March 2023

April 2023

May 2023
SundayMondayTuesdayWednesdayThursdayFridaySaturday
26
27
28
29
30
31
1
  • 7:00 PMin-person! and Online! Penn Vietnamese Student Association presents Broken Bowl
  • 7:00 PM - 10:00 PM Penn Vietnamese Student Association presents Broken Bowl Haunted by the passing of his parents, Nam seeks to escape his grief by leaving his village in Vietnam and starting a new life in America. But he soon discovers that he cannot simply outrun his past and is visited by a magical being who forces him to live through traditional Vietnamese folk stories. Streaming live from The Rotunda in Philadelphia. Watch at https://www.youtube.com/live/rOFoVQLwOis?feature=share
2
3
4
5
6
  • 4:00 PMIn-person! The School for Temporary Liveness
  • 4:00 PM - 9:00 PM

    The School for Temporary Liveness

    Experiments in performance, practice, and pedagogy

    Vol. 3: April 6–8, 2023

    The Rotunda and Slought, Philadelphia

    Participate in situations for collective study with Lou Cornum, FORTUNE, Jonathan González & Marguerite Hemmings, Adelita Husni Bey, Niall Jones, Kevin Quashie, Julie Tolentino, Simone White, and more.

    Free and open to all — anyone can be a student.

    View the program schedule and RSVP for sessions at temporaryliveness.org.

    The School for Temporary Liveness invites you to gather in Philadelphia from April 6–8, 2023 for three days of collective study and experiments in practice, performance, and pedagogy. Located at the Rotunda and Slought, STL Vol. 3 operates as a para-site. If the university is typically understood as the place for proper forms of education, then STL offers a space beside the institution—a temporary zone for the unfolding of our improper and uneven assembly.

    STL asks: What if we approach performances as invitations to enter into study? Inversely, if we imagine the whole operation of a school as a performance, how does that change the ways we teach and learn, or what we think of as knowledge? For Vol. 3, a cohort of participants have been asked to generate situations for collective study that extend from their various practices. Learn alongside them and with each other through their generous and emergent offerings.

    “Study perverts instruction” — STL is an occasion to partake of this perversion, a situation for gathering where “those who study do not improve but improvise.” When approached as a form that bears the excesses, instabilities, and ruptures of social life, performance renders the ways and means by which we come together, linger, exit, and do it all over again. What minor forms of life are brought forth through these passages? What tentative collectivities emerge in these interstices? Performance, like school, can be an excuse for taking part in dissonant communion.

    STL is informed by the work of Black feminist thought, critical pedagogies, queer theory, and performance studies. It is equally informed by the practices in life and art—namely dance, performance, and poetics—that circulate alongside and in conversation with these theoretical traditions. This project is in conversation with historical and ongoing attempts to produce alternative contexts for pedagogy and performance.

    Quotations are from Stefano Harney and Fred Moten’s All Incomplete (2021).

    Subscribe to our email list for updates, and follow us on Instagram.

    The School for Temporary Liveness is curated and organized by Lauren Bakst.

    THURSDAY, April 64:00 pm: Pull Up, Simone White and Wilmer Wilson IV (R)5:30 pm: What Might Live in a Word and a Sentence, Kevin Quashie (S)7:00 pm: djamn, Jonathan González and Marguerite Hemmings (R)

    FRIDAY, April 711:00 am: Thinking with Poems, Kevin Quashie (S)4:00 pm: Critical Infrastructures, Adelita Husni Bey (R)7:30 pm: Making Life in the Wastelands, Lou Cornum (R)10:00 pm: Hahaha, 2023, Niall Jones (S)

    SATURDAY, April 81:00 pm: Critical Infrastructures, Adelita Husni Bey (R)4:00 pm: ON TOUCH, Julie Tolentino (S)5:00 pm: On Necessary Work + I Am Somebody, Adelita Husni Bey (R)8:00 pm: < p a r t y > (S)

    ONGOINGCome early and stay late to linger in these installations.

    The Water Fountain, Organized by FORTUNE (S)

    Physical Education, Organized by Andrew J. Smyth (S)

     (S) = Slought, (R) = Rotunda

7
  • 4:00 PMIn-person! The School for Temporary Liveness
  • 4:00 PM - 10:00 PM

    The School for Temporary Liveness

    Experiments in performance, practice, and pedagogy

    Vol. 3: April 6–8, 2023

    The Rotunda and Slought, Philadelphia

    Participate in situations for collective study with Lou Cornum, FORTUNE, Jonathan González & Marguerite Hemmings, Adelita Husni Bey, Niall Jones, Kevin Quashie, Julie Tolentino, Simone White, and more.

