DANCE - FINE ARTS - MUSIC - THEATER - WRITING

ARTBITS by Richard B. Harper


VOLUME 7 * * All Arts News On the Web * * March 27, 2003

STUFF YOU SHOULDN'T MISS

      ArtBits always features a calendar of the goings on of Franklin County artists. Check out these events around Franklin County. Each issue includes the entire text of our weekly newspaper column.


      Stop in for live music and more at the Fairfax Music Sessions at the Foothills Bakery in Fairfax most Saturday afternoons, at the Kept Writer in St Albans most Friday and Saturday evenings, at the Bayside in St Albans Town most Sunday afternoons, and the Cambridge CoffeeHouses at 7 p.m. on the first and third Wednesday of every month.
     These gatherings bring new opportunities, gossip, "show-and-tell" and occasional workshops. The booked performances and acoustic Open Mike Nights feature music, readings, and more from the best new artists in Vermont.


MAPLE FESTIVAL TO MOVE

      Snake bitten by wintry weather in some past years, and worried about the long stretch of cold and ice, the 37th Annual Vermont Maple Festival will move all exhibits, shows, and entertainment to the Bahamas this year.
      "We were able to make an excellent arrangement with our sister city of St. Albans on the island of Rum Cay in the Bahamas," said St. Albans (Vermont) City Manager Brian Searles. "And there are several excursion flights and a cruise arranged to help Vermonters travel there."
      The changing weather pattern may relate directly to the Festival according to meteorologist Scott Willard of the Fairbanks Museum in St Johnsbury. "We've noticed that the final winter storm has crept later in the season each year to follow the Maple Festival," he said. The Vermont Maple Festival in 1966 was held in the snows of February; last year, the parade suffered a mixed rain and snow downpour.
      "In past years, the Maple Festival has had to spread out to most of the public buildings in St. Albans," Maple Festival chair Jim Cameron said. "We are very fortunate that our sister city in the Bahamas has a major convention center which can house all the indoor activities under one roof."
      The Vermont Maple Festival [April 25-27, 2003, in St. Albans, Rum Cay, Bahamas] is one of the major family events of the Spring. In addition to maple exhibits and demonstrations, the family entertainment includes sugarhouse tours, pony rides, a Civil War reenactment, dog agility demonstrations, face painting, continuous free shows at the Main Street stage, a full size carnival, and friendly competitions between Vermont and Bahamian sugarmakers.
      Family entertainment takes center stage. The Festival will have two outdoor music stages playing continuous music from the 10 a.m. opening bell until midnight each of the three days. Franklin County musicians will be joined by their Bahamian counterparts on the stages. The native rake n' scrape, soca and junkanoo sounds of Bahamian music leans heavily toward the Caribbean for calypso, steel pan, soca and carnival music. Smokey 007 and Blind Blake and Grammy winners the Baha Men will take the stage to perform medleys of Bahamian soca, junkanoo and old fashioned Vermont and French-Canadian fiddling with the Maple Festival Fiddlers. Other performers will include the BFA Chamber Singers and the BFA Players, Borderline, The Croppies, Jim LaClair, the Joe Levesque Big Band, the Maple Festival Cabaret, Yankee Wild and many more.
      The AAC Art Exhibit in the Prince William Ballroom at the Royal Convention Center will feature Eric Bataille, Connie Clay-Bickel, Natalie LaRocque-Bouchard, Bob Brodeur, Alan DeMont, Josh Derner, April Henderson, David Juaire, Beth Maginn, Patrick Murphy, Kate Ritz, Meredith Roberts, and Wayne Tarr, all Franklin County artists with exceptional oil and watercolor paintings, fine art photography, and sculpture, alongside 15 Bahamian artists such as Amos Ferguson, Maxwell Taylor, and Stan Burnside. Mr. Ferguson's work is on permanent display at the Pompey Museum in Nassau.
      The biggest event of the weekend will still be the 37th annual Maple Festival Parade. Starting at 1 p.m. on Sunday, the parade may stretch out over the entire length of Rum Cay with over 120 bands, unique floats, clowns, horses and tractors, and the ever-popular pooper scooper.
      The Commonwealth of the Bahamas begins 60 miles east of Florida and extends southeastward to within 50 miles of Cuba. There are about 700 islands and more than 2,000 cays, islets, and smaller rocks. Large Caribbean pine and maple forests thrive on several of the islands. Rum Cay is located about 180 miles southeast of Nassau.
      It is not particularly well known that the Bahamas are a competitor in maple syrup production. "With an average winter temperature of 21 degrees C [70 degrees F], we have had to create new techniques for sugaring," a spokesman for Agricultural Minister the Honourable Alfred Gray, MP, said. Bahamian maple producers crush succulent new green leaves in a modified apple press. It is reported that it takes over 100 bushels of leaves to make a single gallon of maple syrup. "We also have an excellent bobsled team," the spokesman added.
      Exhibitors have until Tuesday, April 1, to reserve space on the Celtic Warrior, a Bahamian registered coastal cargo ship that will onload all the floats, sound systems, food trailers, vendor exhibits, art exhibits, craft booths, and other cargo at the Port of Burlington (not at the St Albans Bay docks as announced earlier). The port change was made because St. Albans Bay is still ice bound. Transport is prepaid through a Travel and Tourism grant received by the Maple Festival.
      "We have reserved 68 containers to house all of the Maple exhibits, concession stands, fine art, crafts, antiques, and band equipment," Mr. Cameron said.
      There are still tickets available on the two excursion flights and the special Maple Festival cruise to the Bahamas. Call the Maple Festival office (802-524-5800) or click here for booking information.


