Showing posts with label Magnolia Salon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Magnolia Salon. Show all posts

Saturday, May 11, 2019

Local Art Seen: Adam Swanson @ the Magnolia Cafe

Detail from lower corner of the Owl below.
This week's Magnolia Salon took pace not at Oldenburg House, where they usually gather, but rather at its namesake, the Magnolia Cafe just off the main intersection in Carlton. The reason for the switcheroo was to host an Opening Reception for an exhibition of paintings by Adam Swanson.

The place was packed with friends of the arts. Room at Table Catering added their upscale appetizers to the down-home goodness of the Cafe. Guitarist Spencer Walton provided a musical accompaniment and Pippi Ardennia added some brightness.

The 6 to 8 reception followed on the heels of a 4 to 6 reception for Kris Nelson that took place at the Pine Knot offices, a two-stop art crawl. The packed Cafe was full of energy. Midway through the festivities things quieted down for Adam Swanson's "artist talk" in which he gave an overview of his career for those unfamiliar with his background or how he came to this neck of the woods.

Nearly right off he noted that he is not related to the Oldenburg House Swansons, though it is very possible back in time they may share mutual bloodlines.

At one time Adam lived and worked in Antarctica, hence the occasional appearance of penguins in his paintings. His transition to the Northland was not as challenging as it might be for someone who only lived in the tropics previously.

When he came to Duluth they lived in town initially. He initially did as much painting as he was able but supplemented the family income with a bartender job. This enabled him to cut back hours slowly as his commission work grew, which it did. Eventually he as able to obtain enough work to move out of Duluth and begin painting full time.

Today he paints every day from 8 to 5 with 60% of what he paints as commission work. Swanson said he was grateful that he's never had to do work he doesn't like "just to make the money."

Swanson paints on Masonite panels, a versatile tempered hardboard with a smooth surface. He gessoes and primes the surfaces before painting. As for subject matter, he likes painting humans interacting with nature, and as is readily apparent, he loves color.

Swanson is currently working on four murals which we be unveiled this summer in a few locations. In the meantime, if you're in the Carlton area, be sure to drop in for coffee and other treats at the Cafe and check out the rest of Adam Swanson's paintings on display at this time.

White Owl or Snowy Owl? 

Meantime, art goes on all around you. Get into it.

Sunday, February 10, 2019

There Will Be A Special Sweetness to This Week's Valentine Events at the O with Sarah Greer

"I help singers sing what they need to say."--Sarah Greer

Improv vocalist Sarah Greer is featured this coming week
for several evenings at the Oldenburg House.
There are many reasons people like jazz. One is simply the pleasure one gets from music itself. A second is the pleasure we receive when we witness virtuosity. A third, and one that is almost exemplified in great jazz, is the unexpectedness and beauty of improv.

Here's a description from APassion4Jazz.net:

Jazz improvisation is the process of spontaneously creating fresh melodies over the continuously repeating cycle of chord changes of a tune. The improviser may depend on the contours of the original tune, or solely on the possibilities of the chords' harmonies. It has been said that the best improvised music sounds composed, and that the best composed music sounds improvised.

I think this is why so many of the great jazz recordings come from live performances in clubs. The great genius of players like John Coltrane and Miles Davis is this ability to weave a spell into the improv realm so that all the players are improvising around a theme that got the whole riff started but now is only assumed. Listen to Kind of Blue. Listen to how they establish the theme and then begin springing off.

Actually, this was my own early fascination with the supergroup Cream with Ginger Baker, Jack Bruce and Eric Clapton. Jack Bruce. Jack Bruce, who became fascinated with jazz in his teens, fused his background with Clapton's blues mastery to produce great new sounds and concerts with incredibly robust improv, my favorite being captured on sides three and four of Wheels of Fire.

* * * *
All this to introduce you to this week's featured performer at the Carlton Room this coming weekend, Sarah Greer. In addition to giving private voice lessons Sarah Greer teaches singing at Minneapolis Community & Technical College (MCTC).

"I practice, study and teach the art of spontaneous singing," she says.

