Latest News

  • Art for Progress, Convergence

    NYC Arts Non Profit Heads West in Support of Local Arts Programs
    Convergence: Saturday, November 14th, Studio Maesto, Santa Monica, CA.

    On Saturday, November 14th New York City based non-profit Art for Progress (AFP) will host a fundraiser in support of Studio Maesto’s Arts Collective Program in Santa Monica, California.  The event will take place at Studio Maesto’s dance and photography studio at 1547 6th Street, Santa Monica, and will feature visual art from three Los Angeles based artists who have exhibited with AFP in the past- Sona Mirzaei, Lichiban and Pablo Damas. The night will also showcase live performances from Barry Komitor (NYC based band Bad Faces), DJ sets from NYC’s Gatto, LA based DJ/Producer Elliot DeHoyos and a myriad of local performance artists. Net proceeds from ticket sales and a percentage of art sales will go to support the studios arts collective program (details below). Tickets ($15) will be available at the door. Tickets include a drink and light fare. Additional beverages will be available for purchase. Studio Maesto, 1547 6th Street, Santa Monica, CA – Hours: 7:30pm – 11:00pm

    Over the last 12 years, Art for Progress has produced over 50 major events in NYC, Miami, San Francisco and Washington DC. With a focus on multimedia productions, AFP has garnered valuable press coverage for artists in world renowned publications such as The New York Times, Women’s Wear Daily and The Village Voice.  While supporting and promoting artists through these events, the events also raise funds for AFP’s art programs in the NYC Public Schools.

    Maesto Arts Collective is a program dedicated to providing free dance, photography, and art workshops for children who do not have access to art programs and aiding and sponsoring artists by providing a “creative home” where they can teach, learn new skills, and share their talents with the community.

    Art for Progress

    “Creative Culture Accelerating Social Change”

  • Los Angeles-based Knative Clothing, helmed by Ariel Goodman-Weston produces “fully fashioned knitwear” that’s not only environmentally conscious, but is also waste conscious.

    Fashion-making typically begets a lot of waste—from discarded textiles to water use. Finding a brand that truly tries to incorporate “no-waste” techniques is definitely something worth calling attention to. It’s also important to distinguish these fashion labels from fast-fashion brands like H&M that attempt to present themselves as eco-conscious in a dishonest practice referred to as greenwashing.

    Brands like Knative Clothing create handmade, durable products. And because of its small size, it doesn’t seem to require the same amount of resources as a larger label would need—thereby labels like Knative create less harmful emissions.

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    Ariel Goodman-Weston

    Here are three reasons why you need Knative knitwear in your possession this Fall into Winter.

    Read More

  • Courtesy of Oscilloscope

    Courtesy of Oscilloscope

    As its title implies, Alice Rohrwacher’s captivating new film The Wonders is infused with a sense of discovery and marvel. Set in the Tuscan countryside, this atmospheric, closely observed narrative centers around the hardscrabble life of a bee-keeping family, as experienced mainly through oldest daughter Gelsomina (Maria Alexandra Lungu). On the brink of adolescence, the girl is torn between the insular existence of her hard-headed father and the pull of the outside world. The latter appears in the form of a seductive reality show called Countryside Wonders and the arrival of a silent, troubled boy who is taken in by the family.

    While the film isn’t autobiographical, Rohrwacher grew up in this part of Italy, worked in honey production, and is of Italian-German descent, like her onscreen family. Her familiarity with this milieu is obvious, especially in realistic scenes of bee handling – which include alarmingly dense swarms around real hives — and honey-making. The apiary details of The Wonders are fascinating enough, but then there’s the roughly beautiful Tuscan countryside and the family itself: Idealistic, bad-tempered Wolfgang (Sam Louwyck) and exasperated, affectionate Angelica (Alba Rohrwacher, Alice’s sister) are the parents; sensitive, determined Gelsomina, comical but vulnerable Marinella (Agnese Graziani), and two uninhibited little girls who frolic half-naked like gleeful colts, are the kids. There’s also their longtime lodger Coco (Sabine Timoteo), a scrappy youngish woman. They live in an old, rambling, somewhat makeshift house, and are all involved to some degree with Wolfgang’s apiary, especially Gelsomina, who is clearly comfortable handling bees and has a talent for managing them.

    Courtesy of Oscilloscope

    Courtesy of Oscilloscope

    Thus she is her father’s main helper, whether smoking and opening hives or changing heavy honey buckets. One day while relaxing on the beach, the family comes upon the filming of an Etruscan-themed reality show, starring the goddess-like Milly Catena (Monica Bellucci, well cast). Unlike his neighbors, Wolfgang is disgusted by the show’s premise — local farm families competing for prize money — and the possibility that it will draw tourists to the region. Gelsomina, intrigued by the glamorous Milly and cognizant of her family’s financial and legal struggles (their honey facilities are not up to code), secretly enters the competition. She is in many ways the family’s most sensible, pragmatic member, and she bears the most responsibility when things go wrong or accidents occur, as they inevitably do. Around this time, her family welcomes sullen young Martin, a 14-yr-old foster child they’ve taken in for money and to help with the apiary. The family dynamic changes, as Wolfgang – who is often teased about having four daughters – shifts some of Gelsomina’s work to Martin, much to her dismay. It’s clear, though, that her own needs and desires have been shifting, as she becomes aware of the possibility of escaping the family’s way of life.

