Category Archives: Installation

Community Gardens Day

Community Gardens DayPhoto by Jeff Stroud, Nature Spirit Photography

WHEN:     SATURDAY, JUNE 21, 10 A.M. TO 3 P.M.

WHERE:   BEL ARBOR COMMUNITY GARDEN,  10th & Kimball Sts., South Philadelphia

WHAT:   The newly revitalized Neighborhood Gardens Trust is kicking off the summer season with the first citywide Community Gardens Day! Participating gardens of NGT and the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society, as well as others throughout Philadelphia, will celebrate with a variety of family-friendly activities. Gardeners and garden lovers of all ages can join in garden tours, hands-on garden workdays, arts and crafts projects, and opportunities to enjoy the city’s beautiful community gardens and learn more about gardening. A perfect way to celebrate the first day of summer!

The event at Bel Arbor will launch the festivities with noted guests and the reading of a Mayoral Proclamation announcing Philadelphia’s inaugural Community Gardens Day.   Check www.ngtrust.org for the up-to-date map of the 30 participating gardens, many of which are protected from development by NGT, whose mission is to acquire and preserve community gardens and shared open space in order to enhance the quality of life in Philadelphia neighborhoods. With 42 million Americans growing their own food in home and community gardens, residents and visitors to Philadelphia can experience how community gardens enhance the quality of life in their neighborhoods, provide healthy food for everyone, and help the environment.

WHO:

  • Margaret McCarvill, Board President, Neighborhood Gardens Trust
  • Mark Focht, First Deputy Commissioner, Philadelphia Parks & Recreation
  • Drew Becher, President, Pennsylvania Horticultural Society
  • Councilman Mark Squilla, First District
  • Carla Puppin, NGT Board Member, Bel Arbor Garden Representative & Co-Founder

Additional Photo and Video Ops:    Visit the Strawberry Mansion Green Resource Center for a workshop on composting.  (link to: http://ngtrust.org/index.php/2014/01/18/strawberry-mansion-grc/)

The Strawberry Mansion Green Resource Center is located on Ridge Avenue at Natrona Street. The lots that make up the site are leased from the Philadelphia Redevelopment Authority and contain 31 community beds and 15 beds for students at the Strawberry Mansion High School across the street. The site acts as a Green Resource Center for the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society, one of five spaces that support neighbors and other urban farmers in growing fresh, healthy food and creating a more beautiful city landscape.

Drop by the Spooky Gardens (http://ngtrust.org/index.php/2014/01/18/spooky-garden/) to check out the “community backyard” and complete an arts & crafts activity.

The Spooky Garden, located on two lots that stretch from North Fourth Street to North Leithgow Street, between George Street and Girard Avenue, acts as a “community backyard” for the nearby residents. Like many city gardens, the lots that compose the Spooky Garden were a former dumping ground that the surrounding neighbors cleaned up more than 20 years ago. The yard hosts community vegetable, herb & flower gardens, trees (including a magnificent elm that is estimated to be over 75 years old), shrubs, a community composter, sitting areas and a small open lawn.

The 2,000-square-foot space has seven distinct mixed-use growing plots, and currently serves 11 member households (18 adults and eight children). While some members follow a traditional community garden approach, focusing on growing vegetables, herb and flowers, others use the yard primarily as a gathering space to socialize with and get to know their neighbors, and some see it as a safe place for their young children to play and learn about nature. This wide range of uses makes the Spooky Garden unique among community gardens in the city and enables it to meet the needs of a diverse group of neighbors.

Since the clean-up years ago, neighbors tried all avenues available to preserve these lots as open community green space. When the lots were listed as “For Sale By Owner” in a craigslist auction in January 2011 without any posting or notice to adjacent neighbors, a powerful wave of community support and network news coverage got the attention of Councilman Darrell Clarke. After visiting the garden and meeting with neighbors, Clarke expressed his approval of and support for the community’s efforts by removing the properties from the auction block and securing the current license agreement between the city and NGT.

The name Spooky Garden is inspired by the garden’s annual Halloween celebration, which attracts hundreds of Philadelphians from across the city.

