Steppin’ Out: Jan. 9, 2014
Published 3:00 pm Saturday, January 10, 2015
Editor’s Note: Every Friday a list of local and area upcoming entertainment and cultural events will be published on the Steppin’ Out page in the Times-Recorder. To submit information for this listing, please send to Steppin’ Out, c/o Americus Times-Recorder, P.O. Box 1247, Americus GA 31709, or fax to 928-6344 or e-mail to beth.alston@gaflnews.com
Americus
Lake Blackshear Regional Library
“Welcome to Camp Sparrow” is the 25th annual play sponsored by the Friends of the Public Library.
Performances are Jan. 31, doors open at 7:30 p.m., curtain at 8:15 p.m. Admission $20 includes heavy hors d’oeuvres and wine; and Feb. 1, doors open at 2:30 p.m., curtain is at 3 p.m. Admission of $5 includes homemade refreshments.
Call 924-8091 or drop by the library at 307 E. Lamar St. for more information.
The Rylander Theatre
• Blind Boys of Alabama
8 p.m. March 14
Put a spring in your step with five-time Grammy Award winning gospel group, Blind Boys of Alabama. After first singing together in 1944, the group has spanned 70 years of music and numerous albums. Renowned for their musicianship, Blind Boys have collaborated with popular artists such as Ben Harper, Randy Travis, Bonnie Raitt and Lou Reed. Their transition from small town gospel group to high-profile mainstream act is evident with television appearances on 60 Minutes, Late Night with David Letterman, The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, Late Night with Conan O’Brien, The Today Show, Austin City Limits, and more.
www.blindboys.com
Montezuma
Museum Hours
The Macon County Historical Museum is open from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday and by appointment. Call the Montezuma Downtown Development Authority at 478-472-4777 for more information.
Atlanta
The High Museum of Art
1280 Peachtree St. N.E.
• Bangles to Benches: Contemporary Jewelry and Design
Ongoing
The High broadens visitors ideas of jewelry as wearable sculpture with this exhibition, which focuses on the scale, range and creative dexterity found in many contemporary designers repertoires today. Innovative contemporary jewelry is paired with other design objects – from chairs to climbing walls – created by key designers in the High’s permanent collection. Ranging from mass produced to one-of-a-kind works and from hand-crafted to digitally fabricated pieces, the works in the exhibition include many of the High’s recent acquisitions by notable designers such as Marcel Wanders, Zaha Hadid and the Campana Brothers.
• Molly Hatch’s Physic Garden
Ongoing
This installation, created by contemporary ceramicist Molly Hatch, is a two-story tall, hand-painted “plate painting” commissioned by the Museum that reinterprets works from its renowned decorative arts and design collection. Physic Garden is installed in the High’s Margaretta Taylor Lobby and is comprised of 456 plates featuring an original design inspired by two ca. 1755 Chelsea Factory plates from the Museum’s Frances and Emory Cocke Collection of English Ceramics, which totals more than 300 works. The historic source plates depict realistic flora and fauna in the Chelsea “Hans Sloane” style of the early 1750s.
• A Painter’s Profile: The High Celebrates Romare Bearden
Jan. 10-May 31
With this exhibition, the High honors one of the 20th century’s most influential artists and the important recent acquisition of Bearden’s only known self portrait, “Profile/Part II, The Thirties: Artist with Painting and Model” (1981). This focus exhibition delves into the layered references of the stunning self portrait – from the Italian Renaissance to Matisse, African Art to the rhythms of jazz, from Bearden’s reminiscences of his Southern roots to the powerful expression of his spirituality and experiences as a black man in America. In addition, the exhibition will feature the eight other Bearden works in the High’s collection.
• A Painter’s Profile: The High Celebrates Romare Bearden
Jan. 10-May 31
With this exhibition, the High honors one of the 20th century’s most influential artists and the important recent acquisition of Bearden’s only known self portrait, “Profile/Part II, The Thirties: Artist with Painting and Model” (1981). This focus exhibition delves into the layered references of the stunning self portrait – from the Italian Renaissance to Matisse, African Art to the rhythms of jazz, from Bearden’s reminiscences of his Southern roots to the powerful expression of his spirituality and experiences as a black man in America. In addition, the exhibition will feature the eight other Bearden works in the High’s collection.