    Free and open to all — anyone can be a student.

    View the program schedule and RSVP for sessions at temporaryliveness.org.

    The School for Temporary Liveness invites you to gather in Philadelphia from April 6–8, 2023 for three days of collective study and experiments in practice, performance, and pedagogy. Located at the Rotunda and Slought, STL Vol. 3 operates as a para-site. If the university is typically understood as the place for proper forms of education, then STL offers a space beside the institution—a temporary zone for the unfolding of our improper and uneven assembly.

    STL asks: What if we approach performances as invitations to enter into study? Inversely, if we imagine the whole operation of a school as a performance, how does that change the ways we teach and learn, or what we think of as knowledge? For Vol. 3, a cohort of participants have been asked to generate situations for collective study that extend from their various practices. Learn alongside them and with each other through their generous and emergent offerings.

    “Study perverts instruction” — STL is an occasion to partake of this perversion, a situation for gathering where “those who study do not improve but improvise.” When approached as a form that bears the excesses, instabilities, and ruptures of social life, performance renders the ways and means by which we come together, linger, exit, and do it all over again. What minor forms of life are brought forth through these passages? What tentative collectivities emerge in these interstices? Performance, like school, can be an excuse for taking part in dissonant communion.

    STL is informed by the work of Black feminist thought, critical pedagogies, queer theory, and performance studies. It is equally informed by the practices in life and art—namely dance, performance, and poetics—that circulate alongside and in conversation with these theoretical traditions. This project is in conversation with historical and ongoing attempts to produce alternative contexts for pedagogy and performance.

    Quotations are from Stefano Harney and Fred Moten’s All Incomplete (2021).

    Subscribe to our email list for updates, and follow us on Instagram.

    The School for Temporary Liveness is curated and organized by Lauren Bakst.

    THURSDAY, April 64:00 pm: Pull Up, Simone White and Wilmer Wilson IV (R)5:30 pm: What Might Live in a Word and a Sentence, Kevin Quashie (S)7:00 pm: djamn, Jonathan González and Marguerite Hemmings (R)

    FRIDAY, April 711:00 am: Thinking with Poems, Kevin Quashie (S)4:00 pm: Critical Infrastructures, Adelita Husni Bey (R)7:30 pm: Making Life in the Wastelands, Lou Cornum (R)10:00 pm: Hahaha, 2023, Niall Jones (S)

    SATURDAY, April 81:00 pm: Critical Infrastructures, Adelita Husni Bey (R)4:00 pm: ON TOUCH, Julie Tolentino (S)5:00 pm: On Necessary Work + I Am Somebody, Adelita Husni Bey (R)8:00 pm: < p a r t y > (S)

    ONGOINGCome early and stay late to linger in these installations.

    The Water Fountain, Organized by FORTUNE (S)

    Physical Education, Organized by Andrew J. Smyth (S)

     (S) = Slought, (R) = Rotunda

8
  • 1:00 PMIn-person! The School for Temporary Liveness
  • 1:00 PM - 10:00 PM

    The School for Temporary Liveness

    Experiments in performance, practice, and pedagogy

    Vol. 3: April 6–8, 2023

    The Rotunda and Slought, Philadelphia

    Participate in situations for collective study with Lou Cornum, FORTUNE, Jonathan González & Marguerite Hemmings, Adelita Husni Bey, Niall Jones, Kevin Quashie, Julie Tolentino, Simone White, and more.

    Free and open to all — anyone can be a student.

    View the program schedule and RSVP for sessions at temporaryliveness.org.

    The School for Temporary Liveness invites you to gather in Philadelphia from April 6–8, 2023 for three days of collective study and experiments in practice, performance, and pedagogy. Located at the Rotunda and Slought, STL Vol. 3 operates as a para-site. If the university is typically understood as the place for proper forms of education, then STL offers a space beside the institution—a temporary zone for the unfolding of our improper and uneven assembly.

