Monday, June 3, 2013
A sad announcement
As we celebrate the one year anniversary of VIA Noke hitting the stands we must share some unfortunate news with our fans and readers. We have had a wonderful year and four wonderful issues, but we are sad to announce that our Marginal Arts issue (March - Issue 4) will be the last. Opportunities have presented themselves to us in southern California and we have chosen to pursue graphic design in that area.
Our website and previous issues will remain available to read online at www.vianoke.com.
We thank everyone so much for your continued support of our beloved magazine! We have been so fortunate to meet so many amazing artists and others involved the in local art world who have made this experience spectacular!
Sincerely, Emily & Chelsea
Monday, April 1, 2013
Marginal Arts Parade & Carnival
by Emily Sibitzky
There was much to see on Saturday during the Marginal Arts Parade and Carnival! From giant clown shoes to Dr. Brown's Delorean, the costumes and floats presented covered a wide variety of themes. Here are a few photos from the event. Hop over to our Facebook page to see more! (And we may even add more to that album in the coming days.)
There was much to see on Saturday during the Marginal Arts Parade and Carnival! From giant clown shoes to Dr. Brown's Delorean, the costumes and floats presented covered a wide variety of themes. Here are a few photos from the event. Hop over to our Facebook page to see more! (And we may even add more to that album in the coming days.)
Thursday, March 28, 2013
Getting started at the Marginal Arts Festival
by Emily Sibitzky
Today marked the first official day of the Marginal Arts Festival, although Lycee events (workshops, debates, etc,) have been going on all week. Chelsea and I ventured downtown and were happy to run into Brian Counihan, who was garnering attention for the festival by parading through Market Square wearing a huge papier-mâché sugar skull.
Our first official MAF event was Circus Pony, a circus-inspired collection of works curated by local artist Susan Jamison for the Star City Creator's Society. This colorful and whimsical show, held at Liminal Alternative Artspace (302 Campbell Ave SE) includes works by local and national artists with a special opening night performance by Tif Robinette. The show will hang until April 12, so be sure to stop by and see it while you can!
Unfortunately I attended with no memory card in my camera, but I was able to snap a couple of shots with my phone!
Today marked the first official day of the Marginal Arts Festival, although Lycee events (workshops, debates, etc,) have been going on all week. Chelsea and I ventured downtown and were happy to run into Brian Counihan, who was garnering attention for the festival by parading through Market Square wearing a huge papier-mâché sugar skull.
Our first official MAF event was Circus Pony, a circus-inspired collection of works curated by local artist Susan Jamison for the Star City Creator's Society. This colorful and whimsical show, held at Liminal Alternative Artspace (302 Campbell Ave SE) includes works by local and national artists with a special opening night performance by Tif Robinette. The show will hang until April 12, so be sure to stop by and see it while you can!
Unfortunately I attended with no memory card in my camera, but I was able to snap a couple of shots with my phone!
Tif Robinette performing as the "Circus Pony."
Artist Ben Osmann and artist/curator Susan Jamison dressed up for the circus-themed occasion.
PS, Follow us on Instagram @vianoke to keep up with the rest of our MAF adventures.
Monday, March 18, 2013
Cycles~
by Amanda Agricola
Saturday, March 23rd, at 5:00 pm, experience a variety of performance works which express elements of feminine identity, and probe cultural constructions. Eleven local, regional and global artists will be showcased at 115 Salem Avenue (across the street from the Taubman).
If you are not a local Roanoke person, or you are out of town, try to watch the internet streaming of the show on c-y-c-l-e-s.net, where you can also find more information on the artists and their work.
Photo credit: Sarah Ingel - still from "A Study in Deific.iency"
Saturday, March 23rd, at 5:00 pm, experience a variety of performance works which express elements of feminine identity, and probe cultural constructions. Eleven local, regional and global artists will be showcased at 115 Salem Avenue (across the street from the Taubman).
If you are not a local Roanoke person, or you are out of town, try to watch the internet streaming of the show on c-y-c-l-e-s.net, where you can also find more information on the artists and their work.
Photo credit: Sarah Ingel - still from "A Study in Deific.iency"
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Community is what Community High Does
by Celine Anderson
A group of teachers at Community High School founded the Marginal Arts Festival to develop a place for art and the avant-garde in Roanoke. For the past six years, the festival has attracted artists of all different types (local and international) to create an inclusive and intellectually stimulating festival that encourages everyone to be a participant and invites them to explore the art opportunities around them.
