August 31, 2024

The Threepenny Opera & the Tango

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Die Dreigoschenoper (The Threepenny Opera)                                                                         
      

On August 31, 1928, Die Dreigoschenoper (The Threepenny Opera) by Bertolt Brecht with music by Kurt Weill, premiered in Berlin. The play has been represented on the Viewfinder (links below) several times. There have been hundreds of presentations of the work but there are two very interesting interpretations I have found fascinating.         
 
The first was adapted by playwright Wallace Shawn and brought back to Broadway by the Roundabout Theatre Company at Studio 54 in March 2006 with Alan Cumming playing Macheath, Nellie McKay as Polly, Cyndi Lauper as Jenny, Jim Dale as Mr Peachum, Ana Gasteyer as Mrs Peachum, Carlos Leon as Filch, Adam Alexi-Malle as Jacob and Brian Charles Rooney as a male Lucy. Included in the cast were drag performers. The performances, set design by Derek McLane, costumes by Isaac Mizrahi and choreography by Aszure Barton are astounding! It is also heavy on LGBTQ references. 
      
There is a video of the complete performance on YouTube; although the quality of it sucks royally, it is worth watching even with all it's imperfections. There is a good quality video of the Tango-Ballad performed by Lauper (as Jenny) and Alan Cumming (as Macheath) during the 2006 Tony Awards (link below).        
 
 
 
While Cummings and Lauper sing the Tango-Ballad, they are joined by the cast dancing to the tango, men with men, women with women; this is appropriate as the dance originated in Argentina and was performed in the brothels of Buenos Aires where men danced with each other while they waited for the women who were busy with other clients. The anticipation aroused sexual tension between two male dancers. Eventually it developed into the aggressive movements and struggle for dominance that define the dance.  

During tango’s early days, Argentina was largely populated by male, working-class immigrants. One statistic claims there were seven men to every woman in the country, making marriage and companionship both competitive and a prize awarded only to a few. 
 
Due to Argentina’s draught of X chromosomes, even heterosexual brothers danced with one another. Same-sex dancing was simply a fun way to pass time, a chance to brush up on moves before a potential female suitor came along. It put two men chest to chest, moving strong hips to the alluring beat while fighting for dominance on the floor, just good fun.        
 
In 1903, the very first photo of the tango was published in the magazine Caras y Caretas. The dancers were both men.          


Two men dancing the tango - February, 7 1903
Caras y Caretas magazine


Two women dancing the tango - ca 1920 
Soviet postcard

 
In 2001, the world’s first official queer milonga opened in Hamburg, Germany. Argentina’s inaugural International Queer Tango Festival sashayed onto the scene that same year.   These two simultaneous events marked the beginning of the Queer Tango movement—a distinct style deliberately tossing gendered movements aside in favour of giving and receiving ‘impulses.’         
 
The second version by the Berliner EnsembleBerlinGermany, opened on September 27, 2007, by director Robert Wilson. It had all the wonderful qualities, but different, of the Roundabout production of the previous year (links below).       



     
      
Viewfinder links:        
        
Isaac Mizrahi        
The Threepenny Opera & Lotte Lenya                    
Robert Wilson                
     
Net links:       
         
Caras y Caretas (Español)           
Queer Tango Project         
Lesley Leslie-Spinks           
Playbill ~ The Threepenny Opera        
Robert Wilson ~ 
      The Threepenny Opera         
      The Threepenny Opera images        
     
YouTube links:       
        
Threepenny Opera links        
Alan Cumming &Cyndi Lauper ~ Tango-Ballad     
Berliner Ensemble ~ Threepenny Opera              
                 Threepenny Opera              
        
        
        
        
        
Styrous® ~ Saturday, August 31, 2024        
        















 
 
 
 
 
 

Isaac Mizrahi articles/mentions

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mentions:         
        
        
        
        
        
         
photo by Dan Martensen
     
     
    
     
     
    
     
     
    
     
     
    
     
Styrous® ~ Sunday, February 27, 2022     
     
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

August 30, 2024

Turkish Delight: alabaster lamp (brown)


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Viewfinder links:        
       
Alabaster               
Turkish Delights         
       

        
         
Styrous® ~ Friday, August 30, 2024              
        












Robert Wilson articles/mentions

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mentions:     
Gianni Versace ~ Teatro costume cards   
       
       
       
       
       

Robert Wilson  - 1986 
press photo.  
      
       
        
    
        
      

























August 28, 2024

Gray Loft Gallery ~ Among the Trees installation photos

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photo by Styrous®



Closing Reception for Among the Trees 
Saturday, August 31, 4:00 – 7:00 pm  
gallery opens at 2:00 pm
  
This Saturday will be the last day to celebrate an outstanding exhibition of twenty artists of various media: painting, sculpture and mixed media works utilizing braided textile, collage, ceramic, driftwood, jellyfish, painting, and works on paper.     
 
                                                                                        Featured Artists:  
Steven Andresen, Marsha Balian, Cynthia Brannvall, Maria Budner, Tony Bellaver, Betty Jo Costanzo, Jenn Crane, Janet Delaney, Monica Denevan, Adrienne Defendi, Beth Fein, Lorrie Fink, Lin Fischer, Sarah Grew, Annie Heller, Bill Helsel, Charlotta Hauksdottir, Irene Imfeld, Katie Keller, Deborah O’Grady, Ginny Parsons, Malcolm Ryder, Elizabeth Tana, Christine Watten, Jan Watten and June Yokell.
 
