Weekend Top 6 Picks for September 30th and October 1st.

Saturday September 30, 2017

8:00 AM to 10:30 PM – Free. Day 2 of Indie Galactic Space Jam. The DAVE School (2500 Universal Studios Plaza, Soundstage #25, Orlando, Florida). What is Indie Galactic Space Jam?

 1. It’s an annual space-themed game jam hosted by Indienomicon,
Orlando’s independent game development association.

2. It’s a collaborative event that’s great for creatives of all sorts.
Artists, animators, developers, writers, designers, and others are all
welcome to participate.

3. It’s a good way to flex your game-making skills, find new people to
work with, and learn how to rapid- prototype a game idea.

This will be the 4th Indie Galactic Space Jam. This year they’re providing additional fun challenges, better resources, and greater
opportunity for talent exposure. They also plan to kick things off with
an amazing crop of speakers from both the space and video game
industries. This is your chance to build something extraordinary with
talented peers from all over Central Florida. Become part of a team or
stay a lone (space) wolf charting a course to fun and excitement.

 Everyone is welcome to participate throughout the 48-hour Jam. They’re
looking for artists, programmers, game designers, UI and UX designers,
sound designers, writers, poets, interpretive dancers, people excited
about games, people excited about space, people who like to eat pizza,
and people like you. Register today and get ready to jam!

SATURDAY – SEPT 30TH – THE GRIND CONTINUES

The non-stop game building action remains non-stop, except for the times you have to stop for food and ask for help.

8:00 AM – Doors Open, Breakfast/Coffee

12:30 PM – Lunch / Status Updates / Call for Help

6:30 PM – Dinner
11:00pm- Go Home!

7 PM to 9 PM – Free. Ybor City Art Walk (7th Ave, Ybor, Tampa, Florida 33605). Featuring a number of arts organizations and artsy businesses. Participating locations:

The Bricks of Ybor

Bloodline Tattoo

Ybor Arts Colony

Hot Wax

Wandering Eye Art Gallery

Dysfunctional Grace

Moon Over Havana Arts Gallery

Live Arts Labs

There will be other businesses joining the lineup so stay tuned! For
any questions please feel free to contact the Ybor Art Alliance
through Facebook.

Expect to be wowed!

9 PM to Midnight – Free but get a drink or 2. Oranga Tanga. Live music at The Dog and Bone British Pub, (9 Stone St, Cocoa, Florida 32922).

Sunday October 1, 2017 

8 AM to 9 PM – Free. Day 3 of Indie Galactic Space Jam. The DAVE School (2500 Universal Studios Plaza, Soundstage #25, Orlando, Florida). PROJECT WRAP UP + FINAL SHOWCASE

The hard work hopefully looks like it is forming into something
recognizable as fun. Success or failure, hopefully you learned
something. Participants will present their team’s game concept for
everyone to enjoy!

8:00 AM – Doors Open, Breakfast/Coffee

12:00 PM – Lunch and Status Updates / Call for Help

4:30 PM– Complete Game Projects, Begin Project Uploads

5:30 PM – Dinner & Technical Check with presentations over the
projector

6:30 PM – Team Presentations Begin
9:00pm – Go Home!

10 AM to Noon – Free. Heartfulness Relaxation and Meditation Class. (University, 5200 Vineland Rd, Orlando, FL 32811). The Method of Heartfulness A simple and practical way to experience the heart’s unlimited resources.

4:30 PM to 6:30 PM – Free. Market2Park. Shady Park, (Hannibal Square New England and Pennsylvania Ave. Winter Park FL).

Story Club at the Abbey.

Orlando Story Club gatherings are every other month at The Abbey (100 S Eola Dr, Orlando, Florida 32801) in
downtown Orlando.
Anyone with a story can put their name in the hat for a chance to
share. Ten names are drawn at random. Judges
are picked at random in the audience, preferably those people who are
new to story club. Judges are given a chalk board and piece of chalk to rate each story from 1 to 10. First, Second, and Third place winners
receive a prize!

