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Karen Ponzio |
Jun 5, 2024 9:24 am
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“School’s out for summer” is not just an Alice Cooper lyric; it is also the theme for Best Video’s June screening series. Four films are set to take fans back to high school each Tuesday of the month at 7 p.m. to experience the awkwardness and the uncertainty of that time with a heavy dose of laughter and relatability. According to Best’s own Teo Hernandez, it was a fitting choice for the lazy, hazy, and hot days to come.
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Brian Slattery |
Jun 5, 2024 9:19 am
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Chloe, of the Hartford-based band Cvmrats, told stories about deceased friends and the difficulties of being mistaken for a train hopper, but everyone at Cafe Nine on Tuesday night knew the reason she — and all of them — were there. As the State Street club listed it, “on behalf of Chloe from Cvmrats, we are hosting a benefit show for her mom. All door proceeds are going to help support her current financial hardships and make a tough situation into hopefully something better.” As Chloe had posted on Instagram, the proceeds would “help my mom get back into stable housing” and “a better situation in general.”
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Brian Slattery |
Jun 4, 2024 9:11 am
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On Monday night, members of A Broken Umbrella Theatre gathered in the theater company’s rehearsal and performance space in Westville to roll the clock back to 1929, close to the origins of New Haven’s apizza culture.
In the scene they rehearsed, Pete Jr. (Otto Fuller) wants to introduce his friend Charles (Jonah Alderman) to the rest of his family: mother Lucrezia (Susan Kulp), Cousin Mike (Matt Gaffney), and Uncle Jimmy (Lou Mangini). Mike and Jimmy, behind the counter, roll out dough and slide apizza in and out of a brick oven. Charles isn’t there just to make friends; he wants a job.
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Eleanor Polak |
Jun 3, 2024 8:16 am
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The New Haven Pride Center at 50 Orange St. was decked out this Saturday with colorful flags and even more colorful artwork.
Magik Press, a micro-press and arts studio run by Aly Maderson Quinlog and Ty/Tyasha Pace, was hosting its first-ever zine party and punk show. It was an event, the two stressed, about community, and the community was out in full force, from the vendors showcasing their creativity to the buyers eager to share in it.
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Eleanor Polak |
Jun 3, 2024 8:14 am
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The music room in Never Ending Books at 810 State St. was cluttered but homey. A collage of brightly-colored abstract art and painted records decorated the walls, which were lined by well-worn musical instruments. It recalled a grandparent’s house, a place where one might go to hear wise truths and rambling stories. On Friday night, two groups of musical storytellers gave the audience just that.
Spooky sounds emanated from Cafe Nine Saturday night. Instead of sending shivers up spines, it kept a crowd smiling and shuffling from side to side for a nonstop hour.
Armando Acevedo clicked on a file from his phone. He unrolled a taped-together 10-page scroll. He started rapping the printed lyrics, summoning the insights of a noted 20th century Swiss psychologist married to 21st century beats.
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Brian Slattery |
May 31, 2024 8:14 am
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Frank Bruckmann paints the sky to convey a sense of the clouds roiling overhead; perhaps it’s getting dark, or threatening rain, or both. In the dimness, the lights in the painting are blurred by atmosphere. Metal signs gleam in the reflected light. Bruckmann gives it all emotion and loving attention, which makes it all the more interesting that his subject isn’t a beautiful landscape, or an important person, but a snarl of traffic on I‑95.
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Dereen Shirnekhi |
May 30, 2024 3:15 pm
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Outdoor salsa nights, craft beers, and live music are coming to a long-empty lot in downtown New Haven, thanks to the efforts of a local innovator who is hoping to showcase Black and Brown brewers.
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Lisa Reisman |
May 30, 2024 9:31 am
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When New Haven-based sculptor Susan Clinard moved from her longtime digs at the barn at the Eli Whitney Museum to a studio in West Haven earlier this year, she brought along with her hundreds of people — sculptures of people, to be precise, made of wood, clay, wire, and found objects.
“I’m always looking for materials to speak about the many things I want to speak about, but above all our common experience,” she said at a recent, well-attended open studio at her new space in the Gilbert Street Studios.
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Brian Slattery |
May 30, 2024 9:28 am
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“Year of the Dragon” — an exhibition at Yale University Art Gallery celebrating the year 2024 and running now through Nov. 10 — begins with two artworks of waves. One of those artworks happens to be the beyond-famous woodblock print The Great Wave off Kanagawa, by Katsushika Hokusai, dating from the 19th century. The other, printed only in 2023, is by the Philippines-born American artist Peter Soriano.
In the difference between the two pieces lies the angle of the show overall, which offers a taste of the rich history of East Asian art and shows how more contemporary Asian artists have embraced the modern move toward abstraction while staying true to the techniques and aesthetic sensibilities they’ve inherited.