    STL asks: What if we approach performances as invitations to enter into study? Inversely, if we imagine the whole operation of a school as a performance, how does that change the ways we teach and learn, or what we think of as knowledge? For Vol. 3, a cohort of participants have been asked to generate situations for collective study that extend from their various practices. Learn alongside them and with each other through their generous and emergent offerings.

    “Study perverts instruction” — STL is an occasion to partake of this perversion, a situation for gathering where “those who study do not improve but improvise.” When approached as a form that bears the excesses, instabilities, and ruptures of social life, performance renders the ways and means by which we come together, linger, exit, and do it all over again. What minor forms of life are brought forth through these passages? What tentative collectivities emerge in these interstices? Performance, like school, can be an excuse for taking part in dissonant communion.

    STL is informed by the work of Black feminist thought, critical pedagogies, queer theory, and performance studies. It is equally informed by the practices in life and art—namely dance, performance, and poetics—that circulate alongside and in conversation with these theoretical traditions. This project is in conversation with historical and ongoing attempts to produce alternative contexts for pedagogy and performance.

    Quotations are from Stefano Harney and Fred Moten’s All Incomplete (2021).

    Subscribe to our email list for updates, and follow us on Instagram.

    The School for Temporary Liveness is curated and organized by Lauren Bakst.

    THURSDAY, April 64:00 pm: Pull Up, Simone White and Wilmer Wilson IV (R)5:30 pm: What Might Live in a Word and a Sentence, Kevin Quashie (S)7:00 pm: djamn, Jonathan González and Marguerite Hemmings (R)

    FRIDAY, April 711:00 am: Thinking with Poems, Kevin Quashie (S)4:00 pm: Critical Infrastructures, Adelita Husni Bey (R)7:30 pm: Making Life in the Wastelands, Lou Cornum (R)10:00 pm: Hahaha, 2023, Niall Jones (S)

    SATURDAY, April 81:00 pm: Critical Infrastructures, Adelita Husni Bey (R)4:00 pm: ON TOUCH, Julie Tolentino (S)5:00 pm: On Necessary Work + I Am Somebody, Adelita Husni Bey (R)8:00 pm: < p a r t y > (S)

    ONGOINGCome early and stay late to linger in these installations.

    The Water Fountain, Organized by FORTUNE (S)

    Physical Education, Organized by Andrew J. Smyth (S)

     (S) = Slought, (R) = Rotunda

9
10
  • 6:00 PMOnline! Grant Writing for Artists with Tisha Smith, MBA
  • 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM

    On Monday, April 10th, join us for Grant Writing for Artists with Tisha Smith, MBA Manager of Finance & Grants at Columbia University. In this two-hour virtual workshop, Tisha will teach the basics of applying for arts grants and share common pitfalls to avoid with research and preparation.

    WORKSHOP TOPICS INCLUDE:

    Demystify the language and process behind the grant processLearn the basic of grant researchReview actually grant proposals, learn common mistakes and important proposal components

    Registration is FREE and is required and appreciated. Please register at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/grant-writing-for-artists-with-tisha-smith-mba-tickets-493391586517

    Access to workshop replays will be available to attendees only.

    The Bigger Picture (TBP), in partnership with The Rotunda, local artists and creative entrepreneurs, offers free resources workshops for artists and organizations on a monthly basis.