The thing about vocal improvisation is that it's not for some elite person who's "got it" but rather, something anyone can learn who can carry a tune. (Ms, Greer might even suggest that you can still contribute if you can't carry a tune.) On her Songtaneous Blog one entry is "8 Lessons from Improvising." Group improv singing is collaborative, not competitive.

When you attend a typical jazz performance at the Oldenburg House (or elsewhere) you will see and hear individuals working together to weave a fabric of background that serves almost like a trampoline to propel the singer to the zenith of his or her skills. But its also a mutual respect society, and a team.


I think what surprises some people is how sometimes a new performer comes to Oldenburg House and even without a rehearsal the fluidity of the show comes across as if they'd spent a month preparing. How do they do this? Because it's that jazz methodology or approach.

Sarah Greer's career revolves around teaching this improv sensibility. "I'll share what I learn and experience while traveling in the intuitive, joyful, beautiful, expressive, challenging, abstract world of vocal improvisation."

Improvisational performance is the world she most enjoys swimming in. For this reason she is part of a couple of Twin Cities improv groups including the a capella ensemble the Give Get Sistet and a jazz quintet called BLU-7.

Here are a couple quotes from Ms. Greer's website that illuminate where she's coming from.

"I am passionate – some might say evangelical – about every person’s right to sing and the power of singing to change the world."

"I help people find out what they are 'supposed to sound like' so they can find a unique and joyful place from which to sing, whether they sing on stage, in the studio or in the shower."

In other words, it's really all about you.

* * * *
Valentine's Day at the Magnolia Salon

Sarah Greer will also be the featured guest with musician/singer Steven Hobert at Thursday's Magnolia Salon. Together they will explore, play, ponder and expound on the power of improv and their love of music. The duo will present and lead songs, improvisations and conversation.

Steven Hobert describes himself as a soul who plays, sings and dances while exploring life’s mysteries. His genre-blending piano, accordion and vocal music has been described as “delightful, innovative and viscerally inspiring” that “dazzles audiences with sincerity and playfulness to open up hearts and fire imaginations.”

February Salon Schedule and RSVP HERE.


For Sarah Greer tickets visit https://oacc.us/programs/cookin-at-the-o/
Stay connected to what's happening in 2019 at Oldenburg House: OACC.US


Thursday, January 24, 2019

Upcoming Events at Oldenburg House & Two Harbors and a Reminders About Tonight

How to catch an artist. 
First let's start with the Art: The DAI Member Show and the Biennial Opening Receptions are tonight at the Depot from 5-8 p.m.
Hope to see you there.

* * * *
The Swansons at Oldenburg House in Carlton have released a schedule of upcoming presenters and performers for Magnolia Salon and Cookin' at the O.

TONIGHT, JANUARY 24
MAGNOLIA SALON / HAPPY CRITTERS

THURSDAY, JANUARY 31
MAGNOLIA SALON | CLAIRE LANDE - JUNEBUG BEE FARM
Register Here

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7
MAGNOLIA SALON | LOVE IS A BOX OF CHOCOLATES
Register Here

Sarah Greer
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14
MAGNOLIA SALON | SARAH M. GREER - VALENTINE VOICES
Register Here 

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15
COOKIN AT THE O | SARAH M. GREER
Register Here

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 16
COOKIN AT THE O | SARAH M. GREER
Register Here

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21
MAGNOLIA SALON | WHITE WINTER WINERY
Register Here

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28
MAGNOLIA SALON | ROCK OF AGES LIGHTHOUSE RESTORATION
Register Here


* * * *
THIS JUST IN
Guest Artist Bonnie Cutts will be at Two Harbors Community Center for an Art Lecture and Workshops. The events are sponsored by Voyageur Artists.

Bonnie Cutts
Bonnie Cutts is a Minnesota artist  who was trained by GOLDEN for the Certified Working Artist Program in 1998. Since 1998 she has been offering lecture/demos and hands on workshops in select locations around the midwest. Bonnie is a graduate of the University of Minnesota where she received her B.F.A. in drawing and painting. She has been exhibiting her work professionally since 1981, in both solo and group shows. Her drawings and paintings are included in numerous corporate and private collections around the country.

HERE ARE DETAILS of the Two Harbors workshops.
>>SCROLL DOWN TO THE DESCRIPTIONS that correspond with date of even you wish to attend.

