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PRESS PHOTOS LATEST NEWS 07.13.2011
Un-Think It! (The Arts of The Flow) with Tom Hall and Mark Campbell
"Un-Think It! (The Arts of The Flow)" in Hanover, MA
Contact:
Ellen
McDonough
St. Mary’s
Parish Center
392 Hanover
St.
Hanover , MA
02339
phone:781-826-4303
fax:781-826-5203
Or
Lennie Peterson
(781) 738-1783
www.Lennie
Peterson.com
St. Mary’s
Parish Center,
Hanover, MA
presents: Un-Think It! (The Arts of The Flow)
Wednesday, July
27, 2011
7:15 pm- 8:30 pm
Free and open to
the public and includes refreshments
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
“Picasso
said ‘Art washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life.’ If that is
true, then Improvisation is my soap,” says artist and musician Lennie Peterson.
“Un-Think
It! (The Arts of The Flow)”, a
talk and live demonstration, showcases South Shore resident Lennie Peterson’s
passions for art, music and improvisation.
Peterson
uses his art and music as a metaphor to help people trust their instincts
more effectively. He believes that a person of any age and walk of life who
develops improvisational skills can experience a fuller and more spontaneous,
adventurous life.
This special event at St.
Mary’s Parish Center will feature Peterson creating a 6’ X 3’ portrait
of jazz legend Miles Davis in front of a live audience accompanied by the
improvised music of South Shore resident Mark Campbell and saxophonist Tom
Hall.
The program also intertwines
an informal, interactive and open discussion of the spontaneous creative
process. Peterson, Campbell and Hall use the metaphor of art and music to discuss
practical applications for improvisation and spontaneous creativity in school,
the workplace and in daily life.
Concluding the event
Peterson, who is a trombonist, will join Campbell and Hall to perform a
composition by Miles Davis.
Proceeds from voluntary
audience donations will go to St. Mary’s LIFE TEEN program, immersing teens in the life of the parish and, on a
larger scale, in the Church and providing teens with a Catholic Identity.
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Lennie Peterson has traveled
the world several times devoting his improvisational life to music, visual art
and Arts education and is a former professor at Berklee College of Music. His
artwork has been exhibited throughout the United States with several solo shows
including New York City and Harvard University. Peterson’s large composer
portraits have been purchased throughout the world including Japan, Spain and
Wales and are currently featured in a six month solo exhibition at the new
Boston Convention and Exhibition Center in Boston.
“The Big Picture,” his
nationally syndicated daily comic strip, appeared in more than 100 newspapers
and is now in re-runs featured on GoComics.com, the web site of Universal Press
Syndicate.
In addition, Peterson has written and illustrated nearly a dozen
books.
Mark Campbell is a
guitarist, composer, producer and recording artist creating and producing music
for the broadcasting and film industry. He is on the faculty at Massasoit
Community College and Quincy College and a guitar instructor. Mark is a
graduate of Berklee College of
Music. Campbell is founder and guitarist of the popular local band “Clutch
Grabwell” of which Peterson is trombonist. In the “Un-Think It!” events,
Campbell uses guitar technology and digital recording techniques to perform his
music.
Saxophonist Tom Hall is a
graduate of New England Conservatory. An accomplished musician, teacher and
author, Hall teaches at Brandeis University and travels extensively sharing his
improvisational skills and pedagogy to musicians and non-musicians alike.
He is the author of “Free
Improvisation, A Practical Guide”.
Peterson
compares the creative process of his original artwork to that of a jazz
musician.
“All
of my drawings and paintings are improvised. They are created spontaneously, just
trusting my instincts and going wherever my hand leads me, starting with only a
basic outline or framework. It is similar to a musician who is able to
improvise freely and spontaneously within a given form and framework of chord
structures.”
And,
for Peterson, that is where the metaphor, applied to all people, begins.
“There
is not one occupation, daily activity or human condition that does not call for
improvisational skills and the trusting of instincts,” he says. “Mark, Tom and
I simply use art and music as tools to get that point across.”
The 90 minute presentation
is for artists and non-artists of all ages and encourages audience
participation.
Refreshments
will be served after the program. Back |
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