SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013 [$2.25] www.cityscenecolumbus.com
BUT FOR OHIO STATE, MY OFFICIATING DAYS WOULD BE OVER. Nothing makes Ed feel more alive than officiating high school sports. But he almost had to hang up his jersey for good because of a painful ACL injury. He went to see the sports medicine doctors at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, the team physicians for the Buckeyes. Ed trusted their expertise to perform the ACL surgery that got him back out on the court. “I can do a 360° pivot now without pain!” Hear more of Ed’s story at osu.edu/butforohiostate.
What does it mean to you?
Ed – Blacklick, OH
Opening 2015 I Jameson Crane Sports Medicine Institute The largest, most advanced sports medicine facility of its kind, giving patients greater access to the best care in central Ohio.
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ON THE COVER
6 insight
Rockit Man
New technology and old standards are part of Herbie Hancock’s new show 10 health
Tasty Treatment
{
12 scene
8 Fabulous Foliage
OSU researchers seek cancer cure, bite by bite 35 travel
International Intrigue
Massive Pittsburgh exhibition highlights artists from around the world
}
38 visuals
To Layer is Human
2D materials make 3D masterpieces in artist’s sculptures
Search out the best places to see fall color around Ohio
42 on view
20 Fall in Thrall
The latest gallery shows around the city
The end of summer doesn’t mean the end of festivals
Gallery Exhibits 44 calendar
Picks & Previews
CityScene spotlights what to watch, what to watch for and what not to miss! 48 critique
The Painter’s Eye
Featuring Anne in White by George Bellows
10 2
cityscene • September/October 2013
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COVER: Silvia Kolikonovski Clothing by Cheesecake Boutique Bailey 44 “Metaphor” dress: $144 Scarf: $28
Photo by Scott Cunningham Photography Hair by Michael Puccetti Make-up by Melody Larissa
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• Tickets to BalletMet’s performance of Swan Lake, Oct. 18-20 at the Ohio Theatre. • Tickets to the New Albany Symphony Orchestra’s performance of Beethoven 9 Oct. 13 at the McCoy Center in New Albany • Tickets to Woody: His Life, Times and Teachings, Oct. 6 at the Palace Theatre in Marion.
luxury living 21 living
• Tickets to Sandy Hackett’s Rat Pack Show, Oct. 27 at the Palace Theatre in Marion.
Custom Customs
• Passes to COSI to see such exhibits as Curious George: Let’s Get Curious, which runs Sept. 21-Jan. 5.
27 Stage Advice
• Passes to upcoming Shadowbox Live shows, such as Nightmare on Front Street, Sept. 12-Nov. 16.
30 you’ve been scene
• Tickets to Jersey Boys, presented by Broadway Across America, Sept. 17-29 at the Ohio Theatre.
Taste the Future
• Tickets to the Chamber Music Series at the McConnell Arts Center in Worthington, starting Nov. 10.
Major home-building trends in central Ohio
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{insight}
Rockit M
New technology and old standards are part of Herbie Hancock’s show By Eric Lagatta
“I
haven’t heard anybody yet who has come after him.” Those are words from jazz trumpeter Miles Davis’ autobiography describing his longtime partner and musical collaborator, Herbie Hancock. And though the book was published in 1990, roughly a year before Davis’ death, the words seem to ring true even 23 years later.
Fifty years and 40 studio albums since his first solo effort, Hancock – the jazz pianist, keyboard player, bandleader, composer and Buddhist – isn’t done yet. The 73-year-old has played gigs in South America, California and New York in a two-month tour that began Aug. 3 and culminates in his home city of Chicago on Oct. 11. Before his homecoming, Hancock will also make a stop in New Albany at the Jeanne B. McCoy Community Center for the Arts on Oct. 8. Hancock started his music career in jazz, but he has reached beyond jazz to genres such as funk, blues and even classical. His show at the McCoy Center will lead the audience through all the periods of his work, from the oldest songs to the newest. “Because my music has covered a pretty wide area, a mixture of genres … I’m going to try to do a little bit of this and a little bit of that,” Hancock says. The audience at the 750-seat Schottenstein Theatre in the McCoy Center 6
cityscene • September/October 2013
can expect older jazz standards such as “Cantaloupe Island” and “Watermelon Man,” as well as Hancock’s later hits such as electronic-tinged 1980s smash “Rockit.” Never one to stay stagnant, Hancock is giving the songs new arrangements or, as he says, “a new twist using new technologies.” The new advancements incorporate iPads, which Hancock integrated into his live shows about a year ago to manipulate sounds and access music programs. Technology like this may come in handy for performances of songs such as “Rockit,” which was one of the first popular songs to incorporate turntabling techniques and record scratching. But to Hancock, the show isn’t about the technology; it’s about connecting with the audience. “What I’m actually doing on stage is communicating to them through this language,” Hancock says, “that I’m real at this moment and have the courage to be vulnerable.”
Accompanying Hancock will be guitarist Lionel Loueke, bassist James Genus and drummer Vincent Colaiuta. “It’s just a great band that has been working on and off with me for several years,” Hancock says. A look at Hancock’s successes helps explain the words Davis chose in his autobiography. Now the creative chair for jazz at the Los Angeles Philharmonic and the institute chair at the Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz, Hancock has won 14 Grammy Awards, including Album of the Year, making him one of a handful of jazz artists with that accomplishment. He was also the first jazz artist to have an album go platinum. He’s even won an Oscar. These things aren’t important to Hancock, though. “Usually by the time it goes platinum, I’m on to another project,” he says. “I don’t dwell on that. I don’t sit there going, ‘Wow, look at what I did.’” “I got stuff to do,” he adds, laughing. That “stuff” has spanned five decades. Hancock began his career with his 1963 solo album Takin’ Off. Shortly after that, he joined the Miles Davis Quintet. Hancock started his own band in 1973 called the Headhunters; the group’s self-titled debut was the aforementioned first jazz album to go platinum. In 1983, he collaborated with Bill Laswell on the platinum Future Shock, featuring the single “Rockit,” known as www.cityscenecolumbus.com
an
www.cityscenecolumbus.com
and in 2011 he was designated an honorary UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador, becoming part of a group of celebrity advocates for intercultural dialogue. It’s hard to say what Hancock will do next or where he will go, but one thing’s for certain: After more than 50 years of music, he won’t be stopping anytime soon. “It’s a bottomless well of creativity and cultural development that is connected to my heart and my life,” he says. “I enjoy making people feel something, I enjoy encouraging people, making them even ponder questions, perhaps thinking another way about things.” “This is a great joy for me,” he adds. cs Eric Lagatta is a contributing writer. Feedback welcome at gbishop@cityscenemediagroup.com. Photo courtesy of Douglas Kirkland
much for its quality musicianship as for its music video loaded with dancing robots. 2007’s River: The Joni Letters – a tribute to Hancock’s longtime friend Joni Mitchell and a collaboration with artists including Tina Turner, Leonard Cohen and Mitchell herself – received the Grammy for Album of the Year. Other co-collaborators throughout Hancock’s career include Sting, Stevie Wonder, Carlos Santana and Paul Simon. He’s also made forays into film, composing the score for the 1996 film Blowup and the 1986 film ’Round Midnight, which won him an Oscar for best original score. Even though his expansive body of work would attest otherwise, Hancock doesn’t just focus on his music. Much of his inspiration comes from his Buddhist faith, which he has been practicing for 40 years. “I concentrate more on how I can grow, not only as a musician, but as a human being,” he says. “That makes for a larger palette from which to grow my music.” Indeed, his 2010 effort, The Imagine Project – featuring musicians such as Jeff Beck, Seal and Pink – tackled the themes of peace and global responsibility. Buddhism has influenced not only his music, but also his world view. Through numerous organizations, Hancock has been an advocate for world peace, good will and global understanding. Hancock is the founder of the International Committee of Artists for Peace,
Herbie Hancock October 8 Jeanne B. McCoy Community Center for the Arts, 100 E. Dublin-Granville Rd., New Albany cityscene • September/October 2013
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Fabulous Foliage Search out the best places to see fall color around Ohio By Hayley Ross
A
s September rolls in, the leaves begin to paint Ohio with beautiful shades of red, yellow and orange. What better way to get out and enjoy the cool autumn air and get a glimpse of Ohio’s beauty than by taking a tour of its fall foliage?
