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monstersonscreen · 3 months ago
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The makeup effects for John Landis' prologue segment and George Miller's 'Nightmare at 20'000 Feet' segment of Twilight Zone: The Movie were handled by Craig Reardon.
For the prologue, Reardon applied a makeup on Dan Aykroyd, inspired both by his unused head prop on 'Poltergeist', as well as Lon Chaney's makeups in London After Midnight and Phantom of the Opera.
For 'Nightmare', to realize the gremlin suit Reardon worked with Michael McCracken, with some assistance from Michael Shawn McCracken @michaelshawnmccracken and Reardon's own parents (his mother applied the quills on the gremlin suit)
Larry Cedar wore the gremlin suit, suspended by a harness. There was cable controlled mechanisms inside the gremlin's head, which was modeled after a red-faced monkey at George Miller's suggestion.
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aaronpullinteeth · 4 years ago
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Just a short few GIFs of people who have influenced me in my life.
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aion-rsa · 4 years ago
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Boy Meets World’s Slasher Episode Was Scarier Than it Had Any Right To Be
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Blood-curdling screams. Taunting phone calls from a psycho killer. Creepy, ominous music with lyrics like “Here’s a knife. Here’s a gun. There’ll be fun for everyone. Death is on the menu tonight!” Elements of a forgotten ‘90s slasher classic? Nope. Just some highlights from the most memorable episode of ABC’s family sitcom Boy Meets World.
With the launch of Disney+ and ample time to get nostalgic and revisit old movies and TV shows due to the pandemic, many older millennials are diving back into Boy Meets World, which ran for seven seasons from 1993 through 2000 as a staple of ABC’s TGIF lineup. The show centered on Philadelphia teenager Cory Matthews (Ben Savage) navigating life with his best friend Shawn Hunter (Rider Strong), his love interest Topanga Lawrence (Danielle Fishel), and brother Eric (Will Friedle), while perpetually receiving life lessons from longtime teacher and eventual principal Mr. Feeny (William Daniels). 
Boy Meets World had no shortage of standout moments and episodes, like WWE wrestler Vader appearing as the father of a misunderstood school bully, a young Linda Cardellini being the girl who almost destroyed the Cory and Topanga love story for good, and Peter Tork (who briefly played Topanga’s father), Micky Dolenz, and Davy Jones staging an impromptu Monkees reunion. And who could forget when Ben Savage’s famous brother Fred guest starred as a creepy college professor and was shoved through a glass door? 
But perhaps no other Boy Meets World episode made a bigger impact to impressionable young minds than the fifth season highlight “And Then There Was Shawn,” a format-breaking homage to the popular slasher films of the moment, like Scream and I Know What You Did Last Summer (the latter of which hit theaters just four months earlier). Serving as a metaphor for the fear and uncertainty Shawn feels over the recent breakup of Cory and Topanga, the episode is a mini-horror movie that operates in dream logic and features shocking cast deaths, zeitgeisty jokes, and a big ‘90s teen idol cameo. Many young fans were genuinely frightened by the scares conjured up in the episode, while older fans loved the campy, winking references and the change of pace storytelling.
“And Then There Was Shawn” writer Jeff Menell was typically happy to do what was asked of him on the series, but he jumped at the chance to write a horror-influenced episode. “I’m a diehard movie fan. I have been my entire life. But as a writer on set, I just did whatever I was told,” Menell said in a phone interview with Den of Geek. “I never went after anything. But I begged to write this one because I just knew I could do it.”
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The episode finds the high school-aged cast members serving detention with Mr. Feeny after a fight, springing from Cory and Topanga’s recent breakup, disrupts the class. Things quickly take a turn when the kids see a message in blood written on the chalkboard that reads “No One Gets Out Alive!” and hear a discomforting jingle with menacing lyrics playing over the high school’s PA system. Initially, the kids believe that Mr. Feeny is playing a prank on them, but things take a turn for the serious — and scary – when classmate Kenny is murdered in the dark by the masked killer wielding a pencil (prompting a very timely “You Killed Kenny!” reference). None other than Mr. Feeny himself bites the dust shortly thereafter via scissors to the back.
“You know, usually you go off for two weeks and you go write this draft and you bring it back, and then the room rewrites it. That always was the process. I wrote this one like in two days, and I had to pretend that it took longer because if you’ve written the script in two days, they assume it sucks, or that you didn’t really care or make an effort,” Menell says.