11
12
13
  • 7:00 PMIn-person! 2 Fantastical Features! AIR CONDITIONER (2020) & SOUND OF NOISE (2010)
  • 7:00 PM - 10:30 PM BRIGHT BULB SCREENINGS, Free Double Features Every Second Thursday of the MonthFollow Bright Bulb Screenings on Facebook, InstagramThe Rotunda (4014 Walnut, Philly) - Thurs. April 13th, 2023, 7pmTwo Clever, Amusing Fantastical International Features!AIR CONDITIONER (2020, directed by Fradique, 72 minutes, Angola)SOUND OF NOISE (2010, directed by Ola Simonsson and Johannes Stjärne Nilsson, 102 min., Sweden)- - - -AIR CONDITIONER us an indescribable small wonder. At just over an hour in length, native director Fradique introduces us Angola's bustling capital Luanda, its haunting and beautiful landscape traversed by the easy-going security guard Matacedo (Jose Kiteculo). It's the middle of summer and his boss' air conditioner needs to be hauled in for repair but as the local radio station reports, there has been a mysterious rash of air conditioners dropping from daily from the city's windows. Matacedo will discover there indeed is more here than meets the eye.Fradique's sustains a magical realism with great finesse that quietly and poetically reveals the soulful history of the place and its people. Aline Frazao's score is particularly striking, a fusion of jazz made new with indigenous instrumentation.“Fradique’s gently freewheeling slice of science-fiction-inflected urban strangeness...has the logic and pace of a dream”- Hollywood Reporter“The tech may be on the blink, but this striking debut makes humanity seem like a beautiful malfunction.”- The Guardian“This is like nothing you’ve seen anywhere else.”The Irish Timestrailer:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2crYKgRbpRI- - - - - -SOUND OF NOISE is an 2010 epic Swedish comedy that seems made to tickle the imaginations of every slightly-disgruntled musician. We meet our musical antagonists as the pair of expelled music students creating a song while barreling down the highway: one hammering away with a drum kit packed into the old van, the driver playing the sounds of the engine accompanied by the whir of the tire hitting this warning slits on the pavement's shoulder.Crashing the van, the pair move on to creating an epic public four-part piece for six drummers (all hilariously recruited), each segment creating music of dangerous means with the noise of objects on-site. They're being pursued by a police detective named Amadeus, a profoundly unmusical man born into a prestigious musical family, including his younger brother, the local orchestra's conductor.Writer/directors Ola Simonsson and Johannes Stjärne Nilsson do a fantastic job sustaining a tricky state of whimsy, juggling its eccentric cast of character and creating a quartet of wildly theatrical, highly rhythmic set pieces, each piece successfully topping the last in scope and musical madness. It is safe to say, you've never seen a musical quite like it.“Part quirky comedy, part existential mystery, part flash-mob musical.”AV ClubTrailer:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZSYQ0IbNsBwMasking is encouraged. Seating is limited.- 100 people MAX will be permitted in the venue during an event. This includes audience and staff.Follow brightbulbscreenings on Instagram, Facebook
14
  • 7:00 PMIn-person! I Know The End, a play by Sof Sears (Penn '23), produced by Ricardo Bracho
  • 7:00 PM - 8:00 PM

    SHOWTIMES:

    Friday April 14, 7PM

    Saturday April 15, 2PM

    Sunday April 16, 5PM

    I Know the End is a 1-act play about Los Angeles and all its urban folklore, Chicana experience, monsters, girlhood, trauma and rage, with a title borrowed from a Phoebe Bridgers song. Tickets are free. Estimated show runtime is an hour, and there will be no intermission.

    Content warning: this is a play largely about dead and murdered women, with lots of cursing, screaming, blood, general blasphemy, and lights/sound effects. Please attend at your own risk!

    This play is co-sponsored by the GSWS Department and The Rotunda.

    Tickets are FREE. Please register at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/i-know-the-end-tickets-600835795037

     

15
  • 2:00 PMIn-person! I Know The End, a play by Sof Sears (Penn '23), produced by Ricardo Bracho
  • 2:00 PM - 3:00 PM

    SHOWTIMES:

    Friday April 14, 7PM

    Saturday April 15, 2PM

    Sunday April 16, 5PM

     

    I Know the End is a 1-act play about Los Angeles and all its urban folklore, Chicana experience, monsters, girlhood, trauma and rage, with a title borrowed from a Phoebe Bridgers song. Tickets are free. Estimated show runtime is an hour, and there will be no intermission.

    Content warning: this is a play largely about dead and murdered women, with lots of cursing, screaming, blood, general blasphemy, and lights/sound effects. Please attend at your own risk!

    This play is co-sponsored by the GSWS Department and The Rotunda.

     

    Tickets are FREE. Please register at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/i-know-the-end-tickets-600835795037

     

  • 8:00 PMIn-person! Proteus-3, Bernhard Wostheinrich with special guest Tim Motzer
  • 8:00 PM - 11:00 PM Event Horizon SeriespresentsProteus-3: purveyors of electronic symphonic proportionsBernhard Wostheinrich: music for a strangely beautiful stream of consciousnessfeaturing special guest Tim MotzerAdmission is FREE
16
  • 5:00 PMIn-person! I Know The End, a play by Sof Sears (Penn '23), produced by Ricardo Bracho
  • 5:00 PM - 6:00 PM

    SHOWTIMES:

    Friday April 14, 7PM

    Saturday April 15, 2PM

    Sunday April 16, 5PM

     

    I Know the End is a 1-act play about Los Angeles and all its urban folklore, Chicana experience, monsters, girlhood, trauma and rage, with a title borrowed from a Phoebe Bridgers song. Tickets are free. Estimated show runtime is an hour, and there will be no intermission.