Rose Lake in Hocking Hills
Holmes County (Amish Country) Due to its rural location, Holmes County is covered with foliage. Operators are available to give custom tours, but visitors can see an array of different colors and tree species just by driving down the highway. “Anyone who visits is sure to stumble upon cool little shops and Amish farmers selling their goods or working in the fields,” says Shasta Mast, executive director of the Holmes County Chamber of Commerce. The peak of the leaves is usually around the second week in October, depending on the weather, Mast says. Hocking Hills The dramatic landscapes and colors of southeastern Ohio’s Hocking Hills make it one of Ohio’s most popular sites for tourists during the fall. The density of the forest, colorful leaves of the deciduous hardwoods and rolling landscape all factor into the striking nature of the foliage, says Karen Raymore, executive director for the Hocking Hills Tourism Association. The colors usually peak mid-October. Conkle’s Hollow in Hocking Hills
“Because we had a damp summer, we expect the leaves to be especially vibrant this year,” Raymore says. Most of the fall color tours are self-guided, but visitors are provided with maps of back roads, local art galleries, shops and farmers’ markets. Greene County Greene County contains several choice spots for visitors looking for beautiful fall colors, including John Bryan State Park and Clifton Gorge State Nature Preserve. Clifton Gorge is home to many different plants and animal species, and the scenic rivers and rolling hills make John Bryan State Park a perfect destination for hiking and nature walks, says Larry Hensel, communications specialist for the Greene County Convention and Visitors Bureau. “The colors vary depending on the season, but the leaves are gorgeous shortly after the first frost,” Hensel says. Greater Licking County Licking County is home to a variety of locations to see the colors of fall, especially the Dawes Arboretum, Blackhand Gorge, Flint Ridge and the Newark Earthworks. Fall foliage is also easy to spot while riding down the 38 miles of bike paths in Licking County. “Foliage east of Columbus generally has more vibrant colors due to the weather being slightly cooler,” says Ron Bower, marketing and sales manager for the Greater Licking County Visitors Bureau. cs Hayley Ross is a contributing writer. Feedback welcome at gbishop@cityscenemediagroup.com.
8
cityscene • September/October 2013
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{health}
Tasty Treatment OSU researchers seek cancer cure, bite by bite By Lisa Aurand
I
nstead of chemotherapy or radiation, imagine drinking a can of juice each morning to treat prostate cancer or nursing on a candy for tongue or throat cancer. Food could be the new cancer treatment. Food scientists, plant geneticists and doctors at The Ohio State University have been working together to create plants – and foods made from these plants – that have anti-cancer properties. Plants have dozens of phytochemicals. research because it is one of the few uniSome are “chemical warfare” they use to versities in the country to have an extenprotect themselves from harm, some help sive agriculture program, school of public them reproduce and pollinate, and some health and comprehensive cancer center make them colorful, says Dr. Steve Clin- under one roof, Clinton says. “We can sit down with these people ton, program leader of molecular carcinogenesis and chemoprevention at the OSU and say, ‘Why don’t we make a tomato Comprehensive Cancer Center – James that has more of the phytochemicals in it that have anti-cancer properCancer Hospital and Solove ties?’” he says. “Once we make Research Institute. these novel food products, “Many of these (phytochem(we) do research on people icals), we’re learning, may have to see if they truly have the activity in people and may health-promoting or diseasehave benefits if you consume preventing properties we’re them in a reasonable amount,” trying to attain.” Clinton says. “In a healthy, For example, the James rediverse diet of five to 10 servcently hosted a clinical trial ings of fruits and vegetables per of a soy-tomato juice for prosday, you might get hundreds of Dr. Steve Clinton tate cancer patients. The chemicals that have interestidea, Clinton says, is to deliver the posiing properties.” Epidemiological and population stud- tive health benefits of soy to those who ies point researchers toward plants that wouldn’t normally consume it. “If we want men to eat more soy, we can’t may have phytochemicals with potential positive influences on human health. For just say, ‘Why don’t you eat more tofu?’” example, countries where soy has been Clinton says. “How do we get it into a food traditionally consumed, such as Japan product that might be easier to consume? and China, have had lower rates of colon, … He can have a can of soy tomato juice. breast and prostate cancers than countries That’s stuff you can throw in your briefcase or your lunch bucket. When you add soy into with Western diets. Ohio State is uniquely poised to take tomato juice, it tastes reasonably good. The on the challenge of building upon that next step is to (create) a vegetable juice that 10 cityscene • September/October 2013
has other things in it than soy and tomato … that have anti-cancer properties, such as cruciferous vegetables.” Another study applied research on the antioxidants found in black raspberries and their effect on oral cancers. “We know, from studies, that black raspberries have anti-cancer properties in those systems, so how do we get the best delivery of black raspberries to the targets in the mouth?” Clinton says. “You want to have a lot of interaction between that and the oral mucosa.” To that end, the team developed a black raspberry gummy candy and a black raspberry juice, and is hoping to study both in clinical trials with oral cancer patients. The research at Ohio State is being funded in part by Growing the Cure, an initiative formed by five Ohio and Indiana farming cooperatives. The program kicked off about a year ago with a donation of more than $103,000 to the James and continues to raise funds for the cause via individual farmers, who are offered the chance to donate each time they buy supplies through the co-op. Growing the Cure will present the university with a check for its first-year fundraising total in September. Though a food-based cure for cancer is still a dream for the future, current cancer patients can avail themselves of the latest research on dietary links to good health via the Survivors Garden, a two-acre farm on Ohio State’s agriculture campus that is now in its second year. Cancer patients, survivors and their families can tend the garden, harvest fruits and vegetables, and learn from chefs and dietitians how to cook them. www.cityscenecolumbus.com
Above: The JamesCare for Life Garden of Hope. Left: Cancer survivor Laurel Page works in the garden.
“We have several teaching sessions that include anti-cancer dietary guidelines and how to prepare the foods to fit into that,” Clinton says. “A lot of folks who have just gone through a very intense experience of cancer therapy … are looking for ways to empower themselves to be healthier and maybe to ward off any chance of recurrence, to see what (they) can do with food and nutrition … to get control of the situation and recover from treatment and live a healthier life free of cancer.” Clinton himself is taking his in-depth knowledge of food’s healthful properties to the national level as a member of the committee that is working on the new Dietary Guidelines for Americans to be released in 2015. The guidelines influence meals at all levels, including school lunches and meals in hospitals and nursing homes. cs Lisa Aurand is a contributing editor. Feedback welcome at gbishop@cityscenemediagroup.com. www.cityscenecolumbus.com
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COLUMBUS CRAVE OHIO MAGAZINE CITYSCENE ONDOMEDIA cityscene • September/October 2013 11
CityScene and local boutiques look into fall fashion
Jonathan Barnes Clothing from Jeffrey Thomas Jack Victor houndstooth sport coat: $495 Alberto ceramica pants: $188 Signum contrast collar shirt: $148 Luchiano Visconti knit vest: $149
Rebecca McCabe Ibel Clothing and accessories from Rowe Boutique Smythe jacket: $668 Floyd clutch: $158 Biko necklace: $224 Clothing from own closet Emanuel Ungaro vintage top Banana Republic trousers Brooks Brothers shoes
12 cityscene • September/October 2013
www.cityscenecolumbus.com
Michael Brown Clothing from Jeffrey Thomas Luxury alpaca zip sweater: $198 Bills Khakis signature plaid shirt: $155 Alberto twill pants: $188 www.cityscenecolumbus.com
cityscene • September/October 2013 13
Katrina Fontenot Clothing from Thread Nicole Miller black dress: $358 Marc by Marc Jacobs bolt slice necklace: $158 Dolce Vita black kid suede and tan leather shoes: $98
14 cityscene • September/October 2013
www.cityscenecolumbus.com
Jennifer Joseph Clothing from Faze Planet blouse: $110 Drew slacks: $188 Sun Kim jacket: $268 Michael Kors boots: Custom
John Joseph
Clothing from Godfry’s Pal Zileri fall/winter weight black and blue donegal sport coat: $1,596 Pal Zileri multi-stripe sport shirt: $295 Gran Sasso red V-neck cashmere sweater: $395 Seaward & Stern red silk pocket square: $75
Lance White Clothing from Godfry’s Canali charcoal grey fancy solid suit with purple highlights: $1,995 Zegna white twill dress shirt: $355 Robert Talbott (Estate) tie: $195 Vitaliano Pancaldi pocket square: $95
16 cityscene • September/October 2013
www.cityscenecolumbus.com
Silvia Kolikonovski Clothing from Cheesecake Boutique BB Dakota black swing coat: $132 Renuar cigarette pull-on pants in cabernet: $78
www.cityscenecolumbus.com
cityscene • September/October 2013 17
Alan D. Hinson Clothing from Jeffrey Thomas Alberto twill pants in scarlet: $178 Luchiano Visconti navy sweater: $198
18 cityscene • September/October 2013
www.cityscenecolumbus.com
Who Are Those Models? Jonathan Barnes, AIA, NCARB, LEED AP, is managing and design principal at Jonathan Barnes Architecture and Design (JBAD). He has designed cultural, academic, office, retail, mixed-use, multifamily and single-family residential projects, and among JBAD’s major foci are adaptive reuse of historic buildings and new infill construction in urban environments. Michael Brown is director of development and public affairs for Experience Columbus, advocating for building the community’s brand and tourism economy. He is also a board member of the Jazz Arts Group, the Columbus Downtown Commission and Independents’ Day, and on the strategic relations committee for the Columbus Museum of Art. Katrina Fontenot is owner and co-designer of her brand, KiK Vantage. The native Los Angeleno and former model is board president of CMH Fashion Week and a mother of two. Alan D. Hinson is a real estate agent with New Albany Realty, specializing in luxury real estate and relocation services. He is also a member of the United Way of Central Ohio’s Young Leadership and Cinquefoil committees, a board member of the Buckeye Ranch Foundation and chairman of the Hinson Family Foundation.