• Helen Levitt: In the Street
Jan. 10-May 31, 2015
Showcasing the honest, humorous and inventive works of prolific documentary photographer Helen Levitt, this exhibition will feature 30 works by Levitt from the collections of the High and the Telfair Museums (Savannah, Ga.). One of the best-known street photographers of the 20th century, Levitt (American, 1913-2009) documented the everyday dramas of New York City. Working from the 1930s through the 1990s, Levitt roamed the Lower East Side, Spanish Harlem and other urban neighborhoods, capturing the story of city life. As part of the exhibition, the High will acquire 11 prints by Levitt, which will strengthen the Museum’s significant holdings of 20th-century documentary and street photography.
• José Parlá: Segmented Realities
Through May 24
This installation features a group of 10 sculptural paintings by José Parlá that suggest a collection of cultural fragments salvaged from urban sites that have experienced social and cultural upheaval and transformation. Like segments of the Berlin wall, Parlá’s sculptures bear witness to waves of history that seem to be inscribed on their surfaces, told in an expressive and poetic language of the street.
• Wifredo Lam: Imagining New Worlds
Feb. 14-May 24
The High presents a retrospective of work by Wifredo Lam, a preeminent artist of Latin American origin and one of the Surrealist movement’s most influential figures. Wifredo Lam: Imagining New Worlds will feature more than 40 paintings and a selection of drawings, prints and ephemera by the internationally renowned, Cuban-born artist. Many of Lam’s masterworks – drawn from public and private collections across Europe, Latin America and the U.S. – will be presented together for the first time in the exhibition, which offers a rare overview and reexamination of the artist’s career.
• Imagining New Worlds: José Parlá and Fahamu Pecou
Feb.14-May 24
In conjunction with Wifredo Lam: Imagining New Worlds, the High presents two solo exhibitions by leading contemporary American artists José Parlá and Fahamu Pecou. Presented in galleries adjacent to the Lam retrospective, Brooklyn-based Parlá and Atlanta-based Pecou’s exhibitions will respond to the work of Lam, providing contemporary perspectives on his life and career. The artists will examine Lam’s artistic legacy through works that explore their own personal reflections on the artist’s involvement with the Surrealist and Négritude movements, his fusion of African-inspired imagery with that of the natural world, and the influence of the Santeria religion on Lam’s artistic approach.
• Gordon Parks: Segregation Story
Through June 7
The High will present rarely seen photographs by trailblazing African-American artist and filmmaker Gordon Parks in this exhibition, presented in collaboration with The Gordon Parks Foundation. The exhibition features more than 40 of Parks’ color prints – most on view for the first time in over half a century – created for a powerful and influential 1950s Life magazine article documenting the lives of an extended African-American family in segregated Alabama. The series represents one of Parks’ earliest social documentary studies on color film. Coinciding with the exhibition, the High will acquire 12 of the color prints featured in the exhibition, which will augment the Museum’s extensive collection of Civil Rights era photography, one of the most significant in the nation.
• Leonard Freed: Black in White America
Through June 7
Alongside the works on view in Gordon Parks: Segregation Story, the High presents selected prints from celebrated photographer Leonard Freed’s multi-year documentary project and 1968 book “Black in White America.” From 1963 through 1966, Freed traveled across the U.S. capturing images of the Civil Rights era, from rural scenes in the South to daily life on New York City streets and political protests in Washington, D.C. This exhibition features 38 black-and-white images by Freed that complement the rarely seen color prints from Parks’ 1956 Life magazine photo essay.
• Wynn Bullock: Revelations
Through Jan. 18
The High will become the first major art museum in nearly 40 years to mount a retrospective of work by photographer Wynn Bullock (1902-1975). This exhibition is organized by the High in collaboration with the Center for Creative Photography. One of the most significant photographers of the mid-20th century, Bullock worked in the American modernist tradition alongside Edward Weston, Harry Callahan and Ansel Adams. More than 100 black-and-white and color works by Bullock will come together for the exhibition, which will coincide with a major gift to the High from the Bullock Estate of a large collection of vintage photographs, making the High one of the most significant repositories of Bullock’s work in the country.
