Category Archives: Events

Re:New Art Olympic Champions!

Pittsburgh artist Ryder Henry led team Answers to victory in the tenth Art Olympic competition on Saturday at the Re:NEW Festival, Downtown Pittsburgh. Henry’s team members included Nick Falwell, Kate Bechak and Jennifer Bechak. Henry and team were permitted to bring one brown paper bag of tools into the contest, a bag that appeared to contain a bunch of rusty hand tools. Wasting no time, Answers began by dumping their giant palette of Goodwill merchandise onto their nine foot by nine foot working area. Adversity struck early as a greasy mess oozed from an unidentifiable object being cut with a Sawzall. As their space transformed into an oil slick, event organizers raced to contain the spill.  Frantic team members broke down furniture by smashing chairs to the ground. Eventually Answers caught their stride. Objects provided by Goodwill, the event sponsor, were used in clever ways. A rotary telephone was created, complete with dialing mechanism and ringer. At the end, Henry dialed the phone and ordered pizza, singing a jingle recalled from the distant past, “twenty-nine minutes or it’s free!”

Several audience member’s were victorious in the audience participation games. Ryder Henry’s wife Maya took a break from cheering and won the puppet making competition. A recent arrival from Russia, Sasha, won the Halftime Sculpture Contest.  Kirsten Ervin won the Seventh Inning Sketch, capturing a confident likeness of art critic Graham Shearing.

Images by Larry Rippel Photography.

Art Olympics Crew, Kristen Barca, Tom Sarver and Mike Cuccaro.

Art Olympics crew: Kristen Barca, Tom Sarver and Mike Cuccaro.

 

Team Answers making the call that sealed their victory.

Team Answers making the call that sealed their victory.

 

Sasha is declared winner of the Halftime Sculpture Contest.

Sasha is declared winner of the Halftime Sculpture Contest.

 

Zach and Maya competing in the Puppet Making Audience Challenge.

Zach and Maya competing in the Puppet Making Audience Challenge.

 

 

Coming in a close second place was Team: Our Powers Combined, led by Audra Clayton.

Coming in a close second place was Our Powers Combined, led by Audra Clayton.

 

Team "Trebuchet" Led by Sam Turich, toasting the start of the competition.

Team “Trebuchet” Led by Sam Turich, toasting the start of the competition.

 

Kirsten Ervin with Graham Shearing after the Seventh Inning Sketch.

Kirsten Ervin with Graham Shearing after the Seventh Inning Sketch.

 

Art Olympics at Re:New Festival

Five audience member took part in the Seventh Inning Sketch, a portrait sketching contest with art critic and event judge Graham Shearing serving as model.

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Each Art Olympic Team was provided with a basic tool kit and a giant bin of Goodwill items.  Teams were allowed to bring in one brown paper grocery bag of their own objects.

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Alisha Wormsley of “Team Trebuchet” interacting with a member of the audience.

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Ryan (Water) and Audra (Earth) of team “Our Powers Combined” discuss strategy.

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Event judge Gwen Bowman observes the theatrical developments of Gab Cody and “Team Trebuchet.”

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Artist T.Foley, a participant in first Art Olympics of 2007, provides a personal account of her time in the Art Olympic arena.

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Activity branched out well beyond the team nine foot by nine foot spaces.

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The crowd awaits the winner of the puppet making contest.

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An audience member provided feedback on the work in progress.

b0133 “Team Trebuchet” arrived with their brown paper bag filled with books. Here team leader Sam Turich reads as judge Graham Shearing looks on.

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Team “Our Powers Combined” invited audience members into their square to MAKE ART.

 

 

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Art Olympics at Re:NEW Festival – September 17th, 2016

This September brings a new festival to Pittsburgh.  The Re:NEW Festival celebrates creative reuse, with a monthlong line-up of exhibitions, performances, educational activities and events throughout Downtown Pittsburgh and surrounding areas.  A highlight of Re:NEW is the North American premier of Drap-Art, an international show of art made from repurposed materials.

Re:NEW is the perfect venue for Art Olympics, my game-show style performance project that involves teams making sculptural works out of piles of junk over a two-hour period.  Goodwill Industries is sponsoring the event, so teams will discover a plethora of old wooden furniture and well-used housewares as their building materials are unveiled.

2015 Art Olympics (Larry Rippel Photograph).  The September 17th event will be indoors.

2015 Art Olympics (Larry Rippel Photograph). The September 17th event will take place in a repurposed retail store in Downtown Pittsburgh. 