www.cityscenecolumbus.com
Rebecca McCabe Ibel is director and curator of the Pizzuti Collection, which opens Sept. 7. She worked with Ron and Ann Pizzuti to establish the nonprofit arts space in the Short North dedicated to presenting exhibitions from the Pizzutis’ collection of contemporary art.
ing travel on a daily basis around weather conditions and air traffic. Lance White is a senior vice president at UBS in New Albany. He has managed wealth for high net worth families locally and across the U.S. for the past 18 years.
Zoey Joseph
Jennifer Joseph is a member of Joseph & Joseph Co. LPA, a practicing attorney in the areas of civil litigation, domestic relations and employment law. She comes from a family that owned a fashion industry based in Chicago and was on the college board of Saks Fifth Avenue while attending Loyola University. John Joseph is also an attorney and member of Joseph & Joseph Co. LPA, practicing in commercial and residential real estate, corporate law and civil litigation. He and his wife limit their clothes shopping in Columbus to boutiques, believing the best clothing in the city can be found there. Zoey Joseph, who turns 5 in September, is known as the fiercely fashionable security dog of Joseph & Joseph Co. LPA. Silvia Kolikonovski is an account manager at NetJets. Her background in meteorology helps her plan trips and solve problems for NetJets owners that involve safely execut-
Clothing from various sources Posh Pets sweater: $32 Posh Pets sunglasses: $20 Louis Vuitton collar: $360
Boutiques • Cheesecake
Boutique, Upper Arlington Grandview Heights and Dublin • Jeffrey Thomas, Upper Arlington • Godfry’s, Polaris Fashion Place • Rowe Boutique, Short North • Faze, Upper Arlington • Thread,
cityscene • September/October 2013 19
Fall in Thrall
The end of summer doesn’t mean the end of festivals By David Allen
T
hough the daylight is shortening and the kids are back in school, there’s still time to enjoy Ohio festivals before winter sets in. Around Ohio Poppin’ Fresh This year’s Marion Popcorn Festival, Sept. 5-7, has an extra “pop” to it with a music line-up featuring the Village People and Jo Dee Messina. This is the largest popcorn festival in the world, attracting crowds
of more than 250,000 people to take part in festival fun and such associated activities as a charity 5K and a golf outing. Big Twists The pretzel is among Germany’s contributions to global cuisine, so it’s only fitting that pretzels be the theme of Germantown’s annual festival. The 34-year-old Germantown Pretzel Festival, set for Sept. 28-29, also features palate cleansers such as unique crafts and live entertainment.
CITYBBQ.COM
REA US A B M : LU 8 CO C AT I O N S OR LO OUT Y R R CA RING C AT E
TAILGATE M V P
Sweet and Sauer The Ohio Sauerkraut Festival in Waynesville hosts more 450 vendors, with products ranging from sauerkraut pizza to sauerkraut fudge. The 43-yearold festival is a Midwest staple and will be hosted Oct. 12-13. For the Love of Pumpkins The annual Circleville Pumpkin Show will showcase multiple pumpkin contests, arts and crafts, a flower show, live concerts, amusement rides and more for all ages from Oct. 16-19. And that’s not to mention the food; vendors find ways to incorporate pumpkin into all sorts of recipes, from cream puffs and milkshakes to pizza and sloppy joes. Around Columbus Feel the Heat The Hot Times Community Music and Arts Festival brings its usual flair and flash back to Main Street and Parsons Avenue, just east of downtown Columbus, Sept. 6-8. Visual performers, nationally and locally known musicians and the largest gathering of art cars in central Ohio will be showcased. Just Talkin’ ’Bout Craft More than 150 vendors will converge on Uptown Marysville for the Festifair Arts & Crafts Festival, slated for Sept. 7. Uptown streets will close for the 33rd annual festival, which also features a variety of food vendors. Fall Fair The 163-year-old Fairfield County Fair brings two country music stars, Casey James and the Henningsens, to kick off Ohio’s last county fair of the year, set for Oct. 6-12. In addition to the concerts, there are truck pulls and rodeos at the county fairgrounds in Lancaster. Fall in Love with Fall Whether it’s arts and crafts shows, storytelling, pumpkin painting, folk music or local nourishment, there’s something for almost any audience at the Worthington Fall Festival on Oct. 12. The eighth annual festival will be held on the Worthington Village Green. cs David Allen is a contributing writer. Feedback welcome at gbishop@cityscenemediagroup.com.
20 cityscene • September/October 2013
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W
hen it comes to new homes, everywhere you look – models, websites, magazines, friends’ homes – something is new or different. So what’s in a trend?
living
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CustomCustoms Major home-building trends in central Ohio
ALSO: Home Staging p27 • Drink Like a Pirate p31 • Community Spotlight p32
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Luxury Living
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uyers happen upon trends The national association’s surby a variety of avenues vey of 3,862 homebuyers or – word of mouth, floor potential buyers in the U.S. put plans printed in magazines energy conservation at the top and posted online, or touring of the preference list, and with events such as the Parade of that go Energy Star-rated appliHomes. Builders and designers ances and heating systems. Gated consider those suggestions and golf course locations were and their applicability as a By Duane St. Clair just above elevators as the plan is drawn, while weighleast desirable amenities. continued from page 21 ing a multitude of factors Still, the average purchase that may or may not allow for inclusion price of those who responded was $203,900 of the preferred features. – well below the typical cost of a customWhen a buyer comes forward with mul- designed home in central Ohio. tiple ideas from multiple sources, they all For upscale buyers, energy is a conneed to be sorted so decisions can be made sideration, not the “trend,” says Lori on what to include and what to omit so Steiner, president of Truberry Custom as to best suit the client’s needs, wishes Homes. It’s certainly not a top considand budget. eration when buyers and Truberry archiTrends emerge in interviews with tects begin designing a custom home, those in the Columbus-area new home Steiner says. market and from a nationwide survey Most Truberry homes cost at least by the National Association of Home- $400,000. builders, the parent organization of Energy efficiency comes automatically in the Building Industry Association of new homes in Ohio. One factor is upgraded Central Ohio. building codes. Another is that top-grade
living
materials, such as windows, are always included, especially in upscale homes. Design is another factor. Window placement designed to maximize natural light and room placement and sizes designed to account for the buyer’s living needs or desires both factor into energy costs. With energy efficiency frequently part of the custom home package, other considerations rise to the top of the preference list, and for Truberry, neighborhood is still No. 1, Steiner says. It’s followed by garage size and basement walkout possibilities. After those come living spaces, such as placement of the master bedroom and determination of the number of bedrooms and walk-in closets. Then there’s consideration of other rooms and uses. “In the family market, we are seeing a trend back to the two-story homes with second-floor masters,” Steiner says. Empty-nesters, on the other hand, tend to prefer first-floor master bedrooms, she says. Architect Richard Taylor of Dublinbased Richard Taylor Architects has also
Inserting a home office into a niche as part of a large, open room is one emerging trend.
