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Cultural events, places and people in the Little Rock area

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Artober – Poetry…. poet and publisher Bryan Borland

Posted on October 12, 2019 by Scott

October is Arts and Humanities Month nationally and in Little Rock. Americans for the Arts has identified a different arts topic to be posted for each day in the month.  Today’s feature is Poetry.

I cannot think of Poetry in Little Rock without thinking of poet and publisher Bryan Borland. He is not only a gifted writer, he is a nurturer of talent in others. He selflessly cultivates talent as he also serves as a social activist and historian.

BRYAN BORLAND is the founder and publisher of Sibling Rivalry Press, an independent publishing house based in Little Rock, he runs with his husband, Seth Pennington.

​SINCE 2010, Sibling Rivalry Press has published Poets & Writers Top Debut Fiction, a Poets & Writers Top 12 Debut Poet, a Pushcart Prize winner, a Lambda Literary Award winner for Gay Poetry, a Lambda Literary Award winner for Lesbian Poetry, eight Lambda Literary Award finalists, three Publishing Triangle Award finalists, 29 American Library Association “Over the Rainbow” recommended LGBT titles, four American Library Association “Over the Rainbow” top 10 favorite picks, “a book all Georgians should read” as selected by the Georgia Center for the Book, one of Library Journal‘s “Best New Magazines,” one of Flavorwire’s “50 books that define the last five years of literature,” and finalists for the Bisexual Poetry Book of the Year, the Oklahoma Book of the Year, the Oregon Book of the Year, and the Georgia Book of the Year. Sibling Rivalry Press authors have gone on to win such prestigious prizes as the Ruth Lilly Poetry Fellowship, the Whiting Award, and the T.S. Eliot Prize. In 2015, the Library of Congress acquired all of Sibling Rivalry Press’s printed titles for housing in its Rare Books and Special Collections Vault, “housed among history’s greatest writers for all of perpetuity.”

AS A POET, Bryan’s first collection of poetry, My Life as Adam, is a potent cocktail of family life, religion, and sexuality. It was one of only five books of poetry selected by the American Library Association for its first annual “Over the Rainbow” list of recommended LGBT-themed publications. His second collection of poetry, Less Fortunate Pirates: Poems from the First Year Without My Father, was released in November 2012. Bryan is also the founding editor of Assaracus, the world’s only print journal dedicated exclusively to the gay poet, the editor of Lady Business: A Celebration of Lesbian Poetry, published in August 2012 by Sibling Rivalry Press and included on 2013’s “Over the Rainbow” list, and the co-editor of Joy Exhaustible, an anthology highlighting the writing of gay publishers and editors, which was included on 2014’s “Over the Rainbow” list. He is a 2015 Lambda Literary Fellow in Poetry and winner of the 2016 Judith A. Markowitz Emerging Writer Award. His third collection of poetry, DIG, was published in September 2016 by Stillhouse Press/George Mason University. DIG was named a finalist for the Lambda Literary Award for Gay Poetry, honored as a Stonewall Honor Book in Literature by the American Library Association, and included on the 2017 “Over the Rainbow” list. Bryan also edited If You Can Hear This: Poems in Protest of an American Inauguration. Of this anthology, Out in Print said, “This book serves as a reminder that nothing is more dangerous than words and those who know how to wield them.” Bryan was selected as the inaugural “Best Poet of Arkansas” by the readers of the Arkansas Times in its annual Best-of-Arkansas issue in July 2018.

​BRYAN’S LATEST RELEASE is Tourist  (2018), a chapbook which chronicles his cross-country tour during the 2016 presidential election.

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Posted in Arts & Humanities Month, Civic Engagement, Literature | Tagged Bryan Borland, poetry, Seth Pennington, Sibling Rivalry Press

Artober – Inspired by….. Robinson Center Performance Hall

Posted on October 11, 2019 by Scott

October is Arts and Humanities Month nationally and in Little Rock. Americans for the Arts has identified a different arts topic to be posted for each day in the month.  Next up is a topic called simply “Inspired by….”

Many things, events, people, and occurrences have inspired me.  But the architecture, history, and artistic & historic events from Joseph Taylor Robinson Memorial Auditorium (now known as Robinson Center performance Hall) may collectively have inspired me the most.