Art Olympics will take place on Saturday, September 17th from 6:00 PM to 9:00 PM at 623 Liberty Avenue, Downtown Pittsburgh. The show will be free to the public.  Stay tuned for more information about teams, judges, and audience activities.

 

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Art Olympics Winners Announced!

Art Olympics champions, Nathan Curtis, Elizabeth Rudnick, David Zak and Craig Freeman.  Photo copyright, Larry Rippel.

Art Olympics champions Nathan Curtis, Elizabeth Rudnick, David Zak and Craig Freeman. Photo copyright, Larry Rippel.

Craig Freeman and team crowned “Masters of 2015 Art Olympics.”

On Saturday, August 29th at 6:30 PM, Artist Craig Freeman and his team, the Commission for Cosmic Craft Transmission, were declared winners at the Art Olympic Festival in East Deutschtown, Pittsburgh. Rounding out Mr. Freeman’s team were artists Elizabeth Rudnick, Nathan Curtis and David Zak. The team members, who are also skilled art installers at some of Pittsburgh’s most prominent galleries, exhibited focus and ingenuity in repurposing the random junk provided for the contest. Their science fiction theme included the use of screen-printed costumes with a flying saucer logo and team abbreviation, C.C.C.T. Their performance involved attempting to contact extraterrestrials with the intention of petitioning for a living wage for Pittsburgh artists. An antenna was raised and their plea was answered by a supportive signal from the beyond.

Also exhibiting strong showings at the Olympics were Hyla Willis, with teammates Ryan A. Murray, Felipe Garcia-Huidobro and Hannah G. Thompson and D.S. Kinsel with teammates Daryl Collier, Anqwenique Wingfield and Julie Mallis. Ms. Willis and team invited audience members to participate in the creation of inflated plastic sculptural forms, some of which became props for catching the wind. Mr. Kinsel and his team, representing the Garfield art studio Boom Concepts, explored the Black Lives Matter theme. Their performance culminated in a multidisciplinary display of operatic voice, sculptural form and symbolic gesture.

Judges for the competition included Erika Johnson, Executive Director of Pittsburgh Center For Creative Reuse, multidisciplinary artists Christiane D and Maritza Mosquera and Wayne Younger of Cityview Church. Teams were rated in various categories including: creative use of materials provided, following the rules, adherence to team artist statement, aesthetic quality of the final product, and the performance element during the two-hour long event.

Developed by Pittsburgh artist Tom Sarver, Art Olympics features three teams of Pittsburgh artists competing over two hours to build winning sculptures out of random junk materials. The high-energy, reality TV-inspired event allows visitors to get up close and see the art making in progress. Previous Art Olympic events have been held at the Mattress Factory Museum of Art, the Union Project, Market Square during the Three Rivers Arts Festival, New Hazlett Theater, and Pittsburgh Center for the Arts.

 

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AUGUST 29th Art Olympic Festival – Press Information

Mural in progress at event site.

Mural in progress at event site.

A group of teenage girls from the East Deutschtown neighborhood assisted in painting the foreground of the mural during a workshop.

A group of teenage girls from the East Deutschtown neighborhood assisted in painting the foreground of the mural during a workshop.

Mural workshop crew. Photo courtesy of NK Contemporary Art Center.

Mural workshop crew. Photo courtesy of NK Contemporary Art Center.

During a trophy-making workshop, community participants made Art Olympic Trophies for artists participating in the August 29th Event. The pieces were made with materials from Pittsburgh Center for Creative Reuse.

During a trophy-making workshop, community participants made Art Olympic Trophies for artists participating in the August 29th Event. The pieces were made with materials from Pittsburgh Center for Creative Reuse.

For Immediate Release
Contact: O​reen Cohen,​Neu Kirche Contemporary Art Center, 1000 Madison Avenue, Pittsburgh PA 15212
ph.: 412-322-2224 e: oreen@neukirche.org

A​ r t O l y m p i c F e s t i v a l – A O n e D a y E v e n t Featuring FALLOW GROUNDS Artist: Tom Sarver

Saturday, August 29th 4:00 PM – 7:00 PM Located on green space at:

824 – 826 Concord Street, East Deutschtown, Pittsburgh 15212

[21 July 2015]

Neu Kirche Contemporary Art Center (NK) presents a new public work by August featured resident artist, Tom Sarver as part of NK’s public art program, Fallow Grounds for Sculpture (FG). Fallow Grounds is a public art initiative that temporarily activates vacant land located in the East Deutschtown neighborhood of Pittsburgh’s Northside to enhance community interactivity by making otherwise empty spaces as active places for healing, growth and revitalization.

