Verse as water takes position on Tuesday

Central Lakes College announces that its next occasion Verse Like Water will take place at noon on Tuesday afternoon with irish poet P. D. Tuama.

The loose occasion will be transmitted in youtu. be/X9mbm03Bm5c.

Tuama is a theologian, mediator of the solution of clashes and 4 volumes of poetry including: “Daily Prayer with the Community of Corrymeela” published in 2017; “In the Shelter” in 2015; “Sorry for your problems” in 2013; and “Readings of the Books of Exile” in 2012, which was chosen for the prize of the first Polari ebook 2013.

His poems have been in Poetry Ireland Review, Academy of American Poets, Post Road, Cream City Review, Holden Village Voice, Proximity Magazine, On Being, Gutter, America and Seminary Ridge Review.

Tuama holds a bachelor’s degree in theology from the Pontifical College of Maynooth, a master’s degree in theology from Queen’s University Belfast and has been pursuing a PhD in Creative Practice theology at the University of Glasgow, exploring poetry, Irish and religion lately.

He’s in Belfast, Ireland.

The Crossing Arts Alliance presents its new exhibition “Young At Art”, an exhibition of student works.

“Young At Art,” an annual exhibition showing paintings by local students, is presented at the Brainerd Art Gallery downtown. The exhibition will be open from 2 to 30 April.

“This lively display is color and exploration from floor to ceiling!”The art center said in a press release: “This networked painting exhibition offers young artists the ability to exhibit their paintings in a ‘real gallery’ and a special opportunity for art lovers to exhibit their paintings for our looming artists. “

Due to COVID-19 and regulations for meetings of giant organizations, there will be no public reception for this exhibition. The number of other people in construction will be limited to 18. Social distance rules will be in effect and a mask will be required at all. Times.

For those who wear a mask for fitness reasons, the art center will be enabled for special visits outside of business hours. Contact the Art Center at 218-833-0416 or info@crossingarts. org to make those configurations.

Crossing Arts will be open until 6 p. m. On the first day of the exhibition, on April 2, the art gallery will be open at its usual 10 a. m. 5 p. m. de Tuesday to Friday and 10 a. m. 2 p. m. Saturdays from April 10.

A video from the gallery will be posted on your online page and on social media pages for those who can’t see the exhibition in person.

La empresa Raboin

The exhibition is funded in component through the Minnesota electorate with grants from the Five Wings Arts Council and the Minnesota State Arts Board, thanks to the legislative credits of the Cultural Heritage and Arts Fund.

The Central Lakes Community Center for the Performing Arts presents “Show Off!”a low-pressure, low-pressure skill screen that will be placed on the level at 2 p. m. April 24 in the south garden of the Brainerd campus.

“Frimer!” he said. Organizer George Marsolek is the occasion for an opportunity to shine in a press release.

“There are many other people in the domain with talent. We rarely get to see them, so this screen gives them a level to show the display literally,” he said.

The director of the art center, Patrick Spradlin, highlighted the good luck of showing the organization’s talents on vacation as an engine of the “Show Off!

“We had a lot of local skill for the Christmas show, in Zoom and in a controlled way on our stage,” Spradlin said. “We broadcast the exhibition all over the world, literally, and we were very pleased with the response. smart weather is back, it’s time to take advantage of this skill and provide it to a live audience. “

The occasion has been requesting programs for a few weeks.

“We need to give one last chance to those who might be interested in participating,” Marsolek said.

The rules of the occasion are that a feature can last a maximum of five minutes; it can be of any taste or variety, such as dancing, singing, betting an instrument, juggling or doing magic; Artists under the age of 18 must have the signature of one of their parents on the registration form; and the organization’s capabilities are limited to 8 performers.

All COVID-related precautions will be in place for artists and members of the public. As those protocols would possibly replace in the coming weeks, participants are asked to check with Marsolek to find out which ones are in place. online page for up-to-date www. clcmn. edu.

“We need it to be very easy, very fun,” Marsolek said. “We will give awards to the most productive artists, based on the audience’s response, but that is not the explanation of the event. We just need other people, to laugh and share their talents. “

A panel of artists will make brief comments after each function, providing their views on the act. The audience will be the last to judge whose functionality will be crowned as “the best of the show”.

