Archive for May, 2009

Come See Florida’s Cultural Coast For Yourself

Friday, May 29th, 2009

Today is Friday and we all know what that means. It is time to figure out what to do this weekend. That is pretty easy here along the cultural coast of Florida. Even though the official “season” is over this is the best time for locals and under-the-radar tourists who like to visit areas when the lines aren’t long and the traffic is slow to get out and explore. The area has much to offer everyone. Just think next week is the kick-off to Savor Sarasota, a delicious opportunity to try amazing restaurants at a bargain of a deal, and don’t forget that the theaters are still going strong-Perfect Mendacity in the Cook Theatre is getting rave reviews from friends. Why not get your feet wet by visiting this summer and come back for the plunge October 7-11?    

Love is my sin

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

LOVE IS MY SIN (repetition P.Brook 2009)Theater director Peter Brook adds another award to his list of accolades which include two Tony Awards. Earlier this month, Brook received the UK’s Critics Circle Award for his “distinguished service to the arts.” Brook joins the ranks of Peter Hall, Richard Eyre, and Alan Bennett among noteable others.

The 84-year-old brings his most recent production Love is my sin, to the U.S. with a premiere at the Ringling International Arts Festival. The production premiered in Paris at the Théatre du Bouffes du Nord in April. The production is based on Sonnet 142 by William Shakespeare.

Here is Sonnet 142 by William Shakespeare in case you are not familiar with it:

Love is my sin, and thy dear virtue hate,
Hate of my sin, grounded on sinful loving,
O, but with mine, compare thou thine own state,
And thou shalt find it merits not reproving,
Or if it do, not from those lips of thine
That have profaned their scarlet ornaments
And sealed false bonds of love as oft as mine,
Robbed others’ beds’ revenues of their rents.
Be it lawful I love thee as thou lov’st those
Whom thine eyes woo as mine importune thee.
Root pity in thy heart, that when it grows
Thy pity may deserve to pitied be.
If thou dost seek to have what thou dost hide,
By self-example mayst thou be denied!

Artist Spotlight: Edward Arron, Cellist

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

Cellist Edward Arron is rapidly gaining recognition worldwide for his elegant musicianship, impassioned performances, and creative programming. A native of Cincinnati, Ohio, Mr. Arron made his New York recital debut in 2000 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Since that time, Mr. Arron has appeared in recital, as a soloist with orchestra, and as a chamber musician throughout the United States, Europe and Asia.

Mr. Arron will perform with other internationally renowned musicians – pianist Anne-Marie McDermott, violinist Jennifer Frasutschi, and French horn player Eric Ruske – at the Chamber Music Programs at the Ringling International Arts Festival in October.

But if you’re lucky enough to be in New York tonight you can attend Mr. Arron’s performance at the Baryshnikov Arts Center.

Then come back and write a review.

Behind the Scenes

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

We at the Ringling Museum and the BAC are quickly learning what it takes to put together a international festival as we work hard behind-the-scenes to make sure everything goes as planned come October. Sure, it is still five months away, but we cannot rest on our laurels there is marketing to be done, travel arrangements to be made, and physical coordination of events to be organized, to name only a few. It takes more than just calling some artists and asking them to participate. It takes uber-organization skills, the ability to walk backwards in high-heels (figuratively speaking of course, unless you are Meow Meow who probably can do it in her sleep) and the ability to keep a sense of humor. The ride has been fun so far, stay tuned for more.

‘Tis The Season

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

Today marks the start of Spoleto Festival USA, the 17-day arts festival in Charleston, South Carolina. For 22 years this festival has been a haven for both traditional and experimental artists and has been exciting and stimulating for arts patrons worldwide.

The Ringling International Arts Festival looks to Spoleto Festival USA for inspiration. Sarasota mirrors Charleston in its small town intimacy and sophisticated cultural venues and audiences. Both cities have long histories of initiating arts and culture organizations in their communities.

If you’re lucky enough to attend Spoleto this season, look for the Ringling International Arts Festival ad in your program book and we’ll see you in October!

Have a great Memorial Day weekend and we’ll blog again on Tuesday, May 26.

Celebrate a New Generation

Thursday, May 21st, 2009

Did you know that for every pair of Opening Night Concert tickets sold one child from an area school will attend the concert for free? What a great way to ignite a passion for the arts in the youth of our community. Perhaps they will become the next emerging artist of their generation. Or simply become future patrons of the arts.