The theme for the March event was “Bodies”. Like it or lump it we are all born with our bodies. It seems much of our life is spent just taking care of them. Storytellers explored our topsy-turvey relationship with them. Every body part was explored. Mike Scottie‘s story, was about trying to gain 40 pounds. He was a thin rail as a child with stork like legs. He pushed the notion that you are what you eat. When he discovered that all his pants no longer fit He decided to slim down, but then realized it is even harder to loose weight than to gain weight.

The evening was moderated by special guest story teller, host television personality and stroke survivor Mark McEwen. Orlando Story Club gives anyone the chance to showcase their story
telling for the enrichment of the local community. The benefiting charity was The Assistance Fund.
Every day, The Assistance Fund walks alongside thousands of patients and helps break down
their financial barriers to medical treatment by providing direct
financial assistance

Mark Your Calendar, the next Orlando Story Club with the theme, “A Promise” will be on Wednesday, November 1 at 7 PM – 9:30 PM at The Abbey. Tales will relate a time when you were trusted with A PROMISE.

All proceeds will support Second Harvest Food Bank of Central Florida
Admission: $5 (additional donations encouraged)
Doors open @ 6:30pm. Show starts @ 7pm.

Laugh, listen, drink, and help build our community!

Spotlight Cabaret Series featuring Janine Klein.

 Janine Klein returns to the Winter Park Playhouse Spotlight Cabaret Series
premiering her latest solo cabaret, “Nobody Does It Better.” From “Dr.
No” to “Spectre,” James Bond films have given us some of the most iconic
movie themes of the past 50 years. Janine takes her audience through an
evening of popular Bond theme songs and stories that will definitely cause some laughs.

Pam Schwartz and I went to a rehearsal. It turned out that it was Janine Klein’s birthday. She put on a gorgeous sequin gown and had Christopher Leavy, the musical director at Playhouse Theater, zip her up. He was wearing an orange t-shirt and asked me to sketch him in a dress shirt. He then discovered that he had a dress shirt in his office. In theater you always have to be ready with a change of costume.

Janine gave a hilarious and irreverent performance. She gave a hilarious list of some of the Bond Girls, like Pussy Galore, Plenty O’Toole, Holly Goodhead, Xenia Onatopp and her favorite Octo Pussy. She was at ease and the show became largely a comedy as she lambasted the Bond mystique. She might reign in the irreverent jokes when there is a full house, but I hope not. The microphone was only a prop. It wasn’t live, so for some numbers she spared her voice. Even as she glossed over the difficult passages she was always entertaining. She was even more entertaining as she growled out some lyrics and held the microphone provocatively.

The cabaret
showcases a different professional singer each month up front in the
beautiful lobby bar. A truly “New York-style” cabaret, each performance
is approximately 55 minutes in length with no intermission. Shows are September 27th and 28th at 7:30pm. Doors open
at 6:30pm for General Seating. Tickets are $20 for general seating.

Chuck Archard Electric Bass-Faculty Recital at Rollins College.

Rollins College Tiedtke Concert Hall (1000 Holt Ave, Winter Park, Florida 32789) The night of music featured new original compositions
dedicated to Keith Wilson, Jay Flippin and Harold Blanchard, as well as
tunes by Smokey Johnson, Wardell Q., Galactic, Jim James (My Morning
Jacket), Alan Parsons and Irving Berlin

On stage with Faculty member Chuck Archard were Chris
Rottmayer
, Ed Krout, Marc Clermont, Greg Parnell, Per Danielsson Suzy
Park
, Michelle Amato and direct from New Orleans the legendary drummer
Allyn Robinson.

This was a fun experimental evening of music with each musician seizing the music and making it their own in lively solos. Rollins college has an ongoing series of free concerts and I like to stop in once in a while to sketch. There is nothing like the inspiration of good live music to help the lines dance on the page with less regard for stifling accuracy.

Mark your calendar. Upcoming free concert include..


September 26  |  7:30 PM

MUSIC FACULTY SHOWCASE

Keene Hall, 1000 Holt Avenue Winter Park, FL

32789This
recital is free and open to the public. Parking is available nearby at
the SunTrust Plaza Garage located on Lyman Avenue. 