Help finish a mosaic art project at Hicks Street Garden (http://ngtrust.org/index.php/2014/01/18/hicks-street-garden/).

Hicks Street Garden is located on South Hicks Street between Moore and Mifflin. The garden was founded and preserved in 2007. More than 20 gardeners, including young children, cultivate primarily ornamental plants in this single-lot garden. The lot is located on a small street in South Philadelphia where increasing development pressure has created demand for open space. The garden provides an opportunity to restore the quality of life for residents and make the entire neighborhood safer. In addition to planting, the gardeners have been developing a wall mural engaging children and families as it evolves to completion.

Hear the AMLA Youth Latin Jazz Ensemble performing at 11 AM at the NET Garden at 4404 N. 5th Street as part of Make Music Philly,  AND MUCH MORE!! 

Through its ongoing programs and special projects, AMLA promotes the development, dissemination, and understanding of Latin music in the Philadelphia area and beyond.

AMLA’s programs are directed mainly to Latino youth, families, and community members, but are open to all students, families, musicians, dancers, and aficionados of Latin American music and culture. By teaching and inspiring love for and disciplined knowledge of Latin music and dance, AMLA helps build bridges between frequently divided racial and ethnic communities. AMLA, like its partner organization Esperanza, believes that strong engagement in culture strengthens community.

Community Gardens Day is made possible through the generosity of its sponsors: Chanticleer, Mostardi Nursery, Whole Foods Market-South Street, Urban Jungle, and Valley Green Bank.

Gardens

The Neighborhood Gardens Trust acquires and preserves community gardens and shared open space in order to enhance the quality of life in Philadelphia neighborhoods. Over the past two years, NGT has re-examined its mission and gone through an organizational renaissance that has led to new vision for the future. Now, with a new board of directors and a recently completed strategic business plan in place, NGT seeks to re-introduce itself to the Philadelphia region and establish itself as the city’s leading non-profit community land trust.

Media contacts: Alan Jaffe, PHS, 215.988.8833, (m) 267.968.0859ajaffe@pennhort.org or Nina Zucker Assoc at 610.457.4387 or nzapr@aol.com.

Photo by Jeff StroudNature Spirit Photography

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The Plastic Club

The Plastic Club, Rick WrightThe Plastic Club, Rick Wright Photography, Deya Daphne, iPhone photo, $595. Gold Medal Winner 2014, 102nd Members Medals Exhibition.

The Plastic Club holds a standard of inclusion for artists to participate in a metropolitan art space that is high yet accessible. To be a member of the Plastic Club is to be part of a community of like minded artists who find an eclectic creative vibe in the historic studio and gallery.

The 102nd Members Medals Exhibition has everything: paintings, drawings, sculpture, fiber, video, assemblage, photography, collage and more. Each artist could enter one piece so the quality and range of media is competitively high and does not disappoint. Juror, Roberta Fallon of Philadelphia’s ground-breaking theartblog, selected a contemporary photography masterwork for the gold medal.

Rick Wright’s, Deya Daphne, iPhone photo is a panoramic shot he took in Majorca, Spain. The print is gorgeous with a wonderful anthropomorphic figure in the tree like a reclining goddess. Rick has been exploring cell phone photography since cell phones came with cameras, creating intriguing images with simple materials and systems. Knowing how to make the simplest formats work well lets the artist think in more intellectually connected constructs. Rick took the opportunity at the awards to thank his friends who were there with him when he took the photograph.

The Plastic Club, Donna CotzenThe Plastic Club, 102nd Members Medals ExhibitionDonna Cotzen, Palm, acrylic, $400.

When I say the club offers a metropolitan art experience I mean The Plastic Club has offered me so many opportunities to participate in and learn about the art world that I don’t get anywhere else. The club offers a wide range of workshops, art show opportunities, educational presentations, an art salon and parties. Rick Wright lead a workshop on how to photograph your artwork that taught essential tools for the new digital image requirements for art shows. I presented a couple of workshops on how to use social media and blogging.

The monthly movie night offers memorable double features. Recently Philadelphia Poet Laureate Frank Sherlock read poetry from his new book on a Sunday afternoon, harpist Elizabeth Morgan-Ellis played contemporary harp composition accompanied by planetarium star lights on a Saturday night. Awards and contests, lectures and slide shows, poetry and music are all great but the parties at The Plastic Club are positively divine.