Venue Spotlight: The Historic Asolo Theater

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

One of the venues at the Ringling International Arts Festival will be the Historic Asolo TheaterElla Hickson, Peter Brook / C.I.T.C., and Chamber Music Programs A & B are scheduled to perform in the Historic Asolo.

historic-asolo-theater_web1

An 18th-century treasure in a 21st-century venue, the Historic Asolo Theater is a work of art in its own right. The palace playhouse was created in Asolo, Italy in 1798 to honor the 15th-century exiled Queen Catherine Cornaro of Cyprus. In the late 1940s, the theater was dismantled and brought to the Ringling Estate.

In 2006, after years of painstaking restoration, the 265-seat theater was reset in the John M. McKay Visitors Pavilion just inside the historic Cà d’Zan Gatehouse on the Ringling Museum estate. All levels are wheelchair accessible.

historic-asolo-theater-detail_web

Reaching the International Traveler

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

This week representatives from the local Convention & Visitor Bureaus for Sarasota and Manatee Counties are promoting the Festival in Miami at the U.S. Travel Association’s International POW WOW. This trade show is the travel industry’s premier international marketplace and attracts worldwide tourists to the U.S. for the upcoming year. These meetings will result in the generation of more than $.3.5 billion in future travel business to the U.S.

International POW WOW is also an opportunity for unique news coverage for USA travel destinations and products including the Ringling International Arts Festival.

While the competition is tough, we are confident that the internationally-recognized artists scheduled to participate in the Festival will appeal to tourists looking for an exceptional destination for arts and culture. We thank our CVB’s for recognizing the value of this incredible Festival.

“The B-Sides” by Mason Bates

Monday, May 18th, 2009

Mason Bates will unveil his new commissioned orchestral suite, “The B-sides” this week along with Yuja Wang and the San Fransico Symphony. Excitement for the performance has been raging as once again Bates’ showed off his adroit ability to blend the classical and the hip last month as the YouTube Symphony Orchestra played part of the “The B-sides” during its debut. Check it out. Can’t wait to see what he will put together for the Ringling International Arts Festival.

Let’s Talk About Community

Saturday, May 16th, 2009

Lately we’ve been thinking a lot about community. From a civil, bureaucratic or creative point of view, our communities deal with a set of parameters that are formed from a variety of sources, cultural, geographic, or meteorological, just to name a few. The New York City community and the Sarasota community share a variety of traits between them, luckily these include a love of arts and a passion for their own histories (primary considerations for our work, of course), and even a few shared residents. When RIAF comes to town, it brings with it a community of artists that could be viewed in a refined way as reflecting a specific sphere of the arts world. New, avant-garde, post-?…all inadequate but common titles that define something brave, something unknown or even risky. At RIAF this is namely in terms of how the Baryshnikov Arts Center (BAC) as a unique entity functions in a way that allows focus to emerge on a number of artists. In as vast a landscape as NYC this is pretty tough stuff. Following its mission with vigor, the BAC encompasses a great deal of work with its support of dance, music, theater, performance art, visual art. This support is always more limited than one would hope, given the lack of resources any one entity can provide. But it’s what defines us as a community. The crucial choices that institution makes in terms of who it supports and why, and how the growth and skill set of that institution feeds the growth of its artists, is where the magic happens. It’s where venues define themselves and gain or lose audiences in a variety of ways, and where trend-setting destinations are born. For some of us, that magic is what gets you out of bed in the morning. For others, it’s what makes those talk shows on PBS so incredibly boring!So how can we create a festival whose infusion in the local community both feeds and is fed by it? Pedja Muzijevic (who curated the amazing music series and is himself a renowned concert pianist whose work we will have the pleasure of seeing at RIAF in October), has been dutifully emphasizing this practice from the start. Ella Hickson’s EIGHT was programmed with this in mind, as it will include four students cast from their unique acting program, which is a rare and unique treat in any Festival. We recently scheduled a day of residencies that will see tomorrow’s most prominent choreographers working with local arts high schools, and students working in the same day with two of the world’s finest theater practitioners: veteran actor Bruce Myers of Peter Brook’s C.I.T.C. and Elevator Repair Service. And with the phenomenal composer Mason Bates in the house adding to an already eclectic mix of the next generation of taste makers, the mix is sure to reach multiple generations on many areas of the community.

My recent contact with FSU/Asolo Rep. students and the local high schools reflects an amazing viability and interest in new visions for dance, music and theater in that area. I am truly impressed with the enthusiasm, even after having worked with communities all over the world. We are proud to support and enhance it, and look forward to the new stories that will be told in the future from those who witness the birth of RIAF…

Thomas O. Kriegsmann

Thomas O. Kriegsmann is a producer and curator who founded ArKtype in 2006 toward the long-term development, production and touring of new internationally based performance work on a variety of scales. His acclaimed work as producer has been seen across Europe, South Africa, East Asia, North and South America and Australia. Kriegsmann is Festival Director for the Ringling International Arts Festival. More info at Arktype.