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German American Heritage Center | 563.322.8844 | kelly.lao@gahc.org | gahc.org

 

 

Davenport, Iowa - Nov. 17, 2015 - The long-planned Bix Beiderbecke Museum will make its home at the River Music Experience (RME) in the Redstone Building in downtown Davenport, Iowa, the two organizations announced today.

The RME and the Bix Beiderbecke Museum & World Archives, LTD have signed an option for nearly 1,500 square feet of exhibit and archival space in the lower level of the building. For over half a century, dedicated fans have dreamed of a permanent museum and archive to preserve the memory of Bix and his music. When the exhibit opens, visitors will be able to see original instruments played by Bix and his fellow musicians, listen to recorded interviews with people who knew Bix, and hear some of the music he made famous.

The Bechtel Charitable Trusts in Davenport have generously committed the lead gift of $100,000, out of a projected $625,000 needed for exhibit design and construction. In making the commitment, Trustee R. Richard Bittner said, "Bechtel Trusts are pleased to participate in honoring Bix Beiderbecke, a composer, a cornetist and a pianist, and one of the greatest jazz musicians of all time."

Board members have pledged $68,000, along with other initial donors who have committed an additional $100,000. The Museum is also seeking funds to establish an endowment of at least $250,000. Donors will have the opportunity to have their names featured in the exhibit hall, which should begin construction late in 2016.

A core group of leading Bix historians and experts will meet in Davenport the weekend of November 20-21, 2015, to refine plans for the exhibit hall and examine the important artifacts that have been purchased or donated.

Among these are family photographs and objects from the Beiderbecke family purchased from Elizabeth Beiderbecke-Hart, and a vast collection of correspondence and recorded interviews with Bix's friends and fellow musicians, purchased from musician and jazz historian Scott Black. This collection, the life's work of Phil and Linda Evans, is comprised of about 40 boxes of rare historical material that will eventually be available to researchers. Evans' books "Bix: the Leon Bix Beiderbecke Story" and "Bix, Man and Legend" (with Richard Sudhalter) are based on material from this collection.

General chairs for the Bix Museum campaign are Howard Braren, Rock Island, Ill., family member and retired fundraising consultant; and Randy Sandke, Shohola, Penn., jazz musician and Bix authority. Honorary chairs are George Avakian, record producer and jazz historian; Hoagy Bix Carmichael; Dick Hyman, pianist and composer; Dan Morgenstern, Director Emeritus of the Rutgers Institute of Jazz Studies; Vince Giordano, Grammy-winning bandleader and jazz historian; and David Sager, archivist, Library of Congress National Jukebox.

The River Music Experience (129 N. Main St. in Davenport, Iowa) exists to give Quad-Cities residents and visitors opportunities to experience America's music, and most especially the music of the Mississippi River, through live music performances and programs which nurture, educate and inspire musicians, and music appreciators. www.rivermusicexperience.org

Winner to be announced during Nov. 18 reception at Figge

Who: The media is invited to a reception to recognize 6 Scott and Rock Island County high school students who competed in the 2016 Village in Bloom bald eagle sculpture competition sponsored by Alcoa. Photo and interview opportunities will be available.

What: The reception will feature a display of all of the sculptures, light refreshments and a short presentation during which the winner will be announced. The winning sculpture will be molded, cast and finished by Isabel Bloom artisans as a fundraiser for the festival.

When: Wed. Nov. 18, 6-7:30 pm. A short presentation will begin at 6:30 pm.

Where: Figge Art Museum, 225 W. 2nd St., Davenport.

Background: This is the 2nd sculpture competition for Village in Bloom, and the first sponsored by Alcoa. The 4th annual Village in Bloom Arts Festival will be held Sat. May 7, 2016. Founded to honor legendary artists Isabel and John Bloom, it features fine art, performing artists, free activities for children and families, and exhibits of Isabel and John Bloom's artwork.

High School Artists:

Payton Howard, Sherrard High School, 12th grade

Ariel Scott, UTHS, 11th grade

Reilly Moeller, Davenport Central High School, 12th grade

Lauren Amato, Davenport Central High School, 10th grade

Bailee Perion, Rock Island High School,10th grade

Amy VanFossen, Home School (Bettendorf) 12th grade

Art History Speaker, Carol Ehlers will present "Van Gogh: Nature and the South Arles and Saint Remy, 1888-1890" on November 19, 2015. The lecture will begin promptly at 5:30 p.m. in the Muscatine Art Center's Music Room. The lecture will feature images of Vincent van Gogh's work as well as photos from his life from 1888 to 1890. The lecture is FREE and open to the public.