When Menell brought the initial draft to the writer’s room, however, there were minimal changes to his script. The episode’s director, Jeff McCracken, was impressed. 
“Jeff (Menell) went out and wrote his episode and when it came in it was perfect. It was an absolutely perfect flow of the script. He just nailed it.”
Emulating classic slasher film elements, McCracken had to approach the filming of “And Then There Was Shawn” differently than a typical episode. 
“It was so much fun,” McCracken says. “Because it had all these special sequences, we really had to shoot it like a film. We rehearsed for two days, then shot it for three, and then we showed it before a live audience. The film style is generally single style or two cameras, but I shot a lot of it with three to four cameras so that we wouldn’t have to do multiple retakes. You couldn’t have done the whole thing in front of a live audience because it would have taken too much time to set everything up and run through a show with an audience sitting there.”
The pencil kill is the most memorable moment from the episode, but McCracken nor Menell can take credit for it. “I remember the one gag that was not in the script, the one gag that Michael Jacobs (creator/executive producer) came up with, which was genius, was the pencil dynamic,” McCracken recalls. After classmate Kenny is shown impaled through the head with a pencil, his body slumps down the wall, leaving a lead pencil mark behind him. Cory quips, “We’ll always remember he was this tall.”
Kenny and Feeny’s deaths are bloodless, but they leave a mighty impression for a network family-friendly series. Both writer and director knew that they’d have to tread lightly if they were going to be faithful to the slasher genre (“I’m surprised they let us have Feeny with (scissors) in his back, to tell you the truth,” Menell says) but they both made a concerted effort to surround the kills with humor. 
“We had to make it funny,” McCracken says.” I mean, you put (scissors) in someone’s back, it can be very disturbing for a young audience. You can’t traumatize them. We did it with some sense of humor and it wasn’t so graphic.”
Part of the humor was derived from the very specific references made in the episode. Like Scream standout character Randy, Shawn makes meta references to the rules of the horror genre, telling his friends that virgins are the only ones who are safe. Eric says, “I’m dead,” Jack says, “I’m dead,” and Shawn says, “I’ll get as sick as you can without dying.” 
This slightly scandalous joke wasn’t anything new for the series, but the violent nature of the episode led to “And Then There Was Shawn” receiving the show’s first TV-PG-V rating. According to Menell, Michael Jacobs had a way of pushing the boundaries with network executives. “He got away with a lot more stuff than most people because he could really browbeat some network executives at times to get what he wanted.”
One major addition to the cast for “And Then There Was Shawn” probably helped Jacobs catch the network in the right mood. Jennifer Love Hewitt, coming off Party of Five and at the height of her scream queen powers, guest stars as new John Adams High student Jennifer Love Fefferman. Hewitt at the time was dating Will Friedle and it’s believed their relationship inspired her cameo. 
“We maybe asked him to ask her, because obviously she was in I Know What You Did Last Summer, so having her there just adds horror film credibility to it,” Menell says. “She was great. She was such a great sport, and it was fun having her on.”
McCracken concurs: “It was such a pleasure. It was one of those things that you don’t know how a major star walking in on your set, how they’re going to be, what their demands are going to be, what their personality is going to be like, what their disposition for the script’s going to be like, and she just came in full guns blazing and just had a blast and that made everything just wonderful. She was game for anything.”
One thing that Hewitt was game for was a big makeout scene with Friedle’s Eric, that may or may not have been improvised. “I don’t think we wrote that in, I think they just wanted to do it and we let it,” Menell laughs.
Amongst all of the horror homage fun, the episode ends with Shawn removing the killer’s mask to find himself starring back, having gone through this whole slasher bit just to get his friends back together. It’s quite the philosophical ending for a show primarily aimed at tweens and teens. 
“When it did get serious with Shawn at the end, it was more poignant than it was scary and it was also a great reveal that it was him,” McCracken says. “It was metaphorical in the sense that that component of Shawn is in us all and it’s always lurking and it’s always out there. And so, be vigilant.”
The Jeffs knew that they had a special episode on their hands with “And Then There Was Shawn,” but who could have guessed the episode would have this sort of longevity 22 years later?