September 28  |  7:30 PM

FACULTY RECITAL: Curtis Rayam, tenor

Keene Hall, 1000 Holt Avenue Winter Park, FL 32789

This recital is free and open to the public. Parking is available nearby at the SunTrust Plaza Garage located on Lyman Avenue.

The Ultimate Art Project

Tamera J. Rogers made me aware of The Ultimate Art Project which was slated to happen days after Hurricane Irma struck Florida. This program was planned for the Square in Downtown Tavares, America’s Sea Plane City.It was an opportunity to catch artists in their moments of creative glory. There were to be actors, painters and singers and potters and poets and
jewelers and dancers, sculptors, and weavers and crafters, musicians and
magicians and libations and food.

I decided to make the event one of the locations for the 10 Urban Sketching Workshops I have been offering. This was the 5th workshop. Progressing from small stories to medium stories and ultimately big stories.  Pam Schwartz and I took the one hour drive to sketch the Ultimate Art Project. The sun was setting as we approached the town square. The event was easy to find because of all the white events tents.

The grassy area was about the size of half a football field surrounded by wrought iron fences. The first tend we saw had kids doing four inch square paintings. In a corner of the field was Karaoke which dominated sound scene. Mixed in was a pan flutist, in the center of the field. One lady stood listening and then chatted with him. I decided he wasn’t a sketch option since she was keeping him from performing. A van was painted black like a chalkboard and people could do chalk drawings on the vehicle. This is a pretty awesome idea and I wouldn’t mind setting up mu Prius as a chalk board. There
was the option to take a selfie in “paintings” of the Mona Lisa, The
Scream, American Gothic, and Girl with a Pearl Earring
but we never got around to taking those selfies.

I stopped when I heard this father (James Whitehead) and daughter team singing in the artists tent. They referred to themselves as Southern Roots. She had an amazing voice. They were strictly acoustic so their music had to blend in with the karaoke and Pan pipes across the way. Dad explained to me that his daughter really had to stress her voice to be heard. He was afraid she might not perform her best at next weeks church service. The set abruptly ended when the free movie screening began of Woody Allen’s

Midnight in Paris.

Conversations among the artists were mostly about the recent hurricane. The Tavares marina was destroyed by Irma and all the boats piled up by the high winds. Sections of the park were cordoned off due to hurricane damage. The Ultimate Art Project was a chance for the community to get out after the hurricane and have a relaxing evening on the town green.

Man of La Mancha brings starry eyed ideals to the Shakes.

I had sketched the set being built for Man of La Mancha, at the Orlando Shakespeare Theater (812 E Rollins St, Orlando, FL 32803) so I was curious to see the show. I knew that a large hole had been opened in the stage floor to allow for a rotating stage and trap door. For that reason, I was very curious to see the set in action. The stage is set in the round, meaning the play can be seen from all sides. Pam Schwartz and I sat in the Bard section which was a new section set up for this production. The orchestra was hidden behind prison bars on a platform behind us. Much of the staging had the actors facing the center section which was across from us but there were only a few times when it was uncomfortable to have the action facing away from us.

In the opening scene, Cervantes, (Davis Gaines) is exiled to a dungeon. Inmates of the prison go through his possessions and plan a trial so they can take everything. In his defense Cervantes stages a play and invited prisoners to take parts in the production. He opens a theatrical make up case and turns himself into Don Quixote who is an idealist, a dreamer who imagines himself living a virtuous and heroic life. Sancho Panza, his companion (Matt Zambrano) followed dutifully on his adventures as squire. Just then they came in sight of thirty or forty windmills that rise from the plain. Don Quixote fights the windmills that he imagines are giants. “The scariest dragons and fiercest giants usually turn out to be no more than windmills.”


The staging for this production was pretty amazing. A large drawbridge lowered down to the stage with loud and sinister sounding moving gears. The entire theater felt dank and foreboding. The sounds of water droplets falling echoed in the space as the audience took to its seats. The center stage area could turn like a record on a turntable allowing characters to march in place, or circle. The center area was a rising platform which Don Quixote stood on when he triumphantly proclaimed his ideals and love. The beautiful Aldoneza (Laura Hodos) was a dispassionate and callous woman. She considered all men to be the same, all wanting just one thing. When Quixote saw her he was smitten and imagined her to be the most virtuous woman he had ever seen. He called her Dulcinea. She was annoyed that he didn’t see her as she was, but ultimately she let her defenses down, needing to understand his ideals despite the everyday horrors.


