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Arts & Entertainment News

Emanuel Community Center to host six-week photography class

The Emanuel Community Center will be hosting a six-part digital photography class this summer that will focus on lighting, composition and technical controls of digital cameras in a way to help those participating develop their own artistic touch. The class will be instructed by David Rosenthal who is the founder and director of Prairie, Inc. and an adjunct instructor of Fine Arts at the University of Cincinnati.

The six-week long class will take place at the Emanuel Community Center (map), but will also take participants on several outings to Music Hall, Findlay Market, the Gateway Quarter and Washington Park in order to introduce the architectural, social and cultural assets of historic Over-the-Rhine.

The class will run from Tuesday, June 22 through Tuesday, August 3 and will take place from 6:30pm to 8pm. Registration costs $120, with only 15 available slots, and can be made by contacting Jenny Mendelson at (513) 241-2563 or eccinfo@emanuelcenter.org.

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Landor exhibit brings retail back to its roots

Leading brand development and strategy firm Landor has something new in the shop windows of their Shillitos department storefront space. Walking down Race Street, one encounters mannequins dressed in lavish colors, materials and textures, each manifesting a different brand the company represents. These artful displays are an homage to an incredibly talented fashion designer and illustrator: Anne Wainscott.

Anne Wainscott was Cincinnati’s fashion guru for nearly five decades. As a fashion illustrator, she set the pace of the local trends for the Cincinnati Enquirer, as well as, department stores like Shillito’s. Fashion illustrating was essential to the newspaper medium before the use of photography gained popularity. Wainscott is an artist whose attention to detail and linework is exquisite. She created thousands of drawings showcasing the latest and greatest in fashion looks for every trend setter in the Tri-State, and her work was featured not only in the Enquirer, but the Times Star, Post and other trade journals. The creative team at Landor recognized the beauty of Anne’s work and had the unique opportunity to reunite a former fashionista’s work in the very space it was created.

“Inspired By Anne” is Landor’s newest exhibit concept that encompasses the lobby space of their Shillitos Place office, inviting the public to come and experience the work of Anne Wainscott. Mary Zalla, managing director of Landor’s Cincinnati and Chicago offices, was initially inspired by one of Anne’s works while visiting a friend in the Covington area. After learning that the artist of the piece was local, Zalla was determined to connect her team to Ms. Wainscott, knowing it would inspire and jumpstart a new wave of creative thinking at Landor.

“At Landor, creativity is the engine and inspiration is the fuel that keeps us going,” Zalla explained.  “The entire Landor team jumped in and really became inspired through creating this exhibit. We pulled our various brand teams, and had them choose one of Anne’s works to get inspired by, and then put it into context through the lens of their brand.”

Accompanied by Steve McGowan, Mara McCormick and the rest of the crew, Zalla strove to create an exhibit for the public that would showcase Wainscott’s work through the lens of Wainscott’s passions. Through learning about the artist, a garden party theme was decided, inspired by Anne’s love of pink, flowers, garden, gilding, black and white floors, and linework. The result is a transformed lobby space with horticultured mannequins, living walls, and a soft, beautiful background to the work of Anne Wainscott.

“We really took an ‘Anthropologie’ store style approach to designing the interior, by implementing as many handcrafted details as possible,” McGowan explained. “All of the various disciplines at Landor got involved: graphic, environments and new media all invested in this endeavor.”

The entire concept was conceived and executed in less than six weeks, in order to coincide with the first-ever Cincinnati Fashion Week. The opening reception on April 21 was a tremendous hit, and Anne herself, at age 93, was the belle of the ball.  Passersby can stop, admire and be challenged by the various displays in the storefront windows, but all are invited to come into the space and have a look around.

“This exhibit is absolutely open to the public and has been well received by the community. We wanted to reconnect our retail heritage, inspire our employees, engage the community, and project our brand,” Zalla said. “I think all of these things have been accomplished with Anne’s work.”

Inspired By Anne runs through the end of July. A new concept will be unveiled August 1st, but until then, guests are encouraged to stop in and explore during Landor’s office (map) hours, which are 9am to 5pm Monday through Friday. For those not able to make it down during the work day, there will be one more evening event before the end of the exhibit, connecting the fashion theme to the non-profit Dress for Success. More details to come at a later date.

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Arts & Entertainment News

Cincinnati Museum Center to develop exchange program with Kenyan museum

The Cincinnati Museum Center has been awarded $150,000 through Museum & Community Collaboration Abroad (MCCA) that will support a cultural exchange program with the National Museums of Kenya Lamu Museums in eastern Africa.

The National Museums of Kenya was established in 1910 by the then East Africa & Uganda Natural History Society that set out to preserve artifacts of the area’s colonial settlers and naturalists. Over time the organization has experienced a wide variety of changes, which most recently was sparked by their “Museum in Change” program funding in part by the European Union. This program has led the organization on a mission to open itself up and become a “custodian of heritage” for the area while representing five key values of being authentic, reliable, unifying, caring and authoritative.

“This announcement is great news for the Cincinnati Museum Center,” U.S. Representative Steve Driehaus (D-OH) said in a press release. “The Museum Center is one of our community’s greatest assets, and an important part of our local heritage and history. This award will allow the Museum Center to share that heritage across cultures, while bringing a broader understanding of other cultures into our community.”

The $150,000 grant was awarded by MCCA which is administered by the American Association of Museums (AAM) and funded by the Bureau of Educational & Cultural Affairs of the U.S. Department of State. The funding is reportedly scheduled to continue through 2011.

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Arts & Entertainment News

‘Nancy James Sings Big Band Jazz’ at the Carnegie – 5/13

Vocalist Colleen Sharp, comedian Michael Flannery and performer Nancy James will join the Madcap Puppets and the Sound Body Jazz Orchestra at the Carnegie Visual & Performing Arts Center on Thursday, May 13 at 7:30pm for “an eclectic evening of music, humor and entertainment.”

The concert will be headlined by Nancy James who will entertain the audience with her vocal jazz standards such as “Don’t Get Around Much Anymore” and “My Funny Valentine.” James is an Emmy Award winner, and has been on the Cincinnati entertainment and music circuit for more than 30 years.

Organizers note that the third annual Carnegie in Concert series “strives to break the mold of chamber music offerings from yesteryear; and challenges established programming norms by blending traditional string quartets, wind ensembles and solo piano performances with gospel, jazz, musical theatre, Dixieland and other musical styles.”

‘Nancy James Sings Big Band Jazz’ is the final event of the six-part Carnegie in Concert series. Tickets range from $15 to $18 and can be purchased online or by calling (859) 957-1940. You can also purchase tickets in person at the Carnegie Visual & Performing Arts Center (map) Tuesday through Friday, from 12pm to 5pm.

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Arts & Entertainment News

UrbanCincy Visual Showcase Wrap Up

Allister Sears, Jake Mecklenborg and Jeremy Mosher gathered various pieces of their video and photography work highlighting Cincinnati’s unique cityscape this past Friday, April 30 at the first-ever UrbanCincy Visual Showcase. The temporary exhibit drew around 100 or so people throughout the Final Friday Gallery Hop, and guests were treated to the work of these local artists.

Outside of the exhibit, Cafe de Wheels fed the masses along Vine Street. The buzz throughout Over-the-Rhine was palpable. If you were not able to make it out this past Friday, enjoy these photos from the event courtesy of 5chw4r7z. UrbanCincy would also like to thank Urban Sites for allowing us to use the commercial space along Vine Street for the gallery exhibit.