As a performance venue, it has played host to Marian Anderson, Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne, Mikhail Baryshnikov, Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong, Donna Axum, Elvis Presley, Glen Campbell, Carol Channing, Yo Yo Man, Bernadette Peters, Zuill Bailey, well the list could go on and on for multiple paragraphs.

It has been the resident home of the Arkansas Symphony Orchestra since 1973 and hosted Ballet Arkansas’ The Nutrcracker for 40 years.  Touring Broadway shows and concerts come through on a regular basis.

It was the site of a memorial service for Daisy Bates. It was NOT the site of a Duke Ellington concert in 1961 because administrators refused to desegregate the facility. (He had previously played there in the 1950s). After a lawsuit, the national tour of Hair played there. Presidents Truman, Eisenhower, Clinton, and Bush 43 spoke at the building. Buzz Aldrin held court discussing his trip to the moon and his desire to see the US go to Mars.  George Takei held the audience in rapt silence as he detailed his experiences as a child in a Japanese internment camp in Arkansas.  Elvis’ first recorded version of “Hound Dog” took place in this building.  Jesse Belvin’s final concert was in this building.

The architecture by Lawson Delony and George Wittenberg working with Eugene Stern combines neoclassical elements with Art Deco elements and good, old fashioned New Deal sensibilities. In 2014, Ennead Architects working with Polk Stanley Wilcox led a top to bottom reinvention of the space which brought the performance spaces into the 21st Century while also restoring much of the original 1940 decor which had been decimated in an early 1970s renovation.

This building was the culmination of an effort which started in the 1890s to create a municipal auditorium for Little Rock. Many Little Rock leaders worked on that effort for decades.  Once New Deal funding made the project possible, the drama did not end. Construction funds ran out and Mayor J. V. Satterfield, Jr., had to use innovative financing methods to get the building completed. This February Robinson will turn 80.

While Senator Robinson had nothing to do with the project, as the state’s senior U.S. Senator, he certainly was involved in giving approval to it. After his death in the summer of 1937 it was announced in December 1937 the building would be named in his memory.  Nearly 80 years later it still stands as a testament not only to him, but to the tens of thousands of performers who have been on its stage.

 

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Posted in Architecture, Arts & Humanities Month, Civic Engagement, Dance, Government, History, Music, Theatre | Tagged Alfred Lunt, Arkansas Symphony Orchestra, Ballet Arkansas, Bernadette Peters, Bill Clinton, Buzz Aldrin, Carol Channing, City of Little Rock, Daisy Bates, Donna Axum, Duke Ellington, Dwight Eisenhower, Elvis Presley, Ennead Architects, Eugene Stern, George Takei, George W. Bush, George Wittenberg, Glen Campbell, Harry S. Truman, J. V. Satterfield Jr., Joseph Taylor Robinson, Lawson Delony, Little Rock Convention & Visitors Bureau, Louis Armstrong, Lynn Fontanne, Marian Anderson, Mikhail Baryshnikov, Polk Stanley Wilcox, Robinson Center Performance Hall, The Nutcracker, Wittenberg Delony & Davidson, Yo Yo Man, Zuill Bailey

October 2FAN at Christ Church – Artwork by Jane F. Hankins and Jericho Way clients

Posted on October 11, 2019 by Scott

Join Christ Church on 2nd Friday Art Night as they open their newest exhibit for the Arts at Christ Church, featuring Jane F. Hankins’s collection “Our Better Angels,” together with works by clients of Jericho Way, a homeless day center in Little Rock.

Hankins’ art will showcase her whimsical creativity.  The work by Jericho Way clients ranges in a variety of styles.  These exhibits will be on display and available for purchase through the end of December 2019.

The opening reception will be from 5:00pm to 7;30pm.

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Posted in Civic Engagement, Visual Art | Tagged 2nd Friday Art Night, Arts at Christ Church, Christ Church, Christ Episcopal Church, Jane F. Hankins, Jericho Way

Artober – Community Programs

Posted on October 10, 2019 by Scott

Little Rock’s cultural organizations THRIVE on community outreach programs.  Below are just a few examples of organizations going out into the community or bringing community members to them.  So many more photos could have been shown.

