Showing posts with label Highland Square Festival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Highland Square Festival. Show all posts

Saturday, August 25, 2007

A Highland Square Celebration

It was a grand day to spend in and around Highland Square today. Don't let those dark clouds rolling over the brand new branch library's tower fool you, on this day the community came together to celebrate its unique character and its diverse population.

Art on the Square showcases the many fine talents that live in this neighborhood. Many of Akron's outstanding writers, musicians, visual artists, architects, photographers, film-makers, dancers and theatre artists live there. It is a community so unlike many of our city's neighborhoods, in that you see so many people out and about, walking here and there, waving and nodding to each other as they pass. If only Kenmore Blvd could regain that kind of vibe. Maybe when our new branch library becomes a reality, we'll have a chance.

Here's a photo of the Mayor speaking at the grand opening of the new branch library. There was a ribbon cutting ceremony and many of our local public servants were on hand to say a few words. Each person struck the same theme: how this project could not have been accomplished without the cooperation and collaboration of the library, the city and county governments, and the Albrecht family who have donated land for a reading garden. Afterwards, the crowd flowed into the brand new space, for ice cream and folk music, as well as to check out armfuls of books and videos.

Highland Square is a project not yet finished, with a gaping wound where the essential component for neighborhood sustainability should be -- there is no grocery store. I have been told by a resident that some of the senior citizens in Highland Square are buying their groceries at Walgreen's. Do we really think it is a good thing for our eldest citizens to exist on highly processed food on sale at a local drugstore?

There are some other problem spots on West Market St in Highland Square. The demise of the always popular Dodie's was not due to lack of neighborhood support, but rather bad management. The empty new store fronts on the other side of the street next to the new Chipotle need to find new tenants. Are they empty because of neighborhood turmoil or general economic malaise?

And then there is the fate of the Highland Theatre. I admit that at first I was skeptical about the value of saving this old neighborhood movie house. And then I listened to the the folks who are working to save it and thought their ideas were very creative and that the old theatre could indeed provide a valuable space for local artists and citizens. Akron only need look over at Kent to find a positive re-use of an old neighborhood movie theatre. Transformed into The Kent Stage, it is now home to the finest in acoustic music as well as home of the New World Children's Theatre, sponsored by Kent's Standing Rock Cultural Center.

Akron has done a great job in supporting the training and development of young artists, with its Lock 3 program every summer. The Highland Theatre could be a space where practicing artists of all types share their work and their knowledge with the up and coming generations. It could provide the community with a space that can host independent films as well as family movies and much more.

A Highland Square citizen told me that when plans for the new community learning center were on display for the public, the city wanted to tear down the theatre for parking and in return, the community could use the school's cafetorium because they'd have a projector installed there.

Cafetoriums started sprouting up all over Ohio during the Republican era of spend-the-least-money-possible on children and their schools. They are abominations that seem to be a clever consolidation of space usage. Sometimes, the "stage" is simply a large rectangular gap between a gym on one side and a cafeteria on the other. Sometimes it is one space used for all three purposes. Inevitably, your child's voice will not be heard on such a stage with its vast echoing volume-sucking space in which the audience must uncomfortably sit on folding chairs.

Cafetoriums may have fixed lighting that cannot be used for theatrical purposes, so expensive lighting instruments must be purchased. One techie told me that the grease from all those school lunches is drawn up and coats the lighting instruments. Doesn't sound good for the lights or the kids' nutritional needs being met!

For the residents of Highland Square, a cafetorium is not what they want or need. The Highland has a liquor license, and a community learning center does not. Adult works of art may not be always appropriate for a "learning center." The Highland Square Neighborhood Association is an active, thriving group of people who work hard to make their neighborhood a model urban community. I admire their efforts and envy their achievements.

It pains me to see the conflict between them and the city's administration. I hope both sides listened to the words spoken today at the library and renew their commitment to work together to solve the tough problems. I don't know if the legal threats and efforts to promote a maverick Democrat for mayor are the wisest choices of tactics. More visibility of the real problems caused by no grocery store is a better one. Getting the senior citizens out on the sidewalk with signs was an excellent tactic. It reminds the public that every delay affects the most needy of the neighborhood's residents.

Meanwhile the mayor and council -- please think about what makes urban life special and unique and keeps us city dwellers here rather than heading out to the suburbs. The commitment to neighborhood as exemplified by the folks in Highland Square is something I hope proves infectious and spreads out to all the wards in the city.