This was a fun night of stellar theater. I was very impressed with the production. Donkey’s were portrayed with
large paper mache heads. They pulled tiny carts that acted as the saddle
for the heroic protagonist and his side kick.
I have to confess that I had to wipe away tears as Aldoneza proclaimed herself to be Don Quixote’s idealized Dulcinea when she sang to him in his darkest hour.


The signature song in this musical is “The Impossible Dream” and Davis Gaines singing at the end of the first act brought the audience to it’s feet. I scratched away at the page in the dark, not sure of the result and hopeful anyway. As the lights came up, I saw the results and quickly strove to make sense of the madness.

Go see this show. For a magical moment escape from your everyday reality. “Too much sanity may be madness – and maddest of all: to see life as it is, and not as it should be!”  -Don Quixote. 

The show runs through October 8.

Sunday, September 24, 2017 – 2:00 PM

Tuesday, September 26, 2017 – 7:30 PM

Wednesday, September 27, 2017 – 2:00 PM

Wednesday, September 27, 2017 – 7:30 PM

Thursday, September 28, 2017 – 7:30 PM

Friday, September 29, 2017 – 7:30 PM

Saturday, September 30, 2017 – 2:00 PM

Saturday, September 30, 2017 – 7:30 PM

Sunday, October 1, 2017 – 2:00 PM

Wednesday, October 4, 2017 – 2:00 PM

Wednesday, October 4, 2017 – 7:30 PM

Thursday, October 5, 2017 – 7:30 PM

Friday, October 6, 2017 – 7:30 PM

Saturday, October 7, 2017 – 2:00 PM

Saturday, October 7, 2017 – 7:30 PM

Sunday, October 8, 2017 – 2:00 PM

Hurricane damage in Greenwood Cemetery.

I drive by Greenwood Cemetery almost daily and after Hurricane Irma I was amazed at the amount of tree damage there was in the cemetery. I decided to return to document some of the trees that had snapped like twigs. The first stop was to the four headstones for victims of the Pulse nightclub massacre. This area of the cemetery had been largely spared. As a matter of fact one stone had rainbow balloons, rainbow flowers, a pin wheel and a rainbow colored teddy bear. All the memorial items were pristine. The day before had been Leroy Valentín Fernández birthday. Clearly the family had come out and colorfully decorated his headstone to mark the occasion. All of the Pulse victim headstones now had color photos that were laminated in plastic and cut into the headstones. The photo of Cory Connell was had outstretched arms as if he were ready to wrestle the world. All memorial items had been removed form his stone, probably in preparation for Hurricane Irma. All 4 stone sat quietly in the shade of a large tree that had weathered the storm fine.

Pam Schwartz and I searched the cemetery for the tree I had seen while driving by the cemetery. Blanche Crews headstone
was knocked over by a fallen tree limb. It was wedged back up with
fallen branches making it look like the fallen angels had crutches. 
Dozens of trees had snapped and branches littered the entire cemetery making it appear wild and overgrown. I settled into a spot near the headstone of Edgar Earl Hitchcock. I of course wondered if he was related to the film maker. Pam quickly did research and found out that Edgar was an important figure in Orlando’s medical history.
He founded the Pediatric Associates of Orlando in 1939. He was shown in a photo giving the very first polio vaccine shot in Central Florida to a young boy. His wife Ruth died many years after him but her headstone was not in her family plot or perhaps there is just no headstone.

Across the lane from where I was sketching, a family arrived in several cars. Blue and white helium balloons bounced up out of the car behind them. They were visiting the headstone of Richard Marcano Trinidad who had died on August 19, 2016. He had died at the tender age of 36. His stone noted that he was a Stealers fan and the epitaph read…”For the best daddy in the world. We will never forget you…from your kids.” An Orlando Sentinel article reported that police had been dispatched to a home near UCF, where they found Trinidad critically injured. His 36 year old girlfriend was on the scene. I could not find any further reports about how or why Richard had died. The family released the dozen or so blue and white balloons and they silently rose into the sky.