FREE Mixed Media Techniques Lecture and Demo
February 15th     6:00 - 8:00
Two Harbors Community Center
*No charge but we need at least 15 people
and RSVP is required: email Sandi at
mailto:authenticartist@sandipillsbury.com

Workshop #1 Loose, Lush Landscapes
February 16th 9:30 - 4:00    (9:30 checkin and setup)
Two Harbors Community Center
$100 Non-members ($75 + $10 materials fee for members)
RSVP: authenticartist@sandipillsbury.com

Workshop #2 Encaustic Effects With Acrylics 
February 17th 9:30 - 4:00 (9:30 checkin and setup)
Two Harbors Community Center 
$100 Non-members ($75 + $10 materials fee for members)
RSVP authenticartist@sandipillsbury.com


Meantime, art goes on all around you. Get into it.
See you tonight @ the DAI

Thursday, January 3, 2019

My Favorite New Word of 2018 & an Invite to Magnolia Salon in Carlton

Photo by Kenny Luo on Unsplash
This past year I began blogging on Medium. One of the publications I have been getting involved with is called The Writing Cooperative, and one of the writers there has been creating a blog series titled "Words You Have Taught Me" which, as the name suggests, features words that he's come across while reading other writers' blog posts.

David Foster Wallace famously loved learning new words, and somewhere in my youth I had a teacher who taught us to underline words we didn't know so we could look them up and add them to our own vocabularies.

All this to say that of all the new words I came across in 2018, the one that most stands out is hygge. It's a Danish word that we were introduced to last February at a Magnolia Salon gathering at Oldenburg House in Carlton. Hygge, one of those words with an umlaut sounding vowel that is strange to pronounce in our clumsy English, carries a meaning one might associate with mindfulness, creativity and flow. Another translation associates the word with coziness and contentment. Think of being nestled before a warm fireplace with friends, being laid back, reflective.

This is where some of the magic happens.
It doesn't look like it would be pronounced hoo-ga, but that's probably the closest you will get. I mention this new word because there has been a study done to determine the most hygge cities in the nation, and Minnesota's Twin Cities (Minneapolis-St. Paul) ranked third in coziness. You can read the full story here in the Minneapolis Star Tribune.

According to the article it means more than comfort. It conveys that sense of spending time with friends. And for this reason, one of the first weekly Magnolia Salon gatherings at Oldenburg House last year focused on helping us understand this word.

* * * *

Tonight is the beginning of 2019 and the first gathering of Magnolia Salon at the Oldenburg House. Storyteller Cynthia Johnson will be sharing beginning at 6 p.m. Next week, Almanac Coffee's roaster will be sharing secrets about one of our favorite, most aromatic beverages derived from beans.

On Friday & Saturday next week (January 11 & 12) Ricky and Patty Peterson will be the featured performers Cookin' @ the O.

To learn more about these and other events taking place at Oldenburg House, visit and bookmark oacc.us.

To learn more about H00-ga (Hygge) check out this story about the day I learned the word in 2018. Yes, it took place at Magnolia Salon.


Wednesday, October 31, 2018

Bruce Henry Brings Music and More to Oldenburg House and the Community of Carlton

“Bruce is definitely one of the best artists in education out there today.” ​​
--Randy Jennings, Director of Compas Arts Education

Bruce Henry, Cookin' @ the O. Matt Mobley on bass.
Earlier this year jazz singer Bruce Henry brought his vocal and performance talent to the Carlton Room for a weekend of Cookin' at the O. Next week he will be returning to not only perform, but to offer his talent as an educator. That is, during his November trip to the Northland he will, in addition to performing, because conducting workshops at UMD and high schools in Hermantown, Duluth (Denfeld) and Barnum.

When Bruce was here in June it was quite apparent that he was a polished performer. I didn't know of his 25 years of performance experience, including jazz vocalist, composer, bandleader, live event production. And I was even less aware of his 30 years of teaching experience -- including K-12, college, adults and seniors -- teaching vocal performance as well as workshops on the Evolution of African American Music.

