Silhouette, Gentille Silhouette

1491671_818894424791203_433852922_nThe art of puppetry has been intriguing me for quite some time. While making sketches and plans for various other projects, it seemed that shadow puppetry would be a good way to get the feet wet with less investment in time and material to get started. The art is not without its challenges and it takes some extra thought to figure out how to move things in a two-dimensional space and how to manipulate a being believably with 2-3 sticks. But it has been enjoyable. We are problem-solving on multiple planes including technical issues (lights, screen, and puppet construction), manipulation skills, and narrative development. The project should be ready to launch with a 10-minute show at the MacRostie Art Center for the First Friday walk on April 4th.

UPDATE: The show was a success. We had seating for 30. Both shows had 40-50 in attendance. Here’s the video of the first performance:

And a behind the screen peek at the second performance:

Dancing With Our Stars take 2

dancing with our starsWith a quick turn-around of two weeks (and limited time in my schedule to rehearse) I’m jumping back on stage to defend my title with a new dance partner/choreographer. This year we’re doing a jive to ‘You Can’t Stop the Beat’ from Hairspray. I’m loving it! But it’s making me realize I am out of shape. It’s time to renew that Y membership.

There’s a big part of theatre and performing arts that says ‘If you forget a line or don’t know what you’re doing, just smile and act like you do.’ This seems more truthful for dance than anything else. Not to say I don’t have it down…but I admit I will probably be making a few errors confidently. As long as I err in confidence, I trust no one will know. Regardless, it’s sure to be a good time!

Shakespeare in Old Central School Park

Project: Shakespeare in Old Central School Park: The Taming of the Shrew

Status: Completed!

Story:

IMG_0598Despite the fact that Shakespeare is the most overdone playwright in history, our community has never attempted to tackle the bard. So after a chance meeting happened between Nathan Bergstedt and John and Steph Schroeder in the park outside Central School, a conversation ensued regarding how awesome it would be to do Shakespeare right in that very spot. It didn’t take long before everyone just looked at each other and asked, “So, we’re really going to do this, right?”

Though doing Shakespeare in an open park is not a new concept by any means, it’s new to Grand Rapids, making our work on getting this play off the ground partly experimental, partly innovational, as well as partly culturally established. The script is adapted to be closer to an hour long, as well as “culturally updated” in order to make it more understandable to a contemporary audience. Performances are on Labor Day weekend (in order to hopefully draw in tourists) and the following weekend for the First Friday art walk in September (which would be more focused on local audiences). Since First Friday is an art walk that celebrates local art, we thought it was about time that local theater became involved with the monthly institution.

1233533_654515300394_1732535730_nWe gathered a cast of 11 to present a one-hour adaptation of Shakespeare’s Taming of the Shrew. We’re performing the end of August/beginning of September at the park outside Old Central School in Grand Rapids, MN. With help on costumes and The Forest History Center, our local site for the Minnesota Historical Society, is expanding by bringing in external groups for programming and has invited us to bring the show to them. We’ll be reviving it for their guests on October 5th.

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MacRostie Miniatures

Project: Create a small piece of fine art not to exceed 12″ in any dimension for the MacRostie Art Center’s 6th annual ‘Miniatures Exhibition’

Status: Competed!

Narrative:

The MacRostie Art Center has an upcoming exhibit called Miniatures and takes individual submissions from local artists. The pieces must be no larger than 12″ in any dimension. Now what to do…what to do…

April 22, 2013

I had completed a black under painting and started a sketch out of the painting I was going to do. But I didn’t like it. All along the way a loon kept creeping back into my thoughts, especially with the anxiousness for a summer that seems like it will never come to Minnesota this year. So I got the loon sketched and the water painted. I thought it was odd how quickly my ‘oil’ paint was drying. Upon closer inspection of the blue and discovered it was acrylic. So I had been mixing acrylic blue with white oil (not to mention everything else in the painting was oil). The final results at this point are bearable, so I hope the it will have no long-term disastrous effects.

