it’s about teaching these kids and young adults about who they can be, what they can amount to and shape future generations simply by believing in them maybe when others haven’t.

*Notice I say “we”. Even though I’ve been out of the classroom for 11 years this summer I still think of myself as a teacher. After 30 years IN the classroom it is difficult to think differently!

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Figurative Sculpture Workshop

June 8, 2017

Watershed Center for the Ceramic Arts

Figurative Sculpture Workshop
Dates:  July 20-21
Location: Lincoln Academy, 81 Academy Hill Road, Newcastle, ME  Map
Workshop Fee*: $195 for out-of-state teachers ; $95 for Maine teachers
Optional Housing**: $40 per night
This workshop is for middle and high school art educators.
During this two-day workshop, artist and art educator Claudia Olds Goldie will present a number of figurative ceramic sculpture projects that can be adapted for all grade levels, class sizes, and classroom situations.  Claudia will draw from her experiences as both a long-time teacher and as a professional artist. Through demonstrations and hands-on practice, participants will learn how to create a hollow standing figure, a proportionate, expressive head, and a life-size hand.

Because the course will be held off-site at Lincoln Academy, the local high school (rather than at Watershed), please be prepared to transport your work home as greenware at the end of the workshop. Participants may choose to stay at Lincoln Academy during the workshop or commute.

 Contact hours will be provided by Watershed for this workshop.
*Includes clay and lunch on Thursday and Friday.
** Housing is at Lincoln Academy in double occupancy rooms with twin beds.  Participants must bring their own bedding.  Fee includes breakfast.

About Claudia Olds Goldie

Claudia is a 2017 Mass Cultural Council finalist. She has received a Kiln God Residency from Watershed Center for Ceramic Arts, a residency fellowship from the Vermont Studio Center, and a nomination for a Boston Foundation Brother Thomas fellowship. She has shown nationally in shows such as the NCECA Biennial in Houston, SOFA Chicago, numerous State of Clay National Juried exhibitions, Ohio Craft Museum’s “Figure It” Invitational, and “Contemporary Figurative Sculpture” at Santa Fe Clay Gallery. She shows her work at Boston Sculptors Gallery and Frederick Holmes Gallery of Contemporary and Modern Art in Seattle.

Claudia received her BFA from Boston University College of Visual Arts. She celebrates her 40th year teaching sculpture at Dexter Southfield School in Brookline, Massachusetts, and is an instructor at Harvard’s University’s Ceramic Program.

Her work has been published in 500 Figures in Clay, 500 Figures in Clay Vol. 2 by Nan Smith, Sculpting Clay, and Low Fire: Other Ways to Work in Clay, both by Leon Nigrosh, and Ceramics Monthly, Clay Times, and American Craft magazines.

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A Little Night Music

June 7, 2017

A Little Night Music – A Celebration of Music, Art, and the Evening Sky

On Friday, June 23rd at 7 PM, the Solstice String Quartet will present a multimedia performance pairing two classical masterworks with artwork created by Miller School 3rd graders and professional artists from the Midcoast. The performance will take place at the Broad Bay Congregational United Church of Christ in Waldoboro and will feature violinists Josie and Sophie Davis of Waldoboro, violist Colin Wheatley, and cellist Jaime Feldman. The musicians graduated from Oberlin Conservatory and have since pursued further study in the New England area. Collectively the group has studied, performed, and taught around the world from China and India to Jordan and Amsterdam.

Through a partnership with Miller Elementary School and local artists, the concert will provide an opportunity for community members to reflect on the beauty of the Midcoast through music and artwork themed around skyscapes–the sunrises, sunsets, night skies, storms, and winter evenings that are such a defining part of the rural landscape. The performance will feature Mozart’s beloved Eine Kleine Nachtmusik (A Little Night Music) and Schubert’s Rosamunde String Quartet.

Admission is by donation. For more information, call 832-6898 or email waldoucc@midcoast.com. The Broad Bay Congregational United Church of Christ is located at 941 Main St. in Waldoboro.

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Acts of Giving

June 6, 2017

My mom

Today marks, what would have been the 99th birthday of my mother, Sophie P. Nestor. She lived to be 97 and epitomized what “living each day to the fullest” means to me. Throughout her lifetime she gave of herself in multiple ways and cared deeply about helping others. She spoke up when she believed something was wrong and stepped up when something needed to be done. She took on leadership roles and taught hundreds of children over three generations to Greek dance. She loved to dance!

