Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Laying it down! Giant and Verz, DMHS, Galilee Center, 24th St. Theater!!!


They won hearts and minds, and that's what really counts.  Giant and Verz kicked it hard and with big love at the Tilted Kilt Open Mic Final last Wednesday night...no, they didn't win the grand prize but definitely came away with new fans and heaping dose of positive energy.  It was a joy to coach these guys.  Check em out...




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Thursday morning 7AM, after a LATE night with Giant and Verz...the day began at Carlos Garcia's black box studio theater/classroom at the Desert Mirage High School in Thermal.  Three back-to-back classes learning by doing; voice, body, text and style...in a funky bi-lingual flow with these curious kids.


Theater class at Desert Mirage High School


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Thursday afternoon started with a coaching session with an aspiring playwright/actor from Indio, Reggie Davis.  We talked at length about his love of art and theater, and about his ambition to find a way to continue studying, hopefully in LA or another larger city, and about overcoming obstacles...something he knows a lot about.  



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Back to the Galilee Center in Mecca -- this time to get a first-hand taste of the line, the people, the love...

Galilee Center, Mecca, distribution day.
90 minutes of fast and grateful food-banking.
Galilee Center, Mecca, fresh Tilapi in a sack!

Galilee Center, Gloria and Serafim.
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Friday brought me to the award-winning, ground-breaking, and very hip 24th Street Theater in Los Angeles.  

Jay McAdams, co-founder with Debbie Devine of The 24th Street Theater in LA.

Jay McAdams, Executive Director, was waiting for me in the lobby and took me into the inner sanctum -- the wondrous and funky theater, where Artistic Director, Debbie Devine was working with actors on scenes from the simply gorgeous "Walking the Tightrope" which I saw in Pittsburgh last winter, and which will tour to 8 cities this fall (including four shows for bused-in students at the McCallum!)



Watching rehearsal of the award-winning Walking the Tightrope...touring to the McCallum in October.

Jay and I talked about the goals for the Crisalida Project.  The 24th Street Theater received a grant from the Irvine Foundation last year so we had a lot of common ground.  We talked about setting up a "meet and greet" type gathering with LA Latino theater artists and teaching artists to begin establishing a "talent pool" to help realize Crisalida's mission.  They have been working without pause to make the theater a place where all people are welcome, and to that end have commissioned and produced a number of plays in Spanish and tour them to Mexico and South America.

I love my job.

Thursday, September 18, 2014

From EL GRITO to the SALTON SEA...





September 14th

The week started on Sunday with a blazing afternoon at El Grito, the annual music/culture/community festival in Coachella's Rancho Las Flores Park.  I arrived at 3:30 under 110 degree sun with about 1500 people in attendance, at 5:30 I was toast, and there were about 3000 people, final estimates were in the vicinity of 15,000 people.  

Music, food, ceremony, family, and lots of booths from social service agencies were in full display.  I saw Jocelyn Vargas and some of the kids from RAICES who were showing the skulls they've been working on and were busy painting faces.  


Be sure to catch the RAICES street fair NOVEMBER 1ST, 6PM, 6TH STREET COACHELLA!


I  made contact with folks from Find Food Bank, the CV Link Project that will create a pathway for cyclists, pedestrians, and low-speed electric vehicles from Palm Springs to Mecca, and Tizoc Deaztlan who produces Run With Los Muertos, a 5K race on November 1st in Coachella.

You can read more here: El Grito article from The Desert Sun


September 16th - THE SALTON SEA







Once you are on Hwy 86 heading south out of Coachella things start to change – the sky opens, the fields widen, the mountains tumble down.  There is a distinct feeling of heading toward a mystery, not foreboding, but strangely compelling, like a seductive whisper, like a faint siren’s song.  And then the sky falls to the ground and there is blue as far as the horizon…welcome to the Salton Sea – equal parts marvel, mystery, and tragedy.  I followed the turns on my GPS down open sandy roads, past scattered houses, “Lots for Sale” signs, and the streak of the water beneath the blazing September heat.  I made a quick right and pulled up to the house of Imari Nuyen-Kariotis and John Kariotis, two dedicated residents of Salton City who graciously offered to show me around.


