SATURATION: AV Arts Publication Vol. 3 – released

SATURATION: AV Arts Publication will release Volume 3 on October 13, 2012.

 

SATURATION volume 3 is the product of a collaboration now spanning three issues and dozens of Antelope Valley artists and editors, providing a venue for artists to share their work.

The theme of this issue is TURNING POINTS or THE POINT OF NO RETURN. Artists submitted photography, poetry, short stories, drawings, and paintings to this third annual issue.

 

The list of contributors looks something like this: Larissa Nickel, Todd Cooper, Tom Varden, Edwin Vasquez, Tonia Crews, Sam M., C. Vanderpool, Linda Ruiz, Ruba Alvarado, Vincent Reyes, Frank Rozasy, Frank Dixon, G.L. Helm, Marilyn Dalrymple, and June Marie Milham.

Editors on this project: AJ Currado & Steven Fiche & Eric Martin

Copies are on sale at Sagebrush Cafe and through local art events hosted with/by AJ Currado in Quartz Hill. (Information on those events can be found at AJ’s website and at the AV Arts Blog.)

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*This slideshow represents many of the submissions to the 2012 SATURATION. Copyright is owned by the artist. We just wanted to show you what kind of visual art came our way for this issue of the AV Arts magazine.

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Every-Other Friday writing group begins meetings

The Every-Other Friday summer writing group begins meetings Friday, July 20 (5-8pm) at Sagebrush Cafe in Quartz Hill. An opportunity for writers to meet, support, and make fun of one another.

Actually, I’m less than sure about the make fun of one another part. I may just be making that up. No, yeah. I am making that up.

But the rest is true.

The group will be led by poet and artist Nicelle Davis, editor of the Bee’s Knees Blog (link on the sidebar here), author of Circe and Becoming Judas, and recent director of some Antelope Valley Thespians performances.

Open to the public.

SATURATION – AV Arts Publication: Call for Submissions

SATURATION is an arts publication dedicated to bringing attention and opportunities to artists of the Antelope Valley, creating a venue for connection, community, and expression through the arts. 

We’re looking for pictures/images, poetry, essays, reviews and fiction.

Send work to: poeticwax@rocketmail.com

*

SATURATION is currently available at Sagebrush Cafe in Quartz Hill. The first issue featured original works of art, artist interviews, essays, fiction, and show reviews. A dozen artists and writers contributed including Sarah Allen, Larissa Nickel, Jason Hughes, Nalin Ratnayake, AJ Currado and Rheagan E. Martin. 

SATURATION hopes to expand in breadth, depth, variety and population for the next issue. If you’d like to see your name in print, get some ideas out into the AV, give your work some feet and reach an audience, please submit. (All quality submissions are likely to be used. We’d like to go BIG this time.) 

All contributors receive a free copy of SATURATION.

Submit. Be heard.

Art lives in the Antelope Valley.

Talk About Art

-by eric martin 

How can you help bring more cultural life to your community? This is a question I have asked myself and discussed with my friends.

As a coffee shop owner with a gallery space in my business, I am especially interested in the arts and in a lively interest in culture in my community, but I am not alone.

For every one person who wishes out loud that there were more opportunities to show art and more places to see art there are ten people who would take advantages of these opportunities – if they existed. Small scale art events are just as good as large scale art events in my opinion.

Often a good little gallery show can be more stimulating than a vast museum collection. The focus of a smaller show can be more easily concentrated and cohesive than larger shows and can make for an intimate experience. In a gallery setting we can feel often that we are in the presence of the mind of the artist.

Small scale art shows, in a gallery, are as valid and relevant to our sense of cultural experience as larger shows. This is worth keeping in mind when contemplating how to best support, promote and participate in your local arts scene.

Recently in the Antelope Valley of California a community of artists have undertaken some very interesting arts projects. These projects, presented in unique contexts, have successfully created “traditional” cultural experiences in non-traditional contexts.

A group of artists consisting of painters, ceramic artists, and photographers put on a show and workshop based in one of the painter’s houses. The event was open to the public and served to draw in the community at large and to display the fact that people are doing the work of creativity in the Antelope Valley – in their homes and private lives, and they are willing to share that work.

Another project takes theatre into an unlikely space – a private garage. The Antelope Valley Thespians consist of a group of people dedicated to the idea of theatre as an essentially socially engaged medium which can happen anywhere there is a will.

 These are just two examples of small scale culture, where the arts are brought to life in a community of people who desire opportunities to engage in the arts.