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“We got a few letters from people that were so scared, couldn’t believe we would kill Feeny. And we got some people that were upset,” Menell says. “But we had no idea until years later when the internet came on how popular that episode became. We did some crossovers, some time flashbacks, and some other really cool episodes, but this was a show that was nothing like any other episode we had aired or would air. It was probably the most fun … it’s certainly the most scary.”
The post Boy Meets World’s Slasher Episode Was Scarier Than it Had Any Right To Be appeared first on Den of Geek.
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goalhofer · 6 years ago
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Junichi Tazawa (2017)
Edinson Volquez (2017)
Vance Worley (2017)
Brad Ziegler (2017)
A.J. Ellis (2017)
Brian Anderson (2017)
Mike Aviles (2017)
Christian Colon (2017)
Steve Lombardozzi (2017)
Tyler Moore (2017)
J.T. Riddle (2017)
NPB All-Stars
 Hideki Irabu (1994-95)
Koichiro Yoshinaga (1994)
Hiroo Ishii (1994)
Junichi Fukura (1994)
Hiromi Matsunaga (1994)
Tetsuro Hirose (1994)
Kevin Reimer (1994)
Makoto Sasaki (1994-95, 1997)
Ralph Bryant (1994)
Kimiyasu Kudoh (1994-95)
Tsutomu Itoh (1994-95, 1997-98)
Kazuhiro Kiyohara (1994)
Hatsuhiko Tsuji (1994-95)
Koji Akiyama (1994, 1996, 1999)
Makoto Shimada (1994)
Satoshi Nakajima (1995)
Julio Franco (1995, 1998)
Hiroki Kokubo (1995, 1997)
Kiyoshi Hatsushiba (1995)
Yukio Tanaka (1995-96)
Darrin Jackson (1995)
Troy Neel (1995-96)
Toshifumi Baba (1995)
So Taguchi (1995-97, 2000)
John Hillman (1996)
Koichiro Yoshinaga (1996)
Atsushi Kataoka (1996-98)
Koichi Oshima (1996-97, 2000)
Norihiro Nakamura (1996, 1999-2000)
Arihito Muramatsu (1996)
Yukihiro Ishizaki (1996)
Makoto Takada (1996)
Fumiya Nishiguchi (1997-98)
Phil Clark (1997-99)
Ken Suzuki (1997)
Kazuo Matsui (1997-2000)
Karl Rhodes (1997, 1999)
Domingo Martinez (1997)
Taisei Takagi (1997-98)
Tatsuya Ide (1997)
Naoyuki Omura (1998)
Hiroshi Shibahara (1998, 2000)
Nigel Wilson (1998, 2000)
Makoto Kaneko (1998-99)
Susumu Otomo (1998-99)
Daisuke Matsuzaka (1999-2000)
Kenji Johjima (1999-2000)
Michihiro Ogasawara (1999-2000)
Yoshitomo Tani (1999)
Makoto Kosaka (1999-2000)
Nobuhiko Matsunaka (2000)
Sherman Obando (2000)
MLB All-Stars
Alex Rodriguez (2001-08, 2010)
Manny Ramirez (2001-08)
Bret Boone (2001, 2003)
Juan Gonzalez (2001)
John Olerud (2001)
Edgar Martinez (2001, 2003)
Cal Ripken; Jr. (2001)
Ivan Rodriguez (2001, 2004-07)
Roger Clemens (2001, 2003)
Magglio Ordonez (2001-03, 2006-07)
Derek Jeter (2001-02, 2004, 2006-10)
Johnny Damon (2002, 2005)
Jim Thome (2002, 2006)
Eric Chavez (2002)
Darin Erstad (2002)
Derek Lowe (2002)
Jorge Posada (2002-03, 2007)
Jason Giambi (2002-04)
Alfonso Soriano (2002-05)
Shea Hillenbrand (2002, 2005)
Torii Hunter (2002, 2007, 2010)
Mark Buehrle (2002, 2005-06, 2009)
Roy Halladay (2002-03, 2005-06, 2008-09)
Pedro Martinez (2002, 2005)
Freddy Garcia (2002)
Eddie Guardado (2002-03)
Mariano Rivera (2002, 2004-06, 2008-09)
Sasaki Kazuhiro (2002)
Ugueth Urbina (2002)
Barry Zito (2002-03, 2006)
A.J. Pierzynski (2002, 2006)
Paul Konerko (2002, 2005-06, 2010)
Mike Sweeney (2002-03, 2005)
Tony Batista (2002)