Near the fallen tree I was sketching was the headstone for Harry P. Leu (1884-1977) and his wife Mary (1903-1986) of Leu Gardens fame. Their two granite slabs lying side by side, were pristine except for a few leaves. The Harry P. Leu historic home however has suffered damage from a huge tree limb that crashed into the roof, exposing the Leu bedroom to rain and wind damage. The ceilings and floor boards are soaked. Leu Gardens has closed indefinitely. Pam Schwartz, the Orange County Regional History Center curator went to the historic home to offer advice on preservation societies who might be able to help as well as FEMA contacts. 

The History Center off site storage facility had suffered damage when a roof access panel was blown loose and it gouged holes in the roofing as the heavy metal lid was hurled by the high winds, causing leaks over the historic collection. I was with Pam when she found the soaked warehouse and helped in removing soaked ceiling panels and now useless archival cardboard boxes. It look hours of work and in the emergency the sketchbook was ignored. Even though the floor were dried and artifacts were lifted to be  dried out off the floor, it was then discovered that the walls of the warehouse are fulled with mold. Now an effort needs to be made to save the collection form that mold which is inside the walls up to 10 feet high. The History Center is replacing all the inner walls in an effort to  protect and preserve Orlando’s History.

Weekend Top 6 Picks for September 23rd and 24th.

Saturday September 23, 2017,

9 am to 3 pm Free. Orlando Superkids Classic. Manheim Central Florida 9800 Bachman Road Orlando Fl. Soap Box Derby style race with special needs children. Non-special needs
children will be drivers and special needs children are passengers. http://sunshinestatesuperkids.com

7 pm to 2 am. Free but drinks cost. Pirate Pub Invasion. Starting at Little fish
Huge Pond
401 S. Sanford Ave. Sanford FL, at 7pm and are going to try and invade all the ports in
Sanford. Be part of the plundering and pillaging.  Just make sure ye
don’t steer yur ship with too much grog in yur belly.  PLEASE DRINK
RESPONSIBLY.
Local Bars

Avenue Lounge

Bitters and Brass

Buster’s Bistro

Little Fish HUGE Pond (host bar)

Sanford Brewing Co.

Sanford Avenue Tavern

Standard Sailor

East End Trading Co.

Wops Hops Brewery 

7 pm to 9 pm Free. Functionally Literate presents: SJ Sindu and Kristen Arnett. Blue Bamboo Center For The Arts 1905 Kentucky Ave, Winter Park, Florida 32789. A reading, audience Q and A, book signing, and discussion of LGBTQ + issues in literature, featuring Lambda Literary Fellows:

SJ SINDU (author of Marriage of a Thousand Lies)
KRISTEN ARNETT (author of Felt in the Jaw)

Beer, wine. Books for sale by Bookmark It.
In partnership with Watermark Publishing Group, Inc..
Sponsored by Rollins College Master of Liberal Studies program.

Sunday September 24, 2017

5 pm to 7 pm Free. Blues Jam hosted by Doc Williamson
The Alley 114 S. Park Ave. Winter Park FL. Bring an instrument and join in the fun.

6:30 pm to 7:05 pm $10 Billy and Alan.  Short film screening as part of the Global Peace Film Festival. Cobb Plaza Cinema Café 12, South Orange Avenue, Orlando, FL. Director: Vicki Nantz
USA, 2013, 35 minutes
Website: vickinantzfilms.com

When Billy Manes lost his partner, Alan, to suicide in 2012, he nearly
lost everything he owned to homophobic “in-laws” who swept in to claim
Alan’s possessions. Billy would later write about his devastating loss
in the Orlando Weekly. In 2013 he agreed to share his story in this
documentary to help change hearts and minds in the State of Florida
which, at the time, did not recognize same-sex relationships, or provide
them any legal protections. Billy Manes died unexpectedly in July. He
was friend of the Global Peace Film Festival, and a beloved person in
the Orlando community.