Marginal Arts Festival’s goal of creating artistic opportunities also reflects the curriculum emphasis at Community High School. This year, I am doing an internship with the festival. This internship involves note taking at committee meetings, running the Marginal Arts blog, observing curatorial projects, and leading the Marginal Arts Festival Student Committee.
The festival provides Community High School students with opportunities that nearly all of my peers take advantage of. Last year students did everything from performing with the Community High School band at the Absurdist Street Carnival [event] to attending a master class offered by Todd Ristau and Samantha Macher. The MAF Student Committee is a school club that meets once a week to brainstorm ideas for the festival and discuss the upcoming events.
Vice-president of the Committee and high school junior, Swade Best, is currently leading the committee in its final goal of hosting an event for the festival. Best is not the only Community High School student producing a festival event of their own. Frank Finch is initiating and curating an exhibit involving seven hats selected from an open call in the window’s La-De-Da Clothing Boutique in downtown Roanoke. The hats will each represent one of the nine circles of hell in Dante’s Inferno: Limbo, Lust, Gluttony, Greed, Anger, Heresy, Violence, Fraud and Treachery. The hats will also be featured in the Marginal Arts Festival Parade on Saturday March 30.
Visiting international performance artists, such as the performance duo, Zierle and Carter, and Rebecca Weeks (who travelled from England specifically for this festival last year) have come in to Community High School courses for question and answer sessions and presentations. This opportunity to connect with artists in a classroom environment was one of the things that inspired student enthusiasm for the festival. Last year, my classmates and I, under the mentorship of Rebecca Weeks from Cornwall, did several performance art pieces around downtown Roanoke. My group’s piece involved handing out blank sheets of paper to passersby and asking them to come to a “very important event” that was apparently and invisibly being advertised on the paper. This year’s Marginal Arts Festival will include a whole week of artist-lead workshops, lectures and master-classes in preparation for the three-day festival. I will be leading on the role of the audience in performance art.
I believe I speak for all of the students at Community High School when I say that the Marginal Arts Festival is a wonderful opportunity for us and the citizens of Roanoke to see and participate in art that challenges us intellectually and lets us sample the wider world.
This article was originally published in the March 2013 issue of VIA Noke Magazine.
A group of teachers at Community High School founded the Marginal Arts Festival to develop a place for art and the avant-garde in Roanoke. For the past six years, the festival has attracted artists of all different types (local and international) to create an inclusive and intellectually stimulating festival that encourages everyone to be a participant and invites them to explore the art opportunities around them.
Marginal Arts Festival’s goal of creating artistic opportunities also reflects the curriculum emphasis at Community High School. This year, I am doing an internship with the festival. This internship involves note taking at committee meetings, running the Marginal Arts blog, observing curatorial projects, and leading the Marginal Arts Festival Student Committee.
The festival provides Community High School students with opportunities that nearly all of my peers take advantage of. Last year students did everything from performing with the Community High School band at the Absurdist Street Carnival [event] to attending a master class offered by Todd Ristau and Samantha Macher. The MAF Student Committee is a school club that meets once a week to brainstorm ideas for the festival and discuss the upcoming events.
Vice-president of the Committee and high school junior, Swade Best, is currently leading the committee in its final goal of hosting an event for the festival. Best is not the only Community High School student producing a festival event of their own. Frank Finch is initiating and curating an exhibit involving seven hats selected from an open call in the window’s La-De-Da Clothing Boutique in downtown Roanoke. The hats will each represent one of the nine circles of hell in Dante’s Inferno: Limbo, Lust, Gluttony, Greed, Anger, Heresy, Violence, Fraud and Treachery. The hats will also be featured in the Marginal Arts Festival Parade on Saturday March 30.
Visiting international performance artists, such as the performance duo, Zierle and Carter, and Rebecca Weeks (who travelled from England specifically for this festival last year) have come in to Community High School courses for question and answer sessions and presentations. This opportunity to connect with artists in a classroom environment was one of the things that inspired student enthusiasm for the festival. Last year, my classmates and I, under the mentorship of Rebecca Weeks from Cornwall, did several performance art pieces around downtown Roanoke. My group’s piece involved handing out blank sheets of paper to passersby and asking them to come to a “very important event” that was apparently and invisibly being advertised on the paper. This year’s Marginal Arts Festival will include a whole week of artist-lead workshops, lectures and master-classes in preparation for the three-day festival. I will be leading on the role of the audience in performance art.
I believe I speak for all of the students at Community High School when I say that the Marginal Arts Festival is a wonderful opportunity for us and the citizens of Roanoke to see and participate in art that challenges us intellectually and lets us sample the wider world.
This article was originally published in the March 2013 issue of VIA Noke Magazine.
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