Feb 22

Computer Arts Collection: Typography | Blog | Computer Arts …

It’s dedicated to typography and type design, and an essential addition to any creative professional’s studio bookshelf – available in WHSmiths in the UK, or online.
Scroll down for a bit more info on what’s in all the key sections this issue, or if you prefer, here’s a special 25-page digital preview of the first two issues.
If you’ve seen enough, you’ll need to subscribe to Computer Arts Collection before 26th February to be sure of receiving issue three (Illustration).

KEY SECTIONS
Spread from Folio section in Computer Arts Collection issue two
FOLIOOur carefully curated selection of type-focused work from around the world, including Bureau Bruneau, Heydays, A Practice for Everyday Life, Ben Jeffery, HORT, Pablo Abad, Stefan Schuster, USEFUL, Andres Requena, Coffee Made Me Do It and Anymade.

Spread from Micro Trends section in issue two of Computer Arts Collection
TREND REPORTStay ahead of the curve with our in-depth guide to the aesthetics that will shape typography, produced exclusively for Computer Arts Collection by experienced trend forecasting agency FranklinTill. The report explores how a reaction against mass production and digitalisation has reawakened an interest in hand-crafted, authentic work, and outlines the seven key aesthetics that should be influencing your studio’s typographic work over the next year.

Spread from Industry Focus in issue two of Computer Arts Collection (complete with fluoro Pantone)
INDUSTRY FOCUSWe ask whether the increasing accessibility of type design is levelling the playing field, or dumbing down one of the last great crafts [illustrated throughout by Craig & Karl] – including opinion and analysis from three leading industry figures: Jimy Chambers at P22 on how digital type can vary hugely in quality, Stephen Coles at Typographica on the role type can play on mobile devices, and finally Fontsmith’s Phil Garnham on why it’s an excellent time to be a type designer.

Introduction to issue two’s Studio Project, by Sawdust Spread from issue two’s Studio Project, by Sawdust – create a display typeface
STUDIO PROJECTIn the second in our series of guest-edited special sections, Sawdust reveals the entire design process behind a stylised display font, created exclusively for CA Collection and made available for free to all readers. From initial concept through to building the font in Fontographer – it’s all here.

Spread from Process section in issue two of Computer Arts Collection
PROCESSDeep behind the scenes of the past year’s best type-focused projects, by the world’s leading studios – including Fontsmith for Mahou-San Miguel, Dalton Maag for Nokia, Frost* for Typographic magazine, Bold Monday for NBCUniversal, Julia for Elephant magazine and Justin Thomas Kay for The New York Times.

Icon interview from issue two: 24 hours with Jonathan Barnbrook Spread from Jonathan Barnbrook interview in issue two of Computer Arts Collection
ICON INTERVIEWWe chat to Jonathan Barnbrook, the deceptively soft-spoken creator of such provocatively-named fonts as Exocet, Bastard and Sarcastic.

Essential fonts from The Netherlands, Germany and Switzerland, from issue two’s Global Design
GLOBAL DESIGN30 of the greatest typefaces created in The Netherlands, Germany and Switzerland – part of a 10-page feature exploring the enduring type legacy of these bordering nations.

Spread from issue two’s Talent Directory section
TALENT DIRECTORY
Whether you’re looking to commission, collaborate with or just get in touch with any of the world-class talent featured within the issue, all the essential info is here.

You can find the Typography issue in WHSmiths in the UK, or buy a copy online.
Issue three, dedicated to Illustration, will go on sale in early April 2012 in the UK – but you’ll need to subscribe to Computer Arts Collection before 26th February to make sure you receive it, otherwise your subscription will start from issue four (Branding).
If you’re keen to complete your collection but are yet to pick up the Graphic Design issue then you’re in luck, as it’s also still on sale in WHSmiths in the UK, Barnes & Noble and Books-A-Million in the USA, Chapters in Canada, and other retailers worldwide.

