Tag: Announcements

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Breathing Is Free 12,756.3 at the ASU Art Museum

The Arizona State University Art Museum presents the U.S. Premier of Breathing Is Free 12,756.3: a new work by Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba, January 24 —“ April 26, 2009. Reception: February 20: 7-9 p.m.

Japanese-American-Vietnamese artist, Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba, is well known on the international art circuit for his striking video installations. This exhibition presents new work, and examines his abiding interest in globalization and the balance between tradition and change as we forge our future. Co-organized with the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, each venue will host the on-going piece, Breathing is Free, in which the artist is running the diameter of the earth (12,756.3) in cities of the world at different times. Breathing is Free is a virtual earth drawing, exhibited as an installation, illustrating the movement of populations around the world. The ASU Art Museum exhibition is the U.S. premiere of the Breathing is Free performance and installation.

Jun will be arriving in Phoenix the week of January 19 to install the exhibition and scout locations for the run, which will take place Spring 2009. The artist’s physical runs, when mapped out, create a pattern that fits with his feeling and thinking about the physical location. The run is therefore very strategically planned and requires much forethought. The exhibition inside the Museum will include footage of both his films and previous runs as well as photography, maps and other projects.

Breathing is Free: New Work by Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba is an ASU Art Museum Moving Targets initiative.

Breathing is Free: 12,756.3; New Work by Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba is co-curated by Heather Sealy Lineberry, Senior Curator and Interim Director at the ASU Art Museum, and Dr. Nora Taylor, Alsdorf Professor of South and Southeast Asian Art, School of the Art Institute of Chicago.

Museum hours:

Tuesday: 11am —“ 8pm
Wednesday —“ Saturday: 11am —“ 5pm
Sunday and Monday: Closed

Arizona State University Art Museum
Tenth Street and Mill Avenue
Tempe, AZ 85287-2911
Telephone: 480-965-2787

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Events at the Albany Polish Community Center

Friday, Jan. 9 – Polish-American buffet, 4-8 pm
Sunday, Jan. 11 – Polka Dance with the Eddie Forman Orchestra, 3-7 pm
Sunday, Jan. 18 – Ballroom dance
Sunday, Jan. 25 – Ballroom Dance
Sunday, Feb. 1st – Super bowl Sunday Party! Doors open at 4 pm
Saturday, Feb. 14th – Valentine’s Day Dinner & Dance, 6-12 midnight

For more information please visit the Center’s website or call 518-456-3995. The Center is located at 225 Washington Ave Ext, Albany NY 12205.

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Annual blessing of wine

From the Toledo Blade: Resurrection PNCC plans ‘Blessing of the Wine’

Resurrection Polish National Catholic Church will hold a traditional ‘Blessing of the Wine’ service on Dec. 28.

The ceremony is an old tradition in the Catholic Church and one that the PNCC has followed for many years, according to Chris Cremean, a member of Resurrection PNCC.

People can bring their personal wine from home to be blessed, he added.

The Rev. Jaroslaw Nowak, pastor, will perform the blessing at the 12:15 p.m. service at the church, 1835 West Temperance Rd., Temperance. More Information is available by calling the church, 734-874-5052.

Irony – the blessing of wine on Temperance Road in Temperance, Michigan… 🙂

I previously wrote on this event, which takes place every December 28th on the Feast of St. John the Evangelist. My post includes the Rite used in the PNCC. For more information, contact your local PNCC Parish.

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Dr. Felipe Korzenny joins the Captura Group

From Lee Vann the Founder and CEO of the Captura Group in regard to Dr. Felipe Korzenny, who I admire for his insight into culture, business’ response to culture and ethnicity, and with whom I have corresponded in the past:

When a 30 year veteran of Hispanic marketing joins forces with the leading provider of Hispanic online solutions, the result is added value for companies looking to reach Hispanics online.

I am excited to announce that Captura Group, the leading provider of Hispanic in-language and in-culture online solutions, has named Hispanic marketing expert Felipe Korzenny, Ph. D., Senior Strategy Consultant to the company. The collaboration between Dr. Korzenny and Captura Group will expand on Captura Group’s strategic Hispanic online solutions by providing marketers with actionable insights to inform Hispanic online strategies.

You can also check out their blog, Hispanic Online Marketing.

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Arts For All: Differentiated Instruction and the Arts

The NYS Alliance for Arts Education (NYSAAE) is pleased offer “Arts For All: Differentiated Instruction and the Arts,” a workshop for teaching artists and educators with speaker Russel Granet. This workshop will focus on the practices and theories of arts education as it applies to working with elementary/secondary students with special needs.

This workshop is provided as required professional development for those participating in the Side by Side – NY Program BUT is also open to all those interested in attending.

Presented at three different locations, this workshop is appropriate for sequential arts and general classroom teachers interested in learning new ways of enhancing their instruction through arts integration.