 










     
Gray Loft Gallery
2889 Ford Street, third floor
Oakland, CA 94601
Masks are requested in the gallery.
 
 
 
      
Viewfinder links:       
         
Betty Jo Costanzo               
Gray Loft Gallery        
Jan Watten                                 
     
Net links:        
         
Betty Jo Costanzo          
Gray Loft Gallery          
Jan Watten                         
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
Styrous® ~ Wednesday, August 28, 2024           
        









  



Hours: Saturday, September 3: 2:00 - 7:00 pmMasks are requested in the gallery.

Gray Loft Gallery
2889 Ford Street, third floor
Oakland, CA 94601















Turkish Delights: Alabaster lamps

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alabaster lamp (gold)       
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
       
      
       
       
      
       
      
      
       
      
      






August 27, 2024

Turkish Delight: alabaster lamp (gold)

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Alabaster lamp
       
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The purest alabaster (more into in link below) is a snow-white material of fine uniform grain, but it often is associated with an oxide of iron, which produces brown clouding and veining in the stone as with this lamp.     
 
 
 

photos by Styrous®
 
 


 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 

       
        
       
       
Viewfinder links:        
       
alabaster        
Turkish Delights         
        
        
         
Styrous® ~ Tuesday, August 27, 2024              
        











Turkish Delights: Alabaster

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Alabaster lamp 
photo by Styrous®
 
 

       
       
 
 
 
Some of the wonderful "Turkish Delights" (link below) I have in my collections are composed of an almost magical stone called alabaster.      
       
Alabaster is a mineral and a soft rock used for carvings and as a source of plaster powder. Archaeologists, geologists, and the stone industry have different definitions for the word alabaster. In archaeology, the term alabaster includes objects and artefacts made from two different minerals: (i) the fine-grained, massive type of gypsum, and (ii) the fine-grained, banded type of calcite.           
 
The English word "alabaster" was borrowed from Old French alabastre, in turn derived from Latin alabaster, and that from Greek ἀλάβαστρος (alábastros) or ἀλάβαστος (alábastos). The Greek words denoted a vase of alabaster.          
 
The name may be derived further from ancient Egyptian a-labaste, which refers to vessels of the Egyptian goddess Bast. She was represented as a lioness and frequently depicted as such in figures placed atop these alabaster vessels. Ancient Roman authors Pliny the Elder and Ptolemy wrote that the stone used for ointment jars called alabastra came from a region of Egypt known as Alabastron or Alabastrites.         
 
The purest alabaster is a snow-white material of fine uniform grain, but it often is associated with an oxide of iron, which produces brown clouding and veining in the stone.    
 
Alabaster is mined and then sold in blocks to alabaster workshops. There they are cut to the needed size ("squaring"), and then are processed in different techniques: turned on a lathe for round shapes, carved into three-dimensional sculptures, chiselled to produce low relief figures or decoration; and then given an elaborate finish that reveals its transparency, colour, and texture.          
 
In order to diminish the translucency of the alabaster and to produce an opacity suggestive of true marble, the statues are immersed in a bath of water and heated gradually—nearly to the boiling point—an operation requiring great care, because if the temperature is not regulated carefully, the stone acquires a dead-white, chalky appearance as with this lamp. The effect of heating appears to be a partial dehydration of the gypsum. If properly treated, it very closely resembles true marble and is known as "marmo di Castellina".         
 
Much of the world's alabaster is extracted from the centre of the Ebro Valley in Aragon, Spain, which has the world's largest known exploitable deposits. In modern Europe, the centre of the alabaster trade is Florence, Italy. Tuscan alabaster occurs in nodular masses embedded in limestone, interstratified with marls of Miocene and Pliocene age. The mineral is worked largely by means of underground galleries, in the district of Volterra.        
 
In the 19th century new processing technology was introduced, allowing for the production of custom-made, unique pieces, as well as the combination of alabaster with other materials. Apart from the newly developed craft, artistic work became again possible, chiefly by Volterran sculptor Albino Funaioli. After a short slump, the industry was revived again by the sale of mass-produced mannerist Expressionist sculptures. It was further enhanced in the 1920s by a new branch that created ceiling and wall lamps in the Art Deco style, culminating in participation at the 1925 International Exposition of Modern Industrial and Decorative Arts in Paris.       
 
 
Paris - 1925 
photographer unknown
 
 
 

Viewfinder links:        
       
alabaster lamps       
Turkish Delights         
       
Net links:                
         
Museum of Fine Arts Boston ~ alabaster        
Wisteria ~ Alabaster for Any Aesthetic        
         
YouTube links:                
         
alabaster       
Alabaster Turning            
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
Styrous® ~ Saturday, August 24, 2024            
       




















Billy Currie articles/mentions

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mentions:      
Gary Numan ~ Cars
     
     
     
     
     
Billy Currie - 1963    
photographer unknown     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
 
 
 
 
 
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