Bruce Henry's curriculum provides insights into the impact of African music on contemporary music.
Growing up in Chicago he began to study the music he was singing and hearing in the churches, both the manner in which it was sung as well as the improvisations. As he studied this music in greater detail he learned that "the music of my ancestors has roots in the musical practices of Africans."

He goes on to say, "Over the last 400 years, the music of these proud people has evolved into many forms like jazz, soul, hip-hop, gospel and military music just to name a few. When you listen to Aretha Franklin, John Coltrane, Mahalia Jackson, Celine Dion, John Legend, Beyoncé, Kanye West, Common, Ray Charles, T. Pain, Mary J. Blige, Stevie Wonder, Nina Simone and Christina Aguilera you experience many elements of African music."

The end result of all this research, a by-product of his passion, is a course which he has titled The Evolution of African American Music (A Comprehensive Journey through Time and Culture).

The Evolution of African American Music from Africa to Hip Hop deepens our understanding of music in relation to history and culture as well as broadening our understanding of the relationships between music, the other arts, and disciplines outside the arts. 

* * * *
Next week Bruce Henry will be at the Oldenburg House in Carlton for Magnolia Salon on Thursday, Nov. 8 and the following two evenings of Cookin' @ the O in the Carlton Room.

Reservations can be found at the Oldenburg House website: https://oacc.us/calendar/

Wednesday, October 3, 2018

Oldenburg House Update for October





October at Oldenburg House

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4
MAGNOLIA SALON | ADAM HERMAN - MUSICIAN AND AUTHOR OF LIMBO
REGISTER HERE

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11
MAGNOLIA SALON | PAT McCOY - HEALTHY COOKING
REGISTER HERE

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12
COOKIN' AT THE O | DEBBIE DUNCAN
TICKETS AND MORE INFO

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13
COOKIN' AT THE O | DEBBIE DUNCAN
TICKETS AND MORE INFO

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18
MAGNOLIA SALON | JOE KLANDER - AKA KINDER CHOMPER
REGISTER HERE

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25
MAGNOLIA SALON | BRIAN SCHAZENBACH - BLACKLIST ARTISAN ALES
REGISTER HERE





DEBBIE IS BACK AT THE O!

Best Female Jazz Vocalist
Best Jazz Vocalist
Best Female Performer
Best Jazz Group
(Minnesota Music Awards)

CELEBRATE THE WEEKEND WITH A BANG!
GREAT MUSIC, FOOD AND FUN! 


DEBBIE DUNCAN - vocals
Ryan Frane - piano
Matt Mobley - bass
Glenn Swanson - drums

Sunday, September 16, 2018

Magnolila Salon Releases Schedule for Upcoming Weeks, Plus Intro to One Week Live @ Beaners

Doop-doo-doo, lookin' out a back window @ the O.
After a brief hiatus the Magnolia Salon is ramping up for the Fall. 'Tis an unseasonable beautiful time of year in the Northland. The Oldenburg House, which hosts the Salon, sits adjacent to Jay Cooke State Park and is certain to be in full presentation mode for the next few weeks. Even if you don't participate in the meetings, I would strongly urge you to come down to walk the trails nearby.

When my kids were growing up this was one of my favorite places to bring them to get out for a spell, hiking, skipping stones in the waters below the Thompson Dam and just hanging out. If you're a bike rider, the Munger Bike Trail runs from West Duluth to Hinkley, and autumn has to be the most beautiful time of the year for the trip.

Here are the presenters and themes for the next four weeks.

September 20
Sarah Bamford Seidelmann, author of The Book of Beasties and Duluth’s very own physician-turned shaman and healer, introduces us to the power of animal totems, inviting us to explore why certain ‘beasties’ show up in our lives and what teachings they are trying to share. Come and enjoy Sarah’s quirky and delightful insights drawn from the wisdom of nature.

* * * *

September 27
Arna Rennan presents Scandinavian Roots Music, singing in the Norwegian folk tradition known as kveding, accompanying herself on ancient instruments, and sharing stories, ballads, hymns and cowcalls. Explore Arna’s love for this musical form that inspired Greig and continues to fascinate present day composers.

* * * *

October 4
Adam Herman, musician and author, discusses his debut novel Limbo and uses his soulful voice to explore traditional American music. Reviewer Sam Neumann says ‘Limbo is legitimately laugh-out-loud funny, a rare quality in fiction. Adam’s prose reads like Dave Barry on mushrooms.’

