2017
fall arts guide
the Art Museum in the 21st Century
PUBLISHER & EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Louis Fortis (ext. 202) GENERAL MANAGER: Kevin Gardner (ext. 225)
EDITOR: David Luhrssen (ext. 204) Assistant Editor: John Schneider (ext. 217) COPY EDITOR: Selena Milewski (ext. 219)
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS: Tyler Friedman, Morgan Hughes, Rob Hullum, John Jahn, Kat Kneevers, Dave Luhrssen, Selena Milewski, Evan Rytlewski, John Schneider, Jennifer Walter
CREATIVE SERVICES: ART DIRECTOR: Dave Zylstra (221) GRAPHIC DESIGNER: Melissa Lee Johnson (ext. 238) GRAPHIC DESIGNER/PHOTOGRAPHER: Maggie Vaughn (203)
SALES MANAGER: Alissa Weber (ext. 205)
ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES: Bridgette Ard (ext. 211), Chuck Hill (ext. 222), Jason Locklear (ext. 212), Stephanie Schroeter (ext. 216), Derek Steinborn (ext. 231), Donna Wagner (ext. 215), Amy Zignego (ext. 230)
SALES COORDINATOR: Lisa Kortebein (ext. 213)
EVENT COORDINATOR: Rachel Repetti (ext. 223) WEB PUBLISHER: Cole Vandermause (ext. 207) WEB EDITOR: Rob Hullum (ext. 206)
TIMOTHY HURSLEY
ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGER: Peggy Debnam (ext. 232) CIRCULATION COORDINATOR: Josef Bieniek (ext. 209)
CIRCULATION: Constance Anderson, Bryan Bruno, Gary Gorlewski, Michael Houlehen, Townsend Hunt, Larry Jones, Mike Kieraldo, Paul Kurensky, Brenda Lewis, Francis Mulvey, Todd Pearson, Michael Pollack, Kory Postotnik, Jennifer Schmid, Gregory Stapleton, Laurel Stieg, Daniel Surges, Gregory Tomasetti, Richard Van Wieringen, Daniel Zollner
DISTRIBUTION: Shepherd Express is available free of charge. The Shepherd Express may be distributed only by authorized distributors. No person may, without prior written permission of Shepherd Express, take more than one copy of each weekly issue. Mail subscriptions are available. No refunds for early cancellations. One year (52 issues) via First Class mail - $125.00 Six months (26 issues) via First Class mail - $70.00
contents Introduction ...................................... 4 Villa Terrace / Charles Allis Museum ...... 6 September Calendar .......................... 8 Grohmann Museum ......................... 14 October Calendar ............................. 16 Jewish Museum Milwaukee .............. 24 November Calendar ........................ 26 John Michael Kohler Arts Center ....... 30 December Calendar ......................... 32 Milwaukee Art Museum .................. 36 January Calendar ............................. 38 Museum of Wisconsin Art ................. 42 Racine Art Museum ......................... 46 Directory ......................................... 48 2
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SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE
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Villa Terrace Decorative Arts Museum
Art Museums in the 21st Century As the 21st century accelerates into the future, are art museums—whose traditional mission has been to preserve the past—obliged to keep abreast, and, if so, how do they do this without diminishing their core objective? We began thinking about this last summer at Villa Terrace as we sat on chairs worthy of a 17th-century hacienda, talking with John Sterr. Sterr is executive director of two Milwaukee art museums, Villa Terrace Decorative Arts Museum and the Charles Allis Art Museum, both housed in venerable structures. The historic setting overlooking Lake Michigan, seeming timeless as it glistened in the morning sun, helped us wonder about the paradoxical imperatives of preservation and innovation. One thing is evident: Museum programming is increasingly designed to echo the interests of distinct groups within the Milwaukee audience. Recently, the Milwaukee Art Museum opened its first-ever exhibition by a young contemporary artist with a national reputation, Rashid Johnson. At the Haggerty and the Grohmann, much thought has been given to raising the
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museums’ profiles in the city. The Museum of Wisconsin Art, whose current building was dedicated this century, and the Jewish Museum Milwaukee, open since 2008 in a repurposed building, are exemplary of the trend toward art museums with specialized genre or regional foci. Our city’s symbol—the Milwaukee Art Museum’s Quadracci Pavilion—reached out to the new millennium when it was completed in 2001. Designed by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava, the pavilion remains a bold architectural statement, enabled by technological advances in engineering and serving a dual role in housing exhibitions that honor the past while acknowledging the present. The future? All of us have a role to play in writing it. David Luhrssen Editor, Fall Arts Guide John Schneider Assistant Editor, Fall Arts Guide
SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE
Let’s look at the math. Like $100 million for our local economy. Or the thousands and thousands of jobs they create. Or the hundreds of thousands of kids who do better in English and science and, you guessed it, math. But there’s also 50–as in the 50 years UPAF has supported the arts in Greater Milwaukee, and the over $300 million we’ve raised to set the stage since 1967. Let’s keep it going. Donate today at UPAF.org/donate
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SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE
Charles Allis Art Museum Villa Terrace Decorative Arts Museum When asked about the changing dynamics of art museums in the 21st century, John Sterr, executive director of Charles Allis and Villa Terrace, responds: “Collaboration. Museums can no longer see themselves as monolithic institutions. The key is to collaborate with other partners.”
For the Milwaukee County-owned institutions, the most obvious collaboration has been their membership in the Milwaukee Museum Mile to provide affordable “multiple museum experiences” on the East Side—a joint effort also involving the Jewish Museum Milwaukee, the Museum of Wisconsin Art at St. John’s on the Lake and North Point Lighthouse. The 2017 Milwaukee Museum Mile Day, held on Mother’s Day, offered free or reduced admissions and children’s activities at each of the five institutions. “A lot of families came out that day,” Sterr continues. And that’s the real key: bringing in new faces— especially people who enjoyed the tour enough to consider a return visit. “It’s like in music—a scene happens when bands help each other. One success builds on another,” Sterr says. “Also, the more we can do together programming-wise, budget-wise, marketing-wise—collaboration takes pressure off the smaller museums.” Other collaborations involve education. Shana McCaw, Charles Allis’ and Villa Terrace’s senior curator, is excited about her work with Rufus King High School’s international baccalaureate art program. “I’m talking to students, critiquing their portfolios; we chose work from their senior show to bring to Charles Allis,” she says. Villa Terrace has also become a site for the performing arts—often site-specific performances. This summer’s Sculpt-cussion saw collaboration between art forms with Wild Space Dance Company and musicians Dave Bayles and Aaron Gardner interpreting the exhibit by visual artists Barbara Manger and Richard Taylor. Visitors to the mansion’s library could peruse a selection of books that inspired Manger and Taylor. A “play room” was set aside for people interested in making paper collages by way of exploring the creative process behind Manger’s monoprints. “We’re providing an experience. We’re interested in tapping into different audiences,” McCaw says. “Each exhibition has several satellite programs. They are not always academic lectures but also things whole families can come to,” such as the “community meet-up run” organized in conjunction with the Allis exhibit of photographer Lois Bielefeld’s images of the Shorewood Girls Cross Country team. —David Luhrssen
Charles Allis Art Museum John Sterr (COURTESY OF VILLA TERRACE / CHARLES ALLIS) SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE •
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FALL ARTS GUIDE
THEATER Br!nk New Play Festival
RENAISSANCE THEATERWORKS
2017
septembercalendar
Multiple Venues Sept. 7-12 Now in its fourth season, Renaissance Theaterworks’ Br!nk New Play Festival provides an invaluable platform for Midwestern women playwrights to develop their work. The program has expanded its offerings each year since its inception and 2017 promises a remarkable range of events. On the docket are playwriting workshops and staged readings of the festival’s full-length plays followed by talkbacks with playwrights Reina Hardy and Amanda Petefish-Schrag held at Renaissance’s home in the Broadway Theatre Center and touring venues. Artistic Associate and Director of New Play Development Mallory Metoxen speaks to the festival’s latest addition: “Now we are entering our fourth year, and to give more opportunities to more women playwrights, we have launched the Br!NK Br!efs: The 10 Minute Plays.” (Selena Milewski)
CABARET MILWAUKEE
Astor Hotel Pub Sept. 14-Oct. 1 Cabaret Milwaukee’s fully staged 1930s radio show-style productions have been vivifying historic Milwaukee venues for nearly four years. Their latest trilogy begins with The Clockwork Man, origins…, which director Josh Bryan describes as “somewhere between melodramatic romance and Lovecraftian horror.” Set in 1917, it introduces heroes Pelonius and Sinfan in the trenches of World War I, and villain, Dr. Boggs, on a humanitarian mission in India. The show features familiar faces in its entr’acte segments, including stand-up comedian Michael Palmisano II and tap dancer Danielle Weber, as well as a host of new performers for the main storyline, which Bryan hopes will “provide an alternative to the archaic tropes through which people tend to view ‘civilized’ and ‘uncivilized’ cultures.” (Selena Milewski)
A Moon for the Misbegotten THE BAY PLAYERS
Sept. 8-10
Whitefish Bay High School Auditorium Sept. 15-23 Since their first performance in 1951, the Bay Players have promised approachable community theater, and this season’s fall production of A Moon for the Misbegotten, directed by Chelsea Drenning, doesn’t stray from that promise. The sequel to Eugene O’Neil’s Long Day’s Journey into Night, A Moon for the Misbegotten follows Jim Tyrone, an alcoholic landlord struggling with his mother’s death, and his tenants Josie and Phil Hogan, a father and daughter concerned about the threat of losing their farm. The play is a doleful look at family dynamics and the impact of parental expectation. (Morgan Hughes)
Escanaba
Boeing, Boeing
Sept. 8-24
Sept. 15-Oct. 1 The Racine Theatre Guild will take on French playwright Marc Camoletti’s classic farce Boeing, Boeing in a 13-show run over three weeks. The play, which stars Bernard, a Parisian architect who finds himself engaged to three unknowing stewardesses, has been performed everywhere from local theaters such as this to Broadway. The play also has a Wisconsin connection, in the form of Robert, an old friend of Bernard’s who hails from the dairy state in recent Broadway productions. (Rob Hullum)
Next to Normal
ALL IN PRODUCTIONS
Sept. 7-16
Over the River and Through the Woods SUNSET PLAYHOUSE
Sept. 7-24
Over Here: A Patriotic Review FALLS PATIO PLAYERS
OVER OUR HEAD PLAYERS
Souvenir
MILWAUKEE REPERTORY THEATER (STACKNER)
Sept. 8-Nov. 5
Henry V
BOOZY BARD
Sept. 11-13
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The Clockwork Man, origins…
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SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE
RACINE THEATRE GUILD
Sex Please We’re Sixty
WAUKESHA CIVIC THEATRE
Sept. 15-Oct. 1
Elvis!
