Showing posts with label LINDSAY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LINDSAY. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Then and Now: Michael Olijnyk

These two photos just gives us one more reason why we love Michael Olijnyk so much. He has been curator/co-director of the museum since it was founded in 1977 (he also exhibited here back in 1982).

Here he is when the museum just started more than thirty years ago.

Here he is today. We asked him to recreate the above iconic pose at a staff party on Friday. He happily obliged with fake mustache and all.

Lindsay POSTED BY LINDSAY
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Friday, June 22, 2012

Record-breaking Urban Garden Party fundraiser!


It's been exactly one week since the Urban Garden Party: Alice at the Factory and we're still a bit in shock from the amazing support we have received. With your help, we raised a record-breaking $220,000 for the museum's unique artistic and education programs!

Many thanks to everyone who helped in any and every way – corporate sponsors, visual and performance artists, volunteers, musicians, food vendors, host committee, photographers, ticket-buyers, and our Chairs Susan and Scott Lammie – we couldn't have done it without you. We are humbled.



What people are saying:


 "...And so the story goes that more than 1,300 guests were falling down the rabbit hole and into the summer soiree that has become infamous for a history of bold swan dives into edgy, eye-popping territory." 

"The Mattress Factory's Urban Garden Party is held each year in the rugged outdoor space, and regulars (of which there are quite a few!) know to wear shoes that can handle the terrain. That doesn't preclude going all out in the costume department, and the "Alice at the Factory" theme inspired many mad hatters to don gay apparel."

"The Mattress Factory’s Urban Garden Party should be on your to-do list for next year. Alice At The Factory was a perfect summer party, celebrating quirkiness and art, and supporting an organization that is one of Pittsburgh’s gems. We had a blast!!"

"The MF's Urban Garden Party was over-the-top magical, tasty and eccentric, full of twirly-whirly dancing, and stuffing oneself silly!"
 -Anna Moore, Table Magazine

Curiouser and curiouser!

What people were photographing:

We are indebted to the fantastic photographers who really capture the soul and the depth of this one night!

The official MF photoset: John Altdorfer, Larry Rippel, Andy Rincon, and Ashley Noble
Jo Ellen Smith
Rob de la Cretaz

Even more photos:
WPXI
Showclix
Elevation Loft

We had Alice's prettiest rabbits attend the VIP party

See you at next year's Urban Garden Party on Friday, June 21st, 2013!

Friday, May 4, 2012

2012 Urban Garden Party: Alice at the Factory countdown!

Hard to believe, but our annual fundraiser, the Urban Garden Party, is just six weeks away! Things are really heating up for another fabulous event full of great food & drink, fresh sounds from multiple music performers from near (Pittsburgh) and far (NYC and Oregon), and a few fantastic curiosities. Follow this image during the next few weeks for a little surprise – we'll reveal a piece of the puzzle every other day.

UPDATE 5/18/12: The Queen of Hearts is none other than our fearless leader, founder and Co-Director Barbara Luderowski!



Tickets have sold out the last two years and we're on pace to sell out even sooner, so purchase your tickets today and enjoy a great party while supporting a great museum.

Paul Nosa: Sewing People's Imagination

A few days ago we received a request from Paul Nosa to hang out here at the museum and "sew people's imagination." We said yes.


Watch this video for some AMAZING backwards writing with thread.

Paul Nosa: sewing people's imagination. "Unexpected visitor at the tea party in the sky."
 
Paul is a sewing artist from Tucson, Arizona. He draws people's imagination with a sewing machine powered by a solar panel and a bicycle electric generator. He's currently on a sewing tour across America facilitating people's creativity and showing them how to make their own alternative energy sources.

Paul Nosa: sewing your dreams five words [or less] at a time. "Swimming through the day."
 
If you can think of a scenario in five words or less, he will sew it on the spot using a bicycle-powered sewing machine. When he isn't using his bicycle, he has some photovoltaic panels to juice up a battery which he can connect to his sewing machine on his distinctively outer space looking "Solar Sewing Rover." You can purchase your custom patch from him and walk away with a one-of-a-kind piece of art and feel great knowing you're supporting this talented artist's trek across the continent. We also have a few cool limited edition Paul Nosa MF totes available in the MF Shop.