    Content warning: this is a play largely about dead and murdered women, with lots of cursing, screaming, blood, general blasphemy, and lights/sound effects. Please attend at your own risk!

    This play is co-sponsored by the GSWS Department and The Rotunda.

     

    Tickets are FREE. Please register at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/i-know-the-end-tickets-600835795037

     

17
18
  • 8:00 PMIn-person! Fire Museum Presents: Edition Redux (Vandermark/Finnegan/Dessel/McDonald) & Bark Culture
  • 8:00 PM - 10:00 PM Fire Museum Presents:Edition Redux (Vandermark/Finnegan/Dessel/McDonald) & Bark CultureRegistration is encouraged. https://www.eventbrite.com/e/edition-redux-vandermarkfinnegandesselmcdonald-bark-culture-tickets-514174197867Edition Redux is the most recent of Ken Vandermark's ensembles, an addition to an ongoing series of bands that have been internationally and critically acclaimed, such as The Vandermark 5, FME, The Resonance Ensemble, The Territory Band, Made To Break, and Marker. In addition to Vandermark, who plays saxophones and clarinets with the group, this quintet is comprised of Lily Finnegan (drums), Erez Dessel (keyboards), and Beth McDonald (tuba/electronics).The music of Edition Redux includes the range of Vandermark's interests and influences, incorporating the experimental jazz of the AACM; the different schools of improvised music based in England, Netherlands, and Germany; post-punk, Tropicalia, dub, and funk.Ken Vandermark: is an improvising musician and composer who plays tenor and baritone saxophone, Bb and bass clarinet. He moved to Chicago from Boston in 1989, and has worked from the early 1990s onward, both as a performer and organizer in North America and Europe, recording in an array of contexts with musicians such as Fred Anderson, Hamid Drake, Peter Brötzmann, Sylvie Courvoisier, Terrie Ex, Paul Lytton, Joe McPhee, Eddie Prevóst, Mette Rasmussen, Nate Wooley & many others.Ken co-founded Catalytic Sound in 2012, an organization dedicated to the economic sustainability of creative improvising musicians, and since then has been its director. In 2014 he began Audiographic Records, an independent music label. Since June of 2015 Ken has been co-curator of Option, a music and interview series held at Experimental Sound Studio in Chicago. He is also a prolific writer and in 1999 he was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship in music.Erez Dessel: is an improviser, pianist, composer, and educator. After winning multiple Downbeat Student Music Awards, Dessel moved to Boston to study at the New England Conservatory of Music (NEC), where he worked with a host of jazz luminaries, including Billy Hart, Ethan Iverson, and Jason Moran. As an educator, he led his quartet to perform and teach in over 50 workshops in the Boston area and was also selected to bring his group to the Virginia Arts Festival. After graduating from NEC in 2020, Dessel moved to Savannah, GA to accept the position of music director at the Savannah Music Festival Jazz Academy, Savannah’s first and only free after-school youth jazz program. He currently lives in Chicago, where he's performed with a host of improvising musicians at venues indulging the Hungry Brain and Elastic Arts. Dessel’s music is centered around exploring improvisation, graphic notation, and polyrhythmic structures. He frequently works with cassette tapes and is currently developing ways to paint with the piano using charcoal, pastel, paper, and linen.Lily Finnegan: is a Chicago born and based drummer, composer and improviser. In 2021 she earned a Master of Music from Berklee College of Music in Boston Massachusetts. She received a full scholarship to participate in the Berklee Global Jazz Institute, a 20 person international cadre of musicians led by Danilo Perez. At Berklee she was also part of the Institute of Jazz and Gender Justice. Here she was mentored by Terri Lyne Carrington, Kris Davis, and Linda May Han Oh. She’s worked on projects with Carrington including Music for Abolition as part of the Visualizing Abolition Exhibit at University of California Santa Cruz. In 2022 Lily returned to Chicago where she is involved in various creative groups and projects.Beth McDonald: is a classically trained