Robin Ventura (2002)
Nomar Garciaparra (2002-03)
Miguel Tejada (2002)
Omar Vizquel (2002)
Garret Anderson (2002-03, 2005)
Robert Fick (2002)
Dwight Wynn (2002)
Esteban Loaiza (2003-04)
Carlos Delgado (2003)
Troy Glaus (2003, 2006)
Hideki Matsui (2003-04)
Lance Carter (2003)
Brendan Donnelly (2003)
Keith Foulke (2003)
Shigetoshi Hasegawa (2003)
Robert MacDougal (2003)
Jamie Moyer (2003-04)
Mark Mulder (2003)
C.C. Sabathia; Jr. (2003-04, 2007)
Ramon Hernandez (2003)
Jason Varitek (2003, 2005, 2008)
Hank Blalock (2003-04)
Melvin Mora (2003, 2005)
Vernon Wells III (2003, 2006, 2010)
Carl Everett III (2003)
Dmitri Young (2003)
Vladimir Guerrero (2004-07, 2010)
Francisco Cordero (2004)
Tom Gordon (2004)
Tim Hudson (2004)
Ted Lilly III (2004)
Joe Nathan (2004-05, 2008-09)
Francisco Rodriguez (2004, 2007-08)
Kenny Rogers (2004-05)
Curt Schilling (2004)
Javier Vazquez (2004)
Jake Westbrook (2004)
Victor Martinez (2004, 2007, 2009)
Ken Harvey (2004)
David Ortiz (2004-08, 2010)
Ronnie Belliard (2004)
Carlos Guillen (2004, 2007-08)
Miguel Tejada (2004-06)
Michael Young (2004-09)
Carl Crawford (2004, 2007, 2009-10)
Matt Lawton; Jr. (2004)
Gary Sheffield (2004-05)
Mark Teixeira (2005, 2009)
Brian Roberts (2005, 2007)
Danys Baez (2005)
Matt Clement (2005)
Bartolo Colon (2005)
Justin Duchscherer (2005, 2008)
Jon Garland (2005)
B.J. Ryan (2005-06)
Johan Santana (2005-07)
Bob Wickman (2005)
Scott Podsednik (2005)
Mark Loretta (2006)
Jose Contreras (2006)
Bobby Jenks (2006)
Scott Kazmir (2006, 2008)
Francisco Liriano (2006)
Jonathan Papelbon (2006-09)
Mark Redman (2006)
Joe Mauer (2006, 2008-10)
Robinson Cano (2006, 2010)
Jose Lopez (2006)
Jermaine Dye (2006)
Gary Matthews; Jr. (2006)
Alex Rios (2006-07)
Grady Sizemore (2006-08)
Placido Polanco (2006)
Josh Beckett (2007)
Dan Haren (2007)
Bobby Jenks (2007)
John Lackey (2007)
Gil Meche (2007)
Hideki Okajima (2007)
J.J. Putz (2007)
Justin Verlander (2007, 2010)
Justin Morneau (2007-09)
Mike Lowell (2007)
Kevin Youkilis (2008-09)
Dustin Pedroia (2008-09)
Josh Hamilton (2008-10)
Cliff Lee (2008, 2010)
Ervin Santana (2008)
Joe Saunders (2008)
George Sherrill (2008)
Joakim Soria (2008, 2010)
Dioner Navarro (2008)
Ian Kinsler (2008, 2010)
Joe Crede (2008)
Evan Longoria (2008-10)
J.D. Drew (2008)
Carlos Quentin (2008)
Milton Bradley; Jr. (2008)
Jason Bay (2009)
Zack Greinke (2009)
Felix Hernandez (2009)
Edwin Jackson (2009)
Aaron Hill (2009)
Ben Zobrist (2009)
Brandon Inge (2009)
Jason Bartlett (2009)
Curtis Granderson; Jr. (2009)
Adam Jones (2009)
Andrew Bailey (2010)
Clay Buchholz (2010)
Trevor Cahill (2010)
Roberto Hernandez (2010)
Neftali Feliz (2010)
Phil Hughes (2010)
Jon Lester (2010)
Andy Pettitte (2010)
David Price (2010)
Rafael Soriano (2010)
Matt Thornton (2010)
Jose Valverde (2010)
John Buck (2010)
Miguel Cabrera (2010)
Ty Wigginton (2010)
Adrian Beltre (2010)
Elvis Andrus (2010)
Jose Bautista (2010)
Nick Swisher (2010)
Team Japan
Shimizu Naoyuki (2006)
Fujita Soichi (2006)
Tomoyuki Kubota (2006)
Daisuke Matsuzaka (2006, 2009)
Koji Uehara (2006)
Yabuta Yasuhiko (2006)
Wada Tsuyoshi (2006)
Fujikawa Kyuji (2006, 2009)
Watanabe Shunsuke (2006, 2009)
Otsuka Akinori (2006)
Kobayashi Hiroyuki (2006)
Sugiuchi Toshiya (2006, 2009)
Hirotoshi Ishii (2006)
Mahara Takahiro (2006, 2009)