SUNSET PLAYHOUSE (MUSICAL MAINSTAGE)
Sept. 18-19
Guys and Dolls
MILWAUKEE REPERTORY THEATER (POWERHOUSE)
Sept. 19-Oct. 29
Frankie and Johnny in the Clair De Lune
MILWAUKEE CHAMBER THEATRE
Broadway Theatre Center Sept. 20-Oct.15 Two middle-aged New Yorkers wonder if their one-night stand could turn into something more permanent in this romance from Master Class playwright Terrence McNally. Todd Denning stars as Johnny, an idealistic short order cook, while Marcella Kearns plays Frankie, a woman whose insecurities complicate what she assumes to be a simple fling. F. Murray Abraham and Kathy Bates originated the roles for the play’s 1987 Off-Broadway debut. (Evan Rytlewski)
Small Things
BOULEVARD THEATRE
Plymouth Church Sept. 21-Oct. 8
An Ideal Husband
COMPANY OF STRANGERS
Sept. 22-30
The Who & the What
MILWAUKEE REPERTORY THEATER (STIEMKE)
Sept. 27-Nov. 5 Playwright and Brookfield native Ayad Akhtar’s Pulitzer Prize-winning Disgraced was staged by the Rep last season and his brilliant mash-up of capitalism and terrorism The Invisible Hand the year before. His fans will deepen their admiration, I think, upon viewing his third play, a black comedy about a female Pakistani American writer’s examination of Islam’s traditions regarding women. Dad is a religious conservative, his daughters are not, and honesty has consequences in this highly relatable family tale. (John Schneider)
David Seebach’s Illusions in the Night Sunset Playhouse Sept. 28-Oct. 1
Working
MARQUETTE THEATRE (STUDENT PRODUCTION)
Sept. 28-Oct. 8
I Am My Own Wife THEATRE GIGANTE
UWM Kenilworth Studio 508 Sept. 28-Oct. 7 Dressed as the central character and subject, Charlotte von Mahlsdorf, an openly gay East German transvestite who survived the Nazi and Communist regimes, actor Michael Stebbins will play the 40 characters of this one-man show. Chief among them is the playwright, Doug Wright, who viewed the real life Mahlsdorf as heroic, interviewed her repeatedly and learned to his dismay that she likely spied for the East German Stasi. Isabelle Kralj and Mark Anderson are directing. (John Schneider)
Silent Sky
NEXT ACT THEATRE
Sept. 28-Oct. 22 Though she was little recognized in her lifetime, Henrietta Swan Leavitt made invaluable contributions to the field of astronomy, discovering how to measure the distance between Earth and faraway galaxies. With humor and levity, playwright Lauren Gunderson tells the story of how Leavitt and her female lab peers (then dismissively known as “computers”) helped crack the men’s club that was the Harvard Observatory in the early 20th century. (Evan Rytlewski)
Wittenberg
WINDFALL THEATRE
Sept. 29-Oct. 14
Hot Mikado
SKYLIGHT MUSIC THEATRE
Broadway Theatre Center Sept. 29-Oct. 15 Gilbert and Sullivan’s satirical opera about an overzealous government quick to employ the death penalty got a jazzy makeover in this adaptation, which swapped the soundtrack out for the distinctly American sounds of swing music and the blues. The original 1939 musical starred legendary tap SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE •
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september calendar
dancer Bill “Bojangles” Robinson but unfortunately has been mostly lost to time. Unable to find the original script and arrangements, writer David H. Bell and composer Rob Bowman started from near scratch for this version, which has been consistently popular since it debuted in 1986. (Evan Rytlewski)
DANCE
will perform quite a variety of works from the Classical, Romantic and Contemporary repertoires. These are works “full of surprise, wit, precision and emotion,” according to the Conservatory’s Adam Shafer. There’s a trio by Joseph Haydn, Johannes Brahms’ Trio in C Major, Op. 87 and the Trio Concertant by Hungarian composer László Lajtha (1892-1963). (John Jahn)
World Music Festival
UW-WHITEWATER YOUNG AUDITORIUM
The Goat Palace Sept. 14-17 Driving past, you’d pay this Riverwest “palace” no heed. A greater contrast with Villa Terrace, the setting of Debra Loewen’s major site-specific dance performance last year, is unimaginable. “That was a ‘have’ show,” Loewen said. “This is a ‘have not’ show. It’s a big gritty space with six bays. I thought of an antique mall filled with the junk a person collects, artifacts of lives or a neighborhood. What happens if dancers inhabit them?” (John Schneider)
Sept. 19 “All music is folk music,” Louis Armstrong once noted with impeccable logic, “I ain’t never heard no horse sing a song.” A similar observation could be made of so-called “world music.” Categorical quibbling aside, an acquaintance with far-flung musical traditions expands one’s ears and demonstrates the commonalities underlying human music making. UW-Whitewater’s one-day World Music Festival presents four groups from as many countries, including a Polish multiinstrumentalist celebrated for using instruments of the Middle Ages, one of the few female soloists on the Iranian lute and headliners representing Galician and Chilean musical traditions. (Tyler Friedman)
“Get It Out There”
“Season Sampler”
Artifacts
WILD SPACE DANCE COMPANY
DANCEWORKS DANCELAB
Sept. 16
MUSIC Chris Thile and Brad Mehldau SHARON LYNN WILSON CENTER FOR THE ARTS
Sept. 14
“Music From Almost Yesterday featuring Accordion XXI Century” UWM PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS
Sept. 14
“Marco Sartor Classical Guitar Concert”
UWM PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS
Sept. 15
“Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony” MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Sept. 15-17
Haydn, Brahms and Lajtha PROMETHEUS TRIO
McIntosh-Goodrich Mansion Sept. 18-19 Setting off upon their 18th year of residence at the Wisconsin Conservatory of Music, the Prometheus Trio
“A Soulful Tribute: Hathaway and Cooke”
MARCUS CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS (WILSON THEATER)
Sept. 29-30
“De Waart Conducts Mozart”
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Sept. 29-30
VISUAL ART CONTINUING
“Strata & Cipher: Barbara Manger and Richard Taylor” VILLA TERRACE DECORATIVE ARTS MUSEUM
Through Sept. 10
“Mary L. Nohl Fund Fellowships for Individual Artists 2016 Exhibition” HAGGERTY MUSEUM OF ART
FLORENTINE OPERA @ THE CENTER SERIES
Through Sept. 17
“Gershwin!”
“Rashid Johnson: Hail We Now Sing Joy”
Sept. 22-23
Through Sept. 17
Sam Fazio Trio
“Cedarburg Artists Guild: Endless Expressions”
Sept. 22-23
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
SCHAUER ARTS AND ACTIVITIES CENTER
Sept. 23
“The World of César Franck” FRANKLY MUSIC
St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, 914 E. Knapp St. Sept. 25 An undeservedly somewhat neglected composer, César Franck gets a Frankly Music concert program all to himself! Frank Almond, Yuka Kadota, Margot Schwartz, Susan Babini, Adam Golka and Christoper Berry perform some of Franck’s sonorous works for chamber musicians: Sonata for Violin and Piano, Piano Quintet in F minor, Op. 34 and several selected pieces for organ (at which the Franco-Belgian maestro was one of music history’s greatest practitioners). (John Jahn)
“Jérémy Jouve Classical Guitar Concert”
UWM PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS
Sept. 28 1 0
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SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE
MILWAUKEE ART MUSEUM
SCHAUER ARTS AND ACTIVITIES CENTER
Through Sept. 18
“Collection Focus: Renie Breskin Adams” RACINE ART MUSEUM
Through Sept. 24
“Shie and Acord: Recent Acquisitions” RACINE ART MUSEUM
Through Sept. 24
“Small Gifts from Big Donors—Part 2” RACINE ART MUSEUM
Through Sept. 24
“Inside Job”
“Coalition of Photographic Arts: In a Fashion”
Through Sept. 30
Through Oct. 26
“The Temple of Flora”
MILWAUKEE ART MUSEUM
“Inside/Outside: Katy Cowan: reflected-intothemselves-into-reflected”
“Mary L. Nohl Suitcase Exhibition”
Through Oct. 29
Through Oct. 8
Through Oct. 31
“2017 Annual Members Show”
“Romano Johnson: The Glitterati”
MILWAUKEE INSTITUTE OF ART AND DESIGN
Through Dec. 10
MILWAUKEE INSTITUTE OF ART AND DESIGN
WALKER’S POINT CENTER FOR THE ARTS
Through Oct. 7
“Featured Member Exhibition: PJ Boylan”
MUSEUM OF WISCONSIN ART
LYNDEN SCULPTURE GARDEN
“The Bonsai Exhibit”
LYNDEN SCULPTURE GARDEN
MUSEUM OF WISCONSIN ART
Through Nov. 5
“RAM Artist Fellowship Exhibition 2017” WUSTUM MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS
WALKER’S POINT CENTER FOR THE ARTS
Through Nov. 25
“Frank Lloyd Wright: Buildings for the Prairie”
“Cultivating Creativity: Celebrating 75 Years of Wustum—Part 3”
MILWAUKEE ART MUSEUM
Through Oct. 15
“Cedarburg Artists Guild Annual Juried Exhibit”
CEDARBURG CULTURAL CENTER
Through Oct. 15
“Lois Bielefeld— All In: Shorewood Girls Cross Country”
CHARLES ALLIS ART MUSEUM
Through Oct. 22 The intimate travails of high school athletes are on display in Lois Bielefeld’s new series, which follows her daughter’s cross country team across an entire season. The photos capture workouts, races and the tense and joyful moments of competition. Bielefeld is not new to portraiture, and has shown her work in various galleries, including The Museum of Contemporary Photography in Chicago and during her time as an artist in residency in Bourglinster, Luxembourg. (Morgan Hughes)
WUSTUM MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS
Through Nov. 25
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JOHN MICHAEL KOHLER ART CENTER
Through Dec. 31
“Variations on a Theme: Vessels from RAM’s Collection”
We’ll get you to the show on time!
Through Jan. 21, 2018
ADMIT ONE
Through Oct. 7
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RACINE ART MUSEUM
“Mythologies: Eugene Von Breunchenheim”
JOHN MICHAEL KOHLER ART CENTER
Through Jan. 14, 2018
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september calendar
“Karen Johnson Boyd: Unpacking Her Clay Collection”
“Woven Images 2017” (student exhibit)
“Paul Smith: Masters of Craft”
RACINE ART MUSEUM
RACINE ART MUSEUM
Sept. 17-Dec. 30
Through July 27
UWM PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS
Sept. 14-Nov. 9
“Brass and Friends”
OPENING
“2017 Sum Total”
Sept. 21
Sept. 15-Nov. 9
“Wandering Wisconsin: Concrete Park”
“Masterworks from the Grohmann Museum – Celebrating 10 Years” GROHMANN MUSEUM
Sept. 8-Dec. 29 “The idea was: we want to celebrate our 10th anniversary with something from our collection,” says James R. Kieselburg II, director of the Grohmann Museum. He adds: “We wanted to go back to where we started”—the Eckhart Grohmann collection of work and industry-related paintings that formed the core of the museum’s holdings. Kieselburg culled more than 30 or so works from the collection for the exhibition, representing each topical subset such as farm laborers, artisanal craftspeople, miners and factory workers as represented by four centuries of artists whose eyes were trained on the men (and women) whose hands and shoulders held up the material world. (David Luhrssen)
“Things are what we encounter: Dr. Charles Smith” JOHN MICHAEL KOHLER ART CENTER
Sept. 10-Dec. 31 Charles Smith’s youth was profoundly affected by racism. His father was killed in what Smith supposes was a racially motivated attack. The next year, his mother brought the family to Emmitt Till’s funeral. These events led Smith to turn his home and yard into a sculpture garden of African American history later in life. Artist Heather Hart has created an installation at Kohler Arts Center that will house 20 of Smith’s sculptures and help to tell his story. (Rob Hullum)
“Emojis, Lies, Instagram Muses and Headline News” LATINO ARTS GALLERY
Sept.11-Oct. 13 Experimental art meets political discourse at the Latino Arts Gallery this fall. Artist Pedro Vélez combines his fascination with news media, social networking, politics and the anxiety that comes from each of these things into “visual essays” displayed across various media in a new exhibition, “Emojis, Lies, Instagram Muses and Headline News.” In addition to visual art, Vélez is a tenured columnist, having written for several publications including Artnet Magazine and New Art Examiner. (Morgan Hughes)
UWM PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS
“The Seventh Day: Revisiting Shabbat”
JEWISH MUSEUM MILWAUKEE
UWM CHAMBER MUSIC MILWAUKEE
JOHN MICHAEL KOHLER ART CENTER
Sept. 23
Sept. 13-Dec. 31 Fifty international artists explore the diverse meanings and observances of the Sabbath in an exhibit organized by the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion Museum of New York. The Milwaukee museum describes it this way: “When faced with a rapidly changing community characterized by increasing ethnic diversity, interfaith families, challenges affecting the organized institutions of Jewish life and an unprecedented merger into the fabric of North American life, what does the seventh day mean to contemporary Jews?” (John Schneider)
“Wisconsin Painters Studio Alumni Show”
Anthony Hernandez
Sept. 24-Jan. 7, 2018
MILWAUKEE ART MUSEUM
Sept. 15-Jan. 1, 2018 Anthony Hernandez could well be deemed the photographer laureate of Los Angeles. The 70-year-old photographer has documented the many faces of La La Land since the late 1960s. His first retrospective gathers some 160 works taken from Hernandez’ more than 45-year career. From early noir-ish black and whites, to color captures of Rodeo Drive’s vanity, through poignant habitats of the homeless, Hernandez presents L.A. in all of its contradictory glory. (Tyler Friedman)
“75 at 75: Significant Works from RAM’s Collection” RACINE ART MUSEUM
Sept. 17-Dec. 30 The Racine Art Museum is the offspring of the Charles A. Wustum Museum of Fine Arts. Like a good doting child, RAM is mounting an exhibition to honor the 75th anniversary of its parent institution. “75 at 75: Significant Works from RAM’s Collection” selects 75 representative pieces from its collection of nearly 10,000, curated to tell stories about their artists, donors and conservators. How has RAM managed to build the nation’s largest collection of contemporary craft? What was the life of these objects before joining the RAM family? (Tyler Friedman)
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SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE
SCHAUER ARTS AND ACTIVITIES CENTER
Sept. 23-Nov. 6
“Dean Meeker: Myths and Masquerades”
MUSEUM OF WISCONSIN ART
Sept. 23-Jan. 14, 2018
“Sorehead Hill: Jesse Howard”
JOHN MICHAEL KOHLER ARCENTER
Morehshin Allahyari (lecture) UWM PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS (ARTISTS NOW! SERIES)
Sept. 27
Inside | Outside
Inside | Outside
Katy Cowan:Katy reflected-into-themselves-into-reflected Cowan: reflected-into-themselves-into-reflected Through October 29, 2017
Through October 29, 2017 OCTOBER 15 SEPTEMBER 6 to
Inside | Outside
wan: reflected-into-themselves-into-reflected
The Lynden Sculpture Garden is open year-round.
414.446.8794 or lynden.art Through October 29, 2017 Inside | Outside
2145 W. Brown Deer Rd. | Milwaukee, WI
Inside | Outside Katy Cowan: reflected-into-themselves-into-reflected
Katy Cowan: Through reflected-into-themselves-into-reflected The Lynden Sculpture Garden is open year-round. October 29, 2017 Through October 29, 2017
414.446.8794 or lynden.art Sponsored by Door County Medical Center, Ken Raupach and John & Dyan Smith 2145 W. Brown Deer Rd. | Milwaukee, WI
A charming offbeat comedy!
“Unexpected magic lingers in the air like someone’s breath on a cold winter’s night. John Cariani aims for the heart by way of the funny bone.” – The Star Ledger (Newark, New Jersey)
The Lynden Sculpture Garden is open year-round. Theis Lynden Sculpture Garden is open year-round. The Lynden Sculpture Garden open year-round. 414.446.8794 or or lynden.art 414.446.8794 lynden.art 414.446.8794 or lynden.art 2145 Rd.Rd. | Milwaukee, WI WI 2145W. W.Brown BrownDeer Deer | Milwaukee, 2145 W. Brown Deer Rd. | Milwaukee, WI
Curtain Times: Tuesday – Sunday at 7 pm. Except Sundays, Sept. 17, Oct. 1 & 15 at 3 pm. No shows on Mondays.
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FALL 2017
E V E N T S Performing extraordinary music for you!
Eduardo Garcia-Novelli Artistic Director
Seasons in Song
Noche de Gala
Featuring NʼSamble Latino September 23, 7:00 p.m.