Water finished, loon blocked in

Water finished, loon blocked in

April 23, 2013

I made a few updates, adding green to the head and details to the beak. It still needs the eye and the white spots and stripes, but it is nearing completion. Good thing, too, because it’s gotta be done and dry by Friday (two days!)

Nearing completion- needs eye and spots

Nearing completion- needs eye and spots

April 24, 2013

Completed! Now let’s hope it dries by Friday when submissions are due. The down side of oils is that it doesn’t favor the procrastinator.

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Completed!

Dancing with the Stars

Project: Choreograph, rehearse, and perform an original piece with a high school dance student.

Status: Completed!

The Narrative:

March 8, 2013

Our local performing venue and dance program does its own local version of Dancing with the Stars. This year I’ve been blessed with the opportunity to be a part of it! I’ve been working with Vienna Goad on choreography for Jailhouse Rock. Tech rehearsal is tonight (Friday) and the curtain opens at the Reif Center tomorrow, March 9. Here’s hoping for the win! If not the trophy, then we will hopefully be at least entertaining for the audience.

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March 9, 2013

We won! It was great watching the Reif dance company and dancers from the James Sewell Ballet perform. Then at the end of the evening the four of us guys and our partners danced our pieces in succession. It was a great experience and in its 5th or 6th year now, I hope the Reif continues to do Dancing with Our Stars.

Link to newspaper article here.

Closure: a veteran’s inner skirmish (a novella)

Project: Write a novel. (i.e. convert my stage play into a novel)

Status: In progress. (writing complete. edits and illustrations in progress)

Narrative:

February 10, 2013

After completing Closure: a veteran’s inner skirmish and seeing it produced on stage, I imagined a novel format would be a way to reach a larger audience and tell the story in ways that are not possible on stage. Therefore, NaNoWriMo gave me the push I needed to get started in November 2012. I didn’t complete the goal of 50,000 words in a month, but I got it up to about 23,000 words and from here I continue writing efforts. The research and brainstorming of the play started in December 2011, and here over a year later I have found myself again returning to research to fill in details of the depicted Civil War battle scenes. Finding that most novels are 70,000-100,000 words, I’m not sure at this point if I’ll reach that number. I have other ideas of  adding a number of illustrations equal to or greater than the number of chapters. These illustrations will be done in the style of battlefield illustrators of the time.

March 6, 2013

Conceding that I will not reach a novel length of 70,000 with the current content, I decided to make this a novella with illustrations. I have been particularly inspired by the book The Invention of Hugo Cabret. Edits on the text are in progress and some illustrations have begun. Using a light brown paper, the illustrations are done in pencil and charcoal with white charcoal highlights to simulate many of the Civil War era illustrators that depicted battle scenes on site.

April 9, 2013

I have a half dozen sketches of Joseph Hall as I develop the style for the book. I hadn’t touched it for a while, but I decided to have at it again and I am happy with the progressed style. Sketching it on brown paper and adding white charcoal highlights, I scanned it in and did some composition realignments and added a ink wash background and framing in Photoshop. Now just 50 more to go.

Mammoth Mural

Project: Paint a mural of a mammoth for Itasca County Historical Society.

Status: Completed!

Narrative:

The Itasca County Historical Society has moved to a new location and they are in need of a new mammoth mural to complement the tusk found interred in the area. I’ll be posting some photos of progress and the finished result as it comes available. It has to be finished by the end of February, 2013. So I’ve got a month to hunker down.

The final painting will be 9’x9′ so the plan is to do more research, complete a final, scaled drawing, scan it in, projected with an LCD projector, trace it,  and finally paint.

February 9, 2013

I realized my deadline is coming quickly so I did some work on the mural this weekend. I did a second draft of the preliminary sketch in blue pencil and inked it with a trusty old Sharpie (which after eating kimchi later in the month I realized Sharpies and kimchi have a similar aroma). Then since the sketch was only to be a guide and didn’t need a high resolution for projecting and tracing, I used my iPhone to ‘scan’ it into my computer with a quick photo.

I uploaded the photo onto my computer and then using Photoshop I cut it up and readjusted the composition to fit better in the rule of thirds.