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seen a preference for first-floor masters among buyers, often for use as in-law suites for aging parents. “It may be (the owners’) 20 years from now,” Taylor says. Heated tubs and showers in master suites are popular, Taylor says, and he sometimes suggests large two-person showers and space reserved for a tub with plumbing roughed in, but used for seating or a cosmetics counter. Another popular feature: Eat-in kitchens that are slightly more elegant. “Granite is everywhere, (but) crushed quartz is just coming on,” Steiner says. “It is about the same price, but it never needs to be sealed and doesn’t stain.” Multi-level cabinets are also gaining popularity in all residential prices and types, she says. While eat-in kitchens gain ground in new designs, dining rooms are losing ground. That space is used to better incorporate the kitchen into large rooms where most living is done, Taylor says. Steiner sees significant demand for secondary gathering areas, such as lofts or bonus rooms above garages. She is finding less desire for volume and for two-story great room ceilings, with preference trending to 9- and 10foot, flat ceilings. Also gaining the eyes of buyers is a new ceiling finish called Bark. It’s a variation on the once-popular stipple effect, which left a rough, pointed surface after a soft finish was tamped and dried. Now, the same finish is applied, but bark patterns are pressed into it, resulting in a much smoother, patterned finish to be painted. www.luxurylivingmagazine.com
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Luxury Living Space once designated for a dining or living room is now being used for a den or office instead, and tastes in offices are evolving. The prototypical office with dark paneling and copious shelves is losing favor, Taylor says, as users find themselves with fewer books and smaller computers. He has designed office space behind folding doors in a family room that can be opened as the desk is needed. Another design includes a small office as part of, but somewhat separate from, the main part of a second-floor bedroom. And an office can be inserted in a niche as part of a large, open room, he says. “(Offices) are becoming a room that is worked in almost every day, but now, the kids do their computer work on a laptop or an iPad everywhere and anywhere in the house, not just the office,” Steiner says. Laundry rooms also continue to get larger, Steiner says, while mudrooms – often with clothing storage and charging stations for cell phones and other portable electronic devices – are almost standard.
Home offices are also being incorporated into upstairs areas, such as this one at the top of a skylight tower.
In outdoor areas, open-air roofed spaces – not necessarily screened – with real furniture and TVs are emerging, Steiner says. Those outdoor TVs are often flat-screens, and buyers are forever finding new ways to incorporate flat-screens into rooms; kitchens, bathrooms and porches are joining traditional spots such as family rooms and master bedrooms in TV preferences.
Detailed concrete driveways, some with paver edges, make up another outdoor trend, as do ever-fancier garage door designs. v Duane St. Clair is a contributing editor. Feedback welcome at gbishop@cityscenemediagroup.com.
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Stage Advice There’s an art and a science to getting a home ready to sell By Duane St. Clair Before
I
n the residential real estate market, “clutter” is a dirty word – and like many dirty words, it’s heard all too frequently. Clutter in a home is in the eye of the beholder. Visitors and, more importantly, potential buyers usually see it. But the homeowners – who create and live with furnishings, decorations, artifacts that resulted in 15 showings and other items in highly visible the first day and a quick sale. “You’d be surprised what places – may be less apt to notice. you can do with things you
That usually means staging, an allencompassing term that means using independent eyes to get rid of excess items, ranging from furniture to family photos, and sometimes redecorating. It’s all done either by a discerning owner or, often, with advice from a real estate agent or a person trained to put a home on stage, so to speak. “The reason for staging is to put the focus on the great features you have,” such as wood floor and granite counters, says Stella Pseekos, owner of Dublin-based Styled to Sell. “Clutter gets in the way of what you’re trying to get the buyer to buy.” A potential buyer can immediately identify a room he or she might envision living in someday, says Nancy Edwards, co-owner with Linda Ayers of Clintonville-area First Impression Home Stagers. “It takes just 15 seconds to create a good first impression,” Edwards says. Edwards and Ayers tell of helping an owner stage a 1920s-built home in Upper Arlington by having wallpaper removed in one room, improving some lighting, hiring a professional cleaning crew and rearranging and removing some furniture, steps www.luxurylivingmagazine.com
have,” Edwards says, by repurposing or restaging. First Impression sometimes spices up rooms by adding colorful pillows or, as in a recent case, strategically placing some knick-knacks in a kitchen that surprisingly had none, Ayers says. Most stagers have a supply of furniture or decorative pieces available for temporary use; others arrange to rent what’s desired. It’s important to depersonalize when trying to sell, says Maria Bonaventura, owner of Westerville-based StageOrganizeStyle. “Everybody has too much stuff,” Bonaventura says. “A lot of it goes offproperty” when staging based on a list of suggested changes she prepares. Fresh paint can add to the flair. Art and other decorative items are some of Bonaventura’s favorite extra touches. “Buyers buy on emotions,” she says. “If the home is disorganized, it detracts.” In today’s market, buyers are less inclined to give top dollar for a home that needs decorating or some fix-up work, says Bonaventura.
Kelly Cantwell of Street Sotheby's International Realty transformed this living room to sell by, among other things, neutralizing paint colors, removing bulky window coverings and adding a mirror over the fireplace. After
“The reason for staging is to put the focus on the great features you have, such as wood floor and granite counters. Clutter gets in the way of what you’re trying to get the buyer to buy.” Stella Pseekos
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“Buyers are more critiBefore cal. They want it more turnkey,” she says. Most stagers have similar approaches. Usually, it involves a visit to a home and a room-byroom tour to compile a list of suggestions for the owner to get ready for a sale. Stagers’ fees are based on the services they provide, ranging from suggestions for additions and subtractions to arranging for work to be done to lining up storage and moving unneeded After items, and cannot be determined without a visit to the house. “There might be a room full of antiques that’s not going to sell (the house),” says Pseekos. “It needs to look modern. Today’s younger buyers don’t want a house that’s going to look like their grandmother’s.” Bonaventura also helps owners style their homes to make them look more comfortable. This dining room was being used principally as an She recently helped a office; Stella Pseekos of Styled to Sell staged it as it client do some refinwas meant to be used to better appeal to the buyer. ishing and place furniture when moving from one home in UA to another. some significant purging before Cantwell Pseekos tells of staging a high-end came in, but her suggestions of lighterDublin home with top-quality upholstery colored walls and less furniture in the living and draperies. room helped speed the sale along. “All these fabrics, all these draperies The idea of staging is to “get the paint take away from what you want to see” color right, pick some furniture pieces, in an attractive rear yard, she says. maybe add some throws,” and other simple “We’ve taken down all those expensive decorative touches, Cantwell says. Famdraperies so you can see out.” The home ily pictures, while nice, distract from the sold quickly. home and should be put away. Kelly Cantwell, a real estate agent with While real estate agents generally don’t Street Sotheby’s International Realty in wade into staging, Cantwell makes the Upper Arlington, gets involved in staging effort because a home needs to look good preparations. She once spent nine months to sell, she says. on staging before putting a seven-figure “Over 90 percent of our buyers are home on the market. It entailed “purging shopping for their homes on the Intera lot of personal things to make it more net,” she says. v comfortable for the buyer.” The result: several offers within 48 hours Duane St. Clair is a contributing editor. and a quick sale. In another, smaller UA Feedback welcome at home, the homeowner had already done gbishop@cityscenemediagroup.com. www.luxurylivingmagazine.com
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Luxury Living
you bee’ve sce n ne
Poetics of Pattern opening
For more photos visit www.cityscenecolumbus.com
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❶
Ohio Arts Council’s Riffe Gallery, July 25 Photos by Roni Good
❶ Susan Li O’Connor ❷ Janice Lessman-Moss ❸ Julie Henahan, Mary Gray, Nancy Crow and Janice Lessman-Moss ❹ Carly Witmer ❺ Audra Skuodas, Douglas Sanderson and John Pearson
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Taste the Future Benefiting the Columbus State Community
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College Foundation Columbus State campus, Aug. 13 Photos by Andrew Warner
❶ Columbus State student chef apprentices ❷ Pam Bishop, Dennison Griffith and Dianne Radigan ❸ David Harrison, Kent Rigsby, Kamal Boulos, Carol Kizer, Cameron Mitchell, Sue Doody and Hubert Seifert ❹ Columbus State’s student ambassadors ❺ Ken Heigel, Robin Davis and Will Kop ❻ Abbigail Myers, Matt Henry and Matt Smith
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Photos by Scott Cunningham Photography, www.scottcunninghamphotography.com 30 L u
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Avast, Me Hearties! in the spirit
Splice the mainbrace on International Talk Like a Pirate Day By Garth Bishop
’T
is a fine time o’ year to be talkin’ like a pirate. Arr! Fer the uninitiated, Sept. 19 be designated International Talk Like a Pirate Day. This underrated but joyous holiday was created in 2002 by John “Ol’ Chumbucket” Baur and Mark “Cap’n Slappy” Summers. Though it originated in Florida, it didn’t take it long to sail to Columbus, and the Jolly Roger has been planted here each fall since. If it’s a celebration of pirate culture ye desire, ye might take a voyage to the Santa Maria in downtown Columbus, which hoists the mainsails for its annual Talk Like a Pirate Weekend Sept. 21-22. But for all the Santa Maria’s good points as a seafarin’ vessel, she has no bar on board. So should ye be seekin’ a pirate libation that even a landlubber can enjoy, plunder at liberty from the list that follows; I’ll not force ye to walk the plank. All recipes are courtesy of the official International Talk Like a Pirate Day website, www.talklikeapirate.com. Just don’t get too loaded to the gunwalls. Ye don’t want to end up on the wrong end of the cat o’ nine tails. American Grog • 1 oz. dark rum • 1 tsp. sugar • 2 cloves • Dash lemon juice • Stick of cinnamon Combine rum, sugar and cloves in a mug, then add lemon juice and cinnamon stick. Top with hot water. Battering Ram • ¾ oz. dark rum • ¾ oz. light rum • ½ oz. bourbon • Orange juice Pour liquor over ice in a highball glass, then fill with orange juice. www.luxurylivingmagazine.com
Caribbean Smuggler • ¾ oz. dark rum • ½ oz. triple sec • 1 oz. orange juice • 1 oz. margarita mix • ½ oz. simple syrup • 3 oz. lemon-lime soda Pour the dark rum, triple sec, orange juice, margarita mix and simple syrup into a cocktail shaker half-filled with ice cubes. Shake well, then strain into a hurricane glass almost filled with ice cubes. Top with lemon-lime soda and stir briefly. Garnish with a lime wheel and an orange flag. Dark and Stormy • 2 oz. dark rum • 8 oz. ginger beer Pour rum over ice, add ginger beer and stir. Rum Runner Island Style • 1 oz. dark rum • 1 oz. light rum • ½ oz. blackberry brandy • ¼ oz. banana liqueur • 1 splash grenadine • 1 splash lime juice Pour liquors, grenadine and lime juice into a blender with 1 ½ cups of ice, and mix until thick. Pour into a hurricane glass, garnish with a cherry and serve. Garth Bishop is editor of CityScene Magazine. Feedback welcome at gbishop@cityscenemediagroup.com.