Sat. Oct. 21, 2017 | 7:30pm North Shore Congregational Church 7330 N. Santa Monica Blvd. Fox Point
Jarabe Mexicano
Sun. Oct. 22, 2017 | 3pm St. John’s Lutheran Church 20275 Davidson Rd. Brookfield
November 3, 7:30 p.m.
Welcome All Wonders Sat. Dec. 16, 2017 | 7:30pm with Muskego High School Concert Choir
Sun. Dec. 17, 2017 | 3pm with Hamilton High School Concert Choir
Pinto con Tinto Sugar Skull Paintings
November 16, 5:30 - 7:00 p.m.
St. Joseph Chapel 1501 S. Layton Blvd. Milwaukee
Sol e Mar
Receive a 25% discount on a 2017-2018 Season Subscription Package when purchased online by October 22, 2017.
December 1, 7:30 p.m.
TICKETS AVAILABLE ONLINE OR AT THE DOOR.
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Grohmann Museum Before becoming the Grohmann’s director, even before the new millennium began, James R. Kieselburg II was already thinking about the changing posture of art museums. As a museum studies instructor at UW-Milwaukee in the 1990s, Kieselburg was discussing the “Disneyesque conception of that time— museums as an experience blending education with entertainment.” He adds that, while the idea “wasn’t entirely wrong,” you won’t be greeted at the Grohmann’s door by Mickey Mouse or find flashy holograms of dead artists amid the museum’s unique collection depicting various fields of work and industry. Kieselburg understands the Grohmann Museum as “community, not authority,” by which he means a shift away from the art museum’s traditional position as arbiter of taste toward a service role. “We serve the MSOE campus community but also the greater Milwaukee community.” An important aspect is in “supplemental education initiatives. With the abandonment of art education in many schools, museums can fill that role.” The annual field trip as experienced by baby boomers, involving a standardized walk-through, no longer cuts it. Recent years have found Kieselburg tailoring tours to fit specific curriculums. For St. Robert Catholic School in Shorewood, he crafted a tour linking the Roman Church’s patron saints of professions and occupations to the art on display. In the 21st century, Kieselburg concludes, museums must “strive to be more accessible, to use collections in new ways, to tell stories by previously unheard voices. It’s no longer just a matter of what we think you should know. We want to know what you are interested in, what your needs are as a visitor and how we can fill that role.” —David Luhrssen
Grohmann Museum James R. Kieselburg II SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE •
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THEATER CONTINUING
octobercalendar
The Clockwork Man, origins...
Through Oct. 29
Souvenir
Boeing Boeing
Through Nov. 5
Through Oct. 1
The Who and The What
RACINE THEATRE GUILD
Sex Please We’re Sixty
MILWAUKEE REPERTORY THEATRE (STACKNER)
MILWAUKEE REPERTORY THEATER (STIEMKE)
WAUKESHA CIVIC THEATRE
Through Nov. 5
David Seebach’s Illusions in the Night
opening
Through Oct. 1
SUNSET PLAYHOUSE
Through Oct. 1
2017
MILWAUKEE REPERTORY THEATER (POWERHOUSE)
CABARET MILWAUKEE
Through Oct. 1
Working
The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark
VOICES FOUND REPERTORY (THE ARCADE THEATRE)
MARQUETTE THEATRE (STUDENT PRODUCTION)
Oct. 9-22
Small Things
FIRST STAGE (FIRST STEPS SERIES)
Through Oct. 8
BOULEVARD THEATRE
Spookley the Square Pumpkin (family friendly)
Plymouth Church Through Oct. 8
Oct. 1-29
I Am My Own Wife
MARCUS CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS (BROADWAY SERIES)
THEATRE GIGANTE
Through Oct. 7
Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune
MILWAUKEE CHAMBER THEATRE
Through Oct. 15
Hot Mikado
SKYLIGHT MUSIC THEATRE
Through Oct. 15
Silent Sky
NEXT ACT THEATRE
Through Oct. 22
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Rent 20th Anniversary Tour
Oct. 3-8
All the Great Books (Abridged) IN TANDEM THEATRE
Tenth Street Theatre Oct. 5-29 Cocktail parties are a drag. But In Tandem Theatre’s production of All the Great Books (Abridged) should help ease the burden of small talk while preparing you to put those supercilious comp-lit grad students in their place. The curtains open on an English class’ alarming realization that their graduation is imperiled by a difficult final exam. To avoid the unthinkable, the drama professor, student teacher and gym coach join forces for a frantic tour of the literary canon in 90 minutes. (Tyler Friedman)
Dead Man’s Carnival MIRAMAR THEATRE
Oct. 6, Nov. 3, Dec. 1 Dead Man’s Carnival’s First Friday series continues through the fall at the Miramar. Each show features different carnival acts from around the country performing music, carnival and burlesque acts. The season finale will be a Tom Waits tribute on Dec 1. (Jennifer Walter)
Pepper’s Ghost
ALCHEMIST THEATRE
Oct. 6-28 Alchemist Theatre’s Halloween show is back by popular demand, featuring a new script with a cast of familiar faces. Throw in some themed drinks and decorations, and the theater becomes frighteningly festive. In the words of director Aaron Kopec, the Halloween special is more than just a show, “it’s a fun night out for grown ups who don’t want to wait in lines for haunted houses anymore.” (Jennifer Walter)
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (family friendly) FIRST STAGE
Marcus Center for the Performing Arts, Todd Wehr Theater Oct. 6-Nov. 5 Say “Ian Fleming” and think James Bond, but Fleming was also responsible for a timeless and wonderful children’s book— Chitty Chitty Bang Bang—about an old jalopy that finds new life (literally!) in the hands of dedicated father and eccentric inventor, Caractacus Potts. This enrapturing tale was made into a fabulous 1968 film starring Dick van Dyke, Sally Ann Howes and Lionel Jeffries. First Stage presents a very kid-friendly stage adaptation based upon that classic film and including its memorable, tuneful score by Richard and Robert Sherman. (John Jahn)
Macbeth
BOOZY BARD
Best Place at Historic Pabst Brewery Oct. 9-11 Best Place at Pabst comes alive with drinks and drama for another season. The upcoming show, Macbeth, is a shortened version of the original script, with actors and actresses choosing their roles just minutes before the show begins. Notoriously unprepared and wildly entertaining, this spontaneous adaptation puts the Bard’s
classics in a not-so-sober light. (Jennifer Walter)
Toil and Trouble (student production)
Family Series at the Todd Wehr Theater
UW-WHITEWATER THEATRE
Oct. 9-15
CHITTY CHITTY BANG BANG A CHARLIE BROWN CHRISTMAS THE MIRACULOUS JOURNEY OF EDWARD TULANE THE WIZ ANTARCTICA, WI JUDY MOODY & STINK: THE MAD, MAD, MAD, MAD TREASURE HUNT
Anna Deavere Smith MILWAUKEE THEATRE
Oct. 11
Sister Act
SUNSET PLAYHOUSE
Oct. 12-Nov. 5 Based on the 1992 hit film starring Whoopi Goldberg, this upbeat musical combines dancing, divas and disguise—all within the walls of a convent. Sent to live with nuns after witnessing a murder, singer Deloris Van Cartier shows the sisters how to brighten up their daily worship. When Delores’ cover is blown, the nuns band together to protect their honorary sister. (Jennifer Walter)
First Steps Series
SPOOKLEY THE SQUARE PUMPKIN DR. SEUSS’S THE CAT IN THE HAT
Young Company
THE SKIN OF OUR TEETH HENRY V
Single tickets on sale now w w w. Fi r stStag e .o r g
Don Juan (student production)
UW-PARKSIDE THEATRE
Oct. 13-22
One Drop of Love
UW-WHITEWATER YOUNG AUDITORIUM
Locally owned retail gallery representing the work of over 300 artists on Milwaukee’s East Side.
Oct. 16
The Performance Ecology Project (world premiere)
COOPERATIVE PERFORMANCE
Oct. 18-29 The show features a group of performers— actors, dancers, musicians and poets— who “hunt and gather” encounters with their environment. It’s what Jeff Grygny, the show’s director, calls “fieldwork”—testing hypotheses as to how we interact with nature. Whether on the second floor of the Center’s Riverside Branch during the week, or sitting outside at the park on weekends, viewers of all ages are invited to experience this collaborative performance celebrating the outdoors. (Jennifer Walter)
A Midsummer Night’s Dream OFF THE WALL THEATRE
Oct. 18-29
1800 E. North Ave. www.thewaxwing.com SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE •
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production of The Hunchback Of Notre Dame features memorable songs from the film (“Out There,”“Hellfire,” “The Bells of Notre Dame”) as well as new music (“Rest and Recreation,”“Flight into Egypt”). (John Jahn)
Esperanza Rising
MILWAUKEE YOUTH THEATRE
Lincoln Center for the Arts Oct. 19-20 A family of immigrants, forced to give up their wealthy lifestyle in Mexico, settle in California during the 1930s to become migrant workers. This theatrical adaptation of Pam Muñoz Ryan’s novel, published in 2000, couldn’t be performed at a more appropriate time. “There is a lot of history to be learned from this play for both our actors and for audiences,” says Volunteer Coordinator Judy Swanson, noting the themes of discrimination and acceptance that are still relevant today. (Jennifer Walter)
DANCE Dancing on the Ceiling: performances by women of a certain age
SIMONE FERRO AND FRIENDS @ DANCEWORKS
Oct. 21-22
The Burials
CARDINAL STRITCH THEATRE
ArtsBridge
Indoor/Outdoor
Oct. 27
Oct. 20-29
MILWAUKEE BALLET AND FLORENTINE OPERA
RACINE THEATRE GUILD
Oct. 20-Nov 5
Sex with Strangers
music
Oct. 20-Nov. 12
“An American Songbook Soirée”
Beyond The Beatles: The British Invasion
Oct. 4
Oct. 23-24
Rose Ensemble: “Il Poverello: The Life and Legacy of St. Francis of Assisi”
RENAISSANCE THEATERWORKS
SHARON LYNN WILSON CENTER FOR THE ARTS
SUNSET PLAYHOUSE (MUSICAL MAINSTAGE)
UW-WHITEWATER YOUNG AUDITORIUM
Jersey Boys
UW-WHITEWATER, YOUNG AUDITORIUM
Oct. 5
“You’ve Got A Friend”
Oct. 25
SUNSET PLAYHOUSE (SIDENOTES CABARET)
The Clockwork Man’s Delirium CABARET MILWAUKEE
Oct. 5-8
Phantasies Such as These
Thomas Pandolfi: “Gershwin, Hamlisch and the Movies”
Oct. 25-28
SCHAUER ARTS AND ACTIVITIES CENTER
SUNSET PLAYHOUSE (AFTER SUNSET STUDIO)
Oct. 6
Oct. 26-29
“Raphaella Smits Classical Guitar Concert”
The Hunchback of Notre Dame WAUKESHA CIVIC THEATRE
UWM PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS
Margaret Brate Bryant Civic Theatre Building Oct. 27-Nov. 12 This musical drama boasts some impressive credentials. With book by Peter Parnell, music by Alan Menken, lyrics by Stephen Schwartz, grounding in the classic Victor Hugo novel and based as well upon the 1996 Disney animated film, Waukesha Civic Theatre’s
Oct. 6
Fine Arts Quartet
HELENE ZELAZO CENTER
Oct. 8 In 1963, after many years of summer concerts on the campus of UW-Milwaukee, the Fine Arts Quartet was invited to become the university’s Quartet-in-Resi1 8
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dence; it has, in fact, been such ever since. A look at FAQ’s concert history shows that it has performed live all over the world and made numerous recordings for the Naxos, Mercury, Vox and others over the decades. Their October concert features Joseph Haydn’s “Sunrise” String Quartet in B-flat Major, Samuel Barber’s B Minor String Quartet and Ludwig van Beethoven’s String Quartet No.14, Op.131. (John Jahn)
“A Toast to 70 Strong”
WISCONSIN PHILHARMONIC
Oct. 10
“Under The Street Lamp”
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Oct. 13-15
“Evensong”
BEL CANTO CHORUS
Oct. 15
Gay Men’s Chorus of Los Angeles: “It Gets Better” UW-WHITEWATER, YOUNG AUDITORIUM
Oct. 19
“Skipper’s Alley”
IRISH CULTURAL AND HERITAGE CENTER
Oct. 20
The Glenn Miller Orchestra MARCUS CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS (WILSON THEATER)
Oct. 20
The Merry Widow
FLORENTINE OPERA
Marcus Center for the Performing Arts, Uihlein Hall Oct. 20-21 The Merry Widow (Die lustige Witwe) is a classic operetta about a wealthy widow and her fellow Parisian’s attempts to keep her riches in their own city by finding her the right husband. It’s a work by one of operetta’s masters—the Austro-Hungarian composer Franz Lehár (and his collaborators, librettists Viktor Léon and Leo Stein). In this sure-to-be opulent Florentine production, Alyson Cambridge returns to the company in her role debut as Hanna Glawari (the rich widow). Other cast members include baritone Corey McKern (Danilo) and tenor Cody Austin (making his Florentine debut as Camille). (John Jahn)