 

Vincent van Gogh, celebrated painter, has a lifelong fascination with nature. While in Holland, he spent his youth in the country and his work would feature the birds, trees, and garden. While in Paris, he is exposed to the radical thinking of Impressionism and continues his collection of Japanese art. The art talk will focus on Vincent's time at Arles and the asylum, Saint Rémy, France from 1888-1890.

On February, 1888, Vincent moved from Paris to the Provencal town of Arles. The talk using images will focus on the natural elements. It is the blossoming trees; wheat fields; sunflowers; cypress trees; olive trees; gardens of the public, hospital, and asylum and beautiful still life flora that provide the subjects for some of his most recognized artwork. The program presents artwork showing the beauty of the country side and gardens versus portraits of Arles.

It is in Arles that Vincent van Gogh and Paul Gauguin will create the "Studio of the South" The art talk will include details on how the sunflower series ties in with Paul Gauguin and information about their lives together while in Arles.  Learn thru the letters of Vincent to his brother, Theo van Gogh how he wanted the Sunflowers display and why he repeated some of the original flowers.

May of 1889, Vincent admitted himself as a voluntary patient to the asylum of Saint Paul-de-Mausole in Saint Rémy de Provence, north east of Arles. Although he had access to the outside country side, he will focus on the gardens of the asylum. In the first month, he will produced Irises, 1889.  Later in June of 1889, Vincent produced the highly charged and recognized work, Starry Night, 1889. His artwork, later documents the harvest and picking of olives.

In May, 1890, just before he checked himself out of the asylum and went back north, Vincent painted four exuberant bouquets of spring flowers: two of irises, two of roses, with contrasting colors and formats. They are among his largest and most beautiful still lives.

Vincent van Gogh drew much comfort from the beauty of nature. He believed the countryside was a sanctuary of health. Vincent's artwork during 1888-1889, provides a testament to his unwavering faith in nature and the arts.

EVENT DETAILS:

What: "Van Gogh: Nature and the South Arles and Saint Remy, 1888-1890"

Who: Carol Ehlers

When: Third Thursday, November 19

Time: 5:30 PM

Where: Muscatine Art Center Music Room

Admission to this lecture is FREE.

Please contact Melanie Alexander, Director, with any questions or concerns at 563-263-8282 or by email at malexander@muscatineiowa.gov .

The Muscatine Art Center is located at 1314 Mulberry Avenue in Muscatine, Iowa. Hours are Tuesday through Friday from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Thursday evenings until 7:00 p.m., and Saturday and Sunday from 1:00 to 5:00 p.m. Admission is free. Donations are appreciated. Go to www.muscatineartcenter.org for more information about programs and events and to download a class brochure.

 

A grant from the Iowa Arts Council is making it possible for the Muscatine Art Center to commemorate its 50th anniversary. The public is invited to attend a special event on Sunday, November 22nd with a 1:30 p.m. vocal concert by Katherine Eberle with piano accompaniment by Wayne Wyman.  At 2:30 p.m., "The Lady of the House", a life-size portrait of Laura Musser McColm Atkins by Muscatine artist Jon Fasanelli-Cawelti, will be unveiled.

The event is a celebration of Laura Musser's birthday (November 23, 1877). "Laura would certainly love a concert in her Music Room, and Kitty Eberle is a choice Laura would have appreciated," states Melanie Alexander, Director of the Muscatine Art Center. Laura studied music at Grant Seminary in Chicago and under Sbrigilia in Paris, France. Her beautiful mezzo-soprano voice often filled local performance spaces, especially Muscatine's First Methodist Episcopal Church (today, Wesley United Methodist).

Katherine Eberle, mezzo-soprano, has had a fascinating career of professional and collegiate engagements in both the United States and abroad. She specializes in oratorio, chamber music, art song, and opera. In the past twenty years, Eberle has performed in numerous engagements with orchestras, choral organizations, and chamber music groups. Concert credits include solo performances with the symphonies of Detroit, Lansing, Saginaw (Michigan), Atlanta, Macon, Rome, and Valdosta (Georgia). She has given over one hundred solo recitals as a guest artist in eighteen states as well as in Brazil, Canada, England, Ireland, the Netherlands, Russia, St. John and St. Thomas, Virgin Islands, and Canada. She made her New York debut at Weill Recital Hall, Carnegie Hall in 1994. She was an Artistic Ambassador for the United States Information Agency doing solo concert tours in South America (in 1995 she appeared in Argentina, Ecuador, Peru, Trinidad, and Tobago) and in Korea in 1997. A Van Lawrence Fellowship Winner from the Voice Foundation, Eberle was named a 2012 Obermann Fellow in Residence for her research on Women Composers. Eberle earned degrees from the Baldwin-Wallace Conservatory (BME), the University of Cincinnati (MM), and the University of Michigan (DMA). She has taught at the University of Iowa since 1991.