tuba player gone awry. She performs mainly as an improviser, using the tuba acoustically and with electronic effects pedals. Densing (2021), her most recent album, uses tuba and electronics in conjunction with natural acoustic resonance to build up unpredictable new layers of sound. In a previous musical life, Beth toured as a contemporary classical musician, chamber musician, and soloist. She also participated in orchestral academies at the Lucerne Festival, Aspen Music Festival, and the Schleswig-Holstein Musik Festival, and was on staff at the Summer Institute for Contemporary Performance Practice.Bark Culture:Bark Culture is a trio out of Philadelphia led by Victor Vieira-Branco on vibraphone, John Moran on bass and Joey Sullivan on drums. The group approaches Vieira-Branco’s compositions in an episodic frenzy, leaping from idea to idea, rarely looking back and using improvisation as a means of collective momentum.Vieira-Branco spent the 2010’s in Brazil where he got his footing in the expansive creative music scene in Sao Paulo, having played extensively with trio repelente, a band with Rodrigo Hara and Mauricio Takara of Sao Paulo Underground, Hurtmold, Rob Mazurek’s Black Cube SP. In the later half of the 2010’s, Vieira-Branco was active in the free improv scene, both as a performer and putting on numerous shows over the years of his stay there, having performed with Mauricio Takara, Bernardo Pacheco, Philip Somervell, Thomas Rohrer, Lorena Hollander, Romulo Alexis, Negro Leo and Rogerio Martins amongst others.Joey Sullivan and John Moran have been active in the Philadelphia scene for some time now. Moran has been a part of Maya Keren’s trio with Julian Miltenberger, Micah Graves’ group, as well as playing in bands like EAT, Guitars and Drums, and Ceiba, both of the latter alongside Joey Sullivan. Sullivan is active in both setting up some very successful free music showings as well as playing with an array of east coast improvisers. Playing drums in out music groups like Violet Salon III with James McKain and Jared Radichel as well as playing in active alt-folk groups like Florry.Registration is encouraged. https://www.eventbrite.com/e/edition-redux-vandermarkfinnegandesselmcdonald-bark-culture-tickets-514174197867Admission is FREE
19
20
21
  • 8:30 PMOnline! Bill Fieger Live from ElectricLattéLand
  • 8:30 PM - 10:30 PM Bill Fieger, B. 1964, is a local composer and performer of electronic and acoustic music. This performance will be an all-acoustic set of improvisations loosely based on the Raga Musical form. Along with some American primitive style guitar playing. The goal is always to create a music of mystery (tone-magic).Catch the livestream at https://youtube.com/live/SWyhzqYoGDQ?feature=share
22
  • 7:00 PMIn-person! SOLEFULL Vol.8
  • 7:00 PM - 11:59 PM HERE WE GO !!! #SOLEFULL Vol.8 is here!5 hrs of HOUSE MUSIC ! No Age restrictions! This is a SPECIAL one! It’s our resident DJ’s @djlonelythebronxonian BIRTHDAY !!! Also, we have a SPECIAL GUEST SOLE SELECTOR for the evening! None other than @worldtown ‘s own @benarsenal !!! What a treat to have them both on one night! You won’t want to miss this one! TRUST !!! We are at The Rotunda (4014 Walnut Street) from 7pm-12am. $10 to party, $5 for college students with a valid ID. Come through and get your SOLE•FULL !!!
23
24
25
26
27
28
  • 8:00 PMIn-person! WAIL and Planet Y
  • 8:00 PM - 10:30 PM Band bio(s)WAIL: Wail is a Funk/Jazz/Rock band from Philadelphia PA.The band features drummer G. Calvin Weston, who has had a brilliant career of over 40 years playing with such notables as Ornette Coleman, James Blood Ulmer, John Lurie and the Lounge Lizards, Mark Ribot, Medeski Martin and Wood, and most recently The Free Form Funky Freques, featuring Vernon Reid and Jamaaladeen Tacuma. On guitar and bass, Wail features the Papadopoulos brothers Yanni and Alexi, who’s Doomjazz band, Stinking Lizaveta, has been touring the US and Europe for three decades. With eight studio albums in circulation, Stinking Lizavetea has carved out a unique nitch in the Stoner Rock world as an exciting instrumental combo. Also featured on guitar is Pete Wilder who’s decades long work with Philly’s own infamous band, EDO, has earned him the respect of many technical guitarists.