“Stars and Stripes: American Icons” CONCORD CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Wauwatosa Presbyterian Church, 2366 N. 80th St. Oct. 21 The church in Wauwatosa that will be hosting this Concord Chamber Orchestra concert will at times fairly resound with patriotic tunes both familiar and obscure. And by “patriotic” I don’t mean the simple-minded, chest-thumping, nationalistic kind, but a rather more reflective and thoughtful take upon the music of American composers. This CCO concert (with guest narrator) features works such as the George Washington March by Francis Hopkinson, Rip van Winkle Overture by George Chadwick, Lincoln Portrait by Aaron Copland and effervescent Candide Overture by Leonard Bernstein. (John Jahn)
“Capella Pratensis: Missa Lutherana” EARLY MUSIC NOW
Oct. 21
Milwaukee Festival Brass at St. John’s Lutheran Oct. 21
Joey Alexander
SHARON LYNNE WILSON CENTER FOR THE ARTS
Oct. 21 Joey Alexander may look like any other fresh-faced 13 year old, but sit him at a Steinway and marvel at the musical maturity that instills envy even in seasoned veteran pianists. Alexander has already waxed two albums that have earned him three Grammy nominations and the admiration of influential contemporary jazzmen such as Wynton Marsalis. The Sharon Lynne Wilson Center for the Arts hosts the young phenom for an evening of jazz standards and original compositions. (Tyler Friedman)
“Simple Gifts: A Collaboration”
WAUKESHA CHORAL UNION
Oct. 21
Milwaukee Children’s Choir: “Evoking Sounds 1: Sounds of Color” CATHEDRAL CHURCH OF ALL SAINTS
Oct. 21
“Seasons in Song” MASTER SINGERS OF MILWAUKEE
North Shore Congregational Church, 7330 N. Santa Monica Blvd. St. John’s Lutheran Church, 20275 Davidson Road, Brookfield Oct. 21-22 (respectively) This concert features the lovely and highly evocative Mid-Winter Songs (1980) by American composer Morton Johannes Lauridsen (b. 1943). The piece’s five movements’ titles give you some idea what you’ll be experiencing: “Lament for Pasiphaë,” “Like Snow,”“She Tells Her Love While Half Asleep,”“Mid-Winter Waking” and “Intercession in Late October.” (John Jahn)
2150 N. PROSPECT AVE. 414-271-5278 • WWW.IZUMIS.COM
“MYSO Playathon 2017” MILWAUKEE YOUTH SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Bayshore Town Center Oct. 22 Following a concentrated period of fundraising (and hot off a concert tour of Argentina and Uruguay), the 1,000-members of MYSO—three full orchestras, seven string orchestras, a wind ensemble, two flute choirs, several jazz combos and more—will perform for the public for free in this, their only annual event that features every single one of their instrumental groups. (John Jahn)
“Serenade and Swan Songs”
PHILOMUSICA QUARTET
Wisconsin Lutheran College Oct. 23 Entering into their 10th season, the spirited resident quartet at the Wisconsin Lutheran College, Philomusica String Quartet, will continue to enchant their loyal and growing audience with famous and familiar as well as overlooked and rarely heard gems of the string quartet repertoire. Their first concert of the season features works representing three musical eras: Classical, Romantic and Post-Romantic/Modern. These are (respectively) Joseph Haydn’s String Quartet in F
AUTHENTIC JAPANESE RAMEN SERVED DAILY FOR LUNCH AND EVERY THURSDAY NIGHT
Tomato, Miso and Tonkotsu
SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE •
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Major (the “Hoffstetter”), Felix Mendelssohn’s String Quartet No. 6 in F Minor, Op. 80 and Gabriel Fauré’s String Quartet in E Minor, Op. 121. (John Jahn)
VISUAL ART CONTINUING
“The Bonsai Exhibit”
Sphinx Virtuosi: “Concerti per Venti”
“The Temple of Flora”
“Romano Johnson: The Glitterati”
SHARON LYNN WILSON CENTER FOR THE ARTS
Through Dec. 10
Through Nov. 5
“Mary L. Nohl Suitcase Exhibition”
Black Violin
MILWAUKEE INSTITUTE OF ART AND DESIGN
“Wisconsin Painters Studio Alumni Show”
Through Oct. 8
Through Nov. 6
Oct. 28 To many ears the sound of the violin indexes a white aesthetic typified by the Western classical tradition. Such a myopic view overlooks figures such as Eddie South, “the Dark Angel of the Violin,” or longtime Ellingtonian Ray Nance. Wil B. and Kev Marcus, the classically trained violist and violinist behind Black Violin, are the latest avatars of this African American fiddle tradition. Influenced by both hip-hop and classical music, Black Violin serves forth a sui generis cultural compound. (Tyler Friedman)
“2017 Annual Members Show”
“Woven Images 2017” (student exhibit)
Through Oct. 7
Through Nov. 9
“Featured Member Exhibition: PJ Boylan”
“2017 Sum Total”
“Fall Masterworks Concert”
“Frank Lloyd Wright: Buildings for the Prairie”
MILWAUKEE ART MUSEUM
Oct. 27
MARCUS CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS
WALKER’S POINT CENTER FOR THE ARTS
WALKER’S POINT CENTER FOR THE ARTS
Through Oct. 7
RACINE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Frances Bedford Concert Hall Oct. 28 The Racine Symphony’s annual Masterworks Concert not only contains classical music masterpieces, but also a master musician featured as guest soloist; this year’s event offers the RSO’s current artist-in-residence, pianist Wael Farouk. He’ll play the Piano Concerto No. 1 in E Minor, Op. 11, of Frédéric Chopin, which was written in 1830 by the then 20-year-old Polish composer and given its premiere in October of that year in Warsaw. Also on the program is Symphony No. 86 in D major—the fifth of the six so-called Paris Symphonies written by Joseph Haydn. (John Jahn)
MILWAUKEE ART MUSEUM
Through Oct. 15
“Cedarburg Artists Guild Annual Juried Exhibit” CEDARBURG CULTURAL CENTER
Through Oct. 15
“Emojis, Lies, Instagram Muses and Headline News” LATINO ARTS
Through Oct. 20
“Timo Korhonen Classical Guitar Concert”
“Lois Bielefeld—All In: Shorewood Girls Cross Country”
UWM PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS MUSIC RECITAL HALL
CHARLES ALLIS ART MUSEUM
Through Oct. 22
Oct. 29 Finnish classical guitarist Timo Korhonen will play as a part of the UWM Peck School of the Arts Guitar Series this fall, presented in conjunction with the UWM Classical Guitar Student Organization. Considered one of the most renowned classical guitarists of his generation, Korhonen has been performing since the age of 14, and has been travelling internationally to do so since the age of 17. He has played in more than 30 countries. Currently, he is a docent at the Turku Music Academy in Finland. (Morgan Hughes)
“Coalition of Photographic Arts: In a Fashion” MUSEUM OF WISCONSIN ART
Through Oct. 26
“Inside/Outside: Katy Cowan: reflected-intothemselves-into-reflected” LYNDEN SCULPTURE GARDEN
Through Oct. 29
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LYNDEN SCULPTURE GARDEN
Through Oct. 31
MUSEUM OF WISCONSIN ART
SCHAUER ARTS AND ACTIVITIES CENTER
UWM PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS
UWM PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS
Through Nov. 9
“RAM Artist Fellowship Exhibition 2017”
WUSTUM MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS
Through Nov. 25
“Cultivating Creativity: Celebrating 75 Years of Wustum—Part 3” WUSTUM MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS
Through Nov. 25
“Masterworks from the Grohmann Museum —Celebrating 10 Years” GROHMANN MUSEUM
Through Dec. 29
“The Seventh Day: Revisiting Shabbat”
JEWISH MUSEUM MILWAUKEE
Through Dec. 31
Jacob Baker
JOHN MICHAEL KOHLER ART CENTER
Through Dec. 31
Peter Jodocy
JOHN MICHAEL KOHLER ART CENTER
Through Dec. 31
“Things Are What We Encounter: Dr. Charles Smith” JOHN MICHAEL KOHLER ART CENTER
Through Dec. 31
opening “James Rosenquist: F-111 (South, West, North, East), 1974” HAGGERTY MUSEUM OF ART
“Paul Smith: Masters of Craft”
Oct. 5-Jan. 18, 2018
Through Dec. 30
“The World Turned Upside Down: Apocalyptic Imagery in England 1750-1850”
RACINE ART MUSEUM
Anthony Hernandez
MILWAUKEE ART MUSEUM
Through Jan. 1, 2018
“75 AT 75: Significant Works from RAM’s Collection” RACINE ART MUSEUM
Through Jan. 7, 2018
“Dean Meeker: Myths and Masquerades”
MUSEUM OF WISCONSIN ART
Through Jan. 14, 2018
“Sorehead Hill: Jesse Howard”
JOHN MICHAEL KOHLER ART CENTER
Through Jan. 7, 2018
“Variations on a Theme: Vessels from RAM’s Collection” RACINE ART MUSEUM
Through Jan. 21, 2018
“Mythologies: Eugene Von Breunchenheim” JOHN MICHAEL KOHLER ART CENTER
Through Jan. 14, 2018
“Karen Johnson Boyd: Unpacking Her Clay Collection” RACINE ART MUSEUM
Through July 27, 2018
HAGGERTY MUSEUM OF ART
Oct. 6-Jan. 18, 2018 The social and political changes of the 1700s in England brought with them no shortage of uncertainty and fear, much of which is captured in art from the era. This exhibit curated by Dr. Sarah Schaefer, a visiting assistant professor of art at UW-Milwaukee, spotlights some of the bleaker art of that era, compiling not only paintings and drawings but also pamphlets, illustrated books and political fliers, all of which convey a palpable sense of gloom and dread. (Evan Rytlewski)
“Rick Shaefer: The Refugee Trilogy”
HAGGERTY MUSEUM OF ART
Oct. 5-Jan. 18, 2018
“Gerit Grimm’s Fairytales: In a Time Neither Now nor Then” MUSEUM OF WISCONSIN ART
Oct. 7-Jan. 14, 2018 Gerit Grimm’s life has a fairy tale’s arc. Born in communist East Germany, Grimm was initially trained as a factory potter. Now an assistant professor in the ceramic program at UW-Madison, Grimm’s nontraditional, figurative ceramics range in size from miniatures to life-size and beyond. Inspired by the fairytales of her namesake, the Brothers Grimm, as well as other myths and biblical stories, Grimm’s ceramics fire the imagination like their best literary counterparts. (Tyler Friedman)
“Small Gifts from Big Donors—Part 3” RACINE ART MUSEUM
Oct. 8-Feb. 4, 2018
OCTOBER 22 CHECK OUT OUR UPCOMING SHOWS WWE Smackdown Live October 24
Guns N’ Roses November 7
Marvel Universe LIVE! Age of Heroes October 24-26
Katy Perry December 4
The Original Harlem Globetrotters December 31
2CELLOS January 24
Lorde
ART PRIDE LIFE ARTWORK, FRAMING, AND RESTORATION
March 1 For the latest on upcoming events: bit.ly/BMOHBC-Events bmoharrisbradleycenter.com
@BMOHBC SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE •
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231 N. 76th St. 414-453-1620 landmarksgallery.com
75 at 75: Significant Works from ’s Collection
“Back to School”
VILLA TERRACE DECORATIVE ARTS MUSEUM
Oct. 12-Jan. 28, 2018
“Roger Smith Drawings and Watercolors”
VILLA TERRACE DECORATIVE ARTS MUSEUM
Elise Winters Red Ruffle Cascade Necklace
Racine Art Museum Racine, WI
UWM PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS
Oct. 20-Nov. 10
“Perspective: The Chair” MILWAUKEE INSTITUTE OF ART AND DESIGN
Oct. 19-Jan. 28, 2018
Oct. 20-March 3, 2018
“FANTASTIC: Four Contemporary American Illustration Artists”
Deborah Jojola (lecture)
Oct. 16-Dec. 2
Oct. 25
David Lenz (lecture)
“Día de los Muertos Ofrendas”
MILWAUKEE INSTITUTE OF ART AND DESIGN
Learn more at ramart.org or 262.638.8300
“Crossing Over 2017” (student exhibit)
UWM PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS (ARTISTS NOW! SERIES)
Oct. 18
UWM PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS (ARTISTS NOW! SERIES)
LATINO ARTS
Oct. 26-Nov. 17
“Printmakers: Jack Pachuta, Jewell Riano, Susan Steinhafel and Paul Yank” CEDARBURG CULTURAL CENTER
Oct. 19-Nov. 26
“Joan Hollnagel: Absurd Observations” CEDARBURG CULTURAL CENTER
Oct. 19-Nov. 26
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Ovation Communities is expanding the art experience and building a lasting program that will benefit residents, families and the community for many years to come. Currently exhibiting through September: Splash! Who Spilled the Paint? By Anonymous – Rubenstein Family Kosher Oasis at Ovation Jewish Home Symphonie de Couleurs by Jacqueline Cabessa Redlich – Ovation Jewish Home 20th Century Vintage Food Tins from Chudnow Museum of Yesteryear – Ovation Sarah Chudnow All exhibits are open to the general public free of charge. Senior Living with a continuum of care.