• The Forty Part Motet by Janet Cardiff
Through Jan. 18
From the collection of The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), sound artist Janet Cardiff’s critically acclaimed installation “The Forty Part Motet” will travel to the High. Described as “achingly beautiful” (The New Yorker) and “transcendent” (The New York Times), Cardiff’s “The Forty Part Motet” is a reworking of a 40-part choral piece by Tudor composer Thomas Tallis (ca. 1505-1585). The installation features the voices of 59 singers (adults and children) performing Tallis’ “Spem in Alium Nunquam Habui” (1556), which translates to “In No Other is My Hope” and is perhaps Tallis’ most famous composition. Each voice was recorded separately, and all voices are played back in unison for the final piece via 40 individual loudspeakers on tripods (one speaker for each choral part). The audio component is a 14-minute loop – 11 minutes of singing and three minutes of intermission.
• American Encounters: Anglo-American Portraiture in an Era of Revolution
Through Jan.18
The High, Musée du Louvre, Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art and the Terra Foundation for American Art will present the third installation in their four-year collaboration focusing on the history of American art. American Encounters: Anglo-American Portraiture in an Era of Revolution provides a close look at five portraits that demonstrate how portraiture style evolved in the late 18th and early 19th centuries as American and European painters were influenced by each other. The installation’s five works have never been displayed together previously.
• African Art: Building the Collection
Through May 31
In celebration of its newly expanded Fred and Rita Richman Gallery for African Art, the High is showcasing nearly 40 recent acquisitions of art from Africa to enter the permanent collection. African Art: Building the Collection marks a significant expansion of the African Art galleries, a more than 60 percent increase in the dedicated space for art from the continent. The expansion is the result of a generous pledge from Fred and Rita Richman, longtime patrons of African art at the High and for whom the gallery was named in 2005. Featuring works from ancient to contemporary times and from disparate regions throughout the continent, all of which were acquired over the last nine years, the exhibition provides important insights into African cultural heritage from the past to the present day.
Night Life:
Americus
American Legion Post 558
Ga. Highway 30 West
Open 6-10 p.m. Monday-Thursday
7 p.m. Tuesday is Bingo Night
Wednesday is Games Night
Open 6 p.m.-2:30 a.m. weekends
Friday is Grown Folks Night Out, featuring dance party, karaoke, music video and disco lights show from 9 p.m.-2:30 a.m. Presented by Monster Screen Projections
Saturday is Oldies Goldies Night
Sunday is Members/Guests Night
Astro’s “The Dance Clubb”
153 Sunset Park Road
Entertainment for 21 and over
11 p.m.-until
Thursday: College and Ladies Night
Friday: Midnight Special
Saturday: Dress to Impress Live
I.D. required
Valid college student ID exempt
Floyd’s Pub at BEST WESTERN PLUS Windsor Hotel
125 W. Lamar St.
Ladies Night: Tuesdays beginning at 5 p.m. Ladies only enjoy specials on
drinks.
Live Music:
Fridays beginning at 10 p.m. No cover, must be 21 and older with valid ID.
For more information, call 924-1555. Look for us on Facebook!
G.W.F. Phillips Lodge
The Lodge is open every Friday night with oldies from the ‘70s and ‘80s with Master TJ and Bronco Bill at the Elks Lodge. No teens allowed.
Pat’s Place
1526 S. Lee St. 924-0033
11 a.m.-11 p.m. Monday-Saturday
Quality Inn Lounge (Hillside Cafe)
1205 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.
Vickie Craig deejays every Friday and Saturday nights with karaoke from 9 p.m.-midnight and dance music until 2 a.m. Low drink prices and specials
Cordele
Cypress Grill at Lake Blackshear Resort and Golf Club
2459-H U.S. Highway 280 East
www.cypress-grill.com
Karaoke — Thursday nights
Live music — Friday and Saturday nights