Fairy tales come to local gallery

Monday, 30 April 2012 21:34

 

USA students put together art exhibit featuring pieces inspired by fairy tales and folklore

“Flowers and Daggers,” an exhibition of fairy tale inspired art works by Sara E. Morales and Haley Franklin, is set to be unveiled may 1 at the Mobile Arts Council.

The show will run the entire month of may with a reception for the artists on may 11 at 6 p.m.

The artwork is a mixture of ceramic wall sculptures and portraits on wood.

“The power of fairy tales is timeless, although the details of the stories have strayed through the ages.

“My work shows five of these stories in the contexts of their earliest publications. I have interpreted their timeless themes through ceramic and mixed media sculptures,” said Morales about her sculptures.

The sculptures show the fairytale characters and their villains.

The artists have been planning this show for a while and are hoping to appeal to the resurgence of interest in the fairytale genre in recent months.

With all of the new movies retelling popular fairy tales, such as “Snow White,” it’s no wonder that artists want to give the area their own touch.

Franklin addressed this idea as regarding her own paintings.

“The paintings for this exhibit showcase heroines and other characters from traditional fairy tales. the posed characters are made up of graphite drawings, acrylic paint and ink on wood.

“Artistic liberties were taken with the design of each character, all of which are posed like snapshots from their stories.

“These long-told tales are considered in the contexts of modern society’s unusual standards for physical beauty. “Make up, unnatural proportions, unrealistic hairstyles, ornate clothing and the loss of childhood qualities are all concepts that every person faces in fashion and media,” Franklin stated.

Since the exhibit is running for an entire month, fans of fairy tales and art have the chance to visit the gallery on Dauphin Street and see Morales and Franklin’s take on the genre.

Even though finals week is fast approaching, taking a break to peruse beautiful works of art created by fellow students who would not be considered amiss.

In fact, it may just do you some good and help spur your own creativity in regards to those final essays and papers.

Written by Bailey Hammond | JagLife Editor

Posted in fairy Tales For Kids | Tagged , | Comments closed

Manny Pacquiao clarifies gay marriage comments, denies citing Leviticus 20:13 and hating homosexuals

Filipino world boxing champion Manny Pacquiao cleared himself on earlier accusations that he hates homosexuals and also denied that he cited the Bible verse Leviticus 20:13 during the interview by Examiner’s Granville Ampong last week.

Manny Pacquiao file photoImage Credit: Stephen Dunn/Getty Images

As noted at ABS-CBNNews.com on Wednesday, may 16, 2012, Manny Pacquiao was interviewed by the network’s sports correspondent Dyan Castillejo via phone and explained his side, following an online petition asking Nike to remove their sponsorship to him.

“Sinabi ko lang ang opinion ko na against the law of God ang same-sex marriage. Hindi ako tutol sa gays… may kamaganak akong bakla. Wala tayong magagawa kung pinanganak silang bakla. Ang ayaw ko lang paglabag mo sa utos ng Panginoon.” Pacquiao was quoted telling to Castillejo.

(I only voiced out my opinion that same-sex marriage is against the law of God. I’m not against homosexuals…I have a relative who is also gay. We cannot do anything if they were born that way. what I do not want is when you disobey the commandment of God.)

Likewise, the 33-year old eight-division boxing champion, who is now in the US and preparing for his fight against Timothy Bradley this coming June 9, at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, denied that he cited Bible verse Leviticus 20:13 that brought the rage of the LGBT community.

“If a man lies with a man as one lies with a woman, both of them have done what is detestable. They must be put to death; their blood will be on their own heads.” Leviticus 20:13 apparently reads, with Pacquiao noting to Castillejo that he has not yet read any Leviticus verse.

Meanwhile, Granville Ampong also denied later that the boxer cited the said Bible verse during his interview with Pacquiao, emphasizing that his report has been wrongly re-written by other writers particularly Tom Weir of USA Today and Dennis Romero of LA Weekly.

“I hereby demand both Weir and Romero to apologize to Pacquiao. They, being writers for USA Today and LA Weekly respectively, should have a better reading comprehension than I do, rhetorically.” Ampong wrote on his may 16 post titled “Biased writers grossly twisted Pacquiao‘s view on same-sex marriage“.

Related Post: Manny Pacquiao not welcome at The Grove, Mario Lopez interview canceled, for his comments on gay marriage

Posted in bible Story | Tagged , , , , , | Comments closed

Virtual World of Picture Books for Young Children

Welcome to Magic Town May 16th, 2012 by Andi

Today, we open the doors to Magic Town, the first virtual world based on picture book characters.

We are so excited! After months and months of preparation, it’s time for you to join the fun. This is story time at its very best!

So what will you and your kids find in Magic Town? The site has popular picture books, fairy tales, fables and even original stories. there are also games and puzzles.

When you arrive in Magic Town, you’ll meet our guides Izzy and Max. They’re there to show you around. You’ll see lots of houses that hold the stories and games.  And if you click on the big tree at the top of the landscape, you meet Louis the Storyteller. Louis is a wise old lion who has traveled the world, collecting stories that he’s brought to Magic Town. Click on Louis to get the free story of the day.

You can register for Magic Town using either your email address or Facebook details. if you use Facebook, rest assured we don’t share that information with anybody. It just streamlines the whole process.

Registering will give you access to our free content. but if you want to see everything in Magic Town, you’ll need to subscribe. one subscription enables you to create profiles for up to 4 children. And we have different pricing options.

To celebrate our launch, we have lots of free books. we have Elmer and Butterfly by David McKee; Shrinky Kid from Ian Whybrow; Superfairies from Janey Louise Jones; get Well Friends from Kes Gray; works by Satoshi Kitamura; Aesop’s Fables; Brer Rabbit; Grimm’s Fairy tales; Hans Christian Andersen Fairy Tales; Arabian Nights and some classic fairy tales as well.

So welcome! We’ll see you in Magic Town, where stories live.

Posted in Story Books | Tagged , , , , , | Comments closed

Maurice Sendak, 1928-2012: His books let kids’ imaginations run wild

May 9 The author, who died Tuesday at 83, also worked on ballets and operas.

Maurice Sendak didn’t think of himself as a children’s author, but as an author who told the truth about childhood.

"I like interesting people, and kids are really interesting people," he explained to the associated Press last fall. "and if you didn’t paint them in little blue, pink and yellow, it’s even more interesting."

Sendak, who died early Tuesday in Danbury, Conn., at age 83, four days after suffering a stroke, revolutionized children’s books and how we think about childhood simply by leaving in what so many writers before had excluded. Dick and Jane were no match for his naughty Max. His kids misbehaved and didn’t regret it, and in their dreams and nightmares fled to the most unimaginable places. Monstrous creatures were devised from his studio, but none more frightening than the grownups in his stories or the cloud of the Holocaust that darkened his every page.

"from their earliest years children live on familiar terms with disrupting emotions – fear and anxiety are an intrinsic part of their everyday lives, they continually cope with frustrations as best they can," he said upon receiving the Caldecott Medal in 1964 for "Where the Wild Things Are," his signature book. "and it is through fantasy that children achieve catharsis. it is the best means they have for taming wild things."

Rarely was a man so uninterested in being loved or adored. Starting with the Caldecott, the great parade marched on and on. he received the Hans Christian Andersen award in 1970 and a Laura Ingalls Wilder medal in 1983. President Bill Clinton awarded Sendak a National Medal of the Arts in 1996 and in 2009 President Obama read "Where the Wild Things Are" for the Easter Egg Roll.

Communities attempted to ban him, but his books sold millions of copies and his curmudgeonly persona became as much a part of his legend as "Where the Wild Things Are," which became a hit movie in 2009. he seemed to act out everyone’s fantasy of a nasty old man with a hidden and generous heart. no one granted the privilege could forget his snarly smile, his raspy, unprintable and adorable dismissals of such modern piffle as e-books and publicity tours, his misleading insistence that his life didn’t matter.

"I didn’t sleep with famous people or movie stars or anything like that. It’s a common story: Brooklyn boy grows up and succeeds in his profession, period," he told the AP.

Sendak’s other books, standard volumes in so many children’s bedrooms, included "Chicken Soup with Rice," "One was Johnny," "Pierre," "Outside over There" and "Brundibar."

Besides illustrating his own work, he also provided drawings for else Holmelund Minarik’s series "little Bear," George MacDonald’s "the Light Princess" and adaptations of E.T.A. Hoffman’s "the Nutcracker" and the Brothers Grimm’s "King Grisly-Beard." His most recent book that he wrote and illustrated was "Bumble-Ardy," which came out in 2011 and was based on an old animated skit he worked up for "Sesame Street."

In recent months, he had said he was working on a project about noses and he endorsed – against his best judgment – Stephen Colbert’s "I am a Pole (And so Can You!)", a children’s story calculated to offend the master. Colbert’s book was published Tuesday.

"His art gave us a fantastical but unromanticized reminder of what childhood truly felt like," Colbert said in a statement. "we are all honored to have been briefly invited into his world."

Sendak also created costumes for ballets and staged operas, including the Czech opera "Brundibar," which in 2003 he put on paper with his close friend, Pulitzer-winning playwright Tony Kushner. he designed sets for several productions at New York City Opera and he wrote the libretto for composer Oliver Knussen’s opera adaptation of "Where the Wild Things Are," which premiered at Brussels’ Theatre de la Monnaie in 1980 as "Max et les Maximontres." A revised version debuted in 1984 in London.

He designed the Pacific Northwest Ballet’s "Nutcracker" production that later became a movie shown on television, and he served as producer of various animated TV series based on his illustrations, including "seven little Monsters," "George and Martha" and "little Bear." he collaborated with Carole King on the musical "really Rosie."

None of Sendak’s books were memoirs, but all were personal, if only for their celebrations of disobedience and intimations of fear and death and dislocation.

"It’s a Jewish way of getting through life," Kushner said last fall. "You acknowledge what is spectacular and beautiful and also you don’t close your eyes to the pain and the difficulty."

"he drew children in a realistic way, as opposed to an idealized way," children’s books historian Leonard S. Marcus said Tuesday. "His children weren’t perfect-looking. They didn’t resemble the people seen on advertising or in sitcoms. They looked more like immigrant children. it was a big change for American children’s books, which tended to take the melting pot approach and present children who were generic Americans."

Revenge helped inspire "Where the Wild Things Are," his canonical tale of the boy Max’s mind in flight in a forest of monsters, who just happen to look like some of Sendak’s relatives from childhood. "In the Night Kitchen," released in 1971, was a forbidden dance of Laurel and Hardy in aprons and the flash of a boy’s genitals, leading to calls for the book to be removed from library shelves.

"it was so fatuous, so incredible, that people would get so exercised by a phallus, a normal appendage to a man and to a boy. it was so cheap and vulgar. Despicable," Sendak said last fall. "It’s all changed now. we live in a different country altogether. I will not say an improved version. no."

His stories were less about the kids he knew – never had them, he was happy to say – than the kid he used to be. the son of Polish immigrants, he was born in 1928 in a Jewish neighborhood in Brooklyn. the family didn’t have a lot of money, and he didn’t have a lot of friends besides his brother and sister. he was an outsider at birth, as Christians nearby would remind him, throwing dirt and rocks as he left Hebrew school.

He remembered no special talent – his brother, Jack, was the chosen one. But he absorbed his father’s stories and loved to dream and to create, like the time he and his brother built a model of the 1939 World’s Fair out of clay and wax. At the movies, he surrendered to the magic of "Fantasia" and later escaped into "Pinocchio," a guilty pleasure during darkened times. the Nazi cancer was spreading overseas and the U.S. entered the war. Sendak’s brother joined the military, relatives overseas were captured and killed. Storytelling, after the Holocaust, became something more than play.

"it forced me to take children to a level that I thought was more honest than most people did," he said. "because if life is so critical, if Anne Frank could die, if my friend could die, children were as vulnerable as adults, and that gave me a secret purpose to my work, to make them live. because I wanted to live. I wanted to grow up."

Sendak didn’t go to college and worked a variety of odd jobs until he was hired by the famous toy store FAO Schwarz as a window dresser in 1948. But illustration was his dream and his break came in 1951 when he was commissioned to do the art for "Wonderful Farm" by Marcel Ayme. By 1957 he was writing his own books.

"he began to be honest in the ’50s," said "Wicked" author Gregory Maguire, one of Sendak’s closest friends. "he was laceratingly honest at a time when few others were."

Claiming Emily Dickinson, Mozart and Herman Melville as inspirations, he worked for decades out of the studio of his shingled 18th century house in Ridgefield, Conn., a country home reachable only by a bumpy road that seemed designed to shield him from his adoring public. the interior was a wonderland of carvings and cushions, from Disney characters to the fanged beasts from his books to a statuette of Obama.

Sendak spoke often, endlessly, about death in recent years – dreading it, longing for it. he didn’t mind being old because the young were under so much pressure. But he missed his late siblings and his longtime companion, Eugene Glynn, who died in 2009. Work, not people, was his reason to carry on.

"I want to be alone and work until the day my head hits the drawing table and I’m dead. Kaput," he said last fall. "everything is over. everything that I called living is over. I’m very, very much alone. I don’t believe in heaven or hell or any of those things. I feel very much like I want to be with my brother and sister again. They’re nowhere. I know they’re nowhere and they don’t exist, but if nowhere means that’s where they are, that’s where I want to be."

Associated Press writers Dave Collins in Hartford and Samantha Critchell in New York contributed to this report.

Tweet

Posted in books For Kids | Tagged , , , , , | Comments closed

Only a modicum of shame in wanting my sleep

my number one priority over summer vacation is to sleep in.  I am thrilled to have my kids home and leisurely eating with me around the lunch table while listening to funny stories, but lunch is so much more enjoyable when it’s late in the day because Mommy slept in and we enjoyed a late breakfast, thereby necessitating a late lunch. and of course we’ll read (Hello, Lincoln Leopards!  we are going to SMOKE YOU GUYS on the minutes of reading competition this summer.  Just you wait.) and swim and bike and laze around the house, but all of that is so much more enjoyable after Mommy’s gotten her rest. I never could adjust to the morning schedule this year.  Last year, just fine.  when I worked an 8-5 job, fine.  Of course college was NOT FINE waking up early, but in high school I showed up EARLY.  To talk to my friends.  and in grade school I set my alarm to be the first up in the house–well, except for my dad, who always got to work early–and would eat breakfast in the quiet and read the comics and opinion line in the Wichita paper. as it turns out, my 9-year-old self was a bit more of a grown-up about this morning thing than my 33-year-old self.  now, my 33-year-old self grumbles each morning as she hits the snooze button, because as someone said on Pinterest, why not repeat the sadness of having to wake up nine minutes later? For spring break I did not let my children in on the secret that I was going to sleep late that first morning.  G, sweet little G, who wakes up happy and READY TO GO before the sun is up, came into my bedroom with a calm-as-he-could-make-it admonishment: “Mommy, I think you need to wake up.  You’ve been in bed for a while.” It was 7:15.  IN THE MORNING. No, I didn’t throw a pillow at him.  Instead I smiled and made my way down the stairs while I half-watched cartoons his choice of cartoons. This time, though, my kids have been told more than once that I am going to sleep past 7:15.  really, it all hinges on how late that Baby Chickadee will let me sleep.  Which will only be 8:30 on the most glorious of mornings, but I can handle 8:30.  Little Missy is my sleeper so I know she’ll do me a solid. Thursday night as G headed up the stairs he said, “See you LATE in the morning, Mommy!  Because we’re all sleeping LATE tomorrow.” Yes, my son.  you have learned well. Erin Fox is a weekly columnist for the Augusta Gazette and a busy mother and wife.  her popular blog – erin’s  little corner  can also be found on our webpage,augustagazette.com.

my number one priority over summer vacation is to sleep in.  I am thrilled to have my kids home and leisurely eating with me around the lunch table while listening to funny stories, but lunch is so much more enjoyable when it’s late in the day because Mommy slept in and we enjoyed a late breakfast, thereby necessitating a late lunch. and of course we’ll read (Hello, Lincoln Leopards!  we are going to SMOKE YOU GUYS on the minutes of reading competition this summer.  Just you wait.) and swim and bike and laze around the house, but all of that is so much more enjoyable after Mommy’s gotten her rest. I never could adjust to the morning schedule this year.  Last year, just fine.  when I worked an 8-5 job, fine.  Of course college was NOT FINE waking up early, but in high school I showed up EARLY.  To talk to my friends.  and in grade school I set my alarm to be the first up in the house–well, except for my dad, who always got to work early–and would eat breakfast in the quiet and read the comics and opinion line in the Wichita paper. as it turns out, my 9-year-old self was a bit more of a grown-up about this morning thing than my 33-year-old self.  now, my 33-year-old self grumbles each morning as she hits the snooze button, because as someone said on Pinterest, why not repeat the sadness of having to wake up nine minutes later? For spring break I did not let my children in on the secret that I was going to sleep late that first morning.  G, sweet little G, who wakes up happy and READY TO GO before the sun is up, came into my bedroom with a calm-as-he-could-make-it admonishment: “Mommy, I think you need to wake up.  You’ve been in bed for a while.” It was 7:15.  IN THE MORNING. No, I didn’t throw a pillow at him.  Instead I smiled and made my way down the stairs while I half-watched cartoons his choice of cartoons. This time, though, my kids have been told more than once that I am going to sleep past 7:15.  really, it all hinges on how late that Baby Chickadee will let me sleep.  Which will only be 8:30 on the most glorious of mornings, but I can handle 8:30.  Little Missy is my sleeper so I know she’ll do me a solid. Thursday night as G headed up the stairs he said, “See you LATE in the morning, Mommy!  Because we’re all sleeping LATE tomorrow.” Yes, my son.  you have learned well. Erin Fox is a weekly columnist for the Augusta Gazette and a busy mother and wife.  her popular blog – erin’s  little corner  can also be found on our webpage,augustagazette.com.

Posted in kids Story | Tagged , , , , , | Comments closed

Romance Maker: Create Your Own Love Story

Throughout many centuries, people have been creating love stories for getting into romantic mood. whether you are planning a date, a cozy evening with your lover, or there is the Valentine’s Day occasion, you might want to get more prepared spiritually for sharing your love with your sweetheart. Whereas the boxes of chocolate hearts, fluffy teddy-bears, fresh flowers and cute colourful ‘valentines’ have always been, and will always remain a good option for boosting the romantic mood, why not treat yourself — and perhaps your loved one — with something different for a change?

Play this nice charming game, and perhaps you will discover in yourself a whole range of new talents: that of a match-maker (setting the two hearts together), of an experienced wooer (teaching a boy how to get his dream-girl pleased), of a romanticist (creating and re-creating your own love story), a voodoo adherent. Oh, perhaps we should not spill the beans as for the latter one, as more than a half of this game’s charm lays in the unexpected turns of events. Depending on what sequence of components you choose for your love mixture

Now, think well and try to answer the question — what are the components of a good love story? some would say, two lovers are all that is really takes. for others, material things would matter — such as cars, expensive outings, diamond rings. Romantic natures would most probably mention love poems, white doves, picnics, songs ‘just for two’, the first kiss, the first night together, etc..

Well, in this game you are given a flower seed, a nicely decorated egg, a book, a cupid bow, a piece of tree, some tools, a TV/computer and a hammer. do you think these objects are not something you would make a good romantic story from? Just play this game, and you will see how wrong you could be

Mix these ingredients together into your ‘love potion’, and depending on the sequence of the ingredients you are adding into your romance, they story will develop differently at the end, you will come to a conclusion that what you had been given at the beginning of the game were in fact all the ingredients necessary for a wonderful romantic fairy-tale to come true..

May love always reside in your heart, in your life and in your relationships with others Because that is where it belongs.

Posted in Story Books | Tagged , , , | Comments closed

Action Figure Insider – Best Toy News on the Web! The CS Moore Studio and Zenescope Entertainment Announce 2012 Convention Exclusive Grimm Fairy Tales Alice Liddle Action Figure

Limited Edition Variant Figure Available at Comic-Con International: San Diego

Attendees of this year’s Comic-Con International: San Diego will have the first opportunity to snag the CS Moore Studio and Zenescope Entertainment’s super-hot 2012 Convention Exclusive Grimm Fairy Tales Alice Liddle Action Figure, sculpted by Clayburn Moore! this variant edition of the upcoming Alice Liddle Action Figure wears a sexy red dress and is strictly limited to 1,700 figures.

Zenescope’s Wonderland series follows Alice’s grown daughter, Calie Liddle, as she travels back to Wonderland. With stunning art and a new take on the Alice in Wonderland fairy tale, Zenescope’s stories have riveted readers and garnered critical acclaim. Alice is the first in the Grimm Fairy Tales line of action figures based on Zenescope’s popular stable of sexy characters. Additional figures are planned in the line, including Snow White, Queen of Hearts and Sela to commemorate Grimm Fairy Tales #75‘s 2012 release.

Zenescope’s sexy interpretation of this classic character is brought to life by sculptor Clayburn Moore, widely regarded as a master of the female form. Moore is a household name to action figure collectors, who fondly remember his many blockbuster action figure lines over the years for their signature sex appeal and detailed workmanship. the Alice Liddle Action Figure marks Moore’s first action figure release in over eight years, and collectors won’t want to miss adding this beautiful figure to their collections.

The 2012 Convention Exclusive Grimm Fairy Tales Alice Liddle Action Figure stands 6″ tall and features multiple points of articulation. Alice ships on blister card packaging, and includes a detailed base and rabbit, croquet mallet and potion bottle accessories. Limited to 1,700 figures, the convention exclusive will be available for $39.99.

Collectors can purchase the figures during the 2012 Comic con International: San Diego at the CS Moore Studio (#2800) and Zenescope Entertainment (#2301) booths. for preorder information, visit csmoorestudio.com and zenescope.com.———-

ABOUT THE CS MOORE STUDIO LTD: the CS Moore Studio ltd was founded by sculptor Clayburn Moore. With 20 years’ experience in the collectibles business, Moore directs the CS Moore Studio ltd, which creates licensed statues, busts, and more based on noted comic book and fantasy properties, as well as original creations.

ABOUT ZENESCOPE ENTERTAINMENT: Zenescope Entertainment was founded by Joe Brusha and Ralph Tedesco in 2005 and has quickly grown into one of the top comic book and graphic novel publishing companies in the world.  Zenescope’s Grimm Fairy Tales and subsequent spinoff series such as Escape From Wonderland, Neverland and the Piper, which put a dark twist on classic fables, are some of the best-selling and longest running original independent comic books on shelves today.  Zenescope’s licensed titles include the ongoing, critically acclaimed Charmed series, based off of the long-running popular television series, as well as Se7en and Final Destination, based off of New Line Cinema’s successful film franchises.

Share:         Posted by JuliusMarx

Posted in fairy Tales For Kids | Tagged , , , , , | Comments closed

A fairy tale night for Theron, Stewart

Wednesday, May 16, 2012 » 08:06am

Charlize Theron and Kristen Stewart looked to show they were the fairest of them all as they donned black gowns for the world premiere of Snow White And The Huntsman.

South African star Theron – who squares off against Stewart’s Snow White as evil Queen Ravenna – wore a revealing sheer dress by Dior Couture.

Twilight actress Stewart, 22, chose a lacy number by Marchesa, which she teamed with black trainers for the premiere at London’s Leicester Square.

The story has become the latest fairy tale to get the Hollywood treatment – with at least 18 other classics in the pipeline proving the fairy tale is back in fashion.

And it is the second adaptation of the tale out this year – following Mirror, Mirror starring Julia Roberts – with a third version coming soon.

Speaking to Sky News at the premiere, Stewart says that fairy tales were all the rage because the stories were timeless.

‘I think they’ve lasted for a reason,’ she said.

‘I think they’re pretty fundamental and base – you read them to children. People are fundamentally the same, we care about people and fairy tales are just one way of saying that.’

Universal’s Snow White and the Huntsman promises to give audiences a different take on the children’s favourite.

Charlize Theron said the movie drew on the original story while focusing on its more sinister elements.

‘We just tried to go back to the old Brothers Grimm version, the way it was intended as somewhat dark, and we’ve set it in an incredible world,’ she said.

‘It’s big, it’s epic and we tried to look at these characters in a new light, to shake them up a bit and to turn them on their heads.’

Over the years fairy tales have been told time and time again all over the world.

The Brothers Grimm version of Snow White came out in 1812 and the most famous of its many portrayals was Disney’s 1937 animated version.

Some critics argue that although stories such as this one are timeless, it also indicates Hollywood is becoming lazy and is running out of original material.

However, film critic mark Eccleston told Sky News the trend was very timely.

‘It’s almost this perfect creative storm that works right now,’ he said.

‘They’re universal stories that tap into our storytelling culture. As human beings in the middle of the recession we want to see the underdog champion against dark forces and corporate nature.

‘You have stars and technology that makes them irresistible and when Hollywood gets a hit they’re going to keep churning it out.’

New versions are planned of Beauty And The Beast, Peter Pan and Pinocchio – not to mention another Snow White – over the next couple of years.

Posted in fairy Tales For Kids | Tagged , , , , , | Comments closed

A New Father, Pianist Plans Concert For Kids

Provided by Janet Gramza MarinoPULASKI – Pianist Rob Auler brings a love of music to everything he does – so after becoming music director at Pulaski Congregational Church, Auler – a professor of piano at SUNY Oswego – founded a concert series to bring world-class classical music performances to Pulaski.

The series, named for the late music teacher Rhea LaVeck, has held five concerts a year since 2008.

Six months ago, Auler became a father with the birth of daughter, Katherine Shelley Auler, to him and his wife, Tara.

That’s what inspired him to plan the LaVeck series’ first concert aimed at children for May 27 at 3 p.m. at the church, 27 Lake St., Pulaski.

Auler’s “Scenes from Childhood” concert will introduce kids of all ages to pieces by Mozart, Robert Schumann and Francis Poulenc that appeal to children, and adding art, acting, balloons and ice cream to create a fun, family event for all.

Auler will invite kids to sing the “ABCs” and then perform the inspiration for the song, Mozart’s “Twinkle, Twinkle Variations.”

He’ll get artistic help from Oswego artist bill DeForest as he performs Schumann’s “Scenes from Childhood,” 13 short pieces that each paint a scene.

Kids will be invited to draw with DeForest to illustrate what they imagine the music portrays.

Finally, Syracuse actor and drama teacher Gerard Moses will narrate “The story of Babar” to music composed by Francis Poulenc.

“I’ve always loved kids and have wanted to do something artistically relating to them. but, in the last six months, this plan has become more immediate,” Auler said. “I’ve done a lot of thinking about how we model for our kids – what we expose them to – and I think back to my time growing up in Champaign, Ill., on the campus of the University of Illinois. I remember my mom bringing me to the Krannert Center for the Performing Arts and hearing the “greats,” Murray Perahia, John Browning … This had a huge impact on me as I developed as a musician. Even though Pulaski is a smaller place than where I grew up, I still truly believe that we have to expose our kids to a lot and then see which direction that takes them. And we can do that in a fun, relaxed way….so that’s really the idea behind this program.”

Auler said each piece has special meaning to him and others.

“The Mozart variations will be recognizable to all parents as ‘Twinkle Twinkle,’ or ‘The Alphabet Song.’ In truth, though, this was one of Mozart’s compositions taken from a French melody from the 1760s, which has since been repurposed in the education and entertainment of many kids! I guess it’s a kind of mystery: would kids be learning their ABCs to this melody if Mozart hadn’t stolen the French melody?” he said.

Auler called the Schumann piece “incredibly beautifu1” – 13 vignettes that are remembrances from Schumann’s own childhood.

“There is an unbelievably beautiful YouTube video that I’ve been watching featuring Vladimir Horowitz as an old man, live, from Vienna. Watching this legendary pianist in the last years of his career perform this beautiful, naïve, child-inspired work has been an artistic signpost for me. I’ve always wanted to do this piece, and I guess my daughter is the ‘excuse,’” he said.

Auler also wanted to work with Gerard Moses on “Babar.”

“He is an amazing guy and I know kids and parents alike will love his rendition of the narrated portion of this solo piano and spoken word piece,” Auler said.

The concert will run about an hour and will be followed by an ice cream social courtesy of Stewart’s Shops.

There will be a suggested donation at the door to help with expenses, “but the concert is designed for everyone in the community to enjoy and all are welcome regardless of whether they make a donation or not,” Auler said.

Posted in reading For Kids | Tagged , | Comments closed

‘iQ by Intel’ – experimental online magazine curated by a workforce of thousands

(Bryan Rhoads, Editor-in-Chief of iQ at Intel’s offices in the Presidio, San Francisco.)

I met the team responsible for this week’s launch of ‘iQ by Intel’, an online magazine featuring daily news and feature articles from around the globe plus original content from Intel.

The magazine is curated by Intel employees, choosing and sharing articles from a river of media content surfaced by special tools developed by Intel.

I was pleased to hear Bryan Rhoads, the mastermind behind the project, and its Editor-in-Chief, say that I was one of the people that inspired the venture with my writings about how every company is a media company.

Here are some of my notes from the meeting:

- the project began about a year ago and has about 160 Intel employees curating news and feature articles but the goal is to have more than 5,000 staff-those that have had social media training — take part in the daily selection process.

- ‘iQ’ is aimed at consumers. it is not about technology but what technology enables. the team liked my recent rant against “product journalism” in which I criticized the tech press for trying to scoop each other over leaked spec sheets for mass-produced products.

- the focus of ‘iQ’ is on tomorrow, on the ‘how’, on the types of things people can and will do with technology. the content of ‘iQ’ is not about the technology, it’s about the context of that technology. Technology plays the role of a character in the story.

- There is a river of content surfaced in real-time by an algorithm, using a set of online sources vetted by Intel. from that river, content is chosen by Intel staff. There is also original content from Intel sources, such as Ken Kaplan’s Intel Free Press, and The Creators Project, a joint venture with Vice Media.

- There are three sections: Media, Life, and Planet. Each story is color coded to identify its section. 

- about 50% of the content is original. the size of the tiles shows how much social media support each article has received. 

- There are plans to make the curation fun, and to introduce some game aspects to encourage more Intel staff to take part.

-’iQ’ shares some back-end infrastructure with Intel’s ‘Cockpit‘ a social media monitoring tool it developed to track the flow of social media around key areas of focus for Intel.

- the interface is designed for touch screens. it looks much better on the iPad than on the desktop but it’s a web app and not an app.

- There will be stories about rivals in the ‘river’ of content but because Intel staff don’t like rivals those stories are unlikely to reach the front page.

- Most readers are expected to see individual story items, which will consist of a snippet of the original story and a link back to that source. 

- Traffic, and engagement by Intel staff, will be among the factors used to judge the success of the project.

- Readers will authenticate through Twitter. Readers can also share with their networks directly from the ‘river.’

- ‘iQ’ has been well received by focus groups in Southern California.

- the project is about making best use of Intel capital — its global workforce — and engaging the social graph of Intel’s staff. Intel employs the smartest people it can find, and ‘iQ’ will represent that collective intelligence.

 Exract from: iQ by Intel – iQ – A new Social Publishing Model

We have been inspired by writers and thought leaders such as Brian Solis(exploration of brand journalism), Tom Foremski (“Every Company is a Media Company) andJohn Battelle (writing on brand publishing), and by the AMEX Open Forum experience among other brands. who better to help find and tell these stories than the engineers, scientists and visionaries who are helping design tomorrow’s technologies?

Our simple mission: Share and source content that inspires, educates, entertains and helps all of us to better understand our modern world. 

Technology is only as important as what people do with it. we hope iQ becomes a place where people get inspired to connect and collaborate with others interested in improving life and our planet through the benefits of Moore’s Law.

We’re pleased to have you with us on this journey.

Bryan Rhoads  - iQ Editor-in-ChiefIntel Social Media Center of Excellence

Posted in Story Books | Tagged , , , | Comments closed