Satozaki Tomoya (2006)
Motonobu Tanishige (2006)
Aikawa Ryoji (2006)
Iwamura Akinori (2006, 2009)
Michihiro Ogasawara (2006, 2009)
Matsunaka Nobuhiko (2006)
Nishioka Tsuyoshi (2006)
Imae Toshiaki (2006)
Miyamoto Shin’ya (2006)
Takahiro Arai (2006)
Kawasaki Munenori (2006, 2009)
Wada Kazuhiro (2006)
Hitoshi Tamura (2006)
Tatsuhiko Kinjoh (2006)
Fukudome Kosuke (2006, 2009)
Aoki Norichika (2006, 2009)
Yu Darvish (2009)
Iwakuma Hisashi (2009)
Minoru Iwata (2009)
Komatsu Satoshi (2009)
Masahiro Tanaka (2009)
Utsumi Tetsuya (2009)
Wakui Hideaki (2009)
Yamaguchi Tetsuya (2009)
Abe Shinnosuke (2009)
Yoshiyuki Ishihara (2009)
Johjima Kenji (2009)
Kataoka Yasuyuki (2009)
Kurihara Kenta (2009)
Murata Shuichi (2009)
Nakajima Hiroyuki (2009)
Atsunori Inaba (2009)
Kamei Yoshiyuki (2009)
Seiichi Uchikawa (2009)
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3thurs · 6 years ago
Text
Third Thursday May 16
The next Third Thursday — the monthly evening of art in Athens, Georgia — is scheduled for Thursday, May 16,2019, from 6 to 9 p.m. All exhibitions are free and open to the public. 
This Third Thursday will offer three events in addition to the exhibitions. One of the venues will be closed.
Georgia Museum of Art, University of Georgia
Yoga in the Galleries, 6 p.m. — Join us for a yoga class surrounded by works of art in the galleries. Led by instructors from Five Points Yoga, this program is free and open to both beginner and experienced yogis. Space is limited and available on a first-come, first-served basis; tickets are available at the front desk starting at 5:15 p.m. Yoga mats provided.
Film: “Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead”, 7 p.m. — Part of the "Love and Shakespeare" film series. Rosencrantz (Gary Oldman) and Guildenstern (Tim Roth) ramble obliviously through Elsinore Castle and its environs as the events of William Shakespeare's "Hamlet" unfold around them. While visiting their old friend Hamlet (Iain Glen), the pair engage in an ongoing philosophical debate about free will versus predestination, each trying to prove absurd positions through misbegotten experiments. Meanwhile, the clueless friends attempt to make sense of the peculiar goings-on in the castle. 1991, PG, 118 min.
On view:
“Sculptured Adornment: The Jewelry of David Hayes” — A focused exhibition of approximately 40 of the modernist artist’s brooches and pendants.
“Master of Fine Arts Degree Candidates Exhibition” — The annual exit show for the graduating master of fine arts students at the Lamar Dodd School of Art. Graduating candidates are able to exhibit their work in various areas of study including painting and drawing, fabric design, photo and video, printmaking, sculpture/fibers, jewelry/metals and ceramics. This year’s students showing at the Georgia Museum of Art include: Dimelza Broche, Catherine Chang, Sydney Daniel, Sanaz Haghani, Yiran Liu, Esther Lee Mech, Guadalupe Navarro, Jennifer Niswonger. MFA students Justin Barker, Amanda Britton, Shawn Campbell, Catherine Clements, Lindy Erkes, Yusheng Fang, Matthew Flores, William Major, Kimberly McWhorter, Lauren O’Connor-Korb, Paula Runyon and Taylor Shaw will show at the Deupree Building in downtown Athens at 458 E. Clayton Street.