* * * *

October 11
Pat McCoy, expert cook and Director of Nutrition Services at Cloquet Community Memorial Hospital, shares the latest insights from the art and science of healthy cooking - how to select, purchase, prepare, and enjoy a broad selection of foods. Learn how to reduce your disease risk by improving your dietary choices and practicing mindful eating.

* * * *

TWO MORE ITEMS OF NOTE 
This coming WEDNESDAY is the opening reception for the late John Steffl's exhibition Resonance at the North Shore Bank downtown. The buzz is already building for what promises to be a most exceptional event.

And the Last Week of September will be the Beaner's Central One Week Live (OWL) Volume 17 Recording Festival.

Can't read this? Don't worry. The information is all here below.
The lineup again looks exceptional. I will share more but some of the highlights you can look forward to. For example, Jacob Mahon, who is opening the week on Monday with his Salty Dogs, was winner of the 2017 Duluth Dylan Fest Singer/Songwriter Contest. And he is just the warmup  pitch. Here's your schedule.


Sun 23
Jacob Mahon & the Salty Dogs, One Less Guest and Dan Dresser


Mon 24 Rich Matson and the Northstars
Drew Peterson
Biochemical Characters


Tue 25 Christopher David Hanson   Feeding Leroy
Trash Cats


Wed 26 14th Annual Songwriters Competition hosted by Ryan Lane


Thur 27 Woodblind A Band called Truman Hardaybra


Fri 28 Plucked up String Band
The Fish heads Lady Slipper Ten Crow Moon


Josie Langhorst at Sacred Heart in May.
Sat 29 Holy Hootenanners
The Langertsons
Edward Ojard

A quick note about Edward Ojard. He's the youngest performer to be part of the One Week Live recording project. He was 9 years old when he released his first full-length original album entitled "Butterfly Dances." He's now 10 and releasing his second, I have been told. The youth began composing at age 4, has studied Suzuki techniques and performed with the Ragtime Society. 

That same last evening we'll also get a chance to hear Josie Langhorst and the band she's part of, The Langertsons. Josie's set during the 2018 Dylan Fest Singer/Songwriter Contest absolutely floored me. Had I been a judge she would have taken home the first prize honors. There were four judges there who saw that there was a whole evening of remarkably talented competitors. Of note: Josie is only 12... or at least was 12 in May. I tip my hat to these young ones. 

When I think of the talent in this town--Sparhawk and Low, Gaelynn Lea, Ingeborg von Agassiz, and so many others--it's a wonder Rolling Stone doesn't set up an outpost here. I'm serious.


* * * *


Meantime, life goes on all around you. Get into it.

Wednesday, September 12, 2018

Professor Steve Ostovich Discusses the Value of Philosophy for Business and Life

Gordon Marino (L) waits for next question from  Steve Ostovich.
I first me Steve Ostovich in June at the Magnolia Salon in Carlton. The discussion that evening centered around Gordon Marino's book The Existentialist's Survival Guide: How to Live Authentically in an Inauthentic Age. Dr. Ostovich, philosophy chair at St. Scholastica, had prepared a series of questions for Gordon Marino, much like William F. Buckley's Firing Line, though with somewhat different subject matter. Ostovich played the role of interrogator.

A good bracing discussion ensued and afterwards I reached out to suggest we share an hour over coffee sometime. The discussion generated themes for an interview relating to philosophy and life.

EN: Maybe we can begin with a brief outline of your career path. 

At Perk Place, Kenwood 
Steve Ostovich: After finishing a BA with majors in philosophy and theology at Marquette U. (in Milwaukee), I went to seminary in North Carolina at Duke University. I quickly found that my questions were not shared by my classmates, so I came back to MU, did an MA in biblical studies concentrating on the Hebrew Bible, and looked around for someplace to pursue a PhD. Lots of opportunities, but I ended up staying at Marquette where I could do exactly what I wanted combining philosophy of science and political theology. It was during this time I was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship and did research for a year at the university in Muenster, Germany. When I returned, changes in the department led me to spend two years as an investigator for the Affirmative Action Unit and the City Attorney’s Office in Milwaukee. Eventually I returned to scholarship and college teaching. I came to CSS in 1982, my first full-time appointment, and have never left.