These folks are the core group of resident-activists who volunteer tirelessly to keep the issues of the  Salton Sea alive.  It's a tough road, at times bumpy, at times barren, but they keep on keepin' on because they live there and know the beauty, and the dangers of the place.  I learned that the health and environmental issues of the Salton Sea effect the entire Coachella Valley.  These issues go well beyond the occasional unpleasant smell that catches the fleeting attention of CV residents  and media, reaching up to serious health concerns due to high levels of toxins that get airborne and spread throughout the area.

Here's their mission statement:

"We don’t believe in just putting on event. We believe in cultivating meaningful relationships with our neighbors that last - on our streets, in our towns, beaches and throughout our beautiful Salton Sea Region!" - We love the SALTON SEA region! Come join us!

"Nosotros no creemos en solamente organizando eventos. Creemos en cultivando relaciones  utiles con nuestros besinos que duran en nuestras Calles, Provincias, Playas y durante toda la Region de el Salton Sea!" Nosotros amamos  a la region de el SALTON SEA!"

We had a rich conversation at the shore of the sea, and then over huevos rancheros at The Alamo Restaurant we brainstormed about how their desire and passion could be parlayed into greater community awareness and involvement.  They started a public art project a while back and we talked about how to advance the idea with a crowd-sourcing campaign (like Indigogo, or Kickstarter) and made a plan to do some more collaborating in the coming weeks.





NEXT STOP...




COLLEGE OF THE DESERT - MECCA CAMPUS





Scott Cooper - the unstoppable, affable, and very capable Director of Educational Center at College of the Desert, showed me around the Mecca campus.

College of the Desert walks the walk of community empowerment by building facilities that make it much easier for Coachella Valley students to get started on their college education. 






The Mecca Campus, built with a gorgeous view of the mountains and within a short bus ride or drive from town, offers the basics taught by an excellent staff, and supported by educational counselors and an administrative staff that helps young adults succeed.


Scott next drove me past the date and grape fields to the new facilities in downtown Mecca.



Meet Maria Machuca, Coordinator of the Mecca Family & Farmworker’s Service Center.  Don't let the radiant smile fool you, this woman is a ninja who defends the human rights of her constituents with grace, love, and fierce determination.  Among the services she coordinates are: The Dept of Social Services, Coachella Valley Adult School, Unemployment Services, Clinicas de Salud Promotoras, Riverside Office of Education, WIC, medical and dental clinics, a pharmacy, and many more.  



She and her staff are some of the biggest hearts of the community.   Maria and her cohorts care because the know, and they know because many of them were born and raised right here.


Meet: Ruth Gonzalez, Carmen Lopez, Yesenia Ortiz, Yadira Salazar, Berenice Rebollar, Maria Machuca, and yours truly.  Now that is a powerful line up!  So happy to know these folks!


MECCA BOYS AND GIRLS CLUB


These interlocking hands of the Boys and Girls Club logo that span the doorway say it loud and clear: this is a place of support, friendship, and respect.


Scott introduced me to Ray Almador, Unit Director, and Alma Silva, Youth Development Specialist, of the mind-blowing Mecca clubhouse.  You never know what is behind a door, and this was a HUGE surprise...room after room filled with happy kids engaged in basketball, football, billiards, computer games, boxing (a separate gym, with a full ring!) arts and crafts...you name it.  Unfortunately my camera battery died, but there will be more images soon because I will definitely get back there ASAP.

Check it all out HERE.


Late night at HUMBLE GODZ STUDIOS



Meet Mario "GIANT" Garcia, a spoken-word artist that I originally met at the CULTURAS meeting last week in Coachella.  

Giant is a finalist at the Tilted Kilt Summer Open Mic competition.  When I heard him spit at Rancho Tenochitlan he was really good...and, I thought that maybe I could help his performance style a wee bit.  We had a hard-hitting session, and he was open to all I had to offer.  I'll tell you the result in the next blog...the finals are TONIGHT AT 8PM!