Who: Paul Nosa
What: Sewing Artist from Tuscon is stopping by the Mattress Factory during his U.S. tour on his way from New York City to Los Angeles. 
This event is sponsored by the MF Shop.
When: Saturday, May 5, 2012, 11am-4pm
Where: In the Mattress Factory's "Garden" (or in the lobby if rain)

Thursday, March 22, 2012

A blast through the past 15 Gestures exhibitions

As our artists are feverishly working away down at 1414 Monterey, we hope you are all getting excited for the opening celebration of our sixteenth Gestures exhibition on March 30th, 2012! Join us on Friday, March 30th, from 6-8pm to check out Gestures: Intimate Friction.

Each year, several artists come to our satellite galleries at 1414 Monterey to create site-specific works for our Gestures exhibitions. To help prepare you for the excitement that is about to ensue, we have provided you with a smattering of past Gestures works from throughout the years. Enjoy!

Tom Bedger
Fall, 2001
Gestures 1

Harry Schwalb
Workplace, 2002
Gestures 2

Nathan Nissim
Heliogabalous, 2002
Gestures 3

Robin Stanaway
Collective Corrected Vision, 2003
Gestures 4

Todd Swan
Lamplight, 2003
Gestures 5

Nami Ogawa
, 2005
Gestures 6

Peter Lambert
Sketches in Steel, 2005
Gestures 7

David Sleasman
Hybrids: Pittsburgh: Prairie, 2005
Gestures 8

Jen Lucchino & Freddie Croce
Untitled, 2006
Gestures 9

Jairan Sadeghi
The Current State of Things at Point A, 2008
Gestures 10

Derk Wolmuth
Space Vacuum, 2008
Gestures 11

Amber Coppings
Echoes of Objects, 2009
Gestures 12

Patricia Villalobos Echeverria
Parasite (40°27'25"N 80°00'48"W), 2009
Gestures 13

Ryder Henry
Periphery, 2010
Gestures 14

Jerstin Crosby
On the Inside, 2011
Gestures 15
Gestures 16 "Gestures: Intimate Friction" is guest-curated by Mary-Lou Arscott, of Carnegie Mellon University’s School of Architecture. Participants include Nina Marie BarbutoDee BriggsNick DurrantJeremy FiccaPablo GarciaJenn Gooch, Ling He, Matt Huber, Nick Liadis, TransformaziumGill Wildman, and Spike Wolff. Again, the opening reception is Friday, March 30, 2012, 6-8pm, and runs through September 16, 2012.

Sunday, January 1, 2012

2012 URBAN GARDEN PARTY: ALICE AT THE FACTORY


2012 URBAN GARDEN PARTY: ALICE AT THE FACTORY

Friday, June 15, 2012
VIP 6PM | $250 ($200 for MF Members; email us for code)
General Admission 7-11PM | $95 ($75 for MF Members; email us for code)


COMING TO THE PARTY ON 6/15/12? TWO WAYS TO ARRIVE:

#1
 VALET: From North Ave. turn onto Sherman Ave. and turn left onto Sampsonia Way. We'll take care of your car for the evening. (Complimentary for VIP ticket-holders until 7pm; $10 after 7pm)

#2 SHUTTLE: Park your car over at The Children's Museum and a shuttle will swing by every 10 minutes. Last shuttle leaves the party at 11:30pm. (Free)
_______________________

 
Join us for the Mattress Factory's biggest fundraiser of the year, the Urban Garden Party: Alice at the Factory – chaired by Susan and Scott Lammie – Friday, June 15th, 2012!

Each year, the Urban Garden Party becomes the talk of the town as more than 1,000 attendees turn out to help support the museum's mission in a festive, celebratory atmosphere.

The 2012 Urban Garden Party will take place from 7:00 PM to 11:00 PM on Friday, June 15, 2012. A VIP Pre-Party presented by Pittsburgh Audi Dealers, hosted by Bob Sendall of All in Good Taste Productions, will began at 6:00 PM. The last two parties have sold out, so purchase your tickets early!