EN: In what ways would the study of philosophy be of value for business leaders? 

SO: The simplest answer may seem facetious, but I don’t mean it to be: “career advancement.” Businesses often look for particular skills in entry-level hires, but when you pay attention to who ends up leading the firm, very often it’s the person who started with a strong liberal education: nothing is more liberating than philosophy. Philosophy develops critical thinking and communication skills, but this is only part of the story. Philosophy fosters leadership ability in working with others—philosophy is based on discussion, thinking deeply and critically and developing visions, and helping the members of a community—business, academic, or other—identify and move in a common direction. This is why leadership demands more than management or administrative skills. People who have pursued philosophy also typically are ethical leaders, not so much because they have studied ethics but because they have learned to value others in the organization or community and the world.

EN: What are the big issues in philosophy today? 

SO: Philosophers are all over the place in the kinds of issues and problems they address; this goes with the territory inasmuch as we’re interested in the principles and ways of thinking that inform whatever we’re doing and in learning to make a good life from our pursuits. But there is a big problem, a common problem, facing philosophy as a community of professionals: inclusiveness. We know better than most how diversity is a requirement for good thinking and living, but the discipline is rooted in a classical, Euro-American centered (that is, white male) tradition. So we, too, are faced with actively pursuing a more diverse philosophical community inclusive of women, people of color, and, in general, voices from other cultures, classes, and parts of the world. And, I’m happy to say, we are making some progress.

EN: How does the study of philosophy help us to become better thinkers? 

SO: First of all, we’re the discipline most centrally concerned with what it means to think; this is why logic is so important to us. We strive to practice good writing and oral communication, skills essential to good thinking. Philosophy also can lead to an awareness of the different ways people put the world together both critically and culturally while providing the tools to evaluate these differences. But all this requires we learn how to listen. Socrates doesn’t seem to have written anything down, but he engaged in discussions in which he hoped to learn from the way truth revealed itself to others as evident in their opinions. To do this, one has to listen closely and openly and respond honestly. This is what we still try to do.

EN: How has Academia changed over the past 40 years? 

SO: We have lost a common understanding of the role of higher education in our society. This is part of a general trend in which private goods defined in economic terms take precedence over the public good, and deeper values all but disappear from public discourse. The consequence for higher education has been a drastic cut in funding and support generally. Fiscal concerns are taking over the academy: boards of trustees and administrators fixate on the bottom line as institutions struggle to survive; faculty and staff are treated like employees and the professoriate becomes a job rather than a vocation; and students become consumers whom we train to be distracted workers rather than active members of a democratic society. It is still possible—indeed, likely—for students to get a first-rate education, but we are turning education into a service industry. We want to be empowered to achieve our wants and desires, but there doesn’t seem to be a place for us to discuss what these should be. So we lose our freedom even as choices proliferate, and while we become good at shopping, we lose the capacity to act. We need to resurrect public discussion of the role of the academy in a healthy society.

EN: Who would you say are your favorite philosophers? Are there any that you especially align with? 

SO: One of the benefits of teaching at a small liberal arts college is I have to teach a wide range of courses in philosophy. This broadens my experience and reading which is good for me as well as for students. Having stated this, I would say my favorite philosopher to read, teach, and discuss is the eighteenth century Scottish empiricist David Hume. What makes him attractive is not so much that I agree with him but his style of thinking and writing, both of which are characterized by humility regarding the possibility of knowing truth. Other favorites (and philosophers about whom I have written in most cases) are: critical theorists like Walter Benjamin, Theodor Adorno, the still vital Jürgen Habermas, and Hannah Arendt, whose collection of essays Thinking without a Banister, I currently am reading; twentieth century French thinkers like Albert Camus, Simone de Beauvoir, and Maurice Merleau-Ponty whose work I am reading with a post-baccalaureate student; and Charles Sanders Peirce and William James, American pragmatists whose concerns are still important and whose style is delightful. Also, my German Doktorvater, the political theologian Johann Baptist Metz. Finally, I still treat the Hebrew Bible as an important philosophical resource for thinking differently.