Ballet Arkansas performing at a school as a preview for an upcoming performance.

Students participating in the Arkansas Symphony Orchestra’s Petting Zoo giving them a chance to play musical instruments. This event took place in conjunction with the Museum of Discovery.

Mentors and participants in the Arkansas Cinema Society’s Filmmaking Lab for Teen Girls. Two films written, directed, designed, edited, and scored by these teenage female filmmakers were shown at ACS’s 2019 Filmland.

The Arkansas Repertory Theatre has student matinees for most of its productions. Here are just a few of the students who have attended in 2019. For many of them, a trip to the Rep is the first live theatre they have seen.

In a triple partnership, ACANSA Arts Festival of the South, Little Rock’s Arts+Culture Commission and the Central Arkansas Library System sponsored a free opening night art exhibit in September which drew hundreds of people of all ages.

The Arkansas Arts Center’s Super Sunday Family Free Fun Day is a monthly program offering free arts activities for children. While the MacArthur Park location is closed, it will be at the CALS Hillary Clinton Children’s Library.  Next one is October 13.

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Posted in Arts & Humanities Month, Civic Engagement, Dance, Design, Film, Government, Museum, Music, Science, Theatre, Visual Art | Tagged ACANSA Arts Festival, Arkansas Arts Center, Arkansas Cinema Society, Arkansas Repertory Theatre, Arkansas Symphony Orchestra, Ballet Arkansas, Bobby Roberts Library, CALS, Central Arkansas Library System, Children's Library and Learning Center, Little Rock Arts + Culture Commission, Museum of Discovery

Publisher Walter E. Hussman, Jr., is this year’s CALS J. N. Heiskell Distinguished Lecturer

Posted on October 10, 2019 by Scott

Image result for walter e. hussman jrWalter E. Hussman Jr., is the publisher of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette and a third-generation newspaperman whose family acquired a chain of newspapers stretching from Tennessee to Missouri.

As publisher of the Arkansas Democrat, in 1991, Hussman purchased the assets of the Gazette and began publishing the Democrat-Gazette. Hussman will speak about the newspaper industry, including the recent decision to transition the Democrat-Gazette to a digital-only format Monday-Saturday.

He is speaking tonight (October 10) at the CALS Ron Robinson Theater. Admission is free, please reserve tickets at http://www.cals.org.

Mr. Hussman’s appearance is the 2019 J.N. Heiskell Program, an annual event held in honor of John Netherland (J. N.) Heiskell who served as editor of the Arkansas Gazette for more than seventy years.  Mr. Heiskell was also a trustee of the Little Rock Public Library (forerunner of CALS) from 1910 until his death in 1972 at the age of 100.

Mr. Hussman is not the first person to own the assets of both the Arkansas Gazette and the Arkansas Democrat.  The first to have that designation was J. N. Heiskell who owned the Democrat for a couple of years in the late 1900’s/early 1910s.

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Posted in Civic Engagement, Government, Lecture | Tagged Arkansas Democrat, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Arkansas Gazette, CALS, Central Arkansas Library System, J. N. Heiskell, Walter E. Hussman Jr.

Dedication of sculpture for 100 years of Women’s Suffrage in Arkansas

Posted on October 10, 2019 by Scott

Today, October 10, 2019, Jane DeDecker’s Every Word We Utter sculpture and the Women’s Suffrage Centennial Plaza will be dedicated in the Vogel Schwartz Sculpture Garden in Riverfront Park.

The ceremony will take place at 11:00am. Among the speakers will be Gov. Asa Hutchinson and Mayor Frank Scott, Jr. as well as the sculptor.

In July 1919, in part largely to the leadership of Gov. Charles Brough and First Lady Anne Roark Brough, the Arkansas General Assembly approved the 19th Amendment to the US Constitution, making Arkansas the 12th state of the 36th needed.

Two years earlier, Arkansas had given women the right to vote, but only in party primaries. This was not the first attempt at granting Arkansas women the vote. In 1868, a bill was introduced to allow voting regardless of gender but it failed.

As throughout the United States, the efforts to establish women’s suffrage in Arkansas began prior to the Civil War. By 1869, articles started appearing in local newspapers about women’s suffrage efforts. In 1881, the Arkansas Woman Suffrage Association had been founded. The Arkansas Equal Suffrage Association was created in 1888. Both of these early groups disbanded when their leaders died. However they planted the seeds for future efforts.