Also at the studio was Ricardo Rendon-Santiago, aka AZ, the producer/entrepreneur/wunderkind behind the HUMBLE GODZ STUDIOS.  We had a long talk about his vision to create a local label that would produce music and cultural events that support local artists AND local community projects.  Seriously cool young man with a seriously cool mission...definitely more to come.

See more HERE
and HERE TOO

Whew...that's IT, till there's more, soon...





Saturday, September 13, 2014

Angels in America -- Coachella style.



DESERT MIRAGE HIGH SCHOOL - COACHELLA



Meet playwright, actor, theater-maker, and long-time dedicated theater teacher Carlos Garcia.  Carlos and I talked in the black box theater in Desert Mirage High School where he has taught for the past ten years.  Carlos spoke to me about the challenges of being a Latino theater artist in a community that doesn't seem to value theater, and especially theater that speaks in 3D matrix of bi-lingual wordsmithing -- niether English, nor Spanish, but that multi-grounded/levitated textual space that reaches across the cultural divide of the mono-lingual monolith.

He has a dream...to create a Latino Theater Company that creates, produces and performs bi-lingual theater that reaches the people of the Coachella Valley, and beyond to the bi-cultural communities that are a growing and vibrant reality in the US.  To that end we cooked up a reading of his play, La Mala, that will be done in the coming weeks at the Coachella Valley Arts Center (see previous blog).  We will do a table read of the multi-character play with a bi-lingual cast of readers, and an invited audience.  A hearty discussion and dramaturgical session will follow.  Please check in on this blog for updates.

I will be giving performance workshops for the advanced theater students at Desert Mirage HS in the coming weeks -- looking forward to that.



COLLEGE OF THE DESERT - INDIO CAMPUS





On Thursday afternoon I visited Jacalyn Garcia-Lopez's Art History class in the brand new Indio Campus of College of the Desert.  The lecture centered on the variety of ways that art "functions" with special attention given to Maxine Greene's notion of "awakening".  I read some of my poetry, and showed clips of Butoh dancing and images from Hiroshima, I performed part of my rhymed-verse version of Sleeping Beauty and told the story of how I got into music therapy (Geraldo Rivera played a major role).  The students were vivacious, curious and engaged.  They said they would be happy to have me return.  Got to say that the students' curiosity got under my skin, in a very good way.  Congrats to COD/Indio for giving these people a place to learn, and to Jacalyn Garcia-Lopez for making an intellectual and soulful space that welcomes them, and makes them want to inquire.


GALILEE CENTER - MECCA



How often do angels toss you a head of cabbage?  Rare, but possible, especially if you happen to drop into the Galilee Center in Mecca on a Thursday afternoon when the weekly food distribution pickup is about to open its doors to 900 needy people.  Meet Gloria Gomez and Claudia Castrorena, spiritual sisters, and the powerhouse duo behind this booming organization that provides not only boxes of food, but counseling, housing help, medical support, a hip thrift shop, and many other much-needed things to the eastern most town in the Crisalida Project's geographical area.



Gloria and Claudia started in Indio with five bucks and a wish to help the poor.  The result was the thriving Martha Center, now running under its own steam, with new administration and a multi-million dollar budget, and bouyed by the everlasting imprint of its founders humble, serious, and deeply compassionate leadership.  Several years ago they decided that they needed to bring their special brand of community work to the poor of Mecca, so once again with only five dollars they began soliciting donations, reaching out to the people, and convincing one person at a time that the impossible was indeed possible, that the most helpless could be helped, that there was hope, that there was food enough, that there were hands to carry, ears to listen, and a voice that would speak when their voices were ignored.



This is the side panel of one of the Galilee pick up vans that travel throughout the region retrieving donations.

The strength of their vision was/is matched by the strength of their character and so the job gets done, one cabbage at a time, one box of food at a time, one hug at a time.

We talked about trying out a mobile concert stage on a Thursday afternoon in December, but first I want to volunteer on the food line, to learn more, but more importantly to be shoulder-to-shoulder with a couple of funky angels in Mecca.




