Author Archive

Song of The Day: Proverbial Road

Since, Shaun is out enjoying the proverbial roads, I thought I would share some proverbial roads with you.

Bat for Lashes

Natasha Khan, the muse behind Bat for Lashes, was a recent discovery for me. As far as I know, she hasn’t really hit stateside, just yet. Her dark melodic tones and unique approach to both music and associated art have created an instant fan in me.

Check out her myspace page for some more song demos, but for today, enjoy the sound and visuals of “What’s a Girl to Do.”

»Read More

Popularity: 36% [?]

Ambiguous Animation Painted on Public Walls

I wanted to share one of the coolest pieces of art I’ve seen recently. The artist who refers to himself as “Blu” paints on public spaces in Argentina and then uses stop action photography to animate his art. It is truly amazing stuff and very original. Blu maintains a very interesting blog that you should read if you want deeper insights into the work. Can we please get Blu to come to Charlottesville?! I would love it. Would you?


.

Popularity: 34% [?]

Relaunch of Livearts.org

Live Arts Redesign

Live Arts just did a major redesign of their website.   They’ve incorporated a lot of new features such as a blog (with commentary!), an AJAX side bar (that’s fancy stuff for non-technical people), sharing features and a whole lot more.  Go check out their site and let us know what you think.

Popularity: 72% [?]

Win Free Gary Allan Box Seat Tickets!!!

Blue Ridge InternetWorks has generously donated two box tickets and a free parking pass to the upcoming Gary Allan show at the Charlottesville Pavilion, this Thursday, May 8th. The seats are in Box 5, right next to the sound board.

Sons of Bill and James Otto also be playing at the show. It should be a sweet show! Tell your friends!

You have to support our sponsors so they want to give us tickets in the future. Please click the Blue Ridge link below!

Blue Ridge Internetworks

All you have to do to register is to (1) click the above image, browse the site, then come back and (2) leave a comment below with your real email address. We will randomly select the winner of the 2 tickets and the free parking pass at 10AM on Thursday morning! Check back after the concert for a review and/or pictures.

Please support our sponsors! We need them to get more free tickets for you! Also, please only one entry per person.

(If you comment and know you can’t go or don’t really want the tickets, let us know)

Popularity: 45% [?]

Song of the Day, 4/27

I had to take over song of the day today after I saw this video of this three (?) year old baby singing Hey Jude. It’s pretty amazing to see the baby sing the song in its entirety from memory. I’ve also included a live performance from the Beatles. All after the break.

»Read More

Popularity: 26% [?]

2008-2009 Season for Live Arts Theater

Live Arts

We just had someone send in us the announcement for Live Arts 2008-2009 and I wanted to share it with you.

The arts enthusiast adds:

Before I go on, more important than the specifics of this list are the surprisingly moving words delivered by Live Arts Artistic Director John Gibson. When I say “surprisingly moving”, I am not exaggerating. I don’t get moved, but by God that man made me cry. The theater community of central Virginia has lost some members to God this year, even just this week. I didn’t know all of these people, but I am certain from the audible gasps in the audience that they were loved in the community. Perhaps others in this forum would know who was spoken of by John.

John’s elegy and birth announcement were so impassioned and earnest that I could see why Charlottesville is such a uniquely theater-heavy area, and Live Arts is such a unique theater, not just in Virginia but in the entire theater world. Our area’s theatrical heart beats big; it contains multitudes of creative spirits who unite daily to create our region’s tears and laughter, from Four County Players to the Hamner to Blackfriars and every theater, classroom, bar and ruin in between.

I was too entranced to write while John spoke, so anyone else who was there, please correct anything I’ve missed.  Thank you very much!
The list is after the break..

»Read More

Popularity: 68% [?]

When Art Goes Too Far: Politics and Ethics

I stumbled across an article in the Yale Daily News, titled “For senior, abortion a medium for art, political discourse.” The article, as you may guess, discussed the use of abortion and art to make a statement.

Senior, Aliza Shvarts, shockingly, has documented a 9-month process in which she inseminates herself while taking abortifacient drugs to cause miscarriages. She will display the “exhibit” as video recording of the forced miscarriages as well as collected blood from the process.