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Luxury Living spotlight
Stonebridge Crossing Patio home living convenient to Upper Arlington and Dublin
B
ob Webb is excited about his newest patio home community at Stonebridge Crossing, conveniently located off Hayden Run Road. The location is ideal and the new floor plans developed for Stonebridge are exceptional. Bob Webb jumped at the chance to create a patio home neighborhood to serve an established area that doesn’t see many new construction opportunities. For those considering downsizing, or seeking low-maintenance living without sacrificing upscale finishes and custom designs, this development is truly a rare find. Stonebridge Crossing’s residents benefit from the City of Columbus location, and its proximity to the amenities of Upper Arlington, Dublin and Hilliard, including the Mall at Tuttle Crossing, athletic clubs and numerous restaurants. The setting is surrounded by trees and a ravine, and the community offers all of the conveniences of patio living, including snow removal and lawn care. The development consists of 47 home sites, some with walkout basement design capabilities. Several customizable floor plans range from 2,200 to 4,100 square feet and include first-floor master suites, finished basements and two- and three-car garages. Prices are from the low $400,000s. Stonebridge Crossing has several homes in various stages of completion, and a furnished model is open Saturday through Wednesday. For additional information, contact the sales office at 614-876-5577 or visit www. bobwebb.com. v
Nelson Farms
Stonebridge Crossing
Municipality: Liberty Township Builder: Truberry Custom Homes
Municipality/Township: City of Columbus
Model location: 1690 Shale Run Drive, west side of Olentangy River Road, just north of Home Road Model hours: Saturday and Sunday, noon-5 p.m., and by appointment
Builders in the community: Bob Webb
School district: Olentangy Local Schools
Location: I-270 to Tuttle Crossing Blvd. exit; east on Tuttle Crossing Blvd.; right on Bradenton Ave. to Camden Place Dr.; go straight at light crossing over Hayden Run Rd. into Stonebridge
Number of Truberry homes: 6 to start
School district: Columbus Schools
Price range: $500,000-$800,000
Number of homes when complete: 47 units
Style of homes: Various styles on cul-de-sac, wooded and walkout home sites
Price range: Starting from the low $400s
Special features: Beautiful home sites to build a Tru-custom home. Choose your lot and meet with our architect to design your next home.
Special features: See our new model. Enjoys a privileged location near Tuttle Mall, close to rivers and parks and a short drive to major interstates. With just 47 wooded, ravine lots, Stonebridge Crossing offers tranquility and luxury while close to dining, shopping and entertainment options.
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Style of homes: Patio homes
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available homes
Tartan Ridge – Wooded lot. 10’ ceilings on first floor, 9’ ceilings on second floor. Great open floor plan. Buyer can still do own decorating. Call Neil Rogers: 614-619-8777.
2013 Parade Home in Jerome Village – Great floor plan with lower level walk-out, lots of upgrades. Call Neil Rogers: 614-619-8777.
740-548-5577 740-548-6863 STONEBRIDGE CROSSING – Visit our new model. High ceilings, open floor plan. Lots of hardwood flooring. Kitchen has cherry cabinets with granite tops. Finished lower level. Homes starting at $399,900. Call Rick Tossey: 614-876-5577.
PARK PLACE VILLAGE AT NORTH ORANGE – Visit our model. Condos starting in the $280,000s. Call Adam Langley: 740-548-1900.
www.bobwebb.com
2013 Foundation Home
FRONT ELEVATION
NELSON FARMS –3,483 square feet. 4 bedrooms, home office with built-in shelving, 3.5 baths, 3 car side-load garage, walkout basement with great view. 1690 Shale Run Drive. Olentangy Schools. $595,801.
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Jerome Village – 4,244 square feet. 5 bedrooms, 4.5 baths, 3-car garage. Gourmet kitchen. Amazing outdoor living areas. Truberry’s signature custom trim detailing, including marble-topped built-ins. 10341 Cranberry Drive. Dublin Schools. $674,900.
614-205-0783 www.truberry.com
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SAVONA CONDOMINIUM IN TARTAN WEST – 2689 square feet. Three bedrooms and 3.5 baths. First floor master with large garden bath and two walk-in closets. Still available to choose finishes. 8885 Vineyard Haven Loop. $363,704. www.luxurylivingmagazine.com
JEROME VILLAGE – 3,064 square feet. 2 story, 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, 3 car side-load garage, treed lot fronts on cul-de-sac. Recently dug basement; still available to select finishes. New Jerome Village Community Center with two pools opening summer 2014. 9580 Persimmon Place. Dublin Schools. $472,057. L
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COLUMBUS
Stonebridge Crossing (Patio Homes) Low $400s 614-876-5577 DELAWARE
Nelson Farms High $400s 614-619-8777
Olentangy Falls $400s 614-548-6863
Reserve at Glenross Low $400s 740-548-6863 DUBLIN
Ballantrae Mid $400s 614-619-8777 Tartan Fields Mid $400s 614-619-8777 Tartan Ridge $400s 614-619-8777 The Oaks Mid $500s 614-619-8777 LEWIS CENTER
Little Bear Village Low $400s 740-548-6333
Park Place at North Orange High $300s 614-548-6863 Park Place Village at North Orange (Condos) High $200s 740-548-1900 POWELL
Lakes Edge at Golf Village (Patio Homes) Low $400s 614-619-8777 Woodland Hall $500s 614-619-8777 WESTERVILLE
Harvest Wind Mid $300s 740-548-6333 WORTHINGTON
Village at the Bluffs (Condos) High $300s 740-548-1900
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{travel}
International Intrigue
Mark Leckey Still from Pearl Vision, 2012 Video; color, sound. 3:00 min.
Massive Pittsburgh exhibition highlights artists from around the world By Lauren Hutchison
A
fter a five-year layoff, the Carnegie International exhibition of contemporary art is back and bigger than ever in Pittsburgh. The exhibition is more than a century old, having started in 1896. Pittsburgh holds another one every three to five years.
