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The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage

Thaddeus Phillips & Catie Rosemurgy on Integrating History with Art Making

Posted by Nicole Steinberg | October 23, 2012

 

“The last, distraught days of Edgar Allan Poe are charted with spellbinding vitality,” said Charles Isherwood of the New York Times, regarding Red-Eye to Havre de Grace, an original musical by Thaddeus Phillips, produced at this year’s Philadelphia Live Arts Festival & Philly Fringe and funded by The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage. Made in collaboration with Minneapolis-based composers Jeremy and David Wilhelm, and Teller of magic duo Penn & Teller, Red-Eye re-imagines the mysterious circumstances of Poe’s death after days spent traveling on trains, with dialogue and song lyrics taken directly from Poe’s correspondence with his mother-in-law.

Prior to the show’s opening, Phillips met with 2012 Pew Fellow in the Arts and poet Catie Rosemurgy, to discuss their shared interest in the intersection of historical investigation and creative license, and how this balance plays out in their artistic practices. Rosemurgy, author of The Stranger Manual (Graywolf Press, 2010) spoke with Phillips about Red-Eye and her own current project, based on the Peshtigo Fire of 1871—a poorly documented event that has been mostly forgotten over time.

Watch the full conversation above or view short teaser clips after the cut.

Click here to download the video transcript (PDF) >

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Labels:  catie rosemurgy  edgar allan poe  history  literarture  live arts  live arts 2012  live arts festival  peshtigo fire  pew fellow 2002  pew fellow 2012  pew fellows  poetry  red-eye to havre de grace  thaddeus phillips  theater 

Center Rewind, 5/18/12

Posted by Jordan Shue | May 18, 2012

Exhibitions catches more Braindrops from Bob Dylan and Kathrin Rhomberg

Pew Fellows, including the Magic Gardens' Isaiah Zagar and guitarist Chris Forsyth, explore the "lure of the local" >

Sean Dockray and Fiona Whitten, the founding directors of Telic Arts Exchange and The Public School, give insight into their curatorial practice in the most recent edition of Pigeons >

Words to Live By: The Philadelphia Exhibitions Initiative Library announces the addition of three new subscriptions for your welcomed perusal >

The Center welcomes Jeff Arnal, the new Senior Program Specialist for the Philadelphia Music Project >

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Labels:  bob dylan  chris forsyth  curator  fellow  fiona whitten  isaiah zagar  katherin rhomberg  magic gardens  pei  pei library  pew fellows  philadelphia exhibitions initiative  sean dockray  telic arts exchange  the public school 

Psychoanalyze me

Posted by Asimina Chremos | May 2, 2012

Father of psychoanalysis, Sigmund Freud, took people spelunking into their own minds, searching for threads of memory, fantasy, and cultural association.

Artist Matthew Cox (PFA 2008) dresses the bare bones pictured in x-ray films with embroidery—making memories, fantasies, and cultural associations visible. You can view Cox's work at Pulse Art fair this weekend in NYC. Details >

Jane Irish (PFA 2011), is one of 19 artists chosen by curators Matt Freedman and Laurence Hegarty to make work in response to the artifacts, objects or histories found in Freud’s Vienna office. A resulting group exhibition, titled B19, is on view at Long Island University's Brooklyn Humanities Gallery May 6—June 9Learn more >

Pictured: Playboy 3: Jefferson with nipple piercing by Matthew Cox overlaid with postcard for B19. Images courtesy of the artists.

 

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Labels:  embroidery  freud’s vienna office b19  jane irish  laurence hegarty  long island university's brooklyn humanities gallery  matt freedman  matthew cox  pew fellows  pew fellowships in the arts  psychoanalysis  pulse art fair  sigmund freud  x-ray films 

Soak it in

Posted by Asimina Chremos | March 28, 2012

We see you. You're looking a little parched, a little dry. You could use something that will humidify and soften you, so you flow and grow more. Mmmm-hmmm. Pew Fellows have got something for you. Only a click away, and you can stream some sweetness. For best results, drink both doses:

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Labels:  charles burns  illustrator  john thornton  odean pope  pew fellows  poet  rochester institute of technology  saxophonist  sonia sanchez  valentine’s day. 

New Center Spotlight: Pew Fellows Thrive in Residence at the MacDowell Colony

Posted by Nicole Steinberg | March 27, 2012

In November, the Center announced a new initiative by Pew Fellowships in the Arts (PFA), which provides support for current and recent Fellows to complete full-time artist residencies in a variety of locales. This month, we turn our Center Spotlight on a new partnership between Pew Fellowships in the Arts and the MacDowell Colony, a renowned community and residency program in Peterborough, NH. The residencies allow the program to extend its relationships with Fellows beyond the given time period of their awards—offering professional growth opportunities that deeply impact their work and its subsequent development.

Video artist and photographer Kara Crombie and free-jazz bassist, bandleader, and composer Jamaaladeen Tacuma are the first two Pew Fellows to be awarded The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage Residency at the MacDowell Colony. Crombie was in residence at MacDowell this past winter, where she completed a new video animation, to be exhibited at Philadelphia’s Vox Populi gallery from April 6–30. Tacuma is at MacDowell from February 8 through April 4, where he's working on a multimedia project rooted in music history, and a book on the convergence of music and fashion.

Visit our Center Spotlight page to learn more about Crombie and Tacuma, and the new partnership that allows Pew Fellows to concentrate solely on their art-making, in new and inspiring spaces

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Labels:  artist residencies  artist residency  center spotlight  jamaaladeen tacuma  kara crombie  macdowell  macdowell colony  pew fellows  pew fellowships in the arts  residency