Read more here: Computer Arts Collection: Typography | Blog | Computer Arts …

Feb 22

Macy's Arts Sampler Returns Saturday | Family Friendly Cincinnati

It’s baaaaaaack!
It’s time for the second installment of the Macy’s Arts Sampler presented by ArtsWave. This Saturday you’ll once again have the chance to enjoy FREE arts related events and activities across the Tri-state  for families with children of all ages.
Macy’s Arts Sampler celebrates all things creative —theater, dance, museums, music, and festivals — happening in large and small ways throughout our region. Highlights for this weekend include:
Kennedy Heights Arts Center — Art, Dance and CUlture of Haiti – make masks, learn Haitian dance and culture
Sharonville Fine Arts Center – Bi-Okoto Cultural Institute: traditional African drumming and dance; Scenes from “The Odd Couple with Cincinnati Black Theatre Company; and Traditional Chinesedance with Bing Yang
Thunder-Sky Inc – Small Potatoes: gallery show and art making.
University of Cincinnati – Clermont – “The Ugly Duckling”; Art treasure hunt, facepainting and more
Visionaries and Voices – Create family tree tiles with local artists
Kenton County Library (Erlanger) – KSO’s Newport Ragtime Band
A complete schedule is available on www.theartswave.org….. or….  you can check out their new smartphone app and have the schedule at your fingertips.
Macy’s Arts Sampler Smartphone App
This year ArtsWave is making it even easier for families to find events to attend with the launch of an Macy’s Arts Sampler smartphone app!  The free event-based app is available on all platforms and provides an easy way to find, choose, and plan for festival events that match your schedule, neighborhood, and household interests.  You can search by category – theatre, dance, etc; part of town; venue; and even by age range! You can learn more about the app, and download it, here.
Editor’s Note: While we try our best to be accurate, sometimes event details/information can change. We highly recommend our readers visit the website of the business or event we’ve written about before taking any action.

Related posts:
ArtsWave Presents Free Theatre, Dance, Music, and Museum Events for All
ArtsWave – Six Sampler Weekends of art, dance, music and more – all FREE!
The Fitton Center for Creative Arts – Family Friendly Arts
Community Arts Centers Day – Free Arts Fun For All

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Feb 22

Wellington.scoop.co.nz » The 2012 New Zealand International Arts …

Press Release – New Zealand International Arts Festival

Prepare for 24 days of extraordinary arts experiences when the 2012 New Zealand International Arts Festival opens in Wellington this Friday.
Around 900 artists from around the globe will descend on Wellington and fill its theatres – and streets – for New Zealand’s largest multi-arts festival. The 2012 programme spans everything from salsa to Shakespeare, from home-grown opera to fairy tales and features artists from as far afield as the Sahara and as close to home as Newtown.
“The 2012 Festival programme has been greeted with huge enthusiasm,’’ says Festival Executive Chair Kerry Prendergast. ‘’Wellington audiences have embraced the Festival and we’re also attracting increasing numbers from all over the country. Whether it’s the high-energy physical theatre of the National Theatre of Scotland’s Beautiful Burnout, the charm and wit of Circus Ronaldo’s vintage Big Top or the magical Fijian love story, Masi, there’s something for everyone. With nine world premieres, the new Town Hall Gigs and a feast of Shakespeare, there is plenty to choose from.’’