EN: How about favorite authors? Who are you currently reading? 

SO: Sherman Alexie broadens my world and W. G. Sebald feeds my melancholy. Among essayists, I will always read a piece by Tariq Ali, for even when I don’t understand him or when I disagree with him, I always learn something from him. Among living poets, my colleague and friend Ryan Vine writes lines that speak. My brother and wife now have me reading the mystery novels of Louise Penny. And I just finished a non-fiction history of the Vienna Circle, Exact Thinking in Demented Times, by Karl Sigmund.



Related Links
Fall Schedule for Magnolia Salon (Upcoming Events)
Thursday Evening, Sept. 13: Starry Skies Lake Superior
About Magnolia Salon

Meantime life goes on all around you. Engage it. 

Tuesday, June 19, 2018

Magnolia Salon Winding Down for the Summer with a Send Off Party

Next week the Magnolia Salon is celebrating the end of its first season with a Send Off Party that will feature the Myers Wilkins World Beat Drummers - a much loved group of Duluth 5th and 6th graders who play in the West African Tradition.

The party will include yummy Oldenburgers and picnic food. It will be a chance to visit with the Salon presenters of their first season and meet some of the presenters for the Fall 2018-Spring 2019 Magnolia Salon season.

DETAILS
Please register in advance to give an accurate head count at: www.oacc.us/programs/magnolia-salon Donations for food, beverages and entertainment are suggested.
The Fall season for Magnolia Salon will begin again on Thursday, September 6th at 6:00PM

THIS THURSDAY'S FEATURED PRESENTER WILL BE Gordon Marino, author of The Existentialist’s Survival Guide: How to Live Authentically in an Inauthentic Age. Professor Marino will read from his new book and discuss it with Steve Ostovich, Chair of the Philosophy Department at the College of St. Scholastica. Marino examines the existential perspective that sees our psychological ups and downs as offering enduring lessons about living a life of integrity and can help us discern an inner spark that can inspire spiritual development and personal transformation. Marino is a professor of philosophy and director of the Hong Kierkegaard Library at St. Olaf College, boxing corespondent for The Wall Street Journal and frequent writer for the New York Times. The author will autograph books provided for sale by Zenith Bookstore.
Food and beverages available from Magnolia Cafe.
NO ADMISSION CHARGE
SUGGESTED DONATION $5

MAGNOLIA SALON FALL SCHEDULE
Thursday Evenings 6-9 p.m.
9/6 Adam Herman, author and musician
9/13 Kris Nelson, artist - chairs
9/20 Sarah Seidelmann, author and shaman
9/27 Arna Rennan, Scandinavian roots music
10/4 Ryan Bauers - living your creative life
10/11 Pat McCoy and County Extension nutritionist on One Veg/One Community and Healing Kitchen (invited, not yet confirmed)
10/18 Joe Klander and Kinderchomper (invited, not yet confirmed)
10/25 Blacklist brewing Oldenburg beer (invited, not yet confirmed)
11/1 Hari Shankar,Nidha Bhagsu and Marcus Wise (invited, not yet confirmed)
11/8 Cynthia Lapp and Inner Light Mandalas (invited, not yet confirmed)

* * * *
For details about other events and activities at Oldenburg House,
including Cookin' at the O', visit oacc.us

Oldenburg House is located at 604 Chestnut Avenue - Carlton, MN 55718

Thursday, May 31, 2018

No Excuses for Being Bored: DuSu Film Fest, Magnolia Salon and Pizza Farm Thursdays

BONUS TRACKS

When we first wrote about the Magnolia Salon at Oldenburg House in Carlton, we announced that their Thursday evening gatherings would run from Feb 1 to Memorial Day Weekend. The weekly discussions (with lite food fare and libations) have been so successful that they are continuing on into the summer. Thursday evenings at 6:00 p.m. Their monthly Carlton Room jazz weekends, Cookin' at the O, have been packed out, and the magnetic Bruce Henry (June 8 & 9) will no doubt keep this tradition going. Head to oacc.us for the full summer schedule, which includes movie nights and a bluegrass festival Looking for a wedding venue? I give Oldenburg House an A++ on that score.