See more at www.galileecenter.org





CULTURAS MUSIC AND ART - COACHELLA

This giant dinosaur head is part of the welcoming committee that greeted me at the board of directors meeting for CULTURAS Music and Art, the Coachella arts non-profit responsible for the vastly successful Synergy Festival.  My GPS had to have been going haywire, this endless strip of dusty empty land could not possibly be the location for the board meeting...there were a few houses, a couple of trailers, and one of those vast vistas that is equal parts terror and beauty.  So I called and Oralia picked up, "Was that you in the silver car that just drove past?"  "Yup."  "Well turn around and come on in."  You never know what lies behind an open door, or down a driveway.  In this case it was the amazingly hip and inviting studio/art-space/performance-space/cafe/anything-can-happen place known as Cafe Tenochitlan, owned and operated by Ruben Gonzalez, and the meeting place of CULTURAS.



The place is a marvel -- think the outpost saloon in Star Wars meets an outsider art show -- a place filled with provocative work, whimsy, brains, and especially soul.  Just stepping out my car I felt the power of art all around me, creativity bubbling all around...sculpture, paintings, equipment, materials, collections, junk and brilliance.  So when I sat down at the table in the patio with the CULTURAS board I was stoked to learn more.

This meeting was a planning session for their upcoming Synergy Festival (November 15th in Coachella), so they were looking at the line up of bands, reviewing proposals from vendors and discussing marketing and other critical details.  In attendance were: Oralia "Yaya" Ortiz, Mario Garcia (spoken word artist), Ruben Gonzalez, Pepe Rivera, Jack Rosales, Keila Cupil, Clarissa Camacho, and AZ (a maker of hip hop tracks and owner of a studio in the valley).

I was asked to give an overview of Crisalida and then fielded questions about the particulars of the project.  There was general excitement about collaboration, and I felt as though I had landed in the arms of my tribe -- artists and activists who are putting rubber to the road for their vision of a better community.

Mario offered to perform for us and took the neon-ringed stage beneath the stars.  His spoken word performance was terrific, funky, fueled with passion and intellect.  We have set up a coaching session so that I can try to help him in preparation for the finals of the Tilted Kilt Open Mic competition next Wednesday.  We will meet at AZ's studio so I will be able to hear the trax they have been producing.  Both AZ and Mario told me that their intention was to make music and studio space that could/would support the community.  Great young people standing up for art and community.  Dang.




SYNERGY FESTIVAL LINKS:
Indiegogo: http://igg.me/at/Synergy 2014
Acta video 2012:
 http://youtu.be/VXIRqslqyBc
Miles and monroe 2013
http://vimeo.com/81294382

Volunteers and donations gratefully accepted!

Check them out here:


Angels in America come in all shapes and sizes, and languages, and abilities, and...

d.

Monday, September 8, 2014

Indio Trifecta


It was another amazing day in the Coachella Valley. Started off with a visit to the S.C.R.A.P. Gallery, on the Riverside County fairgrounds, a place where the discarded becomes renewed, where young people get hip to the power of turning refuse into meaningful art. 


Here's a perfect example. The van that used to be the gallery's mobile unit is not driveable any more so it's being recycled as an indoor art space. And all around the gallery there are workspaces chock full of possibilities…materials, work desks, inspirational art, and tons of other stuff ready to inspire young minds. 


For 17 years the founder/director Karen Riley has been a stalwart arts and environmental advocate, artist and educator, teaching kids and their families about the synergy of environmental awareness and creativity. 

I particularly liked the Recycle Bicycle project, and was impressed by how these two-wheelers coasted winningly into the Object Trouvé Art Festival. 


Karen was very generous with her time and ideas, and is eager to be a Crisalida partner. 


Online at: 
https://www.facebook.com/scrapgallery

The next stop was the Indio Performing Arts Center and a visit/tour with Jeannette Knight.  It's an amazing space, with three theaters, lobby space, office space, huge auditorium, a large kitchen, and a great location in downtown Indio. 


Jeanette's many years as an actor, theater educator, teaching artist, and all-around cool person, make her a terrific resource for the community. She told me about the various projects they have going on including the Improv Comedy Festival (which was a huge success this past July) an upcoming production of RED, the play about the abstract expressionist painter Mark Rothko, as well as other productions, and several outside companies that are producing shows in the space. 