This year’s exhibition – which opens Oct. 15 and runs through March 16, 2014 – promises to take over every room in the city’s sprawling Carnegie Museum of Art. The Carnegie International features works by 35 artists from 19 countries. It plays an important role in showing how Pittsburgh has been rebuilt, remade and revitalized, says Connie George, vice president of communications for the Greater Pittsburgh Convention and Visitors Bureau. “This exhibit, much more than anything else, puts Pittsburgh in the international contemporary arts spotlight,” George says. www.cityscenecolumbus.com
The exhibition follows Andrew Carnegie’s founding idea: to discover and bring the “old masters of tomorrow” into the permanent collection at the Carnegie Museum of Art. It is the only international contemporary art exhibition that builds a museum’s permanent collection. Co-curators Dan Byers, Daniel Baumann and Tina Kukielski traveled around the world to select the new “old masters” – their first collaboration together. “Miraculously, it’s been a lot of fun,” Kukielski says. “Now our conversations unfold as easily over the conference table as they do over a beer at 1 in the morning.”
Henry Taylor, Huey Newton, 2007 Acrylic and collage on canvas
Pedro Reyes, Disarm, 2012-2013 Instrument made from decommissioned weapons cityscene • September/October 2013 35
{travel}
January 7-12, 2014 Palace Theatre From London’s West End, the worldwide smash hit musical by Queen and Ben Elton comes to Columbus for a limited engagement! WE WILL ROCK YOU features the greatest hits of the legendary British rock group, Queen. Now in its 11th year in London and seen by a staggering 15 million people worldwide, this hilarious, multiaward-winning and recordbreaking phenomenon boasts a fantastic score of killer Queen tunes that you just can't resist singing along to, such as “Another One Bites The Dust,” “Crazy Little Thing Called Love,” “We Are The Champions,” “Bohemian Rhapsody” and, of course, “We Will Rock You.” It's the world champion of musicals and the show that rocks harder than any other, so don't miss the party! Tickets on sale now at 800.745.3000, ticketmaster.com or the CAPA Ticket Office at 39 East State Street.
All three curators planned to visit countries in the Middle East in 2011. Shortly before Kukielski’s trip to Beirut, the Arab Spring broke out, but it didn’t do anything to detract from the art scene. “Beirut is one of the most chaotic, stimulating, invigorating environments,” Kukielski Nicole Eisenman, Beer Garden with Ulrika says. “I loved the city.” and Celeste, 2009, Oil on canvas From their travels, the curators found and commissioned works by will be on site to give talks, screenings and presentations. emerging and established artists alike. Just a three-hour drive from Columbus, The first floor of the museum will feature monumental works and interactive exhib- the Carnegie International corresponds with its, including a commissioned sculpture a bevy of arts events throughout Pittsburgh. Dance, theater and other performing by British artist Phyllida Barlow, photos of Pittsburgh’s Homestead neighborhood arts lovers can see one of 10 shows durby Philadelphia-based photographer Zoe ing the Pittsburgh International Festival of Strauss, corridors lit with neon sculptures Firsts, so-named because all of the works by Chinese artist He An, books about the will be making their U.S. premieres. The Middle East on loan from traveling exhibi- festival takes place in Pittsburgh’s walkable, tion the Bidoun Library and weapons that 14-block Cultural District, which features have been transformed into self-playing six theaters and dozens of art galleries and instruments by Mexican artist Pedro Reyes. public artworks. Music lovers might consider attending The second floor of the museum will feature group-style exhibits, including a the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra’s searetrospective of Nicole Eisenmann’s works. son opener, featuring Carl Orff’s Carmina Eisenmann is well-known for her figurative, Burana, from Oct. 4-6. The Pittsburgh narrative paintings, but the exhibit will also Opera’s opening-night performance of show her recent work, which extends her Giuseppe Verdi’s Aida is slated for Oct. 12. And the Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre will presfigurative style into sculpture. For the first time this year, visitors ent An Evening of Twyla Tharp – featuring will be able to see more than 200 works In the Upper Room and Nine Sinatra Songs from previous exhibitions. The Carnegie by Tony and Emmy award-winning choreInternational also includes the Playground ographer Tharp – from Oct. 25-27. Between the exhibition and dozens of Project, guest-curated by Gabriela Burkhalter, which features photos and sculptures other cultural attractions, it would be easy of playgrounds around the world, and the to plan a week-long arts and culture vacaLozziwurm, a giant, orange tube installed in tion, George says. “We will amaze and surprise you. It’s not front of the museum for public enjoyment. During the eight-month exhibition, artists a far drive, it’s inexpensive and there’s more to do than you could possibly fit into a weekend,” she says. Regular admission price for the Carnegie Museum of Art and the adjoining Carnegie Museum of Natural History is $17.95, with discounts available for seniors, students and groups. For hours, tickets and more information, visit www.cmoa.org or call 412-622-3131. cs
He An, What Makes Me Understand What I Know?, 2009, Three sets of seven neon characters
36 cityscene • September/October 2013
Lauren Hutchison is a contributing writer. Feedback welcome at gbishop@cityscenemedia group.com. www.cityscenecolumbus.com
{visuals}
To Layer Is Human 2D materials make 3D masterpieces in artist’s sculptures By Garth Bishop
Knotted Gnaw
W
hether she’s creating a small-scale sculpture or a massive installation, multi-dimensional artist Andrea Myers always makes sure she leaves room for the viewer to make his or her own interpretation.
Myers is an adjunct faculty member at the Columbus College of Art and Design. She’s been with the college for three years, teaching mainly sculpture and design. A Westerville native, she currently lives in north Columbus. Andrea Myers She works primarily with sculpture herself, though the word doesn’t fully explain Myers’ artistic 3D art form 38 cityscene • September/October 2013
method. She uses flat and flexible materials such as fabric, paper and wood and layers them, using materials and lettering to emulate nature and make her work look organic. “It’s an exploration of twoand three-dimensionality,” she says. That 2D approach to a is the culmination of Myers’
evolution as an artist. She didn’t start out in the visual arts at all; her first college major was English. After deciding visual art made more sense, she changed course and enrolled at the Art Institute of Chicago. “Through writing, I was still looking for that form of expression and outlet and trying to convey a feeling, and I think that’s a natural segue into visual arts,” Myers says. In art school, Myers started out in printmaking, a decidedly 2D medium, so when she made the move to 3D, she did so by piling and layering flat materials. “I was more drawn to the process than to the project,” she says. While some 3D artists like to utilize found materials in their work, Myers prefers traditional materials – they have more uses, she says, and that means more opportunities for those viewing the work to develop their own meanings for it. “Hopefully, it’s drawing the viewer to think more about the form,” she says. She prefers abstraction for the same reason. It allows her to keep her work openended, offering further opportunity for interpretation, and that helps her better understand certain aspects of the work herself. “Sometimes, people will tell me things – ‘Oh, this sculpture makes me think of this’ – and it can be kind of jarring to hear what they think,” Myers says. An example: A viewer once spotted animal forms in a sculpture Myers built. That wasn’t what Myers had intended, but when she was told, she took another look at the piece www.cityscenecolumbus.com
“‘Oh, this sculpture makes me think of this’ Sometimes people will tell me things – – and it can be kind of jarring to hear
”
what they think.
E ! SAL ON BER 6 M E T SEP
In the Void
Expanse
2013–2014 SEASON September
Aaron Diehl
date theatre 9/19 Southern
January
date theatre 1/14 Palace 1/17 Palace
Fresh Beat Band Ron White
October
Radiolab Chris Thile Tango Fire
10/3 Palace 10/14 Southern 10/18 Palace
an evening with pikelny,
sutton, bulla, bales & cobb the Milk Carton Kids
February
Ladysmith Black Mambazo Peking Acrobats Habib Koite
2/4 Southern 2/12 Southern 2/12 Lincoln
,
and saw how some of the organic elements of the piece could resemble animals. Though she left writing behind as her primary form of expression some time ago, her background in it helped refine her artistic style, and she tells her students that, for an artist, the ability to write is important as it is connected to the ability to explain. Opportunities to see Myers’ work around central Ohio abound for the next few months. She is one of a sizable group of CCAD faculty members whose work will be part
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of the large-scale Naked exhibition at Hammond Harkins Galleries in October and November, displaying small-scale sculptures made primarily of layered cotton fabric. Myers also has work in two exhibitions that will be up until Sept. 14: Surface Tension at the Columbus Museum of Art and In League at The Ohio State University Urban Arts Space. The museum pieces are a medium-size sculpture and a large-scale wall piece; the Urban Arts Space piece is a 9-foot-by-9-foot installation on which she collaborated with OSU faculty member Jeff Haase. cs
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Garth Bishop is editor of CityScene Magazine. Feedback welcome at gbishop@cityscenemediagroup.com.