Check out these photos from last year’s festivities for a little summer party inspiration! 2011 Garden Party Photos

 
 


2012 CHAIRS Susan and Scott Lammie

2012 LEAD SPONSORS


MAD HATTER
Audi Dealers of Pittsburgh
UPMC Health Plan
UPMC


CHESHIRE CAT

Anonymous
CGI Technology and Solutions, Inc.Lot 24Oracle
Tata Consultancy Services

2012 SPONSORS

BLUE CATERPILLAR
Allegheny General Hospital
Cisco Systems, Inc.
Highmark

PNC Bank
Presidio
Verizon

Visa


TWEEDLEDEE/TWEEDLEDUM
First National Bank / First National Wealth Management
First Niagara Bank Foundation

H.J. Heinz Company

Susan and Scott Lammie
The Pittsburgh Steelers
Xerox


MAGIC POTION
Amcom
CrawfordEllenbogen LLC

CSC
DeepLocal
Eric Smith Salon
FUZE
MaherDuessel CPAs
Marilyn Coleman Consulting
Plastic Surgery of Pittsburgh


2012 MEDIA SPONSORS

Pittsburgh City Paper
Pittsburgh Magazine
Pop City
WYEP
Yelp


SIGNATURE SPONSORS
ALCO Parking
All in Good Taste Productions
Arthur Murray Dance Studio, Downtown
Bossa Nova
Clique Vodka
Cure
Edward Marc Chocolatier
Penn Brewery, exclusive beer sponsor
Wigle Whiskey



FRIENDS OF THE GARDEN PARTY
All of our hardworking volunteers & staff
John Altdorfer of J. Altdorfer Photography
Analise Bahneman
Dennis Bergevin
Commonwealth Press
Anthony DeVito-D'Amico
David Edwards of Art Energy Design
Elsen Associates
Flowerama
James Foreman
H Marketing Services
Hilbish McGee Lighting Design
JV Chujko
Massage Envy Squirrel Hill
Mistick Construction & Northside Associates

Party Savvy
Say Cheese Entertainment
photobooth sponsored by Yelp
Spontaneous Art
Zero Fossil - Energy Outfitters


HOST COMMITTEE


Ken + Dede Acer
Esther Barazzone
Bill + Vivian Benter
Martin + Judith Berger
Kathleen Dewalt + Bob Hoover
Anne + Anuj Dhanda
Suzy + Jack Donahue
Saleem + Patti Ghubril
Nachum Golan + Steve Hough
Dana + Franco Harris
Dok Harris
Clyde Jones
Suzanne + Ed Karlovich
Ryan Lammie
Scott Leff + Marilyn McDaniel
Helene + Tom Long
Nils + Muriel Luderowski
Michael Malone
Ellen Mazo
Khari Mosley + Chelsa Wagner
Tracey + Terry Perles
Hilary Robinson
Lea Simonds
Steve Sokol
Alan + Martina Wells
Michael White + Rick LeBeau
Maureen Young



















2012 LEAD FOOD & DRINK SPONSORS



All in Good Taste Productions and Bob Sendall
Bossa Nova and Robin Fernandez
Cure
Penn Brewery
Wigle Whiskey


FOOD AND BEVERAGE SPONSORS

Atria's at PNC Park

B2 Restaurants
barre
Bean Catering
big Catering
Café Ola Appetit
Coca Café
Coca-Cola

Divine Delectables
Donato's Restaurant

Double Wide Grill
Dozen Bake Shop
E2

Eclipse Lounge
Engine House Winery
Gina Marie's Catering
Gluuteny

JPC Event Group

Juice Heaven
La Crème Catering

La Prima Espresso

Las Velas Mexican Restaurant

Legume
Monterey Pub
New Amsterdam
Opening Night Catering

Pgh Taco Truck
 
Pittsburgh Marshmallow Factory
Rania's Catering
Red Star Kombucha
Rita's Italian Ice
Round Corner Cantina
Sonoma Grill
Sugar Café
The Big Boss Ice Cream Truck Company

The Capital Grille
The Culinary Artists Gourmet Catering Group
The Greek Gourmet
Tupelo Honey Teas
Verde Mexican Kitchen & Cantina
Yes, We Cater
5 Hour Energy




Tuesday, November 8, 2011

516 Sampsonia Way is underway!

We hope you'll join us this Thursday, November 10th at 10am for a groundbreaking celebration of our newest exhibition space – 516 Sampsonia!
516 Sampsonia with the main galleries at 500 Sampsonia in the background

The Mattress Factory is currently renovating an 1890 Victorian-era row house and vacant lot located at 516 & 518 Sampsonia Way. By the end of summer, we'll will have an additional 2,500 square feet of space for more exhibitions and programs.

