Posted at 8:32 AM on September 10, 2010
by Marianne Combs
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Filed under: Dance, Events, Museums, Music, Photography, Theater

Bonnie (with a photograph of an angel), Port Gibson, Mississippi 2000
Photography by Alec Soth
Photographer Alec Soth got his start working on the staff at the MIA, and now his work is the subject of a retrospective at the Walker Art Center. "From Here to There - Alec Soth's America" looks back at 16 years of his images, drawing from his series "Sleeping By the Mississippi" and "Niagara" as well as new work. For more information about the show, check out this story by Euan Kerr.
This weekend marks the annual Concrete and Grass music festival in lowertown Saint Paul, featuring performances by the Minnesota Orchestra, the Suicide Commandos and Dessa, among others.
Tennessee Williams' classic tale "The Glass Menagerie" opens this weekend at the Jungle Theater, starring Wendy Lehr as Amanda Wingfield. Themes of "quiet desperation" and "unrealistic dreams" seem particularly poignant given today's economy.
The Guthrie Theater premieres the stage version of Louise Erdrich's novel "The
Master Butchers Singing Club." The story chronicles the intersecting lives of German immigrant and butcher Fidelis Waldvogel and sideshow performer Delphine Watzka as they settle onto the plains and into the small town of Argus, North Dakota.
Ananya Dance Theatre presents Kshoy!/Decay! today through Sunday at the Southern Theater in Minneapolis. It's a powerful work that through movement examines how capitalist interests lead to violence against women. For more details, click here.
So what are you doing this weekend?
Posted at 1:13 PM on September 10, 2010
by Marianne Combs
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Filed under: Dance, Funding, People

Jeff Bartlett
Twin Cities dancers are gathering to support one of their greatest allies.
Jeff Bartlett, longtime dance presenter,was focusing lights up in a Genie lift at Burnsville Performing Arts Center on August 19 when the lift fell over. He suffered multiple fractures in eight ribs, a broken shoulder blade, a broken arm, a collapsed lung and three fractured vertebrae. Doctors say he is very very lucky to be alive.
Tonight and tomorrow, nine different dance companies will perform at the Ritz Theater in Minneapolis in what is being billed as a celebration and fundraiser for Bartlett. A reception will follow Friday's performance, and the opportunity to give additional donations will be available in the lobby.
As the artistic director of the Southern Theater, Bartlett created a venue where local dance companies were welcome to perform. Frequently he also did the lighting design for their shows. In 2008 the board of the Southern Theater let Bartlett go after thirty years of service, for reasons that are still not publicly known. Since then, Bartlett has been working as a freelance lighting designer, and most recently, as Dance Community Liaison at the new Cowles Center for Dance and the Performing Arts.
Bartlett was expected to attend the performances, but an infection forced him to return to Hennepin County Medical Center for further surgery. According to Ritz staff, they are working on setting up a skype connection between the hospital and the theater.
The companies that will be performing are:
ARENA Dances
Ballet of the Dolls
Beyond Ballroom
Ethnic Dance Theatre
Flying Foot Forum
Jawaahir Dance Company
Katha Dance Theatre
Shapiro & Smith Dance
Zorongo Flamenco
Posted at 3:47 PM on September 10, 2010
by Marianne Combs
(1 Comments)
Filed under: Drawing, Galleries

Twin brothers Rowan and Bly Pope stand together in front of a display of their artwork at Grand Hand Gallery in St. Paul.
Rowan and Bly Pope have been creating things together ever since they were little kids.
"We'd make masking tape monsters and little ghosts as kids - it was that kind of art making we did as kids that brought us together," said Bly recently at Grand Hand Gallery, where the two are showing their artwork. "We'd go exploring in the woods, which is where we developed our appreciation of nature," Rowan added.
"Now we're exploring the wilderness of our minds," says Bly, to which Rowan quickly tags on "and our childhoods."
This is what it's like talking with the 30 year-old fraternal twins; so often do they finish each other's sentences that it's almost like talking to one person, or witnessing someone talking to himself. While the two profess to have different groups of friends, and differing personalities, they have lived the majority of their lives together, with Rowan following Bly out of the womb by just ten minutes.
"Our parents say Bly forges the path and then I follow along and augment the path, or add imaginative ideas," chuckles Rowan.

Graphite portrait of Freya Manfred by Bly Pope
Rowan and Bly are the children of an artistic family. Their mother is poet and memoirist Freya Manfred, daughter of the novelist Frederick Manfred. Their father is screenwriter Thomas Pope (writer of F/X and Bad Boys among others) who teaches film theory at the Minneapolis College of Art and Design. Raised in the outskirts of Bloomington, the brothers say they spent a lot of time out in the woods, learning to entertain themselves.
Growing up the two formed a bond atypical even for twins. When the two enrolled in different colleges at either end of the country, Rowan soon found the distance too much.
I started out at Wesleyan, but I found I was too lonely without Bly, so I came home for a while, and realized that I needed my brother so much that I ended up applying to Stanford and transferring to be with him. That was the first time I realized how much I needed my brother.
At Stanford both Bly and Rowan majored in studio art and minored in psychology. That's where they began to seriously explore drawing. They found they were both extremely gifted in creating hyper-realistic images using nothing more than a .3 millimeter mechanical pencil and a q-tip. But it is in their choice of subject matter that the differences between the twins emerge.

Eucalyptus by Bly Pope
Bly describes himself as an avid fan of photorealists like Chuck Close and Richard Estes. He chooses subjects like plants and faces, in moments that might be overlooked by the common eye. He portrays things as he sees them, and leaves others to give the image meaning.
Rowan, on the other hand, has a fantastic imagination, and he uses that imagination to create tableaux that are filled with emotion and storyline. It's only after he's imagined the scene that he starts taking pictures in order to start building a catalog of visual details to draw from. He calls the technique "composite photo realism."
The photos provide me with so much detail that I couldn't come up with on my own. I take a huge number of photographs - maybe 500 - and then narrow them down to 15 or so which are used as sources for the final image.

Judgement by Rowan Pope
Bly somes up their artistic differences this way:
Rowan's work is not just about technological virtuosity, it's symbolic and has deep layers of meaning. Mine is more deadpan, literal and straightforward.
To which Rowan adds:
But you are also glorifying the mundane.
The brothers say they feel lucky to have each other. While they don't draw works together, Bly says they consult each other's feedback regularly, and support one anothers efforts.
It's really been a source of confidence and strength for both of us. We played sports together too; art was a way for us to work independently, and express our individual selves, yet also give us a sense of collaboration and unity.
Rowan, remembering his experience at Weseyan, says he's conscious of the downside, as well:
It's a blessing and a curse. Because we are so close, we rely on each other so much, we need each other that much more.

Orange Flower by Bly Pope
Rowan and Bly Pope will speak tomorrow at an artist talk at Grand Hand Gallery from 2 - 4pm, and there will be a reception for the exhibition on September 18 from 5-8pm. The exhibition of their works, which takes up the front portion of the gallery, will be up through October 10.
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