On Saturday, August 29th, during NK’s Opening Celebration artist Tom Sarver brings his popular Art Olympics back as an outdoor festival event. Sarver’s residency kicks off on August 4th with a free trophy making workshop from 5-7 pm, followed by an artist talk at Neu Kirche Contemporary Art Center with sponsorship by Pittsburgh Center for Creative Reuse. On Wednesday, August 5th, a mural celebrating Art Olympics will be created at the event site with the City View Youth Group. The main event, Art Olympic Festival, happens on Saturday, August 29th, rain or shine. The grounds will open at 4:00 PM. The opening ceremony with begin at 4 PM and the winners announced at 6:30 PM.

What is Art Olympics?

Inspired by game shows, reality TV and arena sports, the event features three teams of Pittsburgh artists competing over two hours to build winning sculptures out of random junk materials. The high-energy event allows visitors to get up close and see the art making in progress. Teams are judged by a panel of community members and arts professionals. Criteria for judging includes “creative use of materials” and “adherence to the team artist statement.” Teams often engage the audience in unexpected ways as the performance element is a key factor in the competition.

Why is it a Festival?

The event will feature live marching band music by Colonel Eagleburger’s Highstepping Goodtime Band. Audience members will be able to try on-site art making activities including puppet making and printmaking. Some lucky audience members will be selected to compete in a short “halftime show” art making contest. At the culmination of the event, performers will be awarded with trophies made by members of the community. The event is fully accessible via Spring Garden Ave and Concord Street. Food trucks will be available in the Neu Kirche parking lot. Parking is available at the UPMC parking lot on Spring Garden Avenue.

Who is involved?

Tom Sarver and Mike Cuccaro will moderate the event. Judges include Maritza Mosquera, Christiane Leach, Wayne Younger and Erika Johnson. Team leaders are Hyla Willis, Darrell Kinsel and Craig Freeman.

Craig Freeman has been active as a visual artist, gallery owner (Fast Forward) and musician (Lost Realms) in the Pittsburgh art scene for the past six years. Born in isolated area of rural Pennsylvania, his sensibilities were formed by his thirst for all things cultural, including underground music, street art and skateboarding. Freeman has been a part of the gallery installation crew at the Pittsburgh Cultural Trust’s Wood Street and Space Galleries for several years, hanging shows in all forms ranging from complex international kinetic and new media works to paintings by local artists. Freeman will be joined by an all-star lineup of fellow art handlers Elizabeth Rudnick, Nathan Curtis and David Zak. They are the ones that help you to get your show up on time for your opening reception! All are showing and playing gigs in the Pittsburgh art and music scene.

Hyla Willis is an artist and designer working across a wide range of media. She is a co-founding member of subRosa, a mutable (cyber)feminist art collective that creates open-ended environments where participants engage with objects, texts and digital technologies that critique the intersections of information and bio-technologies on women’s bodies, lives and work. She was selected as Pittsburgh Center for the Arts’ 2014 Artist of the Year and created “America’s Least Livable City,” an installation about her hometown in the Central Valley of California. Willis has been the recipient of fellowships from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, Creative Capital, and the MacDowell Colony. She teaches Media Arts at Robert Morris University. Willis’s team will include Ryan A. Murray, Felipe Garcia-Huidobro and Hannah G. Thompson.

D.S. Kinsel is a creative entrepreneur and arts administrator based in Pittsburgh, PA. He expresses his creativity through the mediums of painting, installation, curating, action painting and social media. As a recipient of The Pittsburgh Foundation’s Advancing Black Arts in Pittsburgh Grant, he served as the resident artist at 720 Café, where he provided the boutique with creative support while producing commercial-based print work and window displays. He is currently a resident artist with Most Wanted Fine Art Gallery (supported by the Artist Opportunity Grant from Greater Pittsburgh Arts Council). Kinsel is the co-founder of BOOM Concepts, a combination workspace and creative hub in the Garfield neighborhood of Pittsburgh. Kinsel has served as the MGR Pittsburgh Youth Empowerment Arts in Action Program Coordinator & MGR National Social Media Coordinator. He works with youth, community artists, and community partners to identify ways for youth to express issues of social justice through drama, dance, music, visual art, and technology. Kinsel’s team will include Daryl Collier, Anqwenique Wingfield and Julie Mallis.