“Life, Love and Marriage Chests in Renaissance Italy” — The exhibition comprises around 45 Renaissance works of art related to its theme and representative of life and social customs in Renaissance Italy.
“Stony the Road We Trod” — This exhibition features works by African American artists in the museum’s permanent collection and by this year’s Larry D. and Brenda A. Thompson Award Winner, Leo Twiggs.
“Out of the Darkness: Light in the Depths of the Sea of Cortez” — Artist Rebecca Rutstein uses UGA marine sciences professor Samantha Joye's research to create an interactive sculptural installation and several large paintings.
Permanent Collection — Thirteen galleries house a large portion of the Georgia Museum of Art's collection, including many of the 100 American paintings that made up Alfred Heber Holbrook's founding gift.
Lamar Dodd School of Art Galleries, University of Georgia
Closed between academic sessions.
Lyndon House Arts Center
“Collections From Our Community: Mike Landers’ Cookie Jars” — A delightful collection of head-shaped cookie jars featuring beloved cartoon characters- Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Fred Flintstone, Barney Rubble and more.
“Plastic Bodies” — Works by Abigale West
Hotel Indigo, Athens
“You Are Here” — Works by Amanda Jane Burk, Eli Saragoussi, Chasity Williams and Tae Lee
“Taylor Shaw” — A new installation in the GlassCube, featuring neon fantastic mini golf Athens mural fun. 
ATHICA (Athens Institute for Contemporary Art)
“POM POM: Material / Waste / Video / Sculpture / Weaving” — Artist-in-ATHICA Katlin Shae’s POM POM is a multi-sensory, inter-active experience that investigates the possibility of material and questions the role of waste, specifically the single use item in modern society. The artist documented the lifespan of plastic pom-poms harvested at Sanford Stadium in Athens, Georgia, and through the labor of weaving in collaboration with gallery visitors, will transform the pom pom material into a large communal tapestry during a 4 week residency period.  
Ciné 
Opening reception, 6 – 8 p.m., for “Alexis M. Spina: Obsolescence”
The Classic Center
“Checkerboard Checkered Floor” — An exhibition exploring pattern play is on view in Classic Gallery I. Featuring the boxy abstractions of Cal Clements, the black-and-white patterned interiors of Hanna Friedlander, Jess Machacek’s ombré assemblages, Jared Brown’s bouncy, poppy paintings and Courtney McCracken’s marbled geometric combination collages.
“See Dan Paint” — A solo exhibition of Moby Dicks and large paintings by Dan Smith in Classic Gallery II.
--
Third Thursday was established in 2012 to encourage attendance at Athens’ established art venues through coordination and co-promotion by the organizing entities. Rack cards promoting Third Thursday and visual art in Athens are available upon request. This schedule and venue locations and regular hours can be found at 3thurs.org.
Contact: Michael Lachowski, Georgia Museum of Art, [email protected].
0 notes
3thurs · 6 years ago
Text
Third Thursday events and exhibitions for February 21
The next Third Thursday — the monthly evening of art in Athens, Georgia — is scheduled for Thursday, February 21, from 6 to 9 p.m. All exhibitions are free and open to the public.
This Third Thursday will offer four events in addition to the exhibitions. None of the venues will be closed.
Georgia Museum of Art, University of Georgia
Yoga in the Galleries, 6 p.m. — Join us for a yoga class surrounded by works of art in the galleries. Led by instructors from Five Points Yoga, this program is free and open to both beginner and experienced yogis. Space is limited and available on a first-come, first-served basis; tickets are available at the front desk starting at 5:15 p.m. Yoga mats provided.
Film: “Finding Christa,” 7 p.m. — In 1961, artist Camille Billops made a painful decision: to put her 4-year-old daughter, Christa, up for adoption. In “Finding Christa,” Billops is both filmmaker and subject as she tells the story of their separation and ultimate reconciliation. The documentary is an original and personal film that challenges societal biases about adoption and offers new insight on mother-daughter relationships. Presented in conjunction with the exhibition “Stony the Road We Trod.” 1991, NR, 55 min.