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40 cityscene • September/October 2013
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Andrea Myers is just one of 28 artists whose will be part of Naked when it opens at Hammond Harkins Galleries. Naked runs Oct. 18-Nov. 17 at the Bexley gallery. All the participating artists are faculty members at the Columbus College of Art and Design. Curator Char Norman is dean emeritus at CCAD and is former dean of faculty. Naked is, by design, an open-ended theme, left entirely to the interpretations of the artists. That was part of the appeal, Norman says – seeing how each artist would choose to interpret the theme. “It’s an attempt to spark some new ideas in the artists,” she says. “It really kicked some of them out of their comfort zone.” Some interpreted the theme literally, such as with traditional nudes. Others worked with looser connections, such as raw emotions, issues of nature and the environment, and treatment of animals. Artistic media represented in the show include oil, digital photos, watercolors, acrylics, plates, prints, even an iPhone app. Artists were also asked to put together 6-inch-by-6inch miniature pieces for the show. CCAD professors encourage their students to push boundaries in new art forms, and so, too, were faculty members encouraged to push boundaries with their contributions to Naked. “It was really a challenge pushing them, and the ‘naked’ theme and the miniature theme were ways to really get people to think differently and examine their work,” says Norman. “I have seen some surprising things.”
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Gallery Exhibits Dublin Arts Council: emerging: a student art exhibition, artwork by K-12 students in Dublin City Schools’ attendance area, through Sept. 13. Shifting Perspectives 2013, a photography exhibition exploring the lives of people with Down syndrome, Sept. 24-Nov. 8. www.dublinarts.org Columbus Museum of Art: Surface Tension: The 2013 Greater Columbus Arts Council Visual Arts Awards Exhibition, works by the recipients of the 2012 GCAC Individual Artist Fellowship Awards, through Sept. 14. George Bellows and the American Experience through Jan. 4. www. columbusmuseum.org High Road Gallery: Equinox: A German Village Art League Exhibition through Sept. 28. House on Fire/What Matters: A Creative Arts of Women Exhibition from Oct. 2-26. www.highroadgallery.com Terra Gallery: Jazz, European street, country and seaside scenes by Charles Rowland through Sept. 29. www.terra-gallery.com Studios on High Gallery: Waterways, works focused on water by mosaic artist Beth Himsworth and mixed media artist Marty Husted, from Sept. 1-30. www. studiosonhigh.com Canzani Center Gallery, Columbus College of Art and Design: The Magnetic Lady by Gary Panter, RASL by Jeff Smith, Rule by Fear by Kirk Hayes and Camera, Lights, Charge, Pop, by Martha Colburn from Sept. 5-Oct. 4. For Instance Me by Laura Bidwa from Oct. 11-Nov. 15. My Crippled Friend by multiple artists from Oct. 11-Jan. 10. www. ccad.edu 42 cityscene • September/October 2013
Keny Galleries
Pizzuti Collection: Inaugural Exhibition, Sculpture Garden and Cuban Forever from Sept. 7-June 30. www.pizzuticollection.com Art Access Gallery: New Work by Barbara Flowers, Judy Friday, Toni Doilney, Mary Roundtree Moore and Sally Bennett from Sept. 9-Oct. 18. Color by Paula Rubinstein, Marti Steffy and Ellen Bazzoli from Oct. 23-Nov. 23. www.artaccessgallery.com Capital University Schumacher Gallery: Presence: A Dialogue with the Human Form, work demonstrating the diversity of the human form, from Sept. 9-Oct. 17. Memories of World War II: Photographs from the Archives of the Associated Press from Oct. 28Dec. 6. www.capital. edu/schumacher
Hammond Harkins Galleries
Hammond Harkins Galleries: Measured, www.cityscenecolumbus.com
new works by Pam Workman, from Sept. 20-Oct. 13. Naked, a group exhibition featuring faculty of the Columbus College of Art and Design, from Oct. 18-Nov. 17. www.hammondharkins.com Keny Galleries: Michael McEwan: Poetry of Place, landscapes and urbanscapes, and Independent Spirits: Columbus Artists at the Forefront of Modernisn (1907-1917), from Sept. 20-Nov. 15. www.kenygalleries.com Wexner Center for the Arts: Blues for Smoke, artwork that considers the blues as more than a musical genre, from Sept. 21-Dec. 29. www.wexarts.org Ohio Arts Council’s Riffe Gallery: Poetics of Pattern, works by 13 artists that reflect the many facets of pattern, through Oct. 6. www.riffegallery.org Miller Gallery, Otterbein University Art and Communication Building: Color Is, works by Elena Osterwalder, through Oct. 11. Presence, a portfolio of environmental portraiture by Daniel McInnis, from Oct. 21-Dec. 6 www.otterbein.edu The Works: Mr. Jim: Growing Art In Our Community, highlighting the work of Columbus visual artist Jim Arter and his collaborative projects, and Who is South End Newark, an exhibition by Amanda Gunn and 12 senior students, through Oct. 12. www.attheworks.org
PRESENCE:
A Dialogue with the Human Form September 9 to October 17, 2013 Opening Reception Friday, September 20 • 5 to 7:30 p.m.
Since the dawn of creative activity, artists have been naturally inclined to adopt the human figure as subject matter. In our contemporary times it still remains a source of inspiration and a vital tool of symbolism. Presence brings together the work of practicing artists who demonstrate that the human form has a diverse dialogue all its own.
Sweep by Shane Snider Open Monday through Saturday, 1 to 5 p.m. Located on the fourth floor of Blackmore Library on Capital University’s Bexley campus.
The exhibition is curated by Casey Bradley, Studio Manager and Instructor of Dimensional Studies, Columbus College of Art and Design. Visit us on Facebook or at www.schumachergallery.org
614-236-6319
poetics of pattern Curated by Janice Lessman-Moss Kent State University
july 25-october 6, 2013
Art Access Gallery
More.... For additional gallery events, go to www.cityscenecolumbus.com. www.cityscenecolumbus.com
Laurie Addis, Kent Gianna Commito, Kent Dragana Crnjak, Boardman Nancy Crow, Baltimore Kristine Donnelly, Cincinnati Robert Geyer, Bowling Green Susan Li O’Connor, Columbus Danielle Rante, Columbus Judith Salomon, Shaker Heights Douglas Sanderson, Cleveland Heights Audra Skuodas, Oberlin Casey Vogt, Akron Carly Witmer, Pleasant Hill
For events, hours and general gallery info:
www.riffegallery.org
LOBBY EXHIBITION | COVA’s PhotoVoice September 4–27, 2013 Participants share journeys of mental illness and recovery. Downtown Columbus Vern Riffe Center for Government & the Arts 77 S. High Street, First Floor
Douglas Sanderson, Image Arabesque #01 1, detail, 2010-2011, 79.75" x 36.25"
cityscene • September/October 2013 43
events Picks&Previews
CityScene spotlights what to watch, what to watch for and what not to miss! Jersey Boys
Broadway Across America presents Jersey Boys Sept. 17-29 Ohio Theatre, 39 E. State St. After making a big splash in its 2011 Columbus debut, the musical featuring the story and hits of Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons returns to town. www.broadwayacrossamerica .com/columbus
Lithopolis Honeyfest Sept. 6-7 Downtown Lithopolis Beekeeping demonstrations, bee beards, a glassed-in observation hive, live entertainment, children’s activities, a honey bake-off and honey-based food and beverages are all part of Lithopolis’ celebration of honey and honeybees. www.lithopolis honeyfest.com Actors’ Theatre presents Romeo & Juliet Sept. 6-15 Columbus Commons, 160 S. High St. Actors’ Theatre finishes out its 2013 season with one of Shakespeare’s classics. www.theactorstheatre.org New Albany Walking Classic Sept. 8, 8 a.m. Market Square, New Albany Cheer on family and friends at the largest walking-only race in the U.S., which enters its ninth year with halfmarathon and 10K distances. www. newalbanywalkingclassic.com 44 cityscene • September/October 2013
Wizard World Ohio Comic Con
Sept. 20-22 Greater Columbus Convention Center, 400 N. High St. In addition to the usual line-up of vendors selling comics, posters, action figures and DVDs, this year’s Comic Con features appearances by Marvel Comics legend Stan Lee, Star Trek star William Shatner, Happy Days star Henry Winkler, Ghostbusters actor Ernie Hudson and several members of the cast of The Walking Dead. www.wizardworld.com