Judges

Erika Johnson is the Executive Director of Pittsburgh Center For Creative Reuse, a nonprofit dedicated to promoting resource conservation, creativity and community engagement through material reuse.

Christiane D is an award-winning visual artist, poet, writer and musician. Over the past 20 years, her projects have been at the forefront of the Pittsburgh art scene. She is also the Artist Relations Manager at the Greater Pittsburgh Arts Council.

Maritza Mosquera is a Pittsburgh-based visual artist, educator and curator. She is known for socially engaging, community-based work. She is also known for her work in the dynamic, critical programs at the Andy Warhol Museum that spark conversations on gender, race and social issues.

Wayne Younger is a pastor at Cityview Church, a Christian congregation centered in the East Deutschtown neighborhood. Cityview Church actively serves the North Side community with strong neighborhood and youth-centered programs.

Sponsors

Project sponsors include Pittsburgh Center for Creative Reuse, City View Church, Girlfriends Youth Group, Construction Junction, Artist Image Resource, The Home Depot, Pat Catan’s / Prism Art Supplies and ioby. ioby is a community of donors, volunteers and leaders dedicated to making their neighborhoods stronger and more sustainable. The ioby mission is to deepen civic engagement in cities by supporting community-led neighbor-funded projects in urban neighborhoods. We greatly appreciate the generosity and support the East Deutschtown community has shown Neu Kirche in promoting and establishing our public art initiative.

Neu Kirche Contemporary Art Center is a is a nonprofit 501(c) (3) organization founded in 2014 with a focus on the local community, operating as an economic, social and cultural asset for the advancement of the Northside. Neu Kirche supports contemporary artists, proposing new ways to think about art making by promoting cultural vitality through community engagement.

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Mural for Art Olympics

In nine days I’ll begin preparing the grounds for Art Olympics. Part of the process involves painting a mural on site with the assistance of a community youth group. The project is part of the Fallow Grounds residency program of the Neu Kirche Contemporary Art Center.  Fallow Grounds activates vacant lots, transforming them into sites for public art and community interaction.

Mural plan for Concord Street, East Deutschtown, Pittsburgh.

Mural plan for Concord Street, East Deutschtown, Pittsburgh.

Mural site.

Mural site.

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School Residency: Robots, gadgets & STEAM

I’m wrapping up a monthlong school residency project at Claysville, Pennsylvania.  The project, a vision of Claysville art teacher Michelle Urbanek, involved experimentation and discovery in a studio atmosphere blending art and technology.  Over the course of the month, I worked with eighty fourth graders as they participated in teams to build inventions.  An initial challenge involved using toy motors and found materials to make gadgets that move and draw.  We then introduced a library of littleBits electronics, including motion sensors, light sensors, wireless transmitters and an assortment of circuit bending sound components.  Students then worked in groups to create prototypes of their ideas. Project supporters included the Sprout Fund (Spark Award) and the PCA Artists in Schools & Communities program.  More images will be posted on my COMMUNITY page.

An example sketch for a robot idea.

An example sketch for a robot idea.

Students sketching circuit ideas using littleBits components.

Students sketching circuit ideas using littleBits components.

As student setting a robotic vehicle to motion.

A student setting a robotic vehicle to motion.

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Remember Flux?

"World Stage" performace at Flux 12, Downtown Pittsburgh, summer 2005.

“World Stage” performance at Flux 12, Downtown Pittsburgh, summer 2005.  Photo by L. Rippel.

Detail of work in progress, World Stage.  L. Rippel

Detail of work in progress, World Stage. L. Rippel

The FLUX series of late-night art parties in massive vacant industrial buildings were a major part of the Pittsburgh art scene ten years ago.  Developed by Traci Jackson, the one-day events featured a mix of visual arts, films, bands, theatrical performances and lots of beer.  For FLUX 12 (held in the former Art Institute of Pittsburgh facilities, Penn Avenue, Downtown) I created a junk model of the world, decorating it with illustrations of polemical issues.  As I jumped from one end of the sculpture to the other, I touched on destruction of the Amazon rain forest, pre-emptive missile strikes and other current issues involving U.S. consumption and policy (and resulting ripple effects throughout the world).  As I completed one side, visitors moved in to view new developments.