On view:
“The Reluctant Autocrat: Tsar Nicholas II” — This exhibition focuses on the reigns of the last two Romanov rulers: Alexander III (1881–1894) and his son and successor Nicholas II (1894–1917).
“Out of the Darkness” — Artist Rebecca Rutstein uses UGA marine sciences professor Samantha Joye's research to create an interactive sculptural installation and several large paintings.
“Stony the Road We Trod” — This exhibition features works by African American artists in the museum’s permanent collection and by this year’s Larry D. and Brenda A. Thompson Award Winner, Leo Twiggs.
Permanent Collection — Thirteen galleries house a large portion of the Georgia Museum of Art's collection, including many of the 100 American paintings that made up Alfred Heber Holbrook's founding gift.
Lamar Dodd School of Art Galleries, University of Georgia
“Pigeonhole” — New York-based artists Priyanka Dasgupta and Chad Marshall present a new video and sculptural installation inspired by the lost history of Bengali sailors.
“Congeal” — Featuring work by Dodd students exploring the comfort and discomfort of living in a body.
“Purgatory” — Dodd MFA candidate Yana Bondar examines patterns of self-sacrifice in feminine archetypes in her porcelain works.
“Biannual Undergraduate Curated Exhibition” — Juried by Jamie Steele, director of Atlanta gallery Camayhus.
Katya Tepper — A new site-specific wall installation will be on display by the Athens-based artist.
Lyndon House Arts Center
“Artist’s talks: Antoine Stewart and Wyler Hecht,” 6 – 8 p.m. — Stewart discusses his abstract paintings in his Lounge Gallery solo exhibition, “Citrine Visions,” and Wyler Hecht talks about her iron skillets in the Collections from Our Community case.
ATHICA: Athens Institute for Contemporary Art
Opening Reception: “Ringer: Contemporary Portraiture” — Curated by John English and featuring artists Kim Truesdale, Mary Beth Garrett, Laurel Fulton, Ally Christmas, Justin Schmitz, Matthew J. Brown, Joshua Bienko, Tommy Kha, Katherine Schuber, Ray Lee, Stanley Bermudez, Jaquelynn Faass, Jackie Dorsey, Broderick Flanigan, Greg Harris, Noah James Saunders, Rich Panico and Shawn Campbell.
Ciné
“Cameron Lyden: The Wave Tamer’s Lullaby and Other Artifacts” — Cameron Lyden is an Athens-based artist who received his MFA in jewelry and metalwork from the University of Georgia and his BFA in jewelry from Kent State University. He is originally from Bay Village, Ohio, and his work is inspired by dreary midwestern winter landscapes paired with his love for ornate objects and tools. He uses his work to construct a narrative for the viewer by creating fictional tools with ambiguous and fantastical functions. It is his goal to offer the viewer an opportunity to feel a sense of childlike wonder as they explore the faux history of these objects.
Hotel Indigo, Athens
“You Are Here” — Works by Amanda Jane Burk, Eli Saragoussi, Chasity Williams and Tae Lee
“Solar System (dad, you came to earth a long time ago)” — A new installation by Trevor Reese at the GlassCube. Known for his room-filling sculptural works, Reese has turned the GlassCube into a hospitality suite of miscellaneous furnishings ready to take off into the outer limits. Working within a practice of exposing what is usually hidden, Reese’s installation suggests opening your storage shed to find a space-age dance party. The Classic Center
“Checkerboard Checkered Floor” — An exhibition exploring pattern play is on view in Classic Gallery I. Featuring the boxy abstractions of Cal Clements, the black-and-white patterned interiors of Hanna Friedlander, Jess Machacek’s ombré assemblages, Jared Brown’s bouncy, poppy paintings and Courtney McCracken’s marbled geometric combination collages. “Dan Smith” — A solo exhibition in Classic Gallery II of Moby Dicks and large paintings.
--
Third Thursday was established in 2012 to encourage attendance at Athens’ established art venues through coordination and co-promotion by the organizing entities. Rack cards promoting Third Thursday and visual art in Athens are available upon request. This schedule and venue locations and regular hours can be found at 3thurs.org.
Contact: Michael Lachowski, Georgia Museum of Art, [email protected].
0 notes