The ethical and graphic issues associated with this “exhibit” will certainly catapult Aliza into international notoriety, but, I wonder as an artist or an violator of ethics? Aliza explained that the art is intended to spark a conversation about art and the human body.

The Yale Daily news describes the upcoming exhibit:

The display of Schvarts’ project will feature a large cube suspended from the ceiling of a room in the gallery of Green Hall. Schvarts will wrap hundreds of feet of plastic sheeting around this cube; lined between layers of the sheeting will be the blood from Schvarts’ self-induced miscarriages mixed with Vaseline in order to prevent the blood from drying and to extend the blood throughout the plastic sheeting.

Schvarts will then project recorded videos onto the four sides of the cube. These videos, captured on a VHS camcorder, will show her experiencing miscarriages in her bathrooom tub, she said. Similar videos will be projected onto the walls of the room.

I could only find one of Aliza’s pieces on the internet, but perhaps it sheds a light on the why.

Aliza Shvarts Disarticulation

Aliza Shvarts. Disarticulation, 12 in. x 12 in. x 24in. Plaster, vaseline, towels, rubber bands, latex gloves

[credit: Dimensions Magazine]

Has this gone beyond art in order to offend as many people as possible?

Update: Max Bacon points out that this a hoax.  From the Yale website:

Ms. Shvarts is engaged in performance art.  Her art project includes visual representations, a press release and other narrative materials.  She stated to three senior Yale University officials today, including two deans, that she did not impregnate herself and that she did not induce any miscarriages.  The entire project is an art piece, a creative fiction designed to draw attention to the ambiguity surrounding form and function of a woman’s body.

She is an artist and has the right to express herself through performance art.

Had these acts been real, they would have violated basic ethical standards and raised serious mental and physical health concerns.

[via Yale Daily News]

Popularity: 65% [?]

Virginia Film Festival is About the Aliens

Alien Among Us Virginia Film Festival

Virginia Film Festival announces that its 2008 theme will be “Aliens!” Human fascination with extraterrestrial life has always amazed me. Human treatment of “aliens”; whether they be another one of earth’s races or from the planet Xenog involves a fear of the unknown, making assumptions and creating our own conclusions about something different from ourselves.

Hopefully the festival will call upon Roy Wagner, who teachers “Fantasy and Social Values” at UVA to discuss some of the cultural reasons behind people’s fear of the unknown.

There will be a lot to play with in the Virginia Film Society’s 2008 theme. The Society’s artistic director, Richard Herskowitz, explains:

The prominence of the immigration issue in this year’s election inspired us to tackle this theme. There is a rich history of films about the alien-ness of immigrants and outsiders, including science-fiction films like ‘The Brother from Another Planet’ and dramas like ‘El Norte.’ And there are many great filmmakers, from Luis Bunuel to Ang Lee and Mira Nair, whose frequent border crossings and perpetual alien-ness, it can be argued, have sustained the vitality of their work.”

We are very excited over at MUSE about this upcoming events. What alien movies have meant something to you? What would you like to see at the festival?

[Read more about the announcement]

Popularity: 37% [?]

Washington Glass School Comes to Charlottesville on April 4th

The Washington Glass School has three directors who are coming to Charlottesville to display various glass art pieces. The Washington Glass School serves as a mid-Atlantic mecca for glass loving artists. Their mission:

introduce artists in other media to the depth, processes and joys of glass

Tim Tate, Erwin Timmers and Michael Janis, very well known in the glass arts world, will open their exhibit in the Migration Gallery on April 4th from 5:30- 8:00pm. Make sure to ask them lots of questions.

So, when you wander around for First Friday’s make sure you stop by and tell them that MUSE sent you. Their art will be on display through April 30th.  Here are some images of the art:

Silent Spring by Erwin Timmers

Silent Spring by Erwin Timmers

WaitingForAMiracle by Michael Janis

WaitingForAMiracle by Michael Janis

Call For Redemption by Tim Tate

Call For Redemption by Tim Tate

Popularity: 36% [?]

Martin Short Comes to The Paramount

Martin Short makes an appearance at The Paramount tomorrow, March 20. We heard tickets are still available. You may remember him from Saturday Night Live or Father of the Bride. Here is a good interview I found with him:

Interview on Letterman

Popularity: 25% [?]