Jewish Home MilwAuKee
Chai Point MilwAuKee
Sarah Chudnow MequOn
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Jewish Museum Milwaukee The Jewish Museum Milwaukee opened this century with one eye on the past and the other on how to present that history in the present tense. “We want people to relate to the stories we tell, to see themselves in those stories,” says Molly Dubin, the Jewish Museum’s curator. Had the museum opened 50 years ago, it might have consisted entirely of objects in glass cases and text panels on the walls. There almost certainly would have been less emphasis on art. “Visual imagery is a more universal language—it can transcend the challenge of relating to particular times and events,” she explains. “In the past, museums weren’t as cognizant of whether the audience could see themselves in the story. Stories told visually help us to establish a connection with the viewer. If there’s no connection, there’s no experience.” And experience is the operant word for museums in the present century—“engaging the viewer emotionally, viscerally,” Dubin says. The variety of exhibitions mounted at the Jewish Museum testifies to changing definitions of art and the widening scope of offerings by art museums. The recent “Fabric of Survival” featured a series of textile panels illustrating the Nazi occupation of a Polish village by Holocaust survivor-outsider artist Esther Nisenthal Krintz. “Stitching History from the Holocaust” exhibited designs by Prague dressmaker Hedy Strnad, who perished under the Nazis. “Art museums have a more important role than ever in providing art education as funding for public schools have been depleted,” Dubin adds. “Art is an integral part of the human experience. If children aren’t given opportunities to experience art, to be challenged by it, they are missing a huge part of the human experience.” —David Luhrssen
Jewish Museum Milwaukee Molly Dubin SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE •
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THEATER
Frank Ferrante’s An Afternoon with Groucho
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (family friendly)
Nov. 8
novembercalendar
FALL ARTS GUIDE
CONTINUING FIRST STAGE
Through Nov. 5
Souvenir
UW-WHITEWATER, YOUNG AUDITORIUM
Nov. 8
Through Nov. 5
26 Miles
The Who and The What
Nov. 8-12
Through Nov. 5
2017
Aquila Theatre Company: Sense and Sensibility
MILWAUKEE REPERTORY THEATER (STACKNER)
MILWAUKEE REPERTORY THEATER (STIEMKE)
UWM THEATRE STUDIO 508
Aquila Theatre Company: Hamlet UW-WHITEWATER, YOUNG AUDITORIUM
Indoor/Outdoor
Nov. 9
Through Nov. 5
On the Verge, or the Geography of Yearning (student production)
RACINE THEATRE GUILD
Sister Act
SUNSET PLAYHOUSE
Through Nov. 5
Sex with Strangers
RENAISSANCE THEATERWORKS
Through Nov. 12
The Hunchback of Notre Dame WAUKESHA CIVIC THEATRE
Through Nov. 12
opening
MARQUETTE THEATRE
Nov. 9-19 Following the story of three time-traveling female explorers, these adventurous women take viewers on a journey over centuries of ancient history, transcending time through thought-provoking, witty language. Director Maureen Kilmurry fell in love with the script when she first read it, saying On the Verge is unlike anything she’s ever seen. “It is full of surprises on all levels,” Kilmurry says. (Jennifer Walter)
Murder for Two
MILWAUKEE REPERTORY THEATER (STACKNER)
The Clockwork Man’s Heart
Nov. 10-Jan. 14, 2018
Nov. 1-11
Holmes and Watson
CABARET MILWAUKEE
The Witch in 204
MILWAUKEE REPERTORY THEATER (POWERHOUSE)
MEMORIES DINNER THEATRE
Nov. 14-Dec. 17
KRINGLE…The Musical?
Switch Witch (family friendly)
Nov. 3-19
Nov. 15-18
Nov. 3-12
OVER OUR HEAD PLAYERS
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SUNSET PLAYHOUSE
The Secret Mask
NEXT ACT THEATRE
Nov. 16-Dec. 10
“Ex Fabula: Risking It”
A Christmas Carol
MILWAUKEE REPERTORY THEATER (PABST)
Nov. 28-Dec. 24
SOUTH MILWAUKEE PERFORMING ARTS CENTER
Beauty and the Beast
7 (x1) Samurai Nov. 17-19
THEATRE GIGANTE
dance
Annie
La Boheme
Nov. 17-Dec. 23
Marcus Center for the Performing Arts, Uihlein Hall Nov. 2-5 Already gorgeous at its 2012 premiere, Michael Pink’s transformation into dance of Giacomo Puccini’s beloved opera should be breathtaking now given the careful reworking his ballets receive in revival. Moving the tale of starving artists forward to a more recognizable 1950s Paris, Pink fashioned the intimate scenes of friendship, love and loss at the story’s heart to allow the dancers ample room for passion and virtuosity. Highly individualized full company scenes are among his finest. (John Schneider)
Nov. 17
SKYLIGHT MUSIC THEATRE
Jacob Marley’s Christmas Carol ACACIA THEATRE
Nov. 18-Dec. 3
School of Rock
MARCUS CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS (BROADWAY SERIES)
Nov. 21-26 In this new musical adaptation of the heartwarming 2003 Jack Black comedy, written by the film’s screenwriter Mike White, a failed musician poses as a substitute music teacher at a prep school and finds an opportunity to live out his rock star fantasies. In addition to all the music from the movie, the musical features 14 new songs from Andrew Lloyd Webber. And, yes, the kids on stage are actually playing their own instruments. (Evan Rytlewski)
Miracle on South Division Street
MILWAUKEE CHAMBER THEATRE
Nov. 22-Dec. 17
A Charlie Brown Christmas (family friendly) FIRST STAGE
Nov. 24-Dec. 31
The Christmas Schooner
MEMORIES DINNER THEATRE
Nov. 25-Dec. 17
SUNSET PLAYHOUSE
GERIT GRIMM’S FAIRYTALES In a Time Neither Now nor Then
Nov. 30-Dec. 23
Opening Party October 7 | 2:00–5:00
MILWAUKEE BALLET
Artist Talk October 19 | 6:30–7:30 Meet the Artist November 18 | 2:00–4:00 December 2 | 2:00–4:00
On View: October 7, 2017–January 14, 2018 205 Veterans Avenue, West Bend | wisconsinart.org Gerit Grimm standing next to the peddler of Peddler and Female Shopper, Stoneware, 2011
Aparna Ramaswamy: They Rose at Dawn SHARON LYNN WILSON CENTER FOR THE ARTS
Nov. 11
Mad Li(m)bs
DANCEWORKS PERFORMANCE COMPANY
Danceworks Studio Theatre Nov. 11, 12 and 16-18 “I always wonder what our audience takes from our work,” the boundary-pushing Dani Kuepper explained. To get some idea, she’ll recreate with her DPC colleagues an honest, heartfelt, potentially very funny dance she made with her UW-Milwaukee students last winter to music by Meredith Monk. Actor-playwrights Jason Powell and Andrea Moser, who’ll also perform, will help restructure the piece to include improvisations driven by audience member’s on-the-spot thoughts about whatever the heck is going on. (John Schneider)
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Hyperlocal MKE
Maura O’Connell and Karan Casey
“Veterans’ Day Salute”
Stomp
Nov. 10
Silver Linings Arts Center, West Bend Nov. 19 The Kettle Moraine Symphony’s Diana Jonen says that they’re attempting to get “the West Bend High School Chorus as well as the UW-Washington County Community Chorus on the program,” but as of this writing that hasn’t been finalized. Regardless, the works on the orchestra’s program are a patriot’s dream. There’s the American National Anthem, “The Washington Post March,”“The Stars and Stripes Forever,”“Victory at Sea” (TV score themes by Richard Rodgers) and various other musical homages to our men and women in uniform. The classical highlight is Howard Hanson’s Symphony No. 2 (The Romantic). (John Jahn)
Nov. 12
IRISH CULTURAL AND HERITAGE CENTER
UW-WHITEWATER, YOUNG AUDITORIUM
“Take Me To The River”
Nov. 13
MARCUS CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS, WILSON THEATER
MUSIC
Nov. 10
Tchaikovsky’s Fifth Symphony
“A Stritch Music Performance” (Fall Concert)
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Nov. 10-12
CARDINAL STRITCH UNIVERSITY
Nov. 2
“Le Poème Harmonique: Danza! Spanish Dances in 17th Century France”
Jarabe Mexicano LATINO ARTS
EARLY MUSIC NOW
Nov. 3
Nov. 11
Chorisma
David Francey
UW-WASHINGTON COUNTY
IRISH CULTURAL AND HERITAGE CENTER
Nov. 3
“Bach in the Basilica”
Nov. 12
Nov. 4-5
“Thanksgiving Promises”
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
FESTIVAL CITY SYMPHONY
Pabst Theater Nov. 12 “The promise of living, with hope and thanksgiving, is born of our loving and sharing with friends and our neighbors.” That’s a line from Aaron Copland’s 1954 opera-for-television, The Tender Land, from which the Festival City Symphony performs an orchestral suite. Indeed, all the works on the pre-holiday concert speak of the same spirit. There’s also the swirling Spitfire Prelude and Fugue by William Walton (1942), Pulitzer Prize and Grammy Award-winning composer Jennifer Higdon’s “Teton Range” from All Things Majestic and more. (John Jahn)
Milwaukee Children’s Choir Fall Recital
ST. SEBASTIAN’S CHURCH
Nov. 5
“Music of the 1960s: The Mad Men Era”
WISCONSIN PHILHARMONIC FEATURING FIVE BY DESIGN
Sharon Lynne Wilson Center for the Arts Nov. 7 The musical achievements of the 1960s counterculture threaten to obscure an equally rich contemporaneous musical happening, which we might call the last gasp of the Great American Songbook. A division of labor relegating separate tasks to composer, lyricist, arranger and performer, yielded a sophistication that was lost with the ascendance of the jack-of-all-trades singer-songwriter. The Wisconsin Philharmonic, assisted by vocal group Five By Design, will dedicate a performance to the melodies of Henry Mancini, Johnny Mercer and other tunesmiths who provided the sonic backdrop for a more elegant 1960s milieu. (Tyler Friedman)
“Bernstein and Brahms”
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Nov. 17-18
“An Evening of Gilbert and Sullivan” FLORENTINE OPERA @ THE CENTER SERIES
Nov. 17-19
KETTLE MORAINE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
“Thanksgiving” PRESENT MUSIC
Cathedral of St. John Nov. 19 Present Music’s annual Sunday afternoon Thanksgiving concert in the welcoming setting of the Cathedral of St. John has always been thoughtful, engaging America’s ethnic mosaic. This year’s concert features a world premiere by Ingram Marshall drawn from the tradition of Southern shape note singing. Also on the program are works by Armenian American Mary Kouyoumdjian and Iranian American Sahba Aminikia. (David Luhrssen)
“Canadian Brass Holiday”
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Nov. 29
“Served Hot”
UWM CHAMBER MUSIC MILWAUKEE WITH TORCH ENSEMBLE
Nov. 30
visual art CONTINUING
“Romano Johnson: The Glitterati”
MUSEUM OF WISCONSIN ART
Through Nov. 5
“Wisconsin Painters Studio Alumni Show”
SCHAUER ARTS AND ACTIVITIES CENTER
Through Nov. 6
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“Woven Images 2017” (student exhibit) UWM PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS
Through Nov. 9
“2017 Sum Total” UWM PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS
Through Nov. 9
“Crossing Over 2017” (student exhibit) UWM PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS
Through Nov. 10
“The Temple of Flora”
MILWAUKEE ART MUSEUM
Through Dec. 10
Through Jan. 14, 2018
Through Dec. 29
JOHN MICHAEL KOHLER ART CENTER
GROHMANN MUSEUM
“The Seventh Day: Revisiting Shabbat”
JEWISH MUSEUM MILWAUKEE
Through Dec. 31
Jacob Baker
JOHN MICHAEL KOHLER ART CENTER
Through Dec. 31
Through Nov. 17
Peter Jodocy
“RAM Artist Fellowship Exhibition 2017” WUSTUM MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS
Through Nov. 25
“Cultivating Creativity: Celebrating 75 Years of Wustum—Part 3” WUSTUM MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS
Through Nov. 25
MUSEUM OF WISCONSIN ART
“Masterworks from the Grohmann Museum— Celebrating 10 Years”
“Día de los Muertos Ofrendas” LATINO ARTS
“Gerit Grimm’s Fairytales: In a Time Neither Now nor Then”
JOHN MICHAEL KOHLER ART CENTER
Through Dec. 31
“Things are what we encounter: Dr. Charles Smith”
JOHN MICHAEL KOHLER ART CENTER
Through Dec. 31
“Paul Smith: Masters of Craft”
RACINE ART MUSEUM
“Mythologies: Eugene Von Breunchenheim” Through Jan. 14, 2018
“Sorehead Hill: Jesse Howard”
JOHN MICHAEL KOHLER ART CENTER
Through Jan. 7, 2018
“James Rosenquist: F-111 (South, West, North, East), 1974” HAGGERTY MUSEUM OF ART
Through Jan. 18, 2018
“The World Turned Upside Down: Apocalyptic Imagery in England, 1750-1850” HAGGERTY MUSEUM OF ART
Through Jan. 18, 2018
“Rick Shaefer: The Refugee Trilogy”
HAGGERTY MUSEUM OF ART
Through Jan. 18, 2018
“Printmakers: Jack Pachuta, Jewell Riano, Susan Steinhafel and Paul Yank”