Eberle will be accompanied by Wayne Wyman, a sought-after coach, an insightful stage director, and an exciting conductor whose career has included numerous guest appearances as a conductor and stage director, as well as serving as Artistic Director of two regional opera companies (Capital Opera in Raleigh, NC and Lyric Opera of San Antonio.) His work has been consistently well received by the public and lauded by critics. Always interested in the operatic artists of the future, Wyman founded and directed the Lyric Studio young artist program while at the artistic helm of the San Antonio company. Wyman also directed the opera program at UT-San Antonio, serving as conductor, stage director, and coach. Wyman earned an Artist Diploma in Opera from the Cincinnati Conservatory and studied privately with the Director of the Opera School at the Hochschule für Musik und darstellende Kunst in Vienna. Currently, Wyman is Opera Coach at the University of Iowa and is on the faculty of the American Institute of Musical Studies (AIMS) in Graz, Austria. He has presented opera masterclasses at New York University, University of Dayton, Rice University, and other American universities.

Eberle and Wyman will present an entertaining musical program with works by Stephen Sondheim and Aaron Copeland and holiday classics such as "Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!" and "Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire". Passages from Laura Musser McColm's 1936 and 1937 will be read by Eberle.

Following the 1:30 p.m. concert, "The Lady of the House" will be unveiled. Jon Fasanelli-Cawelti was commissioned to complete the portrait for the 50th anniversary in 2015. The Iowa Arts Council provided a project grant in the amount of $9,425 to support 50th anniversary projects such as a series of banners in downtown Muscatine featuring collections from the Muscatine Art Center, concerts, a photography exhibition by Muscatine artist Randy Richmond, and special events presented as part of the 50th anniversary exhibition which will run through January 3, 2016.

The work by Fasanelli-Cawelti will be an addition to the collection of artwork portraying Laura Musser. George Grey Barnard, a noted American sculptor, was perhaps the first when he used marble to captured Laura as a child. She posed multiple times for Oscar Grossheim, and one of his photographs was used for Austrian artist, Thomas Riss, to create the colorful portrait hanging in the Reception Room. The Musser family also commissioned a bronze relief bust of Laura.

"Fasanelli-Cawelti was provided with a range of images of Laura, capturing as a child, adolescent, a young bride, and a widow," explains Alexander. "In this contemporary piece, Fasanelli-Cawelti, was asked to help tell the story of Laura Musser McColm Atkins as someone who was shaped by Muscatine, her family, and life experiences that included both great joys and sorrows." Fasanelli-Cawelti attended the University of Iowa in Iowa City, Iowa from 1978 to 1985, where he studied Printmaking. He worked as personal assistant and printer for Mauricio Lasansky, from 1985 to 1998, in his Iowa City studio. Since his departure from Iowa City in 1998, he has resided in Muscatine, Iowa, with his wife and two daughters, continuing to print from his private studio. Fasanelli-Cawelti served as a part-time instructor at Muscatine Community College.

"We would like the Muscatine community to celebrate with the staff, board, and volunteers of the Muscatine Art Center as we mark our 50th Anniversary and the anniversary of Laura Musser's birth." Alexander continued, "The Musser-McColm home has provide a place for generations of local people to explore local history and to see truly remarkable works of art."

The concert and unveiling are free of charge. Light refreshments will be served. Reservations are requested and can be made by calling 563-263-8282.

The Muscatine Art Center is located at 1314 Mulberry Avenue in Muscatine, Iowa. Hours are Tuesday through Friday from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Thursday evenings until 7:00 p.m., and Saturday and Sunday from 1:00 to 5:00 p.m. Admission is free. Donations are appreciated. Visit www.muscatineartcenter.org for more information about programs and events and to download a class brochure.

Early this month we will be continuing the "SEE Art differently" with the 30 paintings in 30 days by Brad Bisbey and Pat Bereskin. Also Dean Kugler's unique way to look at art. Later in the month we will be preparing for final Friday. Final Friday this month is November 27th from 6 to 9 p.m. We will be featuring every artist in the gallery and the new pieces they've been working on. We are "showing off" the wonderful artist working in Bereskin Fine Art Gallery & Studio.