We brainstormed some ideas about me giving some workshops to support the next round of the Improv Festival. That will be a lot of fun.

Online at:



After a lunch at the wonderful Mexicali Restaurant on Indio Blvd I dashed over to the Coachella Valley Arts Center, and a meeting with the indefatigable director/founder Bill Schinsky.


A lot of people have this idea -- to create a multimodal community art space with galleries and workshop space, and studio space, but very few actually realize it. Bill has done it, and really well. He told me that come November the center will be at capacity, with visual artists, sculptors, glass artists, metal artists, and a whole lot more. He's come up with a really creative solution to community-based art, and has the chops to keep it going.



Here is Bill standing next to one of his own pieces. 

Bill is also on the boards of several other arts organizations, he is a terrifically integrated and connected person whose heart is absolutely in the right place. 

The 17,000 square-foot space is a marvel to witness. At every turn there is equipment, art, and the sense that new things can happen at any moment.  There are classes, workshops, and a gorgeous gallery space. 


Okay, so this place is really starting to grow on me. All the people I have met so far are terrifically dedicated, creative, and determined to make an impact in the valley. I feel like I'm starting to build up a collection of friends and collaborators, and that means I'm starting to feel at home.

Saturday, September 6, 2014

A Day of the Living in Coachella


RAICES Cultural Center

Giant blocks of Styrofoam carved with a chainsaw and hours of sanding into massive skulls for the day of the dead. Teens and their volunteer mentors sweating head to toe, smiling and covered in white Styrofoam chips.


How do you spell empowerment?  RAICES, that's how. This grass roots organization founded by a posse of Coachella residents more than a decade ago is vibrant, creative, and powerfully motivating for its teen clientele.

Blending equal measures of art and leadership training the organization thrives on dialogue and community activism. I had a long conversation with Jocelyn Vargas, the brilliant director of RAICES, who, like many of the others involved, was raised in the neighborhood, got herself a great education and came back to make a difference.



Terrifically refreshing to meet someone who talks the talk, walks the walk, dances the dance, and gets down and dirty with the styrofoam sculpture too!

I had a great conversation with the teens too...about eight or nine of them, all giddy to share their experiences at RAICES, to show me their art, to invite me to participate in their festivities, especially the upcoming Day of the Dead, which I will have to catch in year 2 of the Irvine Grant project. 


It was an added pleasure to meet Tone Rubio, a local artist, who volunteers extensively at RAICES. He walked me through his impressive online painting portfolio, and shared his passion for the work he does with the kids there.


All in all a great day of learning how Coachella grass roots arts activists are kickin it. 

Check them out at www.raicesdelvalle.org

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Ms. Can-do and Mr. Cutz


Hooked up the magnetic logos for my first day in the community. And away we go…




Long good visit with photographer, educator and multimedia artist Jacalyn Lopez Garcia at College of the Desert today. Learned a lot about her artistic vision and the project called Lifecycles that she did a number of years ago where she interviewed over 200 local residents.  Check it out right here http://www.lifecycles.ucr.edu/

I came away very impressed with Jacalyn's can-do spirit, her desire to contribute to the community, and her soulful sense of humor.  We brainstormed  ways to collaborate in the future, including a hang with a bunch of her friends, writers, activists artists, and others who live in Indio and the surrounding communities.  Jacalyn and her husband Carlos have a terrific idea to adapt a Steinbeck work to set it in the community, her passion and vitality for this are infectious.  Let me know if you are interested in talking to her about this cool idea.

Next stop was Mr. Cutz right across the street from the campus, there I met Able and his partner Junior, two haircutters connected to the community of tattoo artists and hip-hop producers. We talked about getting together over coffee next week. These two guys seem to have their finger on the pulse of creativity in the neighborhood.


I got lucky and ran into Scott Cooper from the college and we made a time to tour the facilities next week, and to go down to the satellite in Mecca.

All in all a good morning of contacts, learning begins…