The opening weekend kicks off with the free First Contact 2012 opening night party on the waterfront: the Festival ‘’fan zone’’. Artist Michel Tuffery’s vibrant projected artworks will transform the facade of Te Papa into a moving canvas from 8.30pm, with music and dance from the Whitireia Performing Arts School, The Nomad, Horomona Horo – and more. From 6pm, French acrobats Les Philébulistes will perform Arcane, jaw-dropping feats atop their giant wheels at Waitangi Park.
The city’s theatres will pulse to the irresistible Brazilian rhythms of Grupo Corpo with Parabelo/Onqotô ; the devilish fairy tale of Kneehigh Theatre’s The Wild Bride; the monumental Stravinsky double-bill, Oedipus Rex and Symphony of Psalms and Pan Pan Theatre’s unique take on Hamlet, The Rehearsal, Playing the Dane. The TelstraClear Festival Club, on Odlin’s Plaza, opens with the Barons of Tang’s ‘’gypsy death core’’. Other highlights of opening weekend include Taki Rua’s epic Michael James Manaia, and the New Zealand String Quartet begins its 25th anniversary celebrations with Beethoven! The Age of Enlightenment at St Mary of the Angels church. Tickets for most shows start at 48.
For those who have never been to a Festival event before, head down to the First Contact centre, in front of Te Papa throughout the Festival, for a chance to win discounted tickets.
ENDS
Content Sourced from scoop.co.nzOriginal url

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Feb 22

City takes in $25000 for earning arts funding | NorthBayNipissing.com

NORTH BAY – The City’s arts and culture organizations have an opportunity to raise money and receive a grant as well, thanks to an announcement on Feb. 7 of a Business for the Arts award of $25,000.
“This is a real shot in the arm for our arts and culture groups, a confidence booster for our community and an affirmation of the significance of our North Bay Culture Plan,” said Mayor Al McDonald.
The money is part of the artsVest $250,000 program funded by the provincial government, the Ontario Trillium Foundation and Canadian Heritage and delivered by Business for the Arts. North Bay is one of only five cities in Ontario to be awarded funding. Additional awards went to Elliot Lake, Midland, Ottawa and Windsor.
“The fact that the City had a plan for cultural development was critical to its success,” said Lauren Goldman, Business for the Arts program manager. “All of the applications were juried and I know the selection committee was very excited about the energy that is being generated in North Bay’s arts community and the cultural diversity of its groups and organizations.”
Business for the Arts representatives expect to be in the City in the spring to participate in a celebration event that will also focus on bringing arts and culture groups together with local businesses for purposes of networking.
artsVest’s mandate is to spark business investment in arts and culture, bolster municipal cultural plans and help develop the creative economy. The money awarded to North Bay will be doled out to local organizations based on their ability to find matching or greater money through fundraising efforts.
“Each not-for-profit group can bring us an application for between $500 and $5,000, of the city’s $25,000 allotment,” said Goldman. Groups will be chosen for acceptance into the program based on the strength of both their funding proposal and their fundraising proposal
“Once chosen, the groups will have about six months to raise the matching funding in order to qualify to receive the requested amount,” Goldman explains.
To help the local organizations meet this criteria, Goldman and her Business for the Arts team will be holding an extensive sponsorship training workshop as part of the spring program introduction.
“This workshop is an integral part of the artsVest program and will guide participants step-by-step through securing and nurturing long-term, mutually beneficial partnerships with local businesses,” Goldman said.
Sharon Kitlar, manager of the City’s recreation and leisure services, and one of the people responsible for writing the grant application, said bringing arts and business together “is a really good match, and one that should benefit both partners.”
She also says the sponsorship training component of the artsVest program is an investment in skill development that people will take with them into other volunteer organizations outside the arts and culture sector.  “Most community groups are looking for ways to raise money,” she said. “Training like this will build capacity across many organizations.”
Details the program will be released as they are finalized.
Story by Laurel J. Campbell     lcampbell@metrolandnorthmedia.com

Read more here: City takes in $25000 for earning arts funding | NorthBayNipissing.com

Feb 22

The Next Generation of Cultural Advocates: Community Arts Cultural …

The Community Arts University Without Walls is now launching its Puerto Rico-based COMMUNITY ARTS CULTURAL ARTS ADVOCACY CERTIFICATE PROGRAM SUMMER 2012. This intensive, 16 credit summer course will run from June 4th to 29th, 2012; hosted by Centro de Estudios Avanzados de Puerto Rico y el Caribe (CEA), currently accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools. The CAUWW certificate program will provide those interested in working within the community arts field courses taught by renowned experts culturally grounded in the arts, public policy, and best practices that have made significant contributions to diverse communities.