Editor's notes:
(1) Check the date. Rest assured that it is (almost) April 1, there is little or no chance that the 37th Vermont Maple Festival scheduled for April 25-27 in St. Albans, Vermont, will move to any other St. Albans, let alone an imaginary one in the Bahamas. April Fool.
(2) Happy 25th Anniversary on Tuesday, Sweetie. No Foolin'.


STUFF YOU SHOULDN'T MISS

ST ALBANS--Today is the final day for the annual Franklin Central Supervisory Union District Art Show with the work of students from City School, Town School, Fairfield, and BFA-St. Albans, all in St. Albans City Hall. The exhibit features two and three dimensional works including graveyard drawings, comic strip postcard booklets, Iliad masks, tempera self-portraits, collographs, value paintings, three-dimensional "underwater" paintings, clay castles, dragons, clocks, and other clay characters, sports sculptures and stories, and work from the new BFA sculpture class.
      The show will be open today from noon ­ 5 p.m.

ENOSBURG FALLS--The annual meeting of the Friends of the Opera House at Enosburg Falls will be held at the Opera House tonight at 7 p.m. The agenda includes election of officers, volunteer committees and a discussion of past and future programming. New faces will be welcomed with open arms.

ST ALBANS--The Kept Writer presents Sharing The Stage on Friday evening at 7 p.m. Popular songwriters Joshua Givens, Jedd Kettler, Jonah Salzman, and Zachary Ward will trade songs in a round robin performance.

RICHFORD--The A. A. Brown Library Introductory Course in Oil Painting continues Saturday morning, from 9 a.m. to noon with instruction by artist Kay Maynard of North Troy. There will be a $10.00 charge per class. Call the library (848-3313) for info and a list of materials.


FROM THE ARTS COUNCIL

      A personal note: I paused before hitting send for this April Fool's column but just as the ordinary business of living went on after September 11, art and entertainment and humor can help sustain us now as they have in every prior war; this report is part of our everyday life.
      Our hearts and prayers and condolences go to our armed forces and to their families.


CLICK HERE: ART SITE OF THE WEEK

      Wondering who the Baha Men are? If you watched any sports last year, their winning song, Who Let the Dogs Out, was barking in your head. The song brings the traditional Junkanoo music with its goatskin drums and cowbells together with contemporary hip-hop and Latin rhythms. Teams in the U.S. adopted the Baha Men version to rouse the fans. Click here for another look.


FRANKLIN COUNTY BOOKSHELF

      ArtBits features a quick weekly peek at the bookshelf or night stand of the folks you know in and around Franklin County. That popular feature has a page of its own at the Franklin County Bookshelf here on the AAC site.


SUPPORT LIVE ARTS IN YOUR TOWN!


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      This article was originally published in the St Albans Messenger and other traditional print media. It is Copyright © 2003 by Richard B. Harper. All rights reserved. Archival material is provided as-is. Links are not necessarily maintained (if a link in this article fails, try Google.com or your favorite search engine).
      Thanks to recent misuse of copyright material on the Internet by individuals and archival firms alike, we emphasize that your rights to this article are limited to viewing it and printing it for personal use only. You must receive explicit permission from the All Arts Council and the author before reprinting or redistributing this article in any medium.