Arts in the Alley Sept. 21-22 Grove City Town Center More than 100 juried exhibitors will offer fine art, jewelry, crafts, fabric, glasswork, woodwork and pottery at Grove City’s annual celebration of the arts. www.gcchamber.org Curious George: Let’s Get Curious! Sept. 21-Jan. 5 COSI, 333 W. Broad St. Key concepts in science, math and engineering are presented through adventures with beloved children’s book and TV character Curious George. The Curious George character will be present for a story time Sept. 21. www.cosi.org
New Albany Walking Classic
Columbus Oktoberfest
Columbus Oktoberfest Sept. 27-29 Ohio Expo Center, 717 E. 17th St. Live music, an arts and crafts marketplace, a children’s area, a 4-mile run, a tractor pull, a comedy show, cream puff www.cityscenecolumbus.com
BALLETMET DANCERS BETHANY LEE AND ANDRES ESTEVEZ
s
OCTOBER 18-20, 2013 | OHIO THEATRE
THE FOUR SEASONS: AN EVENING WITH JAMES KUDELKA NOVEMBER 8–16, 2013 | CAPITOL THEATRE
THE NUTCRACKER DECEMBER 12–24, 2013 | OHIO THEATRE
Herbie Hancock
eating contests, onsite artists and plenty of German food, beer and wine highlight the 48th annual Oktoberfest. www.columbus oktoberfest.com
Jersey Boys photo courtesy of Jeremy Daniel; Herbie Hancock photo courtesy of Douglas Kirkland
The Presidents Cup Oct. 1-6 Muirfield Village Golf Club, 5750 Memorial Dr., Dublin Two 12-member teams – one from the U.S., one from non-European countries – compete at the first Presidents Cup ever to be hosted in Dublin. www.presidentscup.com Columbus Symphony Orchestra presents Mahler’s Resurrection Oct. 5, 8 p.m. Ohio Theatre, 39 E. State St. Life-and-death issues are addressed in the season opener for the Columbus Symphony Orchestra’s 2013-14 Masterworks series, featuring “Resurrection” by Mahler. www.columbussymphony.com CityMusic Columbus presents Vagabond Opera Oct. 6, 2 p.m. Via Vecchia Winery, 485 S. Front St. Bohemian cabaret outfit Vagabond Opera kicks off CityMusic’s 2013-14 season. www.citymusiccolumbus.org Herbie Hancock Oct. 8, 8 p.m. Jeanne B. McCoy Community Center for the Arts, 100 E. Dublin-Granville Rd., New Albany See story on page 6. www.cityscenecolumbus.com
SEE THE FULL SEASON LINEUP AT WWW.BALLETMET.ORG SINGLE TICKETS ON SALE NOW FOR ALL SHOWS STARTING AT JUST $25 800.982-2787 OR WWW.TICKETMASTER.COM Design: Peebles Creative Group | Photography: Will Shively
Premieres Monday, September 16 at 8pm, only on WOSU TV Once an industrial powerhouse, the South Side’s “Steel and Glass” heritage is still honored by the people who live there today. In a neighborhood created by everyone from Appalachian migrants to Hungarian immigrants, it remains a place of strength, diversity and resolve. www.columbusneighborhoods.org
Capital Sponsors: JPMorgan Chase, State Auto Insurance Companies and AEP Foundation. Hometown Sponsor: Bailey Cavalieri LLC, Attorneys at Law. Additional support provided by Barbara Fergus, Tad and Anne Jeffrey, The Columbus Foundation, Bob and Missy Weiler, Worthington Industries and others.
cityscene • September/October 2013 45
Columbus Symphony Orchestra presents Masterworks 1: Rachmaninoff & Brahms Oct. 11-12 Ohio Theatre, 39 E. State St. Conductor Jean-Marie Zeitouni and featured piano soloist Maxim Mogilevsky present Rachmaninoff’s “Piano Concerto No. 2” and Brahms’ “Symphony No. 4.” www.columbussymphony.com Columbus Children’s Theatre presents Bunnicula Oct. 17-27 Park Street Theatre, 512 Park St. The well-known children’s book about the family pet that may secretly be a vegetable vampire comes to the stage. www. colschildrenstheatre.org BalletMet presents Swan Lake Oct. 18-20 Ohio Theatre, 39 E. State St. BalletMet and the Cincinnati Ballet perform Tchaikovsky’s timeless story of a princess cursed to live as a swan by an evil sorcerer and the prince who must swear his love to her to set her free. www.balletmet.org
46 cityscene • September/October 2013
with a show of songs by Burt Bacharach and Dave Brubeck. www.jazzartsgroup.org
Buddy Guy
Buddy Guy Oct. 20, 8 p.m. Jeanne B. McCoy Community Center for the Arts, 100 E. Dublin-Granville Rd., New Albany Blues guitarist and singer Buddy Guy, known for his decades of musical experience and the influence he has had on countless other performers, brings a show to the McCoy Center. www.mccoycenter.org Jazz Arts Group presents What the World Needs Now: Bacharach, Brubeck & Beyond Oct. 24-27 Southern Theatre, 21 E. Main St. The Columbus Jazz Orchestra’s 201314 Swingin’ with the CJO series kicks off
Opera Cabaret: The Merry Widow Oct. 26-Feb. 2 Shadowbox Live, 503 S. Front St. Opera Columbus and Shadowbox Live join forces in this short, English-language version of The Merry Widow set in the modern day. www.operacolumbus.org
DON’T FORGET!
Nationwide Children’s Hospital Black Tie Ball Nov. 2, 7:30 p.m.-12:30 a.m. Governors Ballroom, Sheraton Columbus Hotel at Capitol Square, 75 E. State St. This annual black-tie affair benefits the hospital’s Behavior Health Services department. It features heavy hors d’oeuvres, a cash bar, a silent auction, raffles and live entertainment by the Paradise Island Band. www.theblacktieball.org
More....
For a comprehensive list of other happenings around Columbus, check out www.cityscenecolumbus.com.
www.cityscenecolumbus.com
2013/2014 BROADWAY IN COLUMBUS SEASON
BroadwayInColumbus.com • 800.294.1892
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{critique} With Michael McEwan
The Painter’s Eye
Featuring Anne in White by George Bellows
C
olumbus’ own George Bellows (1882-1925) is being celebrated this season in two exhibitions. The first is the Columbus Museum of Art’s George Bellows and the American Experience, running through Jan. 4. The other is Keny Galleries’ Independent Spirits, Columbus Artists: The Forefront of Modernism, Sept. 20 through Nov. 15. Last year, there was a major retrospective of Bellows’ work exhibited in Washington D.C., New York and London. In this painting, we have a fine example of Bellows’ later career, when he focused more on family portraits and the Maine and Woodstock, N.Y. landscape. Bellows lived half of each year in Woodstock from 1915 until his death at the age of 42. This home was the setting for this tender depiction (57” by 42”, oil on canvas) of the older of his two daughters, Anne. Bellows’ technique moved away from the heavier paint handling to a more indirect method. This was based on his increasing interest in methods of the Dutch and Italian masters. The indirect method is a procedure whereby one first makes a drawing, working out values and design, then building up the forms in more neutral tones (sometimes called “dead coloring”). Finally, one adds color in layers. This method can produce a smoother surface. Bellows was always interested in the underlying geometry of composition and various color systems. Take a look at the curves of Anne’s left arm, her large mass of hair, the large hat in her hand and the bend in the large tree in the distance. All relate to one another. The color is restrained everywhere but in the bright landscape beyond the door. You might interpret this as a young girl going out into a bright future from the warmth of her home. Some of these experiments worked better than others, and a number of people feel Bellows’ later work doesn’t quite stand up to his early promise. However, if you look at his work in context of other American painters at the time, this smooth surface quality shows up in the work of such diverse artists as Georgia O’Keeffe, Thomas Hart Benton and Bellows’ close friend Leon Kroll. This is the realist tradition taking on a more modernist tendency. The Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh has always had a focus on collecting contemporary art. Bellows won prizes in the prestigious Carnegie International three times; 1913, 1914 and 1922. The next Carnegie International opens Oct. 5 and runs through March 16, 2014. cs
48 cityscene • September/October 2013
George Wesley Bellows, American, 1882–1925, born Columbus, OH, Anne in White, 1920; oil on canvas; H: 57 7/8 in. x W: 42 7/8 in. (147.00 x 108.90 cm), Painting H: 60 in. x W: 50 1/2 in. (152.40 x 128.27 cm); Frame Patrons Art Fund
Nationally renowned local artist Michael McEwan teaches painting and drawing classes at his Clintonville area studio. www.cityscenecolumbus.com
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