The course of study will focus on the legacy of the civil rights, cultural equity, and social and economic justice movements, and their continuing impact. The courses will include a historical analysis of the challenges that motivated the emergence of the field, and the role of founding artists and cultural workers in establishing community-based programs and organizations. Students will meet and work with policymakers, scholars, community arts advocates, artists, and cultural workers, to collectively work and develop strategies for contributing to their communities and the broader society, to assure equity at all levels of society. Central to the process is the commitment to embrace and honor traditions, cultural histories and evolving transformations that inform the aesthetic and artistic expressions of the diversity of communities of color and poor white culturally grounded communities.  CAUWW has, at its fundamental theoretical approach and praxis, values that underlie the global spectrum of cultural experiences that are the core of achieving cultural equity.

The program accepts applications from four student situations:
Matriculating undergraduatesMatriculating graduate studentsStudents who have recently completed a formal course of studyNon-traditional students, adult learners, community activists without formal credentials.
Key to the integration is a project-based approach whereby students can either bring with them a project that they have been involved in or join in a community-based project underway in Puerto Rico. These projects will allow students to exchange knowledge and analysis of their circumstances from a variety of perspectives, in effect creating a basis for equitable co-learning despite different levels of formal education.

Projects should be developed in consultation with a faculty advisor or community-based mentor.

APPLICATIONThe application process consists of an Online Student Profile submission, to be found at www.cauww.org/apply and you will need to send CEA the required documents in order to begin your registration process. Please visit www.cauww.org for deadlines and requirements.

CERTIFICATE PROGRAM TIMELINEStudent Profile submission deadline: March 30 2012Application submission deadline: March 30, 2012Review by selection committee: Approx. March 30, 2012–April 15, 2012Notification of Acceptance: Approx. April 15, 2012

LocationCentro de Estudios Avanzados de Puerto Rico y el Caribe#52 Cristo StreetOld San Juan, Puerto Rico

Some of the program’s collaborators, advisors, and faculty include Dr. Marta Moreno Vega, President of the Caribbean Cultural Center African Diaspora Institute; Dr. Randy Martin, Chair NYU Art & Public Policy Department; Dr. Marielba Torres, cultural advocate and professor of the University of Puerto Rico; and renowned Puerto Rican artists, such as Antonio Martorell, Pedro Adorno and Edgardo Larregui.

“This project will make it possible to channel the energies and talents of artists into constructive directions and make it possible for their creativity to further the development and uplift of the communities from which they originate.”?—Pedro A. Noguera, Peter L. Agnew Professor of Education Steinhardt School of Culture, Education and Development, NYU

For inquiries and to apply, please contact:www.cauww.orgregina.cccadi@gmail.comT 212.307.7420 Ext. 3011Facebook

See more here: The Next Generation of Cultural Advocates: Community Arts Cultural …

Feb 22

BC Infrastructure investment means new Saanich Arts Centre | TranBC

February 21, 2012

Creating safer highways is a large part of what we do, but being involved in developing infrastructure gives us an opportunity to build for future success. In other words – roads help connect communities, but infrastructure gives us a real destination. Some of our recent infrastructure projects include the Port Mann Highway 1 Project (PMH1) and improvements to playing fields in Metro Vancouver. That list also now includes a new place to explore your creative side.
If you live in the Saanich area, you may have seen the new Arts Centre at Cedar Hill Recreation Complex is open for public use. The Arts Centre, a project funded by the District of Saanich, the Province of British Columbia (through the Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure) and the Government of Canada, hopes to foster creative spirit in the area.
With almost 11,000 square feet of new space created for the arts, opening up and expressing your inner artist is easier than ever before. The new centre features a community art gallery, as well as two fine art studios, a pottery studio and a new multi-purpose room (primarily for children’s programs), as well as a new playground. The centre is also focussed on making accessibility a priority in order to make art an option for everyone, regardless of physical limitations.