* * * *
Jon Sonofmel at last week's Dylan Fest poetry event in the Playhouse.
Word on the street is that a culturally uplifting weekly event has been taking place in Hayward, Wisconsin called Pizza Farm Thursdays. Essentially it consists of spoken word performances at the Farmstead Creamery & Cafe. The word was passed along to me by John Sonofmel, whom many of you will recall from last week's Dylan Fest in which he and Phil Fitzpatrick enacted a sketch in which the late John Bushey returns from the hereafter to pay a visit to Bob Dylan. Sonofmel, with his generous smile and down home demeanor, was also part of the Singer/Songwriter Contest Friday.

The Pizza Farm mission is outlined in this manner: "To build a space for the spoken word in performance (encouraging artists of all ages), as well as facilitate audience participation in the spoken word—both poetry and prose. We’ve been exercising creativity all winter at Farmstead with a Creativity Workshop, now it’s time to put those words into performance and celebrate the writers of the Northwoods!"

Pizza Farm Thursdays will assemble from 6-8 p.m. through the end of August beginning tonight with Frank Zufall and Jen Jenson as featured performer hosts. For more information contact John at 715-699-6023 or by email, sonofmel AT gmail DOT com. Here are your Directions to the Farmstead.

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And finally, Duluth Superior Film Festival is now in high gear. Christa Lawler of the DNT summarizes the films on tap for through the weekend in today's Trib story posted this morning at 5 a.m.


Official Film Festival Website HERE

Feel blocked in? Get out of the cellar and explore a little. 
Life is a Happening. Get into it.

Sunday, May 6, 2018

Local Art Seen: Printmakers Cooper and Rauschenfels Show Their Stuff

Tom Rauschenfels shares a favorite print by Kathy Kolwitz.
It was five years ago when I discovered the breadth of the printmaking scene here in the Northland. Through a show at the North Shore Bank of Commerce I met Cecelia Lieder and learned about the Northern Printmakers Alliance. In our interview Ms. Lieder shared how printmaking evolved from a craft to a fine art form during the 20th century.

On Thursday evening the Magnolia Salon in Carlton hosted a presentation by Tom Rauschenfels, who taught art for 35 years at Hermantown High School and continues to make art and teach since retiring ten years ago. His easygoing temperament and outgoing personality must have made him an enjoyable teacher, for he certainly had a lot of enthusiasm while sharing at the Oldenburg House.

Our lakes are a source of inspiration for both artists.
His talk began with a slideshow in which he showed examples of the various kinds of printmaking through history. Intaglio, which means etching, is a method of metal engraving which is no longer in widespread use because of the chemicals involved. Relief printing can be executed with a variety of different materials and includes woodcut, linocut, Chine-collé and wood engraving. Lithography is another kind of printmaking in which artisans create an image on a polished stone, zinc plate or polyester plate that is then transferred to the paper.  Screen printing is most familiar to us as most of us have worn screen printed T-shirts.

After telling us about the terms and tools, he talked about the advantages and disadvantages of various woods and surfaces. "Pine is wonderful to carve, but it loses its edge as you apply force (when printing). Linoleum, on the other hand, carves easy and keeps its edge."

Tools of the trade.
He showed examples of work by Kathy Kolwitz, who was banned by the Nazis, Emil Nolde, and others including the remarkable wood engravings of M.C. Escher who worked in maple. Mr. Rauschenfels then showed some of his own impressive work.

Using his examples from his own work he presented an in-depth how to clinic of sorts, showing the decisions he made along the way when making six-color images, how he gets the registration correct, how he produces depth and some of the wonderful papers he selects.

ON FRIDAY the Red Mug Coffeehouse in Superior hosted an opening reception for screen printer Joel Cooper whose work is now on display there. Cooper, whose wife Deb Cooper is a former Duluth Poet Laureate, has been a fine arts printer for nearly 30 years. What follows here are photos of Cooper's limited edition serigraphs. A link to Joel and Deb Cooper's website can be found at the end of this blog post.


Related Links
http://thomasrauschenfels.com/
http://cooperartpoetry.com/
About the Magnolia Salon

Meantime, art goes on all around you. Engage it.

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