For aid in visualizing the final, I colored it in Photoshop and did an overlay onto a photo of the wall to be painted. It got the nod of approval from the folks at the Historical Society.

Preliminary sketch Readjusted composition Digital mock-up on wall photo

February 19, 2013

After a long weekend enjoying the frozen wilderness off the Gunflint Trail, I returned to town realizing with just over a week until ICHS’s grand opening…I had better get this pachyderm painted. It began with technical difficulties and trouble getting the projector to read the

computer. After time I overcame that obstacle and got the image projected. I wanted to fill as much vertical space as possible and wasn’t sure how far to the left I could extend the painting. So in retrospect I should have moved the image left so I wouldn’t have lost the whole right side of the composition. Alas, what’s done is done. Below is a series of the first night’s progress, about three hours of work…one of which was fighting with technology.

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February 21, 2013

I returned to lighten the sky with a thin white wash gradient over the blue and began to add brown to the mammoth. After starting to fill in details on the clouds, I suddenly questioned whether (no pun intended) the cumulus-like clouds I was depicting actually form in cold ice age weather. I did some quick research and found another formation more likely seen in the cold. I free-styled it, but it just looked like a white, unplanned mess. The solution? Remove the clouds altogether. I painted sky over my mottled mess and called it good.

Whitewashed sky and revised cloud types. Clouds removed!

February 22, 2013

Progress report:

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Amazing how the angle can skew the size of the tusks…I had considered forcing the perspective like a piece of Julian Beaver sidewalk art so that the mammoth would appear to pop out of the wall from a certain angle… but I didn’t. One or two more sessions of work and it should be ready for the February 28th museum grand opening.

February 25, 2013

Done, perhaps? I spent some time with finishing touches Monday night and kept going back to fix things. I’m not happy with the tusks altogether but I decided to leave well enough alone. Let’s call it finished!

Mammoth Mural Completed

Mammoth Mural Completed

 

March 2, 2013

Although not referenced in the text, look who sneaked into the background of this news article in the Herald Review…

http://www.grandrapidsmn.com/news/article_28ebaa9e-82c3-11e2-a70d-001a4bcf887a.html?mode=image

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Closure: a veteran’s inner skirmish
playbill cover for premiere production

Project: Write a drama.

Status: Completed! (but under final revisions before printing)

Narrative:

There was oral history in my family about my great-great-great grandfather who marched with General Sherman in his march to the sea, and who later owned a general store and let kids trade their trouser buttons for candy. This inspired me to research more and put it on stage. The results were a story that connected a veteran’s struggle to reconcile his past as a soldier in the American Civil War.

My summary of the plot is as follows:

Based on the life of Joseph L. Hall and actual events, Closure is set in 1884 Idaville, Indiana, with flashbacks to the protagonist’s Civil War experiences of the 1860’s. A quick-witted man who is full of heck and runs a general store while auctioneering on the side, Joseph wrestles with symptoms of PTSD and feelings of guilt connected to his roles in past battles. As he struggles to win the internal civil war of finding forgiveness for himself, he delights the town kids by letting them trade trouser buttons for sticks of candy. Of course their mothers are less than impressed with the idea when their children come home with their pants falling down!

A play without being produced is only half completed; and I was fortunate to have the Grand Rapids Players produce it in October 2012 with a reprise for veteran’s day that November. I also had the privilege to audition and play the role of Joseph L Hall. The performance was well-received as indicated by the following reviews:

“A nice dichotomy of light-heartedness and heavy hands” N. Bergstedt, Grand Rapids Herald Review

“Don’t miss this thought-provoking play,” C. Christensen, Itasca Community Television, Inc.

“Amazing!!! I love love loved it! Moved me to tears and to laughter!” S. Richards

“My attention was riveted throughout…A treat for people who think.” J. Mason

“I was so impressed in so many ways. -especially with the obvious research you put into the story, the cleverness and humor…” M. Jess

“I don’t know when play will be produced again, but I highly recommend it.” D. Hall

Closure is available for purchase and performing rights here.
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Closure: a veteran’s inner skirmish