 8 pm to 10 pm Free. Harry’s Honey Badger Cave

Little Fish Huge Pond 401 S. Sanford Ave. Sanford FL. I have no idea what this is about but it sounds like a good sketch opportunity.

Making Conversations – Global Warming.

Founded by artist LeAnn Siefferman, Making Conversations is an ongoing dinner series in which participants sit together at a large dinner table eat drink and talk about issues that effect us today. In cooperation with The Dinner Party Project the topical dinnerware is transformed into an intimate, private dinner party experience… with 12 strangers.The dinner was held in a very unique space, 1010 West Church Street in Paramour near the new soccer stadium, it’s an old airplane hangar that has been converted into a venue.

A large industrial wire spool was set up as a table and plates, all designed by LeAnn were on display. The topic for this evening’s dinner was climate change. The pates themselves addressed the issue. For instance one plate had a graph on it that showed the CO2 levels in the atmosphere over thousands of years. Thought the levels rise and fall over the centuries, the recent spike is ominous and unlike any spike from the past.

Another plate set the tone for the evening, it said, “I will listen, I will be open to your ideas. I will hold space. I will ask thoughtful questions. I will reflect before I respond. I will examine my story. I will look at both sides. I will seek the source of my beliefs. I will come to the table to learn.” The plates reflected LeAnn’s thoughts and he interpretation of information she has gathered on the subject of global warming over the years. Some people at the table were professors who acted as moderators while most were curious open minded people. The moderators were there to answer questions and prompt new ones. The goal l was to learn, listen, share and grow.

LeAnn spoke about each plate before dinner was served. She explained that we see the world through lenses. We interpret the information and project it back out into the world. That process is effected by our experiences, boundaries, religion, society, family, culture, fear, and genetics. Instead of projecting outward, perhaps the conversation could illuminate inward as we seek the source of our stories and understand where they came from. Guests each picked a plate, carried over to the table and dinner was then served.

The catered dinner looked delicious, flowers were arranged as the centerpiece, and the wine flowed. by the time I finished the sketch, the conversations were still heating up. These type of conversations on specific complex issues, by people from different communities, will help us find sustainable solutions for a more sustainable future. The goal also was to understand other peoples belief systems, to listen understand and look for answers. If we are to survive as a human race, we need to start reaching out and connecting.

SEPT, 26

TDPP Presents Making Conversations: Race and Privilege

Tue 6:30 PM 

1010 Church St W, Orlando, FL 32805-2216, United States

Get Tickets

OCT, 26

TDPP Presents Making Conversations: Aging and Staying Engaged

Thu 6:30 PM

1010 Church St W, Orlando, FL 32805-2216, United States

Get Tickets

NOV, 16

TDPP Presents Making Conversations: Gender and Identity

Thu 6:30 PM

1010 Church St W, Orlando, FL 32805-2216, United States

Get Tickets

The Live Oak International.

Live Oak International Grand Prix held at the pastoral Live Oak Plantation (2215 SW 110th Ave, Ocala, FL 34481), a 5,000-acre thoroughbred breeding farm located minutes from Ocala Florida,  celebrated it’s 25th anniversary in 2016. The combined driving event has grown from humble beginnings as a sparsely attended affair held at a small venue near Ocala to one of the largest Combined Driving events in the country.

Today, the competition attracts some of the best drivers, trainers, coaches and owners from around the world. Over the years, tens of thousands have come to watch the driving and show jumping during the Live Oak International. The Show Jumping event draws top riders, including past Olympic gold medalists. Once again in 2017, the Grand Prix will be part of the Longines FEI World CupJumping North American League.

The combination of the two disciplines makes Live Oak International a one-of-a-kind event perfect for the seasoned equine enthusiast and the novice alike.  Was nerve wracking watching the horses jump the fences. Perfect rides with no fence posts down were rare. Of course there is only one horse and rider on the course at a time, but I couldn’t resist putting more horses on the sketch as they jumped.

  

The winner of the $35,000 International Jump Competition (against the clock) was number 175 Vasco with rider Adam Prudent from France. He ran the course at 60.24 seconds with no penalties.

The next Live Oak International competition will be March 15-18, 2018. Tickets are available now.