Friday, August 24, 2007

Highland Square Festival Entertainment line up


Don't forget that tomorrow is 4 Sides of the Square Festival at Highland Square. Should it rain, the whole thing is moving to First Grace Church.

Here's an advance look at the entertainment schedule for Saturday at the Art in the Park side of the square

11:00 Kick Off Art in the Square 2007 w/ The Twoboudors
12:00 The Mickey’s
1:00 Zobapago!
Play "Funny Folk Tales from Around the World" On the grass by the drive way
1:30 Primitive Groove
2:00 Library Ceremony w/ the mayor at the library
3:00 House Popes
4:00 Play "Funny Folk Tales" at First Grace
4:30 Rachel Robert

My apologies for not keeping up this week. Back to school means lots of extras hours gearing up for the new year as well as being ready for Orientation, which happened yesterday. There's no air conditioning in our building which is uncomfortable for everybody. Let's hope the weather breaks before the start of school.

Thursday, August 02, 2007

Akron Earthworm Collective -- one side of the Square

I'm all for collective action and art, so I was very happy to find out about the Akron Earthworm Collective, now digging in to the cultural humus that is Highland Square. It is both place and state of mind, and you can find them at 16 S. Highland Ave next to the old barbershop. They are open from 1 - 9 pm Monday through Friday, though that is not always possible.

According to their manifesto:

The Akron Earthworm is a newly formed autonomous space in Akron, Ohio run by volunteers who work collectively wherein creative people from all of the arts can meet, unite, share, and perform. It is a cooperative of diverse individuals providing a vaudeville stage for Akron and for touring artists from all over where musicians, painters, writers, performance artists, film makers and others can share, collaborate and flourish. The Akron Earthworm will also act as an infoshop, fanzine library and will build and house an extensive selection of radical literature, t-shirts and hard-to-find vinyl. Grassroots organizations are welcome to meet and organize here. The space is substance-free and no sexism, racism, ageism, homophobia or any other brain drool will be tolerated.

The space is small but filled with lots of passion, poetry and DIY spirit. Check out their web page here. And get ready for Wormfest 2007, coming August 25th in conjunction with three other major Highland Square events all happening on the same day at the same time:

Wormfest -- Radical music, art and thought
Art in the Square -- Highland Square artists, writers, performers and activists share their work.
Party on the Path -- Arts and entertainment at Grace United Church
Official Opening -- the new Highland Square Branch Library

More details as they come in, but until then, gaze upon this and mark it on your calendar:

Monday, August 28, 2006

An Akron Weekend

Transitioning out of summer back into school and the set-up seems to be designed to help us all get our acts together without too much stress. Students don't show up until Wednesday, so this is a three day week for them, and with Labor Day ahead we'll have a four day week following. So it's not until the third week of school that we must have worked up the stamina for five whole days in a row.

The weather is in transition as well. The temps are in the 70s this week with cooler nights and a hint of autumn. Lovely drizzling rain all day today. Nothing pell mell, and a nice misty hazy sort of atmosphere.

Saturday I headed to the Highland Sq Festival, delayed a week by weather. Lots of good art at affordable prices! Much better stuff than the Arts Expo. I bought two Jamie Gellner designer scarfs, each a masterpiece! Could not resist a John Sokol print of Samuel Beckett formed from words taken from Godot -- for only $20. I purchased a DVD documentary of PR Miller, The Grizzled Wizard of Waste Not Want Not. And ordered a cool Akron tee shirt. Ran into lots of folks -- it was all very fun and festive too!

By Sunday I was ready to spend a relaxing day at home. Music on, laundry going, picking up and sorting things that need to go to school, things that need to go to Goodwill and things that need to be put where they belong. As the objects go to their proper places, the path ahead starts to appear. "Lesson plans" -- an ugly term if there ever was one. More like creating a structure out of which various projects and entertainments will spring forth.

In between bouts of cleaning and sorting, I finished up "See Delphi and Die" by Lindsey Davis, another in the clever series of Roman mysteries featuring Marcus Didius Falco, an informer. This one is great fun! Falco and his wife set off to solve the mysterious deaths of two young women in Greece who happened to have booked from the same travel agency. So we get some wonderful "views" of Corinth, Olympia and Delphi and learn how those oracles worked their magic. Took a couple of hours to finish it and as the book ended so did my summer vacation mind-set.