My mom is a member of the Greatest Generation. She loved her homeland of Greece and loved the USA even more. A patriot through and through and proud to share her birthday with D-Day, my dad was part of the more than 160,000 troops who landed on the beach in Normandy that day in 1944. Today I honor my mother for a life lived well and remembering her support and giving ways.

With June underway and the close of another school just around the corner, I know that visual and performing arts educators across our state and our country, in fact, the world have given so much to students. Even though this video refers to “items” of giving, it speaks to me in many ways and hopefully will to you.

My favorites are:

  • 9 “I know every gift comes from the store but it really comes from the heart.”
  • 36 “Its important to give because the world is unequal and unfair and some people have more than other people.”
  • 59 “Even tiny things changes lives.”
  • 66 “I brought my best sweater. I hope somebody will be able to enjoy it.”

My Mom continues to dance in my heart! I know you’ll continue, until the last moment of the school year, to give from yours. Thank you!

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Live Coding Using Sonic Pi

June 5, 2017

Using simple computer code in real time

The Midcoast Music Academy in Rockland is offering a class called Live Coding Using Sonic Pi taught by Tom Luther. Not to long ago I wrote a blog post on the academy at THIS LINK and a post that Tom Luther contributed to at THIS LINK.

Live Coding is a way to create sound and music using simple computer code in real time. The program we use is called “Sonic Pi”, and it is designed for simplicity and flexibility. It’s language is easy enough to pick up quickly for a beginner, and it’s design is deep enough for a more advanced user.

This class is for anyone, regardless of experience level with music or coding. Participants will learn the basics of the language, and how to use it to create simple to more complex pieces of music from a small set of tools.

The class covers

  • Simple sound/music making (simple musical structure/form) Basic definitions (synth terms, code syntax)
  • Altering sounds
  • Using on board samples & using your own samples
  • Using effects and synthesizers
  • Adding random elements
  • Live looping versus preplanning

This will be a hands on class, and we are going to make a lot of noise!

For more information and to register contact Midcoast Music Academy 207-701-7410 info@midcoastmusicacademy.com.

Take a look at this youtube video for a brief overview to get an idea of Sonic Pi.

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Conservation and Visual Art

June 4, 2017

Yarmouth High School Artist Residency

Art classes at Yarmouth High School in Maine are channeling their creativity in a new direction.  Students, led by internationally known artist Tim Christensen and Yarmouth High School Art Teacher Holly Houston, are creating clay masterpieces to showcase endangered wildlife from across the globe. The results are stunning and serve as an artistic display of the beauty in nature we strive to protect every day.

Students researched threatened and endangered critters to best convey their subjects through art. The students used clay to create sculptures, pots and tiles and later incorporated food and habitat needs and animal adaptations into their artwork using sgraffito, a carving technique. The contrast of light carvings on the dark surface draws the eye to every detail.

Each student approached the the assignment in a creative way to raise awareness for the species of their choosing. Not only did they develop new techniques for clay, but they learned how to share meaningful conservation messages through art.

Alex’s inspiration was the New England cottontail. “I was concerned with the endangered animals that live near and around me. This animal is found in young forest habitats which are depleted in this area and more habitat is needed to help it recover.”

Kelcie chose the piping plover as her focal species. “I chose the piping plover because it is an animal I am familiar with but did not know it was endangered before I started this project. The piping plover is found along the Atlantic Coast, including Maine. If you’ve been to the beach you have probably seen these birds before. They enjoy nesting on the beach near the dunes and forage for food near the waves. Unfortunately our presence of the beach has disrupted their habitat. In order for them to repopulate we need to give them space to breed and live.”

Daly describes how she planned to convey what she researched about the roseate tern through her work. “The viewer would be able to see where the roseate tern lived and what it ate, as well as their flight patterns. My primary goal with this piece was to convey this animal in the middle of an action, such as fishing or flying. The tern at the top was placed there in order to show how the Tern glided through the air, which would give the viewer clues about what kind of bird it was. The central tern was placed in order to show it capturing its food, something that also provides important information about this animal to the viewer.”

Many students had similar accounts; drawing attention to wildlife that need it most. Their work shows many species that are protected in many different ecosystems across the globe. For many species, work has been done to protect both wildlife and their habitat but much more is needed to ensure their survival. CLICK HERE to learn more about endangered species and how you can help!

The following post is being reprinted from the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service blog located at THIS LINK.