The Plastic Club, Jody SweitzerThe Plastic Club, 102nd Members Medals Exhibition, Jody Sweitzer, My Guardian Angel Wears Rubber Boots, video installation, $5 per DVD.

Last year the club brought back an old tradition that had somehow been abandoned fifty years before called The Rabbit. The Rabbit is a costume party with a theme, skits and music. It’s called The Rabbit because Welsh Rarebit is served, cheesey goodness on ticks of toast. This year the theme was Art and Artists and the club members, like a Stefan tour of nightclubs, had everything from jugglers to a play with Elvis Presley as bartender for Salvador Dali to an interpretive dancer with a spinning sword on her head.

The BBQs and holiday parties are always convivial and friendly, the competition is appreciated and rewarded with true appreciation. Club president Cynthia Arkin told me she just wants the club house to be used in the way it was intended as a haven for free thinking and the creative spirit.

The Plastic Club, Bill MyersThe Plastic Club, 102nd Members Medals Exhibition, Bill Myers

The Plastic Club has a strong connection with the Photographic Society of Philadelphia, monthly meetings are held in the studio and many members cross over. Photography is included in most show,  the club is very inclusive about experimentation with art. Eileen Eckstein, PSoP President, even figured out a way to print photography on fabric so she could be in the fibers show. Photographer Bill Myers epitomizes the club’s pro-photography ethos with his surreal composition with original and found photography. The accomplished photographer also regularly has his documentary photography included in The Philadelphia Public Record newspaper. The photographer in the picture is Morris Klein a dual member of both clubs.

The Plastic Club, DoN BrewerThe Plastic Club, Horizontal Industry, photograph on plexiglass, 20″ x 24″, $300. 102nd Members Medals Exhibition, DoN Brewer

“The Club’s home is a historic double townhouse located on one of Philadelphia’s “little streets” in the heart of the city. Built in 1824, it houses the club’s spacious studio, gallery spaces, offices and dining facilities. The club purchased the property in 1909, and expanded it to include the house next door in 1910. In the past ten years the building has undergone many renovations so that it now functions like a 21st century building, but still retains its 19th century charm.” – The Plastic Club

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Written and photographed by DoN Brewer except where noted.

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Brenna K. Murphy

Solo ExhibitionHome Imagined, Brenna K. MurphyOpening This Saturday at Metropolitan Gallery 250located at 250 S. 18th Street, Unit 102 (on Rittenhouse Square, across the street from the Art Alliance)

Brenna K. Murphy, Metropolitan Gallery 250Brenna K. MurphyDetail from “Home Imagined (Dollhouse),” 4×6 feet, 1,154 strands of the artist’s hair stitched into paper. Click the image for a larger view.

Please join Brenna K. Murphy for the Opening Reception of “Home Imagined” on May 3rd, from 3 – 6pm. Presented by The Center for Emerging Visual Artists and Metropolitan Gallery 250, this exhibition includes 24 new small hair embroideries and “Home Imagined (Dollhouse),” a 4 x 6 foot hair embroidery created over five-months at artists residencies in France last year.

Exhibition Dates: May 3 – June 1, 2014

Special Gallery Hours and Opening Reception on May 3rd: 11:00am-6:00pm (Opening Reception from 3:00 – 6:00pm)

Regular Gallery Hours: Saturdays and Sundays, 11:00am – 4:00pm and by appointment (contact jessie@metropolitanbakery.com)

Metropolitan Gallery 250 is located at 250 S. 18th Street, Unit 102 (on Rittenhouse Square, across the street from the Art Alliance)

For more info, go HERE and check out the Facebook Event Page

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Independent Rock

Independent Rock Grand OpeningIndependent Rock Grand Opening, 38 Jackson Street, suite 206, Philadelphia, PA, 19148

Open House: Saturday, April 26th, 11:00 an – 6:00 pm

Erica Harney, Independent RockErica Harney at Independent Rock, The Era of Distance or the Distance of an Era, oil, acrylic and mixed media on panel, 18″ x 14″, 2013

Artist Reception with Erica Harney, Saturday April 26th, 11:00 am – 6:00 pm

Erica Harney (b. Westchester County, NY, 1984) holds a BFA in Drawing and Painting from Alfred University, Magna Cum Laude and an MFA in Drawing and Painting from The Pennsylvania State University. She has also studied at the Santa Reparata International
School of Art in Florence, Italy. She is currently based in Philadelphia.”