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Obsessions – opening night

Space, Pittsburgh

Performance by Becky Slemmons. Photograph by Larry Rippel. Copyright 2014

 

New work by Laurie Trok.  Photograph by Larry Rippel.  © 2014

New work by Laurie Trok. Photograph by Larry Rippel. © 2014

 

Visitors view work by Nathan Margoni.  Photograph by Larry Rippel.  © 2014

Visitors view work by Nathan Margoni. Photograph by Larry Rippel. © 2014

 

Sculpture by Nathan Margoni.  Photograph by Larry Rippel.  © 2014

Sculpture by Nathan Margoni. Photograph by Larry Rippel. © 2014

 

Performance by Colonel Eagleburger's Highstepping Goodtime Band.  Photograph by Larry Rippel.  © 2014

Performance by Colonel Eagleburger’s Highstepping Goodtime Band. Photograph by Larry Rippel. © 2014

Good time opening music.  Photograph by Larry Rippel.  © 2014

Good time opening music. Photograph by Larry Rippel. © 2014

 

Obsessions opening.

Obsessions opening. Photo by Larry Rippel.  Copyright 2014

 

© Larry Rippel Photography.

© Larry Rippel Photography.

 

© Larry Rippel Photography

© Larry Rippel Photography

 

© Larry Rippel Photography

© Larry Rippel Photography

 

Opening of Obsessions.  © Larry Rippel Photography 2014

Opening of Obsessions. © Larry Rippel Photography 2014

Here are some images by Pittsburgh photographer Larry Rippel from the opening of Obsessions, Space Gallery, Pittsburgh.  It was a great night with music by Colonel Eagleburger’s Highstepping Goodtime Band!  More documentation coming soon!

 

 

 

 

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Flight Out of Time / Puppet Show at Carnegie Museum of Art

Tom Sarver Puppets

Hugo Ball & Emmy Hennings traverse the battlefields of the Great War.

On January 16th, I presented a new show with collaborator Michael Cuccaro at the Carnegie Museum of Art, as part of their Culture Club programming for the 2013 Carnegie International.  The fifteen-minute, Dada-inspired show was performed toy theatre-style in the Museum Café with a cast of newly crafted puppet characters including Hugo Ball, Emmy Hennings, Tristan Tzara and a drone.  Sets for the production included a battlefield scene, the interior of the Cabaret Voltaire, Zurich, Switzerland, 1916 and Hugo Ball’s bedroom.  The Carnegie Café was transformed into an installation for the International, making it an interesting venue for the event.  Also performed that evening was Museum Piece: For Margo Lovelace, a puppetry performance by Paulina Olowska, performed by Kristen Barca and Joann Kielar.

Emmy Hennings performing a dance at the Cabaret Voltaire.

Emmy Hennings performing a dance at the Cabaret Voltaire.

In the fall of 2012, I met Polish artist Paulina Olowska.  She was visiting to plan her 2013 Carnegie International installation for the Carnegie Café.  We talked about the beginnings of the Dada movement at the Cabaret Voltaire and her plans to transform the museum café into a cabaret atmosphere.  When Olowska later invited me to work on the performance piece for her project (and exhibit a collection of my puppets), I began thinking about creating a show about the ideals of early Dada artists.

Dada founders Tristan Tzara and Hugo Ball at the Cabaret Voltaire.

Dada founders Tristan Tzara and Hugo Ball at the Cabaret Voltaire.

It’s difficult to think about the trauma experienced by European artists living during World War I.  What were artists to do at a time when humanity was pushed to the edge?  The reality of war and suffering permeated everyday life.  New, more efficient weapons, tanks and gasses were implemented.  What were artists to do in this time of trauma?  The Cabaret Voltaire was an outlet for artists and intellectuals to express their disgust, their needs and their aim to redefine art.

Tristan Tzara delivering his Dada Manifesto at the Cabaret Voltaire.

Tristan Tzara delivering his Dada Manifesto at the Cabaret Voltaire.

Today, wars are often managed by drones controlled from locations far from the battlefield.  We watch football, go to the movies and get into arguments at the supermarket as wars are being waged halfway around the world.  In developing this new puppet show, I thought about the iconic figure Hugo Ball, dressed in a shiny cone-shaped bishop’s outfit.  I wondered what Ball, his wife Emmy Hennings and other Zurich Dadaists of 1916 would think about the world and warfare today.

Bedroom scene, as Ball is about to be visited by an errant drone from 2016.

Bedroom scene, as Ball is about to be visited by an errant drone from 2016.

The puppet show, Flight Out of Time (after Ball’s diaries), recreates the scene of The Cabaret Voltaire.  A fantastical ending suggests a prophetic element in Ball’s prose.  The show includes an adaptation of Tristan Tzara’s Dada Manifesto as well as a reenactment of Hugo Ball’s sound poetry.