    Courtesy of Oscilloscope

    Courtesy of Oscilloscope

    A deeply impressionistic film about a particular region of Italy and a disappearing lifestyle, The Wonders doesn’t have a tidily resolved plotline, nor are its characters neatly delineated types. The acting, especially on the part of the kids, is very naturalistic, notably newcomer Lungu, whose young face expresses all the pent-up emotions of adolescence. Adding to the film’s loose vibe are Rohrwacher’s lingering camera shots of the countryside with its craggy shoreline and mysterious caves, and unorthodox camera angles that hover around the scene’s human subjects, giving us a palpable sense of place. The Wonders has a warm,  intoxicating ambiance that lingers long after the film is over.

    The Wonders opens Friday, October 30, at  Lincoln Plaza Cinemas in Manhattan.

    Marina Zogbi

  • CMJ 2015 is in full swing. The festival takes its name from the College Media Journal, which was started by Robert Haber in 1978. Haber’s publication was aimed at college radio programmers and their audiences, a crowd which is still well represented at each year’s festival. This year the CMJ speaker schedule includes talks and workshops on the radio resumes, interviews and the history of student-run radio as well as the CMJ College Radio Awards.

    As much as the five day, non-stop marathon still honors its history in college radio, it also delves into the live scene. Well over a thousand bands with varying levels of exposure play venues all over New York. From the basement-like space of Cake Shop to the expansive Brooklyn Bowl, artists gather to play their best and celebrate music. This year’s line-up includes bands of every genre and size. Seeing all of them is infeasible, but here are about dozen acts that you can’t miss.

    – – – – – – – – – – T H U R S D A Y – – – – – – – – – –

    Glass Animals
    Genre: Indie Rock
    Set Time:
    Thu, October 15, 8:00 PM
    @ Terminal 5
    Listen To: “Black Mambo”

    Girls with Brown Hair
    Genre: Indie Rock/Comedy
    Set Time:
    Thu, October 15, 8:06 PM > 8:16 PM
    @ The Unicorn
    Listen To: “Dad Rap”

    Panda Bear
    Genre: Experimental
    Set time:
    Thu, October 15, 9:00 PM
    @ Bowery Ballroom
    Listen To: “Boys Latin” off of Panda Bear Meets the Grim Reaper

    The Maccabees
    Genre: Indie Rock
    Set Time:
    Thu, October 15, 11:00 PM > 11:45 PM
    @ Mercury Lounge
    Listen To: “Spit It Out”
    off of Marks To Prove It

    Palehound
    Genre: Indie/Punk Rock
    Set Time/s:
    Thu, October 15, 9:00 PM > 9:30 PM
    @ Union Pool
    Fri, October 16, 1:45 PM > 2:15 PM
    @ Palisades
    Sat, October 17, 11:30 PM > 12:00 AM
    @ Pianos
    Listen To: “Molly” off of Dry Food

    – – – – – – – – – – F R I D A Y – – – – – – – – – –

    Have Mercy
    Genre: Punk Rock
    Set Time:
    Fri, October 16, 6:30 PM
    @ Marlin Room at Webster Hall
    Listen To: “Collider”

    Microwave
    Genre: Indie Rock
    Set Time:
    Fri, October 16, 6:30 PM
    @ Marlin Room at Webster Hall
    Listen To: “Stovall” off of Stovall

    Department
    Genre: Indie/Pop Rock
    Set Time:
    Fri, October 16, 9:15 PM > 9:45 PM
    @ Alphabet Lounge
    Listen To: “Systems” off of Aporia

    Gang of Thieves
    Genre: Funk Rock
    Set Time:
    Fri, October 16, 11:00 PM > 11:45 PM
    @ Fontana’s
    Listen To: “Cocoa Mocha”
    off of Thunderfunk

    Celestial Shore
    Genre: Indie Rock
    Set Time/s:
    Fri, October 16, 8:00 PM
    @ Baby’s All Right
    Sat, October 17, 2:00 PM > 2:30 PM
    @ Fulton Stall Market
    Listen To: “Creation Myth”
    off of Enter Ghost

    – – – – – – – – – – S A T U R D A Y – – – – – – – – – –

    Narc Twain
    Genre: Indie
    Set Time:
    Sat, October 17, 6:30 PM > 7:20 PM
    @ Pianos (Upstairs)
    Listen To: “Downhill”

    State Champs
    Genre: Punk Rock
    Set Time: Sat, October 17, 7:00 PM
    @ Webster Hall
    Listen To: “All You Are Is History”
    off of Around The World and Back

    The Wonder Years
    Genre: Punk Rock
    Set Time:
    Sat, October 17, 7:00 PM
    @ Webster Hall
    Listen To: “Cigarettes & Saints”
    off of No Closer to Heaven

    Motion City Soundtrack
    Genre: Pop Rock
    Set Time:
    Sat, October 17, 7:00 PM
    @ Webster Hall
    Listen To: “Lose Control”
    off of Panic Stations

    Kate Nash
    Genre: Singer/Songwriter
    Set Time:
    Sat, October 17, 11:30 PM > 12:30 AM
    @ Bowery Ballroom
    Listen To: “Sister”
    off of Girl Talk

    Potty Mouth
    Genre: Punk
    Set Time: Sat, October 17, 7:30 PM > 8:10 PM
    @ Bowery Ballroom
    Listen To: “Cherry Picking”

    -Zoe Marquedant