"It really does give us a much more flexible schedule so that there should be always something interesting to see. We love the fabric of this neighborhood. We love the idea of keeping this old building, not tearing it down, not building something that would be more appropriate."

                             -Michael Olijnyk, Co-Director, as quoted by William Loeffler, Tribune-Review


Watch the retrofitting progress here:



Groundbreaking Celebration
Thursday, November 10, 2011
10am
Coffee and pastries will be available
Free and open to everyone


Lindsay POSTED BY LINDSAY
Read All Posts by Lindsay

Thursday, September 22, 2011

New BoxSpring Café Hours!


 We are happy to let you know that the BoxSpring Café is now open every day the Museum is open! 
Tuesday - Saturday 11am-4pm and now Sunday 1-4pm!

MF Lynn is ready to tempt you with delicious treats. 
And fruit. But who wants fruit when there are treats around?

The Sunday menu:

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Sights of Summer

Summer is over. School is back in session. The sun is setting a little earlier each night.

MF Shop Coordinator, Sam Ditch, snapped these photos of our Community Garden Party on June 19, 2011, with her phone camera and I think they really capture the essence of summer.

You'll catch me viewing this slide show in the middle of snowy and gray January daydreaming of hula-hoops and sprinklers.



Farewell summer. I'll miss you.

Lindsay POSTED BY LINDSAY
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Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Hangin' out at Lake Liz for Art Outdoors

Thursday, September 1st, is the final day of Art Outdoors for 2011.

Every Thursday during the summer, the MF Education Department has set up shop in West Park near Lake Elizabeth on the Northside. We've offered a range of different hands-on activities related to the outdoors and art each week. We partnered with Venture Outdoors and Kayak Pittsburgh for this unique program – thanks to them and for everyone involved* in helping provide free weekly programs for all ages. You'll find us under the blue tent next to Kayak Pittsburgh's unmistakable yellow kayaks (and, yes, you can try your hand at paddling on the little lake for free).

The summer has flown by, so if you haven't had a chance to stop by yet, we hope to see you tomorrow (Lake Liz, 4-6pm, free). For encouragement, we leave you with a few photos from this summer's activities, including a photo of our lovely Director of Education, Liz Keller, and Museum Educator, Gian Carlos, making their way to the Lake via the Mattress Factory staff's favorite form of transportation: bicycling!

Liz and Gian in the MF parking lot heading out to Art Outdoors last Thursday

The Aviary makes magic happen for our 2nd annual Art Outdoors dove release

Kayak Pittsburgh is on hand to teach you how to paddle

Don't want to get wet? Head over to the MF art tent and get creative

Nothing like chillin' in a boat in an urban setting

*Mattress Factory Education and Outreach programs are supported by the Allegheny Regional Assets District, the Grable Foundation, and the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts.

Friday, August 19, 2011

David Conrad + Ice Cream = Supporting the MF

Do you like ice cream?
Mmmmm, ice cream. Photo: Mr. T in DC
Do you like handsome men?

Actor and arts supporter David Conrad (We just couldn't resist the pink hearts!)

Do you like supporting the Mattress Factory?

If you answered yes to the above questions, then Saturday, August 27th, will be your lucky day. Through the generosity of Life'sWork / Ben & Jerry's PartnerShop in Squirrel Hill, you will be able to support the Mattress Factory by stopping by the PartnerShop from 12-9pm and purchasing any ice cream deliciousness and presenting the coupon below – 20% of your purchase will benefit the Mattress Factory. For even more sweetness, if you swing by the ice cream shop between the hours of 1 through 5pm, you'll get to meet the charming and dashing (and Mattress Factory board member) David Conrad!

See you next Saturday!

Psst! Want more art and more David Conrad? You'll be able to catch the exhibition he's been working on over in Braddock, The Lost Pittsburgh School.