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Brian Slattery |
May 29, 2024 9:24 am
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It’s a simple idea with big consequences. The picture of East Rock is the sort you might see on a postcard. The message is easy to digest, a salute to a city the artist loves, a message of solidarity. But it’s also an acknowledgment of struggle, and that’s where the fact that the art is made on a record comes into play. Give the record a spin, and everything gets blurred, both the place and the message. In the midst of the struggle, the hardship can be dizzying. It’s hard to know sometimes which end is up. But that’s also when the music plays.
Fresh off planting New Haven’s pizza flag in D.C., Mayor Justin Elicker led an official delegation to Crown Street Tuesday to lay claim to yet another round-and-flat New Haven original.
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Eleanor Polak |
May 28, 2024 8:32 am
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Best Video Film & Cultural Center was alight on Friday night with movies, music, and general merriment. Three acts — Dan Soto’s Natural Fool, Katy Pinke, and Sallow Friend — performed live music to a crowd of 30 to 40 people, sandwiched together between shelves of video tapes. Before the night was over, the walls would seem to shake with the combined sound of instruments, vocals, and thunderous applause.
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Brian Slattery |
May 24, 2024 9:26 am
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Allie Bee stood in front of an admiring audience in the downstairs space of Westville’s Third Space. Tracks they’d made themself played behind them as they took their time unfurling melodies they’d written on bass. The first one, groovy, insistent, they said, was called “Wayward Giant.” The second one, hazier and jazzier, was called “Blue Moon,” named after a smoothie of the same name that they’d made at work.
“Inspiration comes in weird places,” they said.
An enthusiastic voice came from the back: “Yeah it does!”
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Brian Slattery |
May 23, 2024 9:35 am
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It’s a poster for a conference held in Los Angeles in 1975, “for women who work with public visual and physical forms,” as the piece advertises — that is, women artists and designers. The abstract vista suggests a wide open landscape, a distant horizon, a place of limitless opportunity. But the repeating image, the shape of the symbol of femininity derived from the Roman sign for the goddess Venus, is also quite literally about nuts and bolts.
Plans to convert the former Connecticut Savings Bank on Church Street into a venue for late-night dancing and drinking have fallen apart — leading the marble-columned, long-vacant downtown commercial building to return to the rental market.
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Brian Slattery |
May 21, 2024 9:16 am
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New Haven-based artist Michael Miglietta has a visual style that leans into the surreal and the cosmic, creating dizzying, shape-shifting images with bold linework and vivid color. Under the moniker Parlay Droner, he’s also an experimental musician, exploring the harsher edges of sound. For a show of his artwork at the Cellar on Treadwell in Hamden, however, he faced a more pragmatic problem: “What do I have to do to get people to see a great band from Ireland on a Monday night?”
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Brian Slattery |
May 20, 2024 9:06 am
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A chiming guitar, light percussion from bongos, an ambling bass, a laconic vocal describing a trip down a city street evocative enough that one can visualize the dim sulphur lights, shadows shortening and lengthening as the voyage proceeds. The journey begun, a wavering, fuzzed-out guitar strides onto the scene, taking its time to develop its ideas. The second guitar switches to a fuzz of its own, and together they take the song farther out. Another vocal break, this one taking things in a more surreal direction. “The sun shines on the moon,” two voices sing, and the band keeps going, keeps searching.
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Brian Slattery |
May 17, 2024 9:42 am
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Marisa B. of Trashing Violet was nearing the end of her set, but in another sense, she and her band were just getting warmed up. “Put your earplugs in deep. You’ve been warned,” she said, as the band tore into its most visceral original yet, a song that started and ended with screams that the audience couldn’t help but respond to in kind.
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Karen Ponzio |
May 17, 2024 9:37 am
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Best Video welcomed the return of a popular film screening series Thursday night as Queer Film Club, a collaboration between the film and cultural center and East Rock House, screened the first of four queer comedies to be shown each month from May to August.
The 1999 cult comedy classic But I’m A Cheerleader led the way, as an exuberant audience filled every chair in the space and then some for the story of Megan, played by Natasha Lyonne, who gets sent to a “sexual redirection” school when her parents suspect her of being a lesbian.
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Dereen Shirnekhi |
May 16, 2024 12:07 pm
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In the back room hookah lounge of the Mediterranea Cafe, Love n’Co gave a sneak peak into their musical take on chocolate and hope, a week before it lands on the band’s first-ever EP.
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Brian Slattery |
May 16, 2024 8:22 am
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An entire gallery of the Ely Center of Contemporary Art on Trumbull Street is bathed in a pinkish-orange glow that streams in through tinted windows, a constant chemical sunset. The light transforms the pieces that artist Lionel Cruet has in the space, from a painting of a mangrove swamp populated by iguanas to shopping bags emblazoned with ominous faces commanding you to enjoy your life.