Each space has been thoughtfully designed with flexible spaces to help support a wide variety of community art programs and events. When the centre was in the design phase, a number of community engagement sessions were held to give the public a chance to discuss what sort of features they were looking for. In fact, project architects met with local artists to understand their vision and paint a picture of the community’s needs.  With this kind of teamwork, we hope to see some wonderful new art on display in the centre soon.
Supporting infrastructure development is something we take great pride in doing. We know that as communities grow, their needs shift and change. An open space for artistic use was identified as a clear need in Saanich.  By recognizing and supporting the needs of the community, everyone involved has contributed to the creation of this masterpiece. Bravo!
Tags: BC, BCinfrastructure, Cedar Hill Recreation Complex, Modern Art, Saanich, SaanichArtsCentre

Follow this link: BC Infrastructure investment means new Saanich Arts Centre | TranBC

Feb 22

“Next Generation” Show Abruptly Suspended by DCRA, Quickly …

David Huffman’s “Collard Green,” a work from the show “Next Generation”
Call it a Presidents Day miracle. “Next Generation,” a pop-up exhibit mounted new D.C. gallery Contemporary Wing, experienced a minor hiccup this weekend that nearly forced the show to close. But NIMBYism didn’t bring the exhibit down.
According to Contemporary Wing gallerist Lauren Gentile, an inspector from the D.C. Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs was called out to the pop-up exhibit at 1250 9th St. NW after receiving a complaint that the space lacked bathroom facilities. (Who made the complaint? Gentile says she knows, but won’t identify the claimant.) Though Gentile claims that she had the proper permits—business license, special-events insurance, and certificate of occupancy—she says that the temporary C of O was no longer on file with the DCRA. “I got closed, and a $4000 fine, and fined $4000 everyday I was open,” Gentile writes by email. “So I closed the show down.”
But after sending personal emails to the D.C. Council, Mayor Vincent Gray, and DCRA making her case, she says she received an email on Sunday from Mayor Gray and DCRA director Nicholas Majett. In the space of a couple hours on Sunday, she says, they were able to fix the problem, waiving her fines and reissuing her C of O.

How did Gentile get the personal treatment? She appealed to them directly, she says. “The reason they fixed it so fast is because I was able to get it to their personal email addresses,” she says. “I think most of the time these guys don’t even know about these situations, the inquiries get caught up in all the steps you have to take, but once they know, they’re rational and helpful people.”
The show, City Paper reviewed here, is open through March 10—barring any other incidents.

The rest is here: “Next Generation” Show Abruptly Suspended by DCRA, Quickly …

Feb 22

Studying at Royal Academy of Fine Arts KASK & Royal Conservatory …

The master’s programme in the visual arts, audio-visual arts and music is a laboratory of work and ideas where instructors stimulate rather than direct their students. Your own artistic process is at the centre.

The varied range of artistic disciplines in School of Arts Ghent, makes for reciprocally inspiring and relatively open training programmes. As transdisciplinarity in the arts becomes ever more important, there is room for cross-fertilization and each student can focus on personal accents in his training programme. In addition to this, in the master seminars you will be introduced to some of the numerous theoretical and artistic research projects our lecturers are engaged in. The dissertation stimulates you to deliberately examine and formulate themes important to your work as an artist or a designer.

The campuses of KASK and Royal Conservatory are at the epicentre of Ghent, the cultural capital of Flanders.  Ghent is very receptive to the international art scene en especially welcoming to students. In addition to being embedded in this artistically rich environment, the school itself is a cultural actor, organizing exhibitions, concerts, festivals, weekly lectures and daily film screenings…, and co-producing the international art magazine A Prior.