Erica Harney, Independent RockErica Harney at Independent Rock, You Should See Them, Lloyd , 2014, oil, acrylic and mixed media on canvas, 48″ x 36″

“Solo exhibitions have taken place at The Pennsylvania State University, Penn State Harrisburg, VARGA Gallery (Woodstock, NY) and the Estate Yard Gallery in Castlecomer,County Kilkenny, Ireland. In 2011 she organized a massive solo exhibition called, Here Comes the Sun: Exhibition to Benefit the Killian Mansfield Foundation at the
Greenpoint Gallery in Brooklyn. Notable group exhibitions include several other New York City galleries, such as the Coleman Burke Gallery, Sara Meltzer Gallery,Kathleen Cullen Fine Art Gallery, and James Cohan Gallery. Currently, her work can be seen at JAG Modern (Philadelphia, PA), Beacon Art Shortwave Gallery (Stone Harbor, NJ), Hershey Medical Center (Hershey, PA) and Upstate Medical University (Syracuse, NY).” – Erica Harney

Open House Saturday, April 26th:

Erica Harney, Independent RockErica Harney, Nothing But Security as Far as the Eye Can See, 48″ x 48″, at Independent Rock

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Donate via safe and secure PayPal in the sidebar.Erica Harney at Independent RockErica Harney at Independent Rock, 38 Jackson Street, suite 206, Philadelphia, PA, 19148

RECLAIM | REDISCOVER | REANIMATE

RECLAIM | REDISCOVER | REANIMATE, Destination FrankfordAfter years of neglect, the 4600 block of Paul Street in Frankford is beginning a new life. Destination Frankford is transforming a formerly vacant storefront into an energetic art venue. The temporary pop-up art gallery will accelerate the process of neighborhood revitalization in Frankford.

OPENING RECEPTION for RECLAIM & BLOCK PARTY: Saturday, April 19 | 2:00 – 5:00pm @ the corner of Frankford Avenue and Paul Street , MFL to Margaret-Orthodox

Three separate exhibitions will each focus on one part of the theme:

RECLAIM | REDISCOVER | REANIMATE

RECLAIM will feature members of the Philadelphia Dumpster Divers. Saturdays from April 19 to May 17, 2014, the Philadelphia Dumpster Divers will RECLAIM discarded materials and transform them into new art forms. Seventeen artists who see the possibilities in trash and other under-utilized resources will bring a new awareness to the concept of “upcycling “to Frankford.

Participating Philadelphia Dumpster Divers include:

Sara Benowitz, Ellen Benson, Neil Benson, Carol Cole, Randy Dalton, Dan Enright, Joanne Hoffman, Linda Lou Horn, Ann Keech, Susan Moloney, Eva Preston, Susan Richards, Ellen Sall, Joel Spivak, Jim Ulrich, Sally Willowbee, Burnell Yow!

REDISCOVER | Seven local photographers | Saturdays, May 24 to June 21.

REANIMATE | Members of Philadelphia Sculptors | Saturdays, June 28 to July 26.

Each show will have its own opening reception that will spill over into the street and emerging pocket park next door. The public is invited to listen to live music, enjoy the offerings of food trucks, and peruse a local crafts market.

Destination Frankford is an arts-based initiative using MARKETING and CREATIVE PLACEMAKING to enhance and expand the resources of the Frankford’s growing ARTS, ARTISANAL INDUSTRY, and CREATIVE BUSINESS economy.

Destination Frankford is a project of the Philadelphia City Planning Commission. Local partners include the Frankford Community Development Corporation, Globe Development Group, and Philadelphia Sculptors.

Destination Frankford is supported by a grant from ArtPlace America, a collaboration of leading national and regional foundations, banks and federal agencies accelerating creative placemaking across the US.

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