Saturday, July 9, 2011

Stray Birds Sunrise Performance

This morning Michael Pestel and Kudo Taketeru performed a mesmerizing performance at sunrise. There was a thick mist in the air and you could see the steam evaporating from Kudo's body. Not only did the mist obscure our usual view of downtown Pittsburgh skyscrapers, but of some of the neighboring houses as well. When he exhaled slowly, we could see his breath. As the sun rose, the foggy dew lifted and shifted the mood of the performance awakening the bird within.
Photos by Clif Page

Without a doubt, one of my favorite aspects of this morning's performance was the Northside neighbor walking by. She appeared to be on her way to or from work complete with headphones in and sporting her hospital scrubs. The woman nearly jumped back when she realized she was walking only a few feet away from Kudo's dance performance. She lingered for a few minutes and even started video-recording him with her phone. What an amazing juxtaposition of routine and spectacle.
 
 A passerby stops to record the performance

There will be another performance at 2pm today (7/9/11) and a final performance on Friday, July 15th, at 8pm for sunset. Join us.

__________________________________________________

The following is an explanation of butoh dance and birdsound from Michael Pestel:

"Butoh and Birds 

Butoh is a modern Japanese dance-and-movement form. Taketeru Kudo, currently in residence at the Mattress Factory  is one of the most acclaimed performers of the new generation of butoh. His movements are unusually fluid and frequently compared to those of a bird, something uncommon in the nether world of butoh kinesthetics. We are here, along with several others, to explore the world of birds in sound and movement and to communicate with them. Workshops for children and adults are ongoing from June 20-July 8 from 1-3:00 p.m.. Performances take place weekly through July 15th. Please see Mattress Factory and Aviary websites for details. 

Performing with Kudo - an avian ghost - is not easy. It requires fierce concentration at the razor edge of emotions and a whimsical sense of humor. This is butoh the way we approach it: Kudosan in avian motion and the musicians in birdsong and squawk. Nothing is choreographed or planned except for the meticulous absence of planning. Just like the birds. 

Decisions for movement and sound emerge from raw feeling – gut-wrenching, lice-scratching, satyr-prancing revelations cut as if through onion strata into circling layers of tears, laughter and stillness. Just like the solitary kookaburra at the National Aviary crying and laughing inside its cage, our cycles of emotion start and stop ceaselessly. Or like the flamingos in the Wetlands Exhibit honking back and forth, back and forth, then suddenly spreading wings, preening, walking silently, elegantly, honking some more, we too follow our impulses uncensored. 

Unlike ballet or the kind of modern dance that seeks to defy gravity, Kudo's attempts at flying are quickly aborted and stumble clip-winged to the ground. He then resumes immediately his flights of fancy, trying again and again to lift off of human ground. Everything collapses and rises in an exquisitely ordered sense of the unpredictable only to finally expire, escape or fade out in an incremental, even excremental, decrescendo of exhaustion. 

We are told that such extreme dialectics emerged out of Japan’s postwar crisis - from Truman’s bombs - and that butoh was formed directly from the ashes of the Emperor’s undecipherable surrender. Since capitalism has merely redirected Japanese military discipline, as well as a horrific sense of loss, into the vicious cycle of consumer production and consumption, the crisis which butoh confronted sixty years ago remains more or less the same today – or perhaps more stuck in the Japanese craw, indeed the global craw, than ever. 

Now bombs have become leaking nuclear plants. And by the end of this century, many hundreds of bird species around the world will join the swelling list of extinctions caused by us humans. The National Aviary's conservation efforts will go into overdrive. We are all in this together. 

One could say that the butoh musicians’ approach to sound is similar to Kudo’s approach to movement. There is the emotional dialog and the sudden bursts of arhythmical playing mixed with steady syncopation. In terms of bird sound, the sweet dulcet song of our “yellow warblers” might turn suddenly into a flock of “snarling pterodactyls” – if indeed they snarled – and then return, just as quickly, to the joyous task of warbling. Rather than merely supporting or chaperoning the other, however, Kudo and the musicians prod and poke each other beyond superficial points of synchrony into more complex states of cacophony, chaos and unity. 

Just like the birds."  

-Michael Pestel, June 2011


Lindsay POSTED BY LINDSAY
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