Open House: 22 April 2012

Our master’s programs include:Master of Visual Arts (1 year – 60 ECTS)-Fine Arts (Painting, Drawing, Sculpture, Installation Art, Media Art)-Textiles Design-Fashion-Photography-Graphic Design (Graphic Design, Graphic Arts, Web& Interactive Design, Illustration)-Multimedia Design

Master of Audiovisual Arts (1 year – 60 ECTS)-Animation Film-Film 

Master of Music (2 years – 120 ECTS)-Performing Music: Classical Music-Performing Music: Jazz/Pop-Composing Music: Music Production-Composing Music: Composition 

Advanced Master of Music Soloist Contemporary Music (2 years – 120 ECTS)

Info & application formsmore info & application form – Master in Visual and Audiovisual Arts heremore info & application form – Master studies in Music heremore info & application form – Advanced Master in Music here 

ContactIf you have any questions about your application for the master program or if you are interested in joining a student exchange program with School of Arts Ghent, feel free to contact us:

schoolofarts@hogent.be 

T 0032 9 2670172F 0032 9 2660891

Addresswww.schoolofarts.beSchool of Arts GhentRoyal Academy of Fine Arts – Royal ConservatoryJozefKluyskensstraat 29000 GhentBelgium 

About uswww.schoolofarts.bewww.aprior.orgwww.kaskcinema.bekioskgallery.be

Read this article: Studying at Royal Academy of Fine Arts KASK & Royal Conservatory …

Feb 22

Black Arts Festival Aims To Inspire | Arts | The Harvard Crimson

This year, the Kuumba Singers of Harvard College brought the 14th Annual Walter J. Leonard Black Arts Festival into the greater community with their theme “Living for More Than Just Me.” With funk and compassion, black artists at Harvard put the focus on minority youth in the Boston community, and a large portion of the proceeds from the event were donated to sustaining arts programs for Boston youth. “We’ve seen the impact that [art] has had on our lives, and we know that it can be a positive outlet,” said Amarachi I. Erondu ’15, the financial chair of Kuumba’s Black Arts Festival board. This year, the festival provided a space for young black artists to perform and share their talent.
“In this music that you’re creating, there is no limitation, and you can do whatever you want to do,” said Ikenna Acholonu, a mentor to youth in the Boston area, during the panel discussion at the festival, which ran from Thursday to Saturday. Acholonu reminded students that sometimes society limits the potential of students of color. “You have a lot of stuff stacked against you regardless if you try hard,” he said. He was one of four people who were asked by the Black Arts Festival board to speak about the importance of arts education for minority students. The others were Anyenda Inyagwa, a graduate of Tufts University who now works in various youth programs in Boston; Farai Williams, the artistic director of Project HIP-HOP; and Noni D. Carter ’13, a junior at Harvard whose book “Good Fortune” was published two years ago.
Over three days there were five events, all focused on the same theme. The festival kicked off on Thursday with “Sing it, Sister,” a free event at the Queen’s Head Pub featuring black female vocalists, and ended with a performance on Saturday at the Cabot House Underground Theater featuring black youth from BlackCAST’s Teen Empowerment program, performances from Harvard students from Speak Out Loud, and other monologues by minority students at Harvard. All of the events had a common theme: The arts are an important outlet through which minority students can express themselves freely. “The arts are carriers of cultural memory, and we need to be a part of creating what that is,” Farai Williams said in the panel discussion.
The other speakers present certainly had similar missions in mind. Carter spoke about the impact her book has had on African American students, both in her hometown in Georgia and in Boston public schools, where she has been asked to speak many times. She said that there is a lack of black mentors in our history textbooks, and that part of her mission in educating students through her book was to share her great-great-great grandmother’s slave journey with those around her whom she found to be ashamed of their African American slave history.
The main act was a benefit showcase on Friday at the Roxbury Community College Mainstage Theater. “We’re hoping to fill 500 seats,” said Ada D. Lin ’14, another member of the festival’s board. Lin is from the Boston area, and she benefitted from arts programs in the Boston public schools growing up. These programs lack funding, Lin said, a problem that the showcase aimed to remedy. Kuumba donated most of the proceeds to the Tobin Community Center in Roxbury, an organization that provides after-school arts programs for Boston youth. “The more people you have to look up to, the brighter your future will be,” Lin said.
As such, this year’s Black Arts Festival sought to provide new mentors for Black youth. On Friday, a group from Kuumba ran a workshop for 50 eighth-grade students to talk about Black music and Black History Month in a Roxbury public school. Harvard students shared their experiences and offered themselves as examples of how to express oneself through art. “Growing up I never had black mentors,” Acholonu said. “The first black mentors I received were in college.”
The Black Arts Festival hopes to establish a pattern of giving back to the community. “It’s our responsibility to continue inspiring and uplifting,” Carter said. By collaborating with other black organizations on campus, the Black Arts Festival highlighted the necessity of role models for youth and the importance of keeping art in public schools. Kuumba hopes to continue this mission by providing Boston youth with a continued outlet for expression and will keep this mission in mind when brainstorming themes for next year’s Black Arts Festival.
—Staff writer Virginia R. Marshall can be reached at virginiarosemarshall@college.harvard.edu.