TIMES:

Monday, January 5, 2009 10am – 4pm: East Greenbush Public Library, East Greenbush N.Y.
Thursday, January 8, 2009 10am – 4pm: ARC of Monroe County, Rochester N.Y.
Thursday, January 16, 2009 10am – 4pm: The Center for Arts Education, NYC

For more information, please contact Sharon Scarlata or call (518) 486-7328.

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Polonian events in Portland Oregon

St Stanislaus Choir at The Grotto — Sunday, December 7th at 6pm

Once again, the St. Stanislaus choir will sing Polish carols at the Grotto. This is a great opportunity to hear Polish carols in the beautiful scenery of the Grotto’s Festival of Lights. The Festival, featuring over 150 choral concerts, it is the largest music festival of its kind in the world. Tickets: $7.50 ($3 children), The Grotto, NE 85th and Sandy Blvd, Portland, Oregon, More information:

The following is a recording of the St. Stanislaus Choir at the Grotto in 2006:

New Owner of the Koffeehouse Kraków

Longtime Polish Festival volunteer Mark Ziaja Kirchmeier has now become the sole owner of Krakow Koffeehouse & Deli, immediately north of the St. Stanislaus rectory. Mark looks forward to offering Krakow as a resource for any Polonia groups needing meeting space, or to borrow kitchen equipment chairs or tables. “I am happy to say that 95% of our hours, will compliment our good neighborhood, Grandpa’s Cafe’s schedule, and not overlap with them,” Mark says. Krakow’s hours are Mon-Fri, 6:45am to 6:30pm; Sat 8am to 6:30pm, and Sunday 9am to 6:30pm.

Mark and his wife, Jane, are also interested in organizing a meeting with interested Polonia, and East Indian, Afro-American and Polish-American-owned eateries such as Fire on the Mountain on Interstate Avenue, to better market and improve the historic Interstate area. For more information, contact Mark.

Polish cellist Asia Grzesik will play at Krakow Koffeehouse

Noon, Thursday, Dec. 11
Noon, Thursday, Dec. 18
Noon, Sunday, Dec. 21

Grzesik performed last year with the touring Cirque du Soleil. Krakow admission is free.

Polish Library Association New Year Eve Party

The Polish Library Association would like to invite you to the New year Eve Party. The theme of this year party is “The Phantom of the Opera”. Tickets: $75.00 ($65.00, for PLBA members) available in the Polish Library every Sunday, 12:00-1:00pm (ask for Grzegorz Traczyk).

Looking forward to 2009

Some of the events which have already been scheduled for next year include:

  • Dance Party at Polish Hall – Saturday, Jan 31, 2009
  • Valentine’s evening with Cabaret “Vivat Amore!” – Saturday, February 14, 2009
  • Film Festival featuring the films of Andrzej Wajda – March, 2009
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Christmas Craft Fair at St. Joseph’s, Stratford, CT

From the Stratford Bard: A Christmas Craft Fair will be held at St. Joseph’s of Stratford National Catholic Church, 1300 Stratford Road, Stratford, Connecticut from 10am to 3pm on Saturday, Dec. 6th.

Area crafters and home show vendors will be displaying and selling their crafts. There will also be a bake sale, continental breakfast, and meatball grinders and hot dogs for lunch. There is free admission and free parking. Every adult that attends the fair will receive a free entry into the door prize for a grocery gift card.

St. Joseph’s is located at 1300 Stratford Road in the Lordship section of Stratford, Connecticut at the south end of Main Street beside Sikorsky Memorial Airport. For more information please call the parish office at (203) 377-9901 or Patti at (203) 378-0073.

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World AIDS Day Interfaith Service in Stratford, Connecticut

From the Stratford Star: World AIDS Day service at St. Joseph’s Dec. 1

St. Joseph’s of Stratford National Catholic Church, 1300 Stratford Road, will host the annual World AIDS Day Interfaith Service Monday, Dec. 1 at 7 p.m.

Bishop Anthony D. Kopka is the host pastor and Karen E. Lasecki is the parish organist.

The event is sponsored and conducted by the Stratford Clergy Association. Officers are President, the Rev. Julie-Ann Silberman-Bunn, pastor of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Greater Bridgeport in Stratford; vice president, the Rev. Edward Rawls, pastor of First Congregational Church in Stratford; and treasurer, the Rev. Fredric Jackson, pastor of Stratford United Methodist Church.

World AIDS Day started in 1988 and the Stratford Clergy Association has embraced the effort to increase awareness, fight prejudice and improve education about AIDS. Members also gather to remember those in their congregations and in the community who are suffering with AIDS or have died from it, as well as their families.

This year’s service was planned by Bishop Kopka, the Rev. Silberman-Bunn, the Rev. Robert Genevicz, the pastor of Stratford Baptist Church, and the Rev. Mary Snell Willis, the pastor of Lordship Community Church in Stratford.