Another event that started last month but we are continuing this month is Third Thursday. A tradition is beginning where every third Thursday of the month the galleries in Bucktown and shops downtown will be staying open later than usual. Bucktown and Bereskin Fine Art Gallery will be open from 5 to 9 p.m. on November 19th. This month there will also be a shuttle to transport you around downtown.

A day that many people don't think about over the Thanksgiving holiday is Small Business Saturday. This is a time to support all the small businesses in the area. Bereskin Fine Art Gallery will be open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
'Tis the season for gift giving. Bereskin Fine Art Gallery offers gift certificates that can be used for classes and/or artwork. If you have family or friends that appreciate art you can buy them a gift certificate to come in and purchase a piece of their choosing.
We have also released or new class schedule for this winter.
For more information contact Pat Bereskin at (563) 508-4630 or bereskinartgallery@gmail.com
Sunday, Nov 8 2pm-
WEARABLE ART: Arts & Crafts Jewelry
A Presentation by Ann Koski
Enjoy this informative talk and see beautiful examples from Ann's own collection!
Opening on Sunday! 2 New Exhibits
Winterscapes- Artists Unlimited display seasonal art
Amazing Advent Adventure- Advent Calendars galore in this year's Advent themed display!
Shop our Christkindlmarkt for everyone on your list! Support GAHC with your holiday shopping! New items include glass tree toppers, new linen designs, fun stocking-stuffers for kids, and much much more!

The Special Collections department of the Thomas Tredway Library, Augustana College, Rock Island, Ill., has received a $3,094 grant to digitize materials from the John Henry Hauberg papers. This grant was awarded by the Illinois State Historical Records Advisory Board, through funding from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC), National Archives and Records Administration.

John Henry Hauberg (1869-1955) was a researcher and photographer active in the Quad City area in the early 20th century. He spent nearly all of his spare time researching and photographing topics of historical interest to the Quad Cities and Illinois, and he compiled some 150 unpublished volumes of Illinois history over the course of his life. The hallmark of Hauberg's collection is his photography, which includes approximately 8,000 glass plate images. This project will target 1,500 of the most historically significant glass plate images related to Native American culture and landscapes (primarily focusing on local Sauk/Fox/Meskwaki tribes), Quad Cities scenes, the Rock Island Arsenal, Black Hawk State Historic Site, and the Denkmann-Hauberg West End Settlement in Rock Island. Many of these photographs are entirely unprecedented in the historical record.

). For information on project developments, accessing the materials, or any other questions, please contact Samantha Crisp, Special Collections Librarian, at 309-794-7317 or specialcollections@augustana.edu.

Arsenal of Innovation Special Event
November 7  |  12 - 3PM
FREE Admission
We wish to extend an invitation to all veterans, family members and those in the community to attend a special event we are co-sponsoring on Saturday, November 7th from 12-3pm to see the Arsenal of Innovation exhibit.
The first 300 guests will be admitted FREE with a reduced fee of $5 to see the documentary film D-Day: Normandy 1944 3D during two special show times at 12:30pm & 1:45pm

A veteran's ceremony will be held at 1:30pm with a live rendering of Taps by the Iowa Honor Guard. Contact us at (563) 324-1933 for questions. ?

Winner to be announced during Nov. 18 reception at Figge

Who: The media is invited to a reception to recognize 6 Scott and Rock Island County high school students who competed in the 2016 Village in Bloom bald eagle sculpture competition sponsored by Alcoa. Photo and interview opportunities will be available.

What: The reception will feature a display of all of the sculptures, light refreshments and a short presentation during which the winner will be announced. The winning sculpture will be molded, cast and finished by Isabel Bloom artisans as a fundraiser for the festival.

When: Wed. Nov. 18, 6-7:30 pm. A short presentation will begin at 6:30 pm.

Where: Figge Art Museum, 225 W. 2nd St., Davenport.

Background: This is the 2nd sculpture competition for Village in Bloom, and the first sponsored by Alcoa. The 4th annual Village in Bloom Arts Festival will be held Sat. May 7, 2016. Founded to honor legendary artists Isabel and John Bloom, it features fine art, performing artists, free activities for children and families, and exhibits of Isabel and John Bloom's artwork.

High School Artists:

Payton Howard, Sherrard High School, 12th grade

Ariel Scott, UTHS, 11th grade

Reilly Moeller, Davenport Central High School, 12th grade

Lauren Amato, Davenport Central High School, 10th grade

Bailee Perion, Rock Island High School,10th grade

Amy VanFossen, Home School (Bettendorf) 12th grade

Contact: Donna Young, Isabel Bloom, at donnay@ibloom.com or (563) 349-3167.

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