The Political Equality League was founded in Little Rock in 1911. That year an amendment to the Arkansas Constitution was proposed which would have granted women the right to vote. While it failed, the effort created momentum, and women’s suffrage leagues were created throughout Arkansas which led to ultimate victory in 1919.

DeDecker’s sculpture features Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Sojourner Truth, Harriet Stanton Blatch, Alice Paul, and Ida B. Wells, all national leaders in the Women’s Suffrage movement.

It also features two Arkansas women who played important roles:  Josephine Miller Brown and Bernie Babcock.

This sculpture features two Arkansas women: Josephine Miller Brown and Julia Burnell “Bernie” Babcock. Brown came to Arkansas to work on the woman’s suffrage movement and decided to make it her home, while Babcock grew up in the state and learned about the suffrage effort as a teenager. Both have descendants in Arkansas to this day. This duo were chosen to represent the many women who worked on the suffrage movement. Some were from Arkansas, others came here–all of them worked for decades in this state to advance the cause of women’s suffrage.

Other courageous women who were part of the decades-long women’s suffrage effort in Arkansas include: Frances Reeve Edmonson Almand, Freda Hogan Amerigner, Dr. Ida Joe Brooks, Mary Ascena Burt Brooks, Anne Wade Roark Brough, Haryot Holt Cahoon, Florence Lee Brown Cotnam, Cate Campbell Cuningham, Eliza Bradshaw Dodge, Mary Fletcher Drennan, Pauline Floyd, Elizabeth Wallin Foster, Minnie Ursula Oliver Rutherford Fuller, Lizzie Dorman Fyler, Mary Knapp, Mary W. Loughborough, Clara Alma Cox McDiarmid, Josephine Irvin Harris Pankey, Charlotte Andrews Stephens, Adolphine Fletcher Terry, and Gertrude Watkins.

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Posted in Civic Engagement, Government, History, Public Art, Visual Art | Tagged 19th Amendment, Adolphine Fletcher Terry, Anne Wade Roark Brough, Asa Hutchinson, Bernie Babcock, Cate Campbell Cuningham, Charlotte Stephens, Clara Alma Cox McDiarmid, Eliza Bradshaw Dodge, Elizabeth Wallin Foster, Florence Lee Brown Cotnam, Frances Reeve Edmonson Almand, Frank Scott Jr., Freda Hogan Amerigner, Gov. Charles Brough, Haryot Holt Cahoon, Ida Joe Brooks, Jane DeDecker, Josephine Miller Brown, Josephine Pankey, Lizzie Dorman Fyler, Mary Ascena Burt Brooks, Mary Fletcher Drennan, Mary Knapp, Mary W. Loughborough, Minnie Ursula Oliver Rutherford Fuller, Pauline Floyd, Sculpture at the River Market, Vogel Schwartz Sculpture Garden

Tim Rabolt discusses the role of Higer Ed in addressing addiction crisis tonight at the Clinton School

Posted on October 9, 2019 by Scott

Timothy RaboltThe Clinton School presents another timely program this evening (October 9) at 6pm at Sturgis Hall. Tim Rabolt will discuss the role Higher Ed can (and needs to) play in addressing the addiction crisis.

Tim Rabolt is the Executive Director for the Association of Recovery in Higher Education (ARHE). In his role with ARHE, Rabolt oversees all operations, including but not limited to: the national conference, membership, external relations, partnerships and collaborations.

Prior to joining ARHE, Rabolt worked in the D.C. area as a Project Manager with Altarum, a public health research and consulting organization. He graduated from The George Washington University in 2015 with his bachelor’s degree in business administration, and then again in 2017 with his master’s degree in education and human development. He’s been in recovery since April of 2011 during his senior year of high school in Wilmington, Del. He currently resides in Minneapolis, Minn.

All Clinton School Speaker Series events are free and open to the public. Reserve your seats by emailing publicprograms@clintonschool.uasys.edu or by calling (501) 683-5239.

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Posted in Civic Engagement, Lecture | Tagged Clinton School of Public Service, Clinton School Speaker Series, Tim Rabolt

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