The service will begin in the courtyard of St. Joseph’s with a candlelight ceremony, then proceed into the church. Interfaith hymns, prayers and readings will be offered by members of the town clergy. Three brief reflections and a history and perspective on World AIDS Day will also be offered by clergy. The congregation will be encouraged to remember by name those who have died from AIDS and those who are suffering, followed by silent meditation.

Afterwards, the parish members of St. Joseph’s of Stratford will welcome everyone into Prime Bishop Hodur Hall for a reception and time for sharing.

Clergy who wish to participate in the service are asked to notify Bishop Kopka by calling 203-377-9901.

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The Cosmopolitan Review – integrating roots and history into life

The Cosmopolitan Review is a new journal from the organizers and alumni of the Poland in the Rockies program. I encourage you to check it out. The following is a quote from the introduction to the first edition:

People tend to unite at times of crisis. We just have to look at the high voter turnout for the last American elections and Barack Obama’s landslide victory for proof. Poles are no exception to this paradigm of uniting during times of crisis, and our history is telling of that.

The idea for the cosmopolitan review came at a time of questioning whether the Poland in the Rockies program would continue existing. Organizers and certain alumni alike wondered whether such immense organizational efforts could be sustained without deeper alumni involvement. Spending 11 days in the Canadian Rockies learning about Polish history, culture and politics is great, but what next? How could we keep the spirit of Poland in the Rockies alive between installments of the program?

As I brainstormed ideas with Irene Tomaszewski, program director of Poland in the Rockies, and Judith Browne, a 2008 alumna, we realized that PitR alumni are actually doing a lot. But since we are spread out all over North America and Europe, it can be challenging to keep up with all of this motion. The idea of a newsletter, which then evolved into a review, was thus born.

From Chicago, Montreal, to Toronto, Edmonton and Halifax, PitR alumni are keeping busy organizing movie screening tours, plays, conferences, as well as radio and television interviews related to things Polish. the cosmopolitan review will not only keep you up-to-date on these events, it will also feature book reviews, news analysis, interviews with academics and commentary from a Polish-American and Polish-Canadian perspective.

What made PitR so special was not only the high caliber of speakers, but also the quality and diversity of students and young professionals attending the program. They are leaders in their respective professional and academic fields of activities, and some of them are introduced in this first issue of the cosmopolitan review: emerging musician Nina Jankowicz from Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania; Halifax-based filmmaker Eric Bednarski; Dominic Roszak from Ottawa, an actor in Canadian politics; South African writer Judith Browne; Jodi Greig, a polonophile studying in Krakow; Justine Jabłońska, editor-in-chief & project manager of som.com, Marek Broniewski, an Albertan currently studying at the London School of Economics; Agnieszka Macoch, a history graduate from Chicago; Patrycja Romanowska, a columnist from Edmonton; and Vincent Chesney, a Philadelphia-based psychologist. Let’s not forget about Antoni and Jan Kowalczewski from Edmonton: without them, CR wouldn’t be online.

These individuals are part of a valuable and growing network of dynamic individuals. Such a network is not an option in a globalized world, but a necessity.

In this first edition, we also have the pleasure of featuring an account by historian Norman Davies, a comment by former foreign correspondent and editor for Newsweek and current director of public policy of the EastWest Institute Andrew Nagorski, and a portion of an interview with Polish-English translator Bill Johnston, all three Poland in the Rockies speakers; as well as an interview with Timothy Snyder, an American professor of history at Yale specializing in Central and Eastern Europe, whom we’d love to have at the program in the future.

As Snyder told me during an interview after a lecture at the College of Europe in Natolin, Warsaw, there is currently a great opportunity for Poland to turn Polish historical scholarship and historical consciousness into European historical consciousness and scholarship. Poland would win a great victory if Polish history could be integrated in European history. I will add: to North American history as well.

So, how are you going to integrate your roots and your history into your mainstream North American and European lives?

The PitR alumni network is yours. So is the cosmopolitan review. Take advantage of it. Expand it beyond the borders of PitR: contributions won’t be limited to its participants.

I believe in education and I believe in the value of programs like Poland in the Rockies. CR is a reflection of that. It was born in times of double crisis: one of identity, one of economics. In face of these crises, let’s unite. Let’s cultivate our network, and take advantage of it…

In my estimation this effort goes far beyond ‘identity politics’ to identity. In a world of competing influences, competing intellectual, political, and religious allegiances, we need programs, journals, and intellectual exploration such as that presented in The Cosmopolitan Review. These efforts ground us. They are a touchstone in a sea of confusion, a touchstone that Bishop Hodur would easily recognize. We are one people as a diamond is one. We are multifaceted as is the diamond. Those facets bring out the brilliance that is within. Those facets are the cultures of the world and particularly those that espouse humanity – the humanity we all long for.