Success, for these cultural events, is measured in the same general way that success is measured for any audience-based event. Did anyone come? Of course, the expectations and the specific threshold numbers are adjusted to the scale of the event and the size of the venue. But the challenge for a garage theatre or an art gallery is identical to that of a large playhouse or museum.

In a word, the challenge is communication.

People won’t attend events they don’t know about.

People won’t buy tickets to a show if they have not heard that there is a show going on.

Somehow the fact that these events exist must be communicated to those folks who might be interested in attending.

For a museum like the MOCA (Museum of Contemporary Art: Los Angeles) or the MOMA (Museum of Modern Art: New York City), the public already knows that the institutions exist. The challenge then becomes one of keeping people interested in what is happening now. In the case of smaller groups or galleries or smaller museums, the challenge is larger because there is less awareness that they exist at all.

These cultural purveyors are asking themselves the same question that opened this discussion: How can we help to support and promote the cultural life of our community?

In a way, we have already answered this question. As artists, we can just do things.

Put on a show. Gather a group and host a performance. Open our houses. Invite painters to show work at our businesses. Bring friends to our favorite galleries in our communities.

Talk.

Blog.

Write.

As we said, the small scale cultural events are as valid and relevant as large scale events. This is also true of how we can spread the word about cultural events in our communities.

Two, three or five more people at a gallery opening can make a real difference as to whether or not that show meets its goals for success.

In the end, culture is about the picture we keep in our heads that describes what kind of creatures we humans are, what kind of minds. So the ultimate cultural success lies in the act of communication, in sharing an idea.

For all of us who want to live in a culturally rich and culturally alive community, we can help to make that wish come true by making a simple effort to pass on the idea, pass on the word that an idea is on display at the gallery down the street, or blog about where to find this idea or that idea in a garage or coffee shop near you.

eric martin is a local writer of the antelope valley, slinging coffee at Sagebrush Cafe in the daylight hours.

Deadlines Approaching for Antelope Valley Original Writing Submissions

The Antelope Valley Anthology

 MousePrints Publishing, The Unknown Writers of the Antelope Valley, and WORD AV, the Antelope Valley Literacy Coalition, continues to accept applications until May 31, 2010  for the 2010 Antelope Valley Anthology.

Submissions may be prose or poetry. Poetry may be no more than 100 lines per poem. No more than five poems may be entered. The poems may be any form.

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Prose submissions may be in the form of short fiction, creative non-fiction, essays, or reportage. Submissions will be accepted from 1 January, 2010 through 31 May, 2010.

Please send all entries to mouseprint@earthlink.net For further information regarding the 7th Antelope Valley Anthology please e mail the above address. Criteria provided by: THE EDITORIAL COMMITTEE FOR THE 7TH ANTELOPE VALLEY ANTHOLOGY

More Opportunities for Antelope Valley Writers: ORIGINAL PLAY “BOUNTY” OFFERED BY LOCAL THEATER GROUP The Antelope Valley Thespians (AVT) are currently seeking submissions of an original work related to a selected set of western themes.

 For details see their website (www.avthespians.org/productions/).

Local Writer Shares Thoughts on Shopping Local

Reflections in Comparative Economics After a Trip Abroad    (exerpt)

– Nalin Ratnayake

Our mega-corporations are not all bad; the are the backbone of what provides our huge industrial and economic power. And for all the detriment it has done to the U.S. domestic economy by helping to flood the American //  market with cheap Chinese-made goods, WalMart has also used its enormous purchasing power to push for greener practices in its supply chain [ Aston ]. Starbucks has similarly implemented measures to support small coffee growers with its Fair Trade initiative. File:Farmer's Market Bridgehampton.JPG

But a balance must be made between the benefits of having large-capital corporations, and the need to keep domestic manufacturing viable. Countries like Sri Lanka have a long way to go before they reach the level of labor equity, environmental regulation, and purchasing power of the United States. But they definitely know something that we have forgotten a long time ago: a genuinely local economy that spends wisely is a valuable asset that has no price tag.

As I read the local paper and frown at forthcoming plans to put in yet another suburban WalMart center near Quartz Hill, I fear for the viability of my town’s character; Quartz Hill has long been a pocket of small, friendly, locally-owned businesses. But the powers that be will go with what sells, and that bit of policy is in no one’s hands but our own.