A drone "flies out of time" from 2016.

A drone “flies out of time” from 2016.

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Luck of the Puppets

On March 3rd, Puppet Happening celebrated one year of activity and its third big production, Luck of the Puppets.  The event took Puppet Happening in a new direction, breaking away from the familiar sit-down puppet cabaret show.  After a January brainstorming session, a new path was set, something close to the historic “art happening.”  Puppeteers agreed on a more interactive show, an event that invited guests – and their puppets – to become active participants.   A Vegas-themed, carnival-style festival was in the works.

Luck of the Puppets at Future Tenant Art Space. Image Copyright Larry Rippel.

The hands-on approach began with a puppet making area run by Rose Clancy called Make Your Mate.  Rose, along with artists Kara Skylling and Brandi Welle, assisted guests in creating approximately sixty puppets out of craft supplies and repurposed materials.  Puppet creators were encouraged to complete profiles for their puppets.  The spectator-turned-puppeteer experiment made for a lively evening.  Some participants later took to the stage, taking part in Puppet Dating Game and Puppet Weddings.

Mike Cuccaro hosting the "Puppet Dating Game."

Visitors with their puppet creations. Image Copyright Larry Rippel.

A guest works her new puppet. Image Copyright Larry Rippel.

Aside from the participatory, the happening had plenty of purely experiential performances and moments of spectacle.  Performance artists Scott Andrew and Erin Womack presented Liquid Escort 5000, a futuristic spin on the sex industry. Over a five-minute performance, Andrew danced in elaborate costume while Womack canvassed his movements with psychedelic projections using overhead projectors and an array of colored liquids (Think Matthew Barney + Gaga + mad scientist).

Scott Andrew performing "Liquid Escort 5000." Image Copyright Larry Rippel.

Body Language: A Puppet Seduction explored themes of fantasy and desire.  The performance happened twice during the evening featuring a cast of Megan Morrison, Jeremy Frazier, Brittany Thurman, with set work by Sophie Hood.  Gabe Felice brought his portable studio to the happening.  Throughout the course of the night, guests lined up for his psychic noisemakers and paintings.

"Body Language: A Puppet Seduction." Image Copyright Larry Rippel.

Gabe Felice. Image Copyright Larry Rippel.

One of the highlights of the night was Mime Share by Kristen Barca.  Guests were encouraged to sign up for “time with the mime.”  Located in a 4-foot by six-foot square and dramatically framed by floor to ceiling black velvet, visitors could step into the world of the mime to experience a number of intricate routines.   Kristen stayed in character throughout the night, refusing to speak a word.

Kristen Barca performing "Mime Share." Image Copyright Larry Rippel.

On the opposite side of the gallery, near the entrance was Puppet Peep Show, a project performed by Kate Mickere & Megan Morrison.  As visitors entered a ten-foot by ten-foot black curtained room, they were asked to choose a show.  I only got to see one peep show.  It was pretty hilarious.  It involved a dancing bottle of Thousand Island salad dressing and its affair with a Reuben sandwich.

Operating close to the peep show was another performance duo, Murphi Cook and Zach Dorn with the debut performance of Puppet Photo Booth.  A project of The Society for the Advancement of Miniature Curiosa, the duo performed an epic adventure (Honey I Shrunk Las Vegas) thirty times during the evening.  The photo booth was pretty close to the real thing (aside from the fog machine, water feature and human operators).  I don’t want to spoil the show.  It is due to tour Pittsburgh over the next year.

Late in the evening, Dave English and Paul O’Brien announced the winner of Big N’ Scratchy, an enormous lottery scratch-off ticket.  Puppeteer Cheryl Capezzuti picked the winning ticket and was awarded the task of scratching, and scratching, and scratching with a giant quarter.

Cheryl tries her luck on the big ticket. Image Copyright Larry Rippel.

A late-night puppet wedding. Image Copyright Larry Rippel.

Rounding out the night were performances by Mr. & Mr$. Funky Vegas performing The Puppetmaster of Vegas and Mike Cuccaro with puppet dating game.  I joined up with Mike for a hand puppet show and I ended the night performing puppet weddings for all interested participants.   Luck of the Puppets was the produced as part of the Trespass performance residency series at Future Tenant Art Space.  Drinks were provided by Straub and Woodchuck Cider.

Mr. Funky added some lively keyboard tunes to the evening. Image Copyright Larry Rippel.

Tom Sarver & Mike Cuccaro perform a Vegas puppet satire. Image Copyright Larry Rippel.

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