Through Dec. 30
Through Nov. 26
Through Jan. 1, 2018
Through Jan. 21, 2018
“Joan Hollnagel: Absurd Observations”
“75 AT 75: Significant Works from RAM’s Collection”
“Back to School”
Through Nov. 26
Through Jan. 7, 2018
Through Jan. 28, 2018
“FANTASTIC: Four Contemporary American Illustration Artists”
“Dean Meeker: Myths and Masquerades”
“Roger Smith Drawings and Watercolors”
CEDARBURG CULTURAL CENTER
CEDARBURG CULTURAL CENTER
MILWAUKEE INSTITUTE OF ART AND DESIGN
Anthony Hernandez
MILWAUKEE ART MUSEUM
RACINE ART MUSEUM
MUSEUM OF WISCONSIN ART
Through Jan. 14, 2018
“Variations on a Theme: Vessels from RAM’s Collection” RACINE ART MUSEUM
VILLA TERRACE DECORATIVE ARTS MUSEUM
VILLA TERRACE DECORATIVE ARTS MUSEUM
Through Jan. 28, 2018
Through Dec. 2
“Small Gifts from Big Donors—Part 3” RACINE ART MUSEUM
Through Feb. 4, 2018
“Perspective: The Chair” MILWAUKEE INSTITUTE OF ART AND DESIGN
Through March 3, 2018
“Karen Johnson Boyd: Unpacking Her Clay Collection” RACINE ART MUSEUM
Through July 27, 2018
OPENING Della Wells (lecture)
UWM PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS (ARTISTS NOW! GUEST LECTURE SERIES)
Nov. 1
“Kettle Moraine Fine Arts Guild Holiday Show”
SCHAUER ARTS & ACTIVITIES CENTER Nov. 11-Jan. 2, 2018
“Clandestine Possessions— new collaborative work by James Pederson and Mariah Klemens” & “Family Time—paintings by James Pederson and Jackson Hunt” CHARLES ALLIS ART MUSEUM
Nov. 16-April 15, 2018
“2017 MOWA Members’ Show”
MUSEUM OF WISCONSIN ART
Nov. 18-Jan. 7, 2018
“Main Street Gallery’s Blizzard of Art”
CEDARBURG CULTURAL CENTER
Nov. 29-Jan. 14, 2018
“The Little Show: CCC’s Annual Juried Exhibit”
CEDARBURG CULTURAL CENTER
Nov. 30-Jan. 14, 2018 SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE •
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John Michael Kohler Arts Center For Sam Gappmayer, director of the John Michael Kohler Arts Center, there is no sharp divide between society at large and art museums. Trouble in the one may find treatment in the other. “Our world is Balkanizing in ways that are frightening and dangerous. That’s clear from the American political landscape,” remarks Gappmayer, “I don’t want to sound Pollyannaish, and I certainly don’t think there’s a silver bullet solution, but I do believe that the arts unite people through shared experiences. In these divisive times, art is part of the glue holding us together.” While art museums certainly serve as conservators of cultural artifacts, they celebrate not the objects themselves but the values these objects embody. “We are individually and collectively defined by what we choose to keep,” Gappmayer says, likening curatorial practice to the process of moving, “All sorts of decisions have to be made about the things we can jettison and those we can’t bear to part with. Similarly, museums demonstrate commonly held values, while also providing constructive forums for discussing where our values differ.” Gappmayer’s background at other multidisciplinary arts institutions makes him an ideal director of the forwardthinking JMKAC, which he joined at the end of 2016. “In the early 2000s, there was a pivot point when museums realized that they needed to be more than just antiquated cabinets of curiosity,” he says, “The John Michael Kohler Arts Center strives to engage people in other meaningful ways. Our collection is especially strong in artist-built environments. There is spontaneity, joy and directness that distinguish the experience of these environments from traditional art objects.” —Tyler Friedman
John Michael Kohler Arts Center Sam Gappmayer (COURTESY OF JMKAC) SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE •
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FALL ARTS GUIDE
THEATER CONTINUING
The Purfekt Family’s 1st Annual Yuletide Letter —The Holiday Hogwash Begins
Jacob Marley’s Christmas Carol
Dec. 1-3
Through Dec. 3
Angels in America
decembercalendar
ACACIA THEATRE
The Secret Mask
NEXT ACT THEATRE
UW-PARKSIDE BLACK BOX THEATRE (STUDENT PRODUCTION)
Through Dec. 17
Dec. 1-9 The UW-Parkside Theatre Department takes on the dichotomy between politics and love with Tony Kushner’s Pulitzer Prize-winning Angels in America: A Gay Fantasia on National Themes. Set in 1980s New York City, Angels in America follows two AIDS patients through the trauma of the disease and the impact it has on their relationships. More than that, though, the play is an expression of the intricacies and unknowables associated with finding and falling in love. (Morgan Hughes)
Holmes and Watson
Holiday Musical Spectacular
Through Dec. 10
The Christmas Schooner
MEMORIES DINNER THEATER
Through Dec. 17
Miracle on South Division Street MILWAUKEE CHAMBER THEATRE
2017
MEMORIES DINNER THEATRE
MILWAUKEE REPERTORY THEATER (POWERHOUSE)
CARDINAL STRITCH UNIVERSITY THEATER
Through Dec. 17
Dec. 1-10
Annie
A Christmas Carol: The Musical
Through Dec. 23
Dec. 1-17
Beauty and the Beast
The House Without A Christmas Tree
Through Dec. 23
Dec. 1-17
A Christmas Carol
Scrooge in Rouge
SKYLIGHT MUSIC THEATRE
SUNSET PLAYHOUSE
MILWAUKEE REPERTORY THEATER (PABST)
Through Dec. 24
A Charlie Brown Christmas (family friendly) FIRST STAGE
RACINE GUILD THEATRE
WAUKESHA CIVIC THEATRE
IN TANDEM THEATRE
Dec. 1-Jan. 7, 2018
“Tales of Hoffman” Showcase MILWAUKEE OPERA THEATRE AND UWM OPERA THEATRE DEPARTMENT
Through Dec. 31
Dec. 2
Murder for Two
David Seebach’s “Magic Merry Christmas”
MILWAUKEE REPERTORY THEATER (STACKNER)
Through Jan. 14, 2018
CONTINUING Christmas Carol
FALLS PATIO PLAYERS
Dec. 1-3
SCHAUER ARTS & ACTIVITIES CENTER
Dec. 2
HOMEWARD BOUND: The Sounds of Simon & Garfunkel SUNSET PLAYHOUSE (MUSICAL MAINSTAGE)
Dec. 4-5
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1959 Pink Thunderbird (student production)
UW-WHITEWATER THEATRE
Dec. 4-9
Major Barbara
UWM ARTS CENTER GALLERY
Dec. 6-10
Black Nativity
BLACK ARTS MKE
Dec. 7-17
The Skin of Our Teeth FIRST STAGE
Dec. 8-17
Bing Crosby: Christmas on the Air
MILWAUKEE ENTERTAINMENT GROUP
Dec. 8-23 Bing Crosby was, in the knowing estimation of clarinetist and bandleader Artie Shaw, “the first hip white person born in the United States.” These days, der Bingle’s once revolutionary vocal innovations have been so thoroughly assimilated as to be shorthand for the musical tastes of yesteryear, as exemplified by the seasonal ubiquity of “White Christmas,” the best selling record of all time. Written by and starring Matt Zembrowski, “Bing Crosby Christmas on the Air” presents a tune-filled evening of nostalgia designed to delight old fans and win new ones. (Tyler Friedman)
Chicago
UW-WHITEWATER, YOUNG AUDITORIUM
Dec. 9
Beauty and the Beast, Jr. (family friendly) SUNSET PLAYHOUSE
Dec. 10-11
A Bronzeville Christmas Story FIRST STAGE
Dec. 12 Part of First Stage’s Foundry Series of new play readings, this second play in Sheri Williams Pannell’s emerging, important Bronzeville trilogy about the history of this thriving and stable Milwaukee African American community is set in 1959 and
Open Everyday! M-Sat 9-5, Sun 11-4 2015 W. St. Paul Ave. Milwaukee (414) 933-0808 BBClighting.com
continues the saga of the Dubois family begun in last season’s acclaimed Welcome To Bronzeville, commissioned and produced by First Stage. The 7 p.m. reading at the Milwaukee Youth Art Center is free and open to all. (John Schneider)
Arsenic and Old Lace
OFF THE WALL THEATRE
Dec. 13-31 While best remembered as a classic screwball comedy starring Cary Grant, Arsenic and Old Lace began life on the stage, where, between 1941 and 1944 it garnered 1,444 curtain calls. The delightfully dark comedy centers on Mortimer Brewster’s dealings with his homicidal family, comprised of two spinster aunts with a penchant for poisoning pensioners, and two brothers, one of whom believes himself to be Teddy Roosevelt and another who is on the lam. Sure to please fans of black comedies and comedies in general. (Tyler Friedman)
The Wizard of Oz
MILWAUKEE THEATRE
Dec. 29-31
DANCE “Moscow Ballet’s Great Russian Nutcracker” MILWAUKEE THEATRE
Dec. 1
“On Display” Catey Ott Dance Collective in collaboration with the Haggerty Art Museum HAGGERTY ART MUSEUM AT MARQUETTE UNIVERSITY
Dec. 3 From 2-3 p.m., stationed among the always interesting Haggerty exhibits, you’ll find extremely slow moving human beings, living statues of all ages, body types and physical abilities. Eyes closed, they’ll move as each is uniquely able, fully available to your gaze. Sometimes they’ll freeze, open-eyed and gazing, perfect statues. Conceived by NYC choreographer Heidi Latsky, this haunting improvisation will happen simultaneously in cities across the nation to celebrate the UN International Day of Persons with Disabilities. (John Schneider)
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The Nutcracker
Stefan Kartman and Jeannie Yu
Dec. 9-26
Dec. 3
The Dance Factory: The Nutcracker
Concert at Wisconsin Conservatory of Music
Dec. 16
Dec. 4-5
MILWAUKEE BALLET
UWM PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS
“The Boston Camerata & SHARQ Arabic Music Ensemble perform A Mediterranean Christmas” EARLY MUSIC NOW
“Holiday Pops”
Dec. 7
St. Joseph Chapel, 1501 S. Layton Blvd. Dec. 10 As the early music movement gathered steam in the 1960s and ‘70s, most ears were tuned to Western Europe—Baroque and before. Recent years have seen the concept expand to include other regions. Milwaukee’s Early Music Now has been at the forefront of this shift by presenting music from other cultures and exploring cross-cultural groups. Their mission is evident in EMN’s holiday concert. The Boston Camerata, one of America’s foremost early music ensembles, will perform with SHARQ Arabic Music Ensemble, an Arab American group focused on the art music of the Near East. (David Luhrssen)
Dec. 1-3
“Christmas in the Basilica”
“Northern Lights Holiday Concert”
Concord Chamber Orchestra
Dec. 8-10
Dec. 5
Dec. 2
“Home for the Holidays”
“Our Favorite Things”
Dec. 8-17
Dec. 13-17
“Holiday Pops Concert”
Handel’s Messiah
UW-WHITEWATER, YOUNG AUDITORIUM
PROMETHEUS TRIO
“Holiday G.I. Jukebox”
MUSIC
SHARON LYNNE WILSON CENTER FOR THE ARTS
Dec. 6
Sol e Mar
LATINO ARTS
“MSO Holiday Concert”
Dec. 1
CEDARBURG PERFORMING ARTS CENTER
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
BEL CANTO CHORUS
BASILICA OF ST. JOSAPHAT
FLORENTINE OPERA @ THE CENTER SERIES
Milwaukee Festival Brass ST. MATTHEW’S
Dec. 2
The Snowman (family friendly)
RACINE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Dec. 8
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Dec. 2
Black Market Trust
Moraine Symphonic Band Holiday Concert
Dec. 8
UW-WASHINGTON COUNTY
WISCONSIN PHILHARMONIC
SUNSET PLAYHOUSE (SIDENOTES CABARET)
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Dec. 15-17
Ryan Meisel QuArtet
SCHAUER ARTS & ACTIVITIES CENTER
Dec. 15
Dec. 2
UW-WASHINGTON COUNTY
“MSO Performs the Music of Led Zeppelin”
The Tales of Hoffman
Dec. 9
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
“Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets”
UWM Peck School of the Arts Music Recital Hall Dec. 2 UW-Milwaukee’s Opera Theatre Department hosts artists from Milwaukee Opera Theatre in a semester-long examination of French composer Jacques Offenbach’s immortal Les contes d’Hoffmann—a tuneful and longbeloved opéra fantastique that premiered in 1881, one year after its composer’s tragically early death. In something of a culminating final exam of UWM’s and Milwaukee Opera Theatre’s study of this work, there will be a “Tales of Hoffman Showcase,”—a “raw, pared-down and fresh reading of the opera on stage.” (John Jahn)
“MSO Holiday Pops”
Dec. 15-17
Dec. 10
Milwaukee Children’s Choir: “An Evening of Reading and Carols”
MILWAUKEE OPERA THEATRE
SHARON LYNNE WILSON CENTER FOR THE ARTS
Kettle Moraine Chorus Winter Concert
UW-WASHINGTON COUNTY
Dec. 10
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
CATHEDRAL CHURCH OF ALL SAINTS
Dec. 16
Chant Claire Chamber Choir Winter Concert ST. SEBASTIAN CHURCH
Dec. 16
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Kim Robertson
“The Seventh Day: Revisiting Shabbat”
Dec. 16
Through Dec. 31
Natalie MacMaster & Donnell Leahy: “A Celtic Family Christmas”
Jacob Baker
IRISH CULTURAL AND HERITAGE CENTER
SHARON LYNNE WILSON CENTER FOR THE ARTS
Dec. 16
“Welcome All Wonders”
MASTER SINGERS OF MILWAUKEE
Dec. 16-17