We Americans must realize that there is a hidden price associated with always seeking the cheapest product regardless of anything else and then spending like there’s no tomorrow. But the fault is never in the error itself; it is in failing to learn from it. So, after a gloomy recession year full of bad news and dashed dreams, let us as a nation resolve this year to: a) consume less and save more, and b) when we do consume, to buy local products or domestically manufactured goods whenever possible, even at somewhat greater upfront cost. The long-term effect will be, I think, to make our prosperity more stable, sustainable, environmentally friendly, and good for our nation and the world.

Read the rest of Nalin Ratnayake’s article HERE. (Click the link on HERE.)           

[photo credit: David Shankbone]

Antelope Valley Thespians Competitive Call-For-Scripts

 

Quartz Hill’s own theater company, Antelope Valley Thespians, has announced a call for scripts from local writers.

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The group is offering a $300 “bounty” to the writer of the script selected, which is to be based on a theme relating to THE WEST.

A forum has been opened to field questions  from playwrights and interested parties to provide help in crafting a play that will meet the guidelines and be produceable in the AVT black-box theater space.

For more information on the guidelines and selected themes for the competitive call for scripts, visit the AVT website listed on our sidebar.

ArtsRoundUp

ArtsRoundUp – Arts in the Community Antelope Valley Anthology (volume 7)

The Antelope Valley Anthology is a literary anthology collecting and presenting works by writers of the Antelope Valley. A mixture of prose fiction, non-fiction, and poetry, the anthology seeks to provide a platform for the voices of writers here in the high desert.

Last year’s anthology was titled The Raven & the Writing Desk and featured the talents of 23 local literary artists.

A particular stand-out in the book is non-fiction article on ravens by Monique S. Stevens, thoughtfully considering the night-shade figure of the raven in various contexts – from its intelligence and problem solving skills to the traits it shares with humans.

Not all the anthology writing in The Raven & The Writing Desk is about ravens, however. The book’s opening story, a piece of fiction by Margaret L. Priddy, concerns an African girl forever “missing” from her parents home after a lion attack outside her village. Told with an interweaving of the details of village life and the fantastic elements of an oral-tale and ghost story, Priddy renders an experience of a world far outside the Antelope Valley.

These two pieces of writing demonstrate the wide range of topics covered in the Antelope Valley Anthology. As a local publication, one might reasonably expect the focus to be primarily local, but the content of the anthology instead presents a picture of diversity– diversity of interest, diversity of style, and a diverse collection of voices.

The Antelope Valley Anthology has recently announced the opening of the reading period for a seventh edition of the anthology. Readers and writers should keep an eye out for the anthology’s release date in these pages and/or online (http://www.mouseprintspublishing.com/ ).

Criteria for 2010 Antelope Valley Anthology Submission Included here is an abridged listing of submission information. For full criteria & formatting requirements go to antelopevalleyarts.wordpress.com MousePrints Publishing, The Unknown Writers of the Antelope Valley, and WORD AV, the Antelope Valley Literacy Coalition, now officially opens the submission process for the 2010 Antelope Valley Anthology. Submissions may be prose or poetry. Poetry may be no more than 100 lines per poem. No more than five poems may be entered. The poems may be any form. Prose submissions may be in the form of short fiction, creative non-fiction, essays, or reportage. Submissions will be accepted from 1 January, 2010 through 31 May, 2010. Please send all entries to mouseprint@earthlink.net For further information regarding the 7th Antelope Valley Anthology please e mail the above address. Criteria provided by: THE EDITORIAL COMMITTEE FOR THE 7TH ANTELOPE VALLEY ANTHOLOGY More

Opportunities for Antelope Valley Writers: ORIGINAL PLAY “BOUNTY” OFFERED BY LOCAL THEATER GROUP

The Antelope Valley Thespians (AVT) are currently seeking submissions of an original work related to a selected set of western themes. They are offering a $300 bounty for the play chosen to be performed in 2011.

For details see their website (www.avthespians.org/productions/) or stop in to Sagebrush Café to view a paper copy of the offered bounty.

Around and About: Lancaster Museum & Art Gallery opened its 25th Annual Juried Show in downtown Lancaster, curated by D. Michael Zakian of Pepperdine University. The show runs through March 7, 2010…. A theater group local to Quartz Hill, the Antelope Valley Thespians, opened their 2010 calendar of programs with “Crime & Punishment” with six shows on the weekends of January 16 and 23….Writers and editors of the locally produced children’s book It’s Tough Growing Up: Children’s Stories of Courage continue to promote their work with readings and book signings….Sagebrush Café held a photo scavenger hunt over the month of January, challenging participants to photograph concepts like conservation and community.