See the article here: Black Arts Festival Aims To Inspire | Arts | The Harvard Crimson

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Feb 22

Sandie's Arts Blog: Theater Fun For Everyone! « CBS Dallas / Fort …

GROSSOLOGY – a fun new exhibit about all things that make us go “ewwww!!” is opening this weekend at the Museum of Nature and Science but make sure you don’t miss Planet Shark – Predator or Prey? You can sink your teeth into an amazing out-of-water shark experience perfect for all ages! This 12,000-square-foot exhibition guides visitors through the murky myths and fascinating facts that have surrounded sharks for centuries. See an 18-foot Great White specimen model, mega-sized jaws, rare fossils, teeth, interactive displays, Jaws movie memorabilia, plus a kid’s area with crafts and more. The impressive exhibit continues at the Museum of Nature and Science thru May 27.

It’s always a good time to see a little Tennessee Williams and we are fortunate to have the great talents at the Contemporary Theater of Dallas bringing us Night of the Iguana thru March 4. Theater critic Lawson Tate says “Brilliant productions of American masterpieces don’t come along very often, so you’d best high tail it to Contemporary Theatre of Dallas’ Night of the Iguana”. High praise indeed! Williams’ last inarguably important play takes place in a dingy Mexican resort where the owner, Maxine (played by Cindee Mayfield) is pursuing the houseboys in the wake of her husband’s death. Trouble shows up and the dance is on. Not to be missed!
Ben Stevenson’s Dracula will be performed this weekend in all its gory glory! Before Twilight. Before True Blood. There was the one villain renowned the world over. Dracula! You don’t want to miss the power and drama of Ben Stevenson’s internationally acclaimed production of Dracula presented by Texas Ballet Theater at Bass Performance Hall. This is the only weekend for the intense and beautiful performances.
It’s also the last weekend for The Secret Life of Girls at Dallas Children’s Theater. Local playwright Linda Doughtery has written an honest, unflinching, and timely look at the destructive world of girl bullying. This dynamic play is sweeping the country and has been performed internationally as well. A dramatic family event with an insightful dialogue following every performance.
And lastly – come out to cheer for Bring it On! Cheerleading gets a musical theater turn with a little drama thrown in and will have you wishing you had brought pom poms with you! Bring it On opens the 72nd season of our Dallas Summer Musicals and continues through Sunday.
See you next week…center stage!

See the original post here: Sandie's Arts Blog: Theater Fun For Everyone! « CBS Dallas / Fort …