    Wail has a self titled release on Translation Loss Records. The music can be found at:https://wail2.bandcamp.com/releases

    Planet Y:Planet Y is completely improvised space music featuring WAIL members Yanni Papadopoulos and Pete Wilder. Yanni Papadopoulos relies heavily on his Casio DG20 guitar synth and a handful of effects pedals to create the space scape. There is no looping or sampling involved, all sounds are created in real time. Yanni is joined by musician Pete Wilder, who adds to the mix with guitar, Theremin, and a Casio DG20 guitar synth. (yes, sometimes there will be 2 guitar synths!)Admission is FREE
29
30
  • 1:00 PMIn-person! TINY LITTLE THINGS: THE DOLL/HOUSE & DIORAMA WORKSHOP
  • 1:00 PM - 4:00 PM Sunday April 30, 1pm-4pmTINY LITTLE THINGS:THE DOLL/HOUSE & DIORAMA WORKSHOPDrop-in doll/house and diorama workshopsWe’ll have needle felting, origami display boxes, dollhouse chairs from cardboard tubes, and more. BYOCB (bring your own cardboard box, though we'll have supplies too)More info and updates: @dollhousediorama on Instagram at The RotundaFREE and open to ALL AGES; youth under 12, please bring a grown-upInfo on the workshops and their facilitators: NEEDLE FELTINGCome and learn needle felting, an easy craft for making tiny cute things! You will shape balls of wool to make 3-dimensional animals, people, or objects. In this workshop, we will make tiny guinea pigs with pieces of colored wool and special needles. Vegan fibers will be available for those who don't want to work with animal products. Supplies (including finger protection !) will be available. Taught by ALISON MINER, a librarian at the Free Library of Philadelphia, where she co-runs a needle craft group called Sew What?! Alison has been a fan of miniatures for her whole life and been needle felting for several years, slowly amassing an army of tiny guinea pigs which she swears will not be used for nefarious purposes. ORIGAMI HOUSES Learn how to make a traditional, square-shaped box out of paper that we will decorate to look like your house, apartment, or any other place you'd like to live! You can decorate inside and out to turn your origami Masu box into your new favorite place.AMANDA D'AMICO is a book artist and educator in Philadelphia, working under the imprint Tiny Revolutionary Press. You can see her work at www.tinyrevolutionarypress.com and on Instagram @tiny.revolutionary.DOLLHOUSE IN A BOOKMake a dollhouse in a book; unfold to play out different scenes in different roomsDIY dollhouse:cardboard box edition

    Make your own dollhouse from a shoebox or corrugated cardboard. Endless possibilities. Endless! CC RIOT is an artist and educator who works primarily in ephemera an d text-based media (zines, collage, concepts). Instagram:  @CCRIOT / Www.carolynchernoff.com

     

    DOLLHOUSE CHAIR FROM TOILET PAPER TUBESThis workshop will encourage folks to be creative with toilet paper tubes and paper towel tubes, designer paper, and other decorative elements as we craft adorable chairs made for dollhouses. If there is interest, we can also show people how to make dollhouse plants from these same items. GINA RENZI is a lifelong dollhouse and miniature enthusiast who recently discovered that she not only admires tiny things but also likes to make them from used/discarded/found objects lurking at the bottom of her recycling bin or encountered on her many walks around West Philly. She is focused on the joy of making little things and encourages imperfection and experimentation. FB: @gina.renzi and IG: @ginamrenziAccessibility info:- Left side of the building toward the back: There are seven steps to enter the venue- Right side of the building toward the back: There is a ramp equipped for wheelchairs, strollers, walkers, and all other assistive devices. There is a single-occupancy, all-gender ADA restroom on the first floor, almost as soon as you enter from the rampMasks are STRONGLY ENCOURAGED. Please consider wearing a mask while inside.aaaaand!! SAVE THE DATE!Saturday June 10, 5pm-7pmopening reception ofTINY LITTLE THINGS: THE DOLL/HOUSE PROJECTart exhibition/installation@40th Street Artist-in-Residence Program Gallery aka AIRSPACE, 4007 Chestnut Street First Floormore info coming soon.
1
2
3
4
5
6
March 2023
SMTWTFS
26 27 28 1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31 1
May 2023
SMTWTFS
30 1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31 1 2 3