E.T., The Extra-Terrestrial MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Dec. 30-31
VISUAL ART CONTINUING
“FANTASTIC: Four Contemporary American Illustration Artists” MILWAUKEE INSTITUTE OF ART AND DESIGN
Through Dec. 2
“The Temple of Flora”
MILWAUKEE ART MUSEUM
Through Dec. 10
“Masterworks from the Grohmann Museum —Celebrating 10 Years” GROHMANN MUSEUM
Through Dec. 29
“Paul Smith: Masters of Craft”
RACINE ART MUSEUM
Through Dec. 30
“75 at 75: Significant Works from RAM’s Collection” RACINE ART MUSEUM
Through Dec. 30
JEWISH MUSEUM MILWAUKEE
“Mythologies: Eugene Von Breunchenheim” JOHN MICHAEL KOHLER ART CENTER
Through Jan. 14, 2018
JOHN MICHAEL KOHLER ART CENTER
Through Dec. 31
“The Little Show: CCC’s Annual Juried Exhibit”
CEDARBURG CULTURAL CENTER
Through Jan. 14, 2018
Peter Jodocy
JOHN MICHAEL KOHLER ART CENTER
Through Dec. 31
Anthony Hernandez
MILWAUKEE ART MUSEUM
Through Jan. 1, 2018
“Kettle Moraine Fine Arts Guild Holiday Show” SCHAUER ARTS & ACTIVITIES CENTER
Through Jan. 2, 2018
“2017 MOWA Members’ Show”
MUSEUM OF WISCONSIN ART
Through Jan. 7, 2018
“Sorehead Hill: Jesse Howard”
JOHN MICHAEL KOHLER ART CENTER
Through Jan. 7, 2018
“Dean Meeker: Myths and Masquerades”
MUSEUM OF WISCONSIN ART
Through Jan. 14, 2018
“Gerit Grimm’s Fairytales: In a Time Neither Now nor Then” MUSEUM OF WISCONSIN ART
Through Jan. 14, 2018
“Main Street Gallery’s Blizzard of Art”
CEDARBURG CULTURAL CENTER
Through Jan. 14, 2018
“Things are what we encounter: Dr. Charles Smith” JOHN MICHAEL KOHLER ART CENTER
Through Jan. 21, 2018
“James Rosenquist: F-111 (South, West, North, East), 1974”
HAGGERTY MUSEUM OF ART
Through Jan. 18, 2018
“The World Turned Upside Down: Apocalyptic Imagery in England, 1750-1850” HAGGERTY MUSEUM OF ART
Through Jan. 18, 2018
“Rick Shaefer: The Refugee Trilogy”
HAGGERTY MUSEUM OF ART
Through Jan. 18, 2018
“Variations on a Theme: Vessels from RAM’s Collection” RACINE ART MUSEUM
Through Jan. 21, 2018
“Back to School”
VILLA TERRACE DECORATIVE ARTS MUSEUM
Through Jan. 28, 2018
“Roger Smith Drawings and Watercolors” VILLA TERRACE DECORATIVE ARTS MUSEUM
Through Jan. 28, 2018
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“Small Gifts from Big Donors—Part 3” RACINE ART MUSEUM
Through Feb. 4, 2018
“Perspectives: The Chair” MILWAUKEE INSTITUTE OF ART AND DESIGN
Through March 3, 2018
“Clandestine Possessions— new collaborative work by James Pederson and Mariah Klemens” & “Family Time— paintings by James Pederson and Jackson Hunt” CHARLES ALLIS ART MUSEUM
Through April 15, 2017
“Karen Johnson Boyd: Unpacking Her Clay Collection” RACINE ART MUSEUM
Through July 22, 2018
opening “Here We Make Our Home: Cultural Arts Curriculum & Student Group Exhibition” LATINO ARTS
Dec. 1-Feb. 25, 2018
Rose Curley (lecture)
UWM PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS (ARTISTS NOW! SERIES)
Dec. 6
“UWM Design Entrepreneur Showcase 2017” UWM PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS
Dec. 7
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SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE
Milwaukee Art Museum In August 2016, when Marcelle Polednik became the first Donna and Donald Baumgartner Director of the Milwaukee Art Museum (MAM), the institution was emerging from a $34 million project of renovation and expansion that marked the beginning of a new era. Such a momentous undertaking was the result of reflection about the task of an art museum in the 21st century. That Polednik was hired over dozens of other candidates suggests that hers was the most compelling view. “The purpose of the museum in the 21st century is to be a place of inspiration and contemplation—a place for learning, reverie and connection between the arts and our everyday lives,” says Polednik. And life in the 21st century presents conditions that make the art museum experience all the more important: “In this age of instantaneity and growing technological sophistication, the art museum provides something increasingly rare: a tangible, material connection to some of the most significant forms of expression ever made by humans, whether centuries ago or just this year. The mandate of the museum is to be that connective tissue that binds the experience of humanity over time, or even at any one moment in time.” The art museum of the 21st century also contributes to communication in and between communities. “At their best, museums are seats of important community dialogue,” says Polednik, “ones that challenge us to consider different voices and interpretations, and to spark and fuel the discourse that makes us a better society, better individuals and better civilizations.” As forums for dialogue and debate, art museums not only preserve the past, they shape the future. “I am also drawn to the fact that museums are not just repositories of human knowledge and achievement; they must become the catalysts of future knowledge and achievement, too. In so doing, the relevance of the Milwaukee Art Museum has never been greater.” —Tyler Friedman
Milwaukee Art Museum Marcelle Polednik (BOTH COURTESY OF MAM) SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE •
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FALL ARTS GUIDE
THEATER
Russian Transport
CONTINUING
Jan. 19-Feb. 11, 2018
Scrooge in Rouge
Black Pearl Sings
januarycalendar
IN TANDEM THEATRE
Through Jan. 7, 2018
Murder for Two
MILWAUKEE REPERTORY THEATER (STACKNER)
Through Jan. 14, 2018
opening Waitress
MILWAUKEE REPERTORY THEATER (STACKNER)
Jan. 19-March 18, 2018
Dr. Seuss’s The Cat in the Hat (family friendly)
FIRST STAGE (FIRST STEPS SERIES)
Jan. 21-Feb. 25, 2018
Metamorphosis
THEATER GIGANTE— KENILWORTH 508 THEATRE
MARCUS CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS (BROADWAY SERIES)
Jan. 25-28, 2018
George Orwell’s Animal Farm
SOUTH MILWAUKEE PERFORMING ARTS CENTER
Jan. 2-7, 2018
2017
RENAISSANCE THEATERWORKS
MILWAUKEE REPERTORY THEATER (POWERHOUSE)
Jan. 9-Feb. 11, 2018
The Graduate
SUNSET PLAYHOUSE (AFTER SUNSET STUDIO)
Jan. 11-14, 2018
Talk Radio
BAY PLAYERS
Jan. 12-19, 2018
Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike
RACINE THEATRE GUILD
Jan. 12-28, 2018
The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane (family friendly) FIRST STAGE
Jan. 12-Feb. 11, 2018
A Year with Frog & Toad (student production) MARQUETTE THEATRE
Jan. 14-27, 2018
Room Service
SUNSET PLAYHOUSE
Jan. 18-Feb. 3, 2018
Vitaly: An Evening of Wonders Jan. 26, 2018
The Secret of Sherlock Holmes MILWAUKEE ENTERTAINMENT GROUP
Jan. 26-Feb. 10, 2018
2018 Snowdance 10 Minute Comedy Festival OVER OUR HEAD PLAYERS
Jan. 26-Feb. 25, 2018
“Elton John: Rocket Man” SUNSET PLAYHOUSE (MUSICAL MAINSTAGE)
Jan. 29-30, 2018
MUSIC “Edo De Waart Conducts American Masters”
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Jan. 12-13, 2018
Leslie Odom Jr.
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Jan. 19, 2018
Nineteen Thirteen
SHARON LYNNE WILSON CENTER FOR THE ARTS
Jan. 19, 2018
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SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE
Milwaukee Children’s Choir’s “Afternoon at the Opera” SHATTUCK AUDITORIUM, CARROLL UNIVERSITY
Jan. 20, 2018
“American Classics”
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Jan. 20-21, 2018
“Beethoven’s Emperor Concerto” MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Jan. 26-27, 2018
Venus and Adonis/ Dido and Aeneas FLORENTINE OPERA
Jan. 26-Feb. 4, 2018
Fine Arts Quartet: Farewell Concert
FESTIVAL CITY SYMPHONY
Pabst Theater Jan. 28, 2018
The Firebird (family friendly)
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Jan. 28, 2018
VISUAL ART CONTINUING
Anthony Hernandez
MILWAUKEE ART MUSEUM
Through Jan. 1, 2018
most famous transvestite, who survived the Nazi and Communist regimes, to be honored by
Through Jan. 7, 2018
Germany after the wall came down. Directed by
“Sorehead Hill: Jesse Howard”
surprising and provocative weave of history, sex
Kralj and Anderson, performed by Michael Stebbins, Charlotte’s tale, like her life, is a and politics.
JOHN MICHAEL KOHLER ARTS CENTER
▼ NOVEMBER 17–19, 2017 ▼
“Main Street Gallery’s Blizzard of Art”
created & performed by David Gaines Kenilworth 508 Theatre
Through Jan. 7, 2018
7 (X1) SAMURAI
CEDARBURG CULTURAL CENTER
Mime artist David Gaines returns to the Gigante
Through Jan. 14, 2018
stage to transform the cinematic classic Seven Samurai into one rip-roaring evening
“The Little Show: CCC’s Annual Juried Exhibit”
of live physical theater. Winner of “Best Solo Performance” in D.C.
CEDARBURG CULTURAL CENTER Artistic Directors ISABELLE KRALJ and MARK ANDERSON
MUSEUM OF WISCONSIN ART
Through Jan. 14, 2018
“Gerit Grimm’s Fairytales: In a Time Neither Now nor Then” MUSEUM OF WISCONSIN ART
Through Jan. 14, 2018
“Mythologies: Eugene Von Breunchenheim” JOHN MICHAEL KOHLER ART CENTER
Through Jan. 14, 2018
“James Rosenquist: F-111 (South, West, North, East), 1974”
HAGGERTY MUSEUM OF ART AT MARQUETTE UNIVERSITY
Through Jan. 18, 2018
“Kettle Moraine Fine Arts Guild Holiday Show”
“The World Turned Upside Down: Apocalyptic Imagery in England, 1750-1850”
Through Jan. 2, 2018
Through Jan. 18, 2018
SCHAUER ARTS & ACTIVITIES CENTER
the true story of Charlotte Von Mahlsdorf, Berlin’s
MUSEUM OF WISCONSIN ART
“Dean Meeker: Myths and Masquerades”
“Saints and Heroes”
Winner of the 2004 Tony Award for Best Play, this is
“2017 MOWA Members’ Show”
Concord Chamber Orchestra Jan. 28, 2018
written by Doug Wright Kenilworth 508 Theatre
Through Jan. 6, 2018
Through Jan. 14, 2018
NORTHSHORE CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
I AM MY OWN WIFE
RACINE ART MUSEUM
UWM PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS
Jan. 27-28, 2018
▼ SEPTEMBER 28 – OCTOBER 7, 2017 ▼
“75 at 75: Significant Works from RAM’s Collection”
HAGGERTY MUSEUM OF ART AT MARQUETTE UNIVERSITY
SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALLARTS GUIDE •
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TICKETS/INFO WWW.THEATREGIGANTE.ORG
“Rick Shaefer: The Refugee Trilogy”
HAGGERTY MUSEUM OF ART AT MARQUETTE UNIVERSITY
Through Jan. 18, 2018
“Back to School”
“Perspectives: The Chair”
OPENING
Through Jan. 28, 2017
Through March 3, 2018
“Courtney Goldbach Photography”
VILLA TERRACE DECORATIVE ARTS MUSEUM
“Roger Smith Drawings and Watercolors”
“Variations on a Theme: Vessels from RAM’s Collection”
VILLA TERRACE DECORATIVE ARTS MUSEUM
Through Jan. 28, 2018
RACINE ART MUSEUM
Through Jan. 21, 2018
WAUKESHA CIVIC THEATRE
KEEPING THE ARTS ALIVE IN WAUKESHA
264 W. Main St. Waukesha, WI 262-547-0708 www.waukeshacivictheatre.org
“Small Gifts from Big Donors—Part 3”
MILWAUKEE INSTITUTE OF ART AND DESIGN
“Clandestine Possessions— new collaborative work by James Pederson and Mariah Klemens” & “Family Time —paintings by James Pederson and Jackson Hunt” Through April 15, 2018
RACINE ART MUSEUM
Through Feb. 4, 2018
“Here We Make Our Home: Cultural Arts Curriculum & Student Group Exhibition” LATINO ARTS
“Karen Johnson Boyd: Unpacking Her Clay Collection” RACINE ART MUSEUM
Through July 27, 2018
Through Feb. 25, 2018
UPCOMING FALL SEASON
SCHAUER ARTS & ACTIVITIES CENTER
Jan. 6-Feb. 19, 2018
“Humanly Possible: The Empathy Exhibition” MILWAUKEE INSTITUTE OF ART AND DESIGN
Jan. 12-March 10, 2018
“The Mechanics of Animation: The J. J. Sedelmaier Collection” GROHMANN MUSEUM
Jan. 19-April 29, 2018
Michelle Angela Ortiz (lecture)
UWM PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS (ARTISTS NOW! GUEST LECTURE SERIES)
Jan. 31, 2018
SEPT. 15 TO OCT. 1
OCT. 27 TO NOV. 12
2017 • 2018 SEASON
DEC. 1 TO DEC. 17
; Across Borders ; Across Time ; … Historically informed,
Oct 21, 2017
|
5:00
Nov 11, 2017
|
5:00
Cappella Pratensis
La Poème Harmonique
Missa Lutherana: The Beginnings of Lutheran Church Music
Danza! Spanish Dances in 17th-Century France
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Dec 9 | 5:00 Dec 10, 2017 | 3:00
The Boston Camerata with SHARQ Arabic Music Ensemble A Mediterranean Christmas
SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE
period instrument performances of Medieval, Renaissance, and early Baroque music performed in landmark Milwaukee venues
EARLYMUSICNOW.ORG 414.225.3113
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SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE
Museum of Wisconsin Art For decades, West Bend’s Museum of Wisconsin Art (MOWA) occupied a modest dwelling for its unique collection. In 2013, it moved to a new facility: a compact, wedge-shaped structure situated on a triangular plot along the Milwaukee River designed by Milwaukee’s James Shields of HGA Architects. Executive Director Laurie Winters believes that MOWA’s smaller scale encourages experiments. “We really like trying new things, and at the top of that list is our groundbreaking membership strategy, which has proven to be very successful,” she says. “Even more important is reducing or eliminating barriers. Museums can be expensive places, so wherever we can, we want to make it affordable or free.” To that end, MOWA offers a large number of programs for all ages, including a wide variety of artist talks. “When we think about our master classes for adults and kids, we consider what [we can offer] that gives people an opportunity to engage in a different way,” Winters continues. “It can be everything from tie-dye to furniture re-upholstery to doll making.” For MOWA, being situated in West Bend—or in any one place—is not enough. “The other thing we’re doing is thinking of the museum as extended—having tentacles into different areas of the state,” Winters explains. We do a lot in Downtown Milwaukee, including MOWA on the Lake, and we did a pop-up exhibition at the Pfister Hotel. I think we’ll be doing more of that kind of thing, taking people to places where they might not have been before.” —Kat Kneevers
Museum of Wisconsin Art Laurie Winters SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE •
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SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE
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SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE
Racine Art Museum The Racine Art Museum boasts the nation’s largest and most significant collection of contemporary craft. This specialty marks RAM as a decidedly 21st-century institution since, not so long ago, such a focus would have been inconceivable for a “serious” art museum. “Museums in the 21st century are breaking down the hierarchies that dictated collections in the 19th and 20th centuries,” explains Bruce Pepich, RAM’s executive director and curator of collections, “There used to be the view that painting is the ‘best’ of the arts while works on paper are less important, and decorative arts are exhibited in the basement, if at all. RAM leads with decorative arts and works on paper—usually regarded as ‘poor stepchildren’ by most museums.” RAM marshals its collection to satisfy the public’s growing curiosity about the folkways of yesteryear. “The museum thrives on adventurous displays that unite different arts from the same time period— opening a window into the past and giving viewers a taste of what it was like to live in the world of these artists and collectors,” Pepich says, making reference to RAM’s collection of 1930s art from the WPA’s (Works Progress Administration) Federal Art Project. “Interestingly, as our world becomes more technologically oriented, there is a growing interest in hand-wrought work, like knitting and ceramics,” he continues. “Since RAM has the nation’s largest collection of contemporary crafts, we’re in a good position to exhibit these works.” Pepich also notes changes in the ways art museums advertise in the 21st century. “Because of concerns about copyright issues, we used to prohibit photography in the galleries. Now, we actively encourage people to take pictures and to share them on social media. Museums are recognizing that this is one of the best ways to promote themselves and the artists they represent.” —Tyler Friedman
Racoine Art Museum Bruce Pepich (BY CAMELA LANGENDORF) SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE ’17 •
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directory
ACACIA THEATRE COMPANY
414-744-5995 acaciatheatre.com
ALCHEMIST THEATRE
414-426-4169 thealchemisttheatre.com
ALL IN PRODUCTIONS
allin-mke.com
BAY PLAYERS
414-299-9040 thebayplayers.com
CARTHAGE COLLEGE
DANCEWORKS PERFORMANCE COMPANY
262-551-8500 carthage.edu
CATEY OTT DANCE COLLECTIVE
917-324-9320 cateyott.com
CEDARBURG CULTURAL CENTER
414-277-8480 danceworksmke.org
DANCE REVOLUTION MILWAUKEE
414-939-3761 dancerevolutionmke.com
DEAD MAN’S CARNIVAL
262-375-3676 cedarburgculturalcenter.org
414-364-4796
BLACK ARTS MKE
CEDARBURG PERFORMING ARTS CENTER
414-225-3113 earlymusicnow.org
EARLY MUSIC NOW
414-270-4494 marcuscenter.org/residents/ black-arts-mke
262-376-6161 cedarburgpac.com
BOULEVARD THEATRE
CHANT CLAIR CHAMBER CHOIR
414-276-7435 ghwisconsin.org
CHARLES ALLIS ART MUSEUM
262-255-8372 fallspatioplayers.com
414-744-5757 boulevardtheatre.com
FALL ARTS GUIDE
DANCECIRCUS
414-277-8151 dancecircus.org
BEL CANTO CHORUS
414-481-8801 belcanto.org
BRONZEVILLE ARTS ENSEMBLE
414-290-5378 bronzevilleartsensemble.org
BUNNY GUMBO THEATRE COMPANY
414-630-1748 bunnygumbo.com
CABARET MILWAUKEE
414-902-3895
CADANCE COLLECTIVE
cadancecollective.com
CARDINAL STRITCH UNIVERSITY
2017
CARROLL PLAYERS
262-524-7302 carrollplayers.weebly.com
414-410-4000 stritch.edu
chantclair.org
414-278-8295 charlesallis.org
COMEDYSPORTZ MILWAUKEE
414-272-8888 cszmke.com
COMPANY OF STRANGERS
ENSEMBLE MUSICAL OFFERING
FALLS PATIO PLAYERS
FESTIVAL CITY SYMPHONY
414-365-8861 festivalcitysymphony.org
FINE ARTS QUARTET
414-229-4308 uwm.edu/arts/events
FIRST STAGE
434-221-7498 thecompanyofstrangerstheater.com
414-267-2929 firststage.org
COOPERATIVE PERFORMANCE
FLORENTINE OPERA COMPANY
414-324-0037 cooperformke.com
414-291-5700 florentineopera.org
FRANKLY MUSIC
414-940-8770 franklymusic.org
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SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE
GREENDALE COMMUNITY THEATRE
LYNDEN SCULPTURE GARDEN
MILWAUKEE INSTITUTE OF ART & DESIGN (MIAD)
414-817-7600 greendaletheatre.org
414-446-8794 lyndensculpturegarden.org
414-847-3200 miad.edu
GROHMANN MUSEUM
MARCUS CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS
MILWAUKEE METROPOLITAN VOICES
414-277-2300 msoe.edu/museum
HAGGERTY MUSEUM OF ART
414-273-7121 marcuscenter.org
414-778-1940 milwaukeemetrovoices.org
MARQUETTE THEATRE
MILWAUKEE MUSAIK
414-288-1669 marquette.edu/haggerty
414-288-7504 marquette.edu/theatre
414-881-9900 milwaukeemusaik.org
HYPERLOCAL MKE
MASTER SINGERS OF MILWAUKEE
MILWAUKEE OPERA THEATRE
hyperlocalmke.com
IN TANDEM THEATRE
414-271-1371 intandemtheatre.org
IRISH CULTURAL AND HERITAGE CENTER
414-345-8800
JEWISH MUSEUM MILWAUKEE
414-390-5730 jewishmuseummilwaukee.org
JOHN MICHAEL KOHLER ARTS CENTER
920-458-6144 jmkac.org
KACM THEATRICAL PRODUCTIONS
414-221-9332 kacmtheatrical.weebly.com
KETTLE MORAINE SYMPHONY
262-334-3469 kmsymphony.org
KO-THI DANCE COMPANY
414-273-0676 ko-thi.org
LATINO ARTS
414-384-3100 latinoartsinc.org
LIGHTS! CAMERA! SOUL!
414-499-6366
LUMINOUS THEATRE
888-744-2226 mastersingersofmilwaukee.org
917-684-0512 milwaukeeoperatheatre.org
MEMORIES DINNER THEATER
MILWAUKEE PUBLIC THEATRE
262-284-6850 memoriesballroom.com
414-347-1685 milwaukeepublictheatre.org
MILWAUKEE ART MUSEUM
MILWAUKEE REPERTORY THEATER
414-224-3200 mam.org
414-224-9490 milwaukeerep.com
MILWAUKEE BALLET
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
414-902-2103 milwaukeeballet.org
MILWAUKEE CHAMBER THEATRE
OCONOMOWOC ARTS CENTER
262-560-3179 oasd.k12.wi.us
OFF THE WALL THEATRE
414-491-9088 redlineartmke.org
OPTIMIST THEATRE
RENAISSANCE THEATERWORKS
262-498-5777 optimisttheatre.org
OUTSKIRTS THEATRE COMPANY
414-367-6484 outskirtstheatre.org
OVER OUR HEAD PLAYERS
262-632-6802 overourheadplayers.org
PHILOMUSICA QUARTET
262-227-6693 philomusicaquartet.com
PLEIN AIR SHOREWOOD
414-534-6287 pleinairshorewood.com
SHARON LYNNE WILSON CENTER FOR THE ARTS
262-781-9520 wilson-center.com
SKYLIGHT MUSIC THEATRE
414-291-7800 skylightmusictheatre.org
414-271-0711 presentmusic.org
MILWAUKEE THEATRE
PROMETHEUS TRIO
SOUTH MILWAUKEE PERFORMING ARTS CENTER
MILWAUKEE YOUTH SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
QUASIMONDO MILWAUKEE PHYSICAL THEATRE
414-221-7040 milwaukeechildrenschoir.org
414-267-2950 myso.org
MILWAUKEE COMEDY
MILWAUKEE YOUTH THEATRE
414-423-9760 mfbrass.org
262-670-0560 schauercenter.org
414-291-6010 mso.org
MILWAUKEE CHILDREN’S CHOIR
MILWAUKEE FESTIVAL BRASS
SCHAUER ARTS & ACTIVITIES CENTER
Soulstice Theatre 414-481-2800 soulsticetheatre.org
414-276-5760 wcmusic.org
414-388-9104 milwaukeeentertainmentgroup.com
414-291-7800 r-t-w.com
PRESENT MUSIC
800-745-3000 milwaukeetheatre.com
MILWAUKEE ENTERTAINMENT GROUP
REDLINE MILWAUKEE
414-484-8874 offthewalltheatre.com
414-291-7800 milwaukeechambertheatre.com
milwaukeecomedy.com
REAL TIME
414-277-8480 ext. 6025 andreaburkholder.com/ upcoming
414-766-5049 southmilwaukeepac.org
SOUTHWESTERN SUBURBAN SYMPHONY
414-702-0392 thequasimondo.com
414-427-9428 swssymphony.org
RACINE ART MUSEUM
SPLINTER GROUP THEATER
414-390-3900 milwaukeeyouththeatre.org
262-638-8300 ramart.org
MUSEUM OF WISCONSIN ART
RACINE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
414-935-2207 splinter-group.org
SUEMO: A DANCE EXPERIENCE
262-334-9638 wisconsinart.org
262-636-9285 racinesymphony.org
suemodance.com
NEXT ACT THEATRE
RACINE THEATRE GUILD/ RACINE CHILDREN’S THEATRE
414-803-3984 summitplayerstheatre.com
414-278-0765 nextact.org
luminoustheatre.com
262-633-4218 racinetheatre.org
SUMMIT PLAYERS
SUNSET PLAYHOUSE
262-782-4430 sunsetplayhouse.com SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE •
4 9
WORLD-CLASS FUN ! ®
M W
THEATRE GIGANTE
Donald and Donna Baumgartner present
414-961-6119 theatregigante.org
Franz Lehar’s
THE
ERRY
SUN. FRI.
Oct 20 7:30 Oct 22 2:30
IDOW
PM
OR VISIT
32 OPERA TODAY
WWW.FLORENTINEOPERA.ORG
414-254-2553 voicesfoundrep.com
UW-PARKSIDE THEATRE DEPARTMENT
262-595-2564 uwp.edu
8/31/17 4:05 PM
414-229-4200 uwm.edu/arts/art-and-design
UW-MILWAUKEE PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS: DANCE DEPARTMENT
414-229-2571 uwm.edu/arts/dance
UW-MILWAUKEE PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS: MUSIC DEPARTMENT
414-229-5162 uwm.edu/arts/music
UW-MILWAUKEE PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS: THEATRE DEPARTMENT
414-229-3913 uwm.edu/arts/theatre
Five Museums. One Destination.
UW-MILWAUKEE UNION ART GALLERY
Enjoy unique arts and culture museums located within walking distance of each other on the historic East Side. Charles Allis Art Museum Jewish Museum Milwaukee Museum of Wisconsin Art at Saint John’s On The Lake North Point Lighthouse Villa Terrace Decorative Arts Museum
414-229-6310 unionartgallery.uwm.edu
UW-WASHINGTON COUNTY
•
VOICES FOUND REPERTORY
WALKER’S POINT CENTER FOR THE ARTS
414-672-2787 wpca-milwaukee.org
WAUKESHA CHORAL UNION
414-372-4255 choralunion.org
WAUKESHA CIVIC THEATRE
262-547-0708 waukeshacivictheatre.org
WESTPAC
262-789-6200 nbexcellence.org
WILD SPACE DANCE COMPANY
414-271-0307 wildspacedance.org
WINDFALL THEATRE
414-332-3963 windfalltheatre.com
WISCONSIN CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC
414-276-5760 wcmusic.org
WISCONSIN PHILHARMONIC
262-547-1858 wisphil.org
WOODLAND PATTERN BOOK CENTER
262-335-5200 washington.uwc.edu/events/finearts. html
414-263-5001 woodlandpattern.org
UW-WHITEWATER YOUNG AUDITORIUM
262-636-9177 ramart.org
262-472-2222 uww.edu/youngauditorium
milwaukeemuseummile.org 5 0
VILLA TERRACE DECORATIVE ARTS MUSEUM
TRINITY ACADEMY OF IRISH DANCE
UW-MILWAUKEE PECK SCHOOL OF THE ARTS: ART & DESIGN DEPARTMENT
Florentine1sixthSqAdMerryWidow-IN PROGRESS.indd 1
414-207-4879 villageplayhouse.org
414-271-3656 villaterracemuseum.org
877-326-2328 trinityirishdance.com
Use offer code ‘SHEPHERD’ and save 20%
VILLAGE PLAYHOUSE OF WAUWATOSA
THEATRICAL TENDENCIES
414-541-6240 theatricaltendencies.com
PM
CALL 1800
THEATER RED
theaterred.com
SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE
WUSTUM MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS
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SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE •
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Three major exhibition galleries under one incredible wing-topped roof. See the work of renowned Wisconsin architect Frank Lloyd Wright, Los Angeles street photographer Anthony Hernandez, and Paris-based, twentieth-century modern artists this season at the Museum.
Discover what you could see today at mam.org.
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SHEPHERD EXPRESS FALL ARTS GUIDE