The occasion is open to all, all ages and all talents. Anyone interested in participating on the occasion of April 24 will need to submit a form of registration until April 7. Shapes must be obtained from Marsolek in george. marsolek@clcmn. edu.

In bad weather, the occasion would be postponed until May 1.

Dan Hegstad of Brainerd announced that of his book, “Next Steps: Tools to Move from Adaptation to Prosperity. “

The eBook is available in Amazon. com in the form of a Kindle eBook and audiobook.

Hegstad has been helping others heal and replace for more than 25 years through his Tai Chi exam and training and the stress control class “Tame the Stress Monster,” according to a press release. Hegstad watches how many other people are looking to replace him.

Excerpt from the book: “Why is it so hard to replace?”Why are we struggling to replace when we know it’s smart for us?We can replace, why not us?

“Some other people have lived a ‘life in the chimney’. Or maybe it was a disaster that burned without a flame for years. But what happens when the chimney goes out, where to go?What’s next?”

Hegstad said Carl Jung laid the groundwork for his e-book when he said, “I am what happened to me. I’m the one who chose to convert. Well, how do you do that?”

This eBook is for others who have gone through life’s challenges, such as addictions, physical and intellectual fitness problems, divorce, abuse, a dark night of the soul and are now in a position to move on.

“Now we are at the most sensitive point of the pyramid of Maslow’s needs hierarchy. We are beyond food and shelter, beyond protection and even beyond friendships,” Hegstad said. “We are at the point of esteem and now we are in a position to take the next step towards the most sensitive of the pyramid: self-realization. “

Hegstad said that if other people are in favor of a fluffy self-help e-book, it’s not like that. He said this eBook is genuine and that other people will be challenged.

Hegstad will retire soon after 24 years as station manager at Lakeland Public Broadcasting Service in Brainerd. He will continue to paint as a cameraman with his company, Easy Street Productions, and as a speaker.

LITTLE FALLS – Great River Arts announces that its next exhibition “50 Years of Creativity” at its main gallery in Little Falls will begin Wednesday, March 31st and continue through the end of April.

The exhibition will feature the participation of Richard Lozier, a guy who has traveled and painted around the world and has now rented an apartment in Little Falls. This is the painter’s latest art exhibition. The exhibition can be viewed during gallery opening hours from 11 a. m. 18 a. m h. De Wednesday to Friday and 10 a. m. to 2pm. Saturday Face mask is required on site until additional notice.

Although Lozier refused a giant reception during COVID, it can be discovered on the site during the month, connecting with visitors navigating his work. Lozier’s paintings will be installed using the gallery walls as a visual chronology commemorating the work of his life.

Over more than 50 years, Lozier’s artistic ability has allowed him to travel to the country in search of inspiration for his next painting, according to a statement. His works can be noted in the collections of celebrities such as Joan Kroc, Debbie Allen, Norm Nixon, Steve Garvey, Kevin McReynolds, Alan Trammell, Ms. Paul Newman and Robert Mitchum.

Born in Harvard, Massachusetts, Lozier began his career in 1968 when he enrolled in a mail ordering school called “The Famous Art School” in Westport, Connecticut. This art school was created through artists who added Norman Rockwell. Meanwhile, Lozier worked on sidewalks three years later, enrolling at the New England School of Art.

Although Lozier began his next paintings in Rockport, Massachusetts, he also traveled through New Hampshire and along the Maine coast. The arrival of winter moved Lozier’s travels along Florida’s east coast to the British Virgin Islands; then travel to the western border of Florida, across the southern border of the United States and Mexico to Idaho, California and Hawaii. Lozier stopped at each location for at least a month to paint, sell art and sometimes part-time paintings along the way.

Author Mary Casanova has her third old Rainy Lake drama titled “WATERFALL”, through the University of Minnesota Press.

Casanova, who lives in Rainier, is the one with 39 books, ranging from picture books to old fiction, adding “Hush, Hush Forest,” “Frozen,” and “Ice-Out. ” His numerous awards come with a “Notable” from the American Library Association, Aesop Honors from the American Folklore Society, a Parent’s Choice Gold Award, a Booklist Editor’s Choice, and two Minnesota Book Awards.

According to the book’s description, Casanova brings readers back to pristine and rugged northern Minnesota. In 1922, women won the right to vote and Trinