here - Delaware County Symphony

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2015
ARTS LIFE AND LEISURE
| NEWS | 3
B
MUSIC
ART
DCS concert to include
Bach masterpiece,
‘Brandenburg Concerto’
‘In Person’ celebrates the human form
Flutist Barbara Cohen of Broomall has been with DCS for
23 years. She will be on stage for DCS’s Chamber Concert
Feb. 8 at Neumann University.
The Delaware County
Symphony (DCS) will present the third of its Chamber
Concert Series, 3 p.m., Sunday, Feb. 8 in the Life Center
at Neumann University. Included in this program will
be Bohuslav Martinu’s “Trio
for Flute, Cello, and Piano.”
Martinu is one of the greatest Czech composers of his
generation and internationally known for his concert
and chamber music. His
work tends to command attention from its opening
bars and offers a rhythmically vital and singing style
that recalls the genius of
both Dvorák and Stravinsky. The concert continues
with August Klughardt’s
Pianist Arnold Ostroff of
Springfield is marking his
20th year with the DCS.
lyrical “Wind Quintet, Op.
79”and will conclude with
Bach’s lively masterpiece
“Brandenburg Concerto No.
4” a quintessential example
of the High Baroque period
in classical music.
Featured in this concert
will be Jennifer Flam, Barbara Cohen , flutes; Michael
Berton, cello; DCS Music Director Tim Ribchester; Arnold Ostroff, piano; Kristin
Bray, oboe; Lynn Thomas,
clarinet; Alex Bancer, bassoon; Rebecca King, horn;
Jeremy Desiderio, Lisa Roberts, violins; Barbara Ostroff,
viola, and Arnold Ostroff, piano.
Chamber program commentary will be provided
by Tim Ribchester, Music
Director Delaware County
Symphony.
Tickets are $12, $10 for seniors/students. Neumann
University students with
ID are free and children
under 12 (one child per
paying adult) are free. A
special ticket price of $8
applies to groups of 10 or
more. Tickets will be $8 to
all who show their Delaware County Library Card
on the day of the concert.
Tickets may be purchased
at the door (cash, check or
credit card). For more information, visit www.dcsmusic.org or call 610-8797059.
The exhibition, “In Person,” opens with a wine
and cheese reception, 2-4
p.m., Sunday, Feb. 8 in the
Duke Gallery at Community Arts Center, 414 Plush
Mill Road, Wallingford.
Juried by Doug Martenson, “In Person” celebrates
the human form and runs
through March 13.
Other exhibits opening at 2 p.m. on Feb. 8 are
Marcia Reiver, Ceramics,
on the BEAdazzle Gallery
Wall, and The Young Artists of Community Arts
Center, in the Stairwell
and Fay Freedman Galleries. All exhibits are free
and open to the public.
The “In Person” exhibition is a biennial event at
Community Arts Center.
As in the past, every entry
must incorporate the human form, have been completed during the last two
years and not been previously exhibited at the Arts
Center. Selected entries
will be two dimensional
works in mixed media,
wall sculpture, hand-pulled
prints, photography or digital media. Selected entries
are in competition for cash
prizes in Best of Show, Sec-
emy of Fine Arts. Since
the mid-1980s, he has exhibited at Gross McCleaf
Gallery in Philadelphia as
well as other galleries in
Pennsylvania, New Jersey,
New York, Delaware and
Massachusetts. His work
is held in many public and
private collections. He currently teaches at PAFA and
the University of Pennsylvania.
Paul Downie, Executive
Director of Community
Arts Center, said, “We’re
proud to once again present, ‘In Person.’ We host the
exhibition every two years,
and each time we are delighted by the array of new
approaches to this time
honored subject, emblematic of the dynamic nature
of artistic approach and vision. This year we are very
pleased to have Doug Martenson jurying the show.
He brings a vast experience
as a painter and educator.”
“Figure with a Book,” by Doug Martenson, is
representative of the type of works exhibited at “In
Person,” opening at the Community Arts Center on Feb.
8. Martenson is the show juror.
Gallery hours are Monday-Thursday 9 a.m. 7:30 p.m., Friday 9 a.m.3 p.m. and Saturday 10
ond and Third Place.
a Philadelphia based artist a.m. – 2 p.m. For more inThis year’s juror is Doug and educator and graduate formation, call 610-566Martenson. Martenson is of the Pennsylvania Acad- 1713.
AT BRANDYWINE RIVER MUSEUM
Read-Aloud tours inspire love of stories, art
Young children and
their grown-ups can hear
a story and see the artwork in the Brandywine
River Museum (BRM),
then make their own creative work to take home on
Thursdays at 10:30 a.m.
BRM Public Relations
Coordinator Lora B. Englehart said that many families participate in Read
Aloud year after year. The
Zerbey family is one example. Jason, a stay-athome dad, first brought
his three-year-old son,
Westen, to Read Aloud.
Westen loved Read-Aloud
and looked forward to coming every week. When son
Isaac, was born, the Zerbeys came as a threesome.
As Isaac grew older, he became restless, and Jason
thought their Read-Aloud
ART EXHIBIT
Quilts by Helen Larkin on view
in Swarthmore Borough Hall
Isaac Zerbey, 3, has fun
making a picture to take
home.
days were numbered. However, little by little, Isaac
learned to sit still during
story time. Jason advises
parents not to give up if
their child doesn’t adapt
immediately to all the elements of the program.
With time, the child will
adjust and reap all the benefits of Read Aloud.
Books to be read on upcoming Thursdays are: Feb.
5: “Lines that Wiggle” by
Candace Whitman; Feb. 12:
“Extra Yarn” by Mac Barnett;
Feb. 19: “Charlotte Jane Battles Bedtime” by Myra Wolfe;
Feb. 26: “Ribbit!” by Rodrigo
Folgueira; March 5: “Tap
the Magic Tree” by Christie Matheson and March 12:
“The Very Hungry Caterpillar” by Eric Carle
A special Read-Aloud
program will be held on
St. Patrick’s Day, Tuesday,
March 17, with a reading of
“The Tallest Leprechaun”
by Emily Grace Koenig
and green-themed art activities.
The Read-Aloud Program is made possible by
Joseph and Diane Packer
in memory of Emily Grace
Koenig. Emily Grace Koenig, a Villa Maria student,
wrote “The Tallest Leprechaun” when she was
12 and died of meningitis
shortly after the story was
completed.
Register if you plan to
attend by calling the education office at 610-3888382 or e-mailing education@brandywine.org.
Read Aloud events are included with admission.
Admission is $15 adults,
$10 seniors, $6 students
with I.D. and ages 6 to 12
and free for BRM members and for children ages
5 and under and for active military personnel.
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EVENT #1
“Approaching Storm” is one of the art quilts by Helen Larkin which will be on display Feb.
4 through March 1 at Swarthmore Borough Hall, 121 Park Avenue, Swarthmore. The public
is invited to the artist’s reception, 5:30 to 7:30 p.m., Friday, Feb. 6, scheduled as part of
Swarthmore’s First Friday. The exhibit is free and open to the public.
An exhibition of art quilts, with the graphic quality of silver and copper, and semiwall hangings and hand the quilts she saw in a mid- precious stones such as, picwrought jewelry created by 1970s quilt exhibit at the ture jasper and plume agSwarthmore artist Helen Whitney Museum, and that ate. She says “the beauty
Larkin will be on display her attraction to pattern and that comes from the earth,
Feb. 4 through March 1 at texture in fabric led her to and the process of creating
Swarthmore Borough Hall, a quilting class taught by a wearable piece of jewelry,
121 Park Avenue, Swarth- Nancy Rose of Swarthmore never ceases to amaze and
more. The public is invited in 1985, and then to an ex- inspire me. I enjoy both the
to the artist’s reception, 5:30 hibit of contemporary quilts puzzle and the mechanics of
to 7:30 p.m., Friday, Feb. 6, at the Quilt National 1987 bi- translating that inspiration
scheduled as part of Swarth- ennial exhibit. She says that with a melding of earth’s
more’s First Friday. The ex- the inspiration from those rocks and earth’s metals into
hibit is free and open to the quilts has “led me on an ad- jewelry.”
public.
venture exploring two differMs. Larkin has exhibited
The exhibit, entitled ent facets of this historic art locally in a number of area
“Landscapes of the Imagi- form: the graphic aspects of shows and juried exhibits, innation,” presents the work design inherent in the quilt- cluding the Community Arts
of Ms. Larkin, a Swarth- making process, and the use Center in Wallingford, and
more artist and former long- of fabric to translate my im- has won a number of prizes
time Wallingford resident, pressions of our natural sur- for her art quilts and her jewwhich she describes as be- roundings.”
elry. She has been a meming inspired by nature and
In the early 1960s, she ber of Main Line Quilters
by her travels to China, the took her first jewelry class since 1987, and a participant
Poconos, Louisiana and the with Miriam Elsbree at the in the Advanced Jewelry StuAmerican Southwest.
Community Arts Center, dio Workshop at the CommuHer interest in quilts was Wallingford, followed by nity Arts Center since 2000.
sparked by early experiences classes and workshops with
This exhibit is sponsored
with her grandmother, who artists Don Pyewell, Faith by Swarthmore Friends of
used remnants from Ms. Lar- Pfaffet-Lugassy, Harold the Arts. For more inforkin’s sewn clothing in her O’Connor and Marcia Clark. mation about Swarthmore
quilts. She describes herself Her pins and pendants are Friends of the Arts visit
as having been fascinated made from metals such as www.swarthmorearts.org.
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SUNDAY, MARCH 29, 2015
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EVENT #3
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EVENT #5
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MAY 24, 2015 (R/D: 6/14/15)
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APRIL 12, 2015 (R/D: 4/19/15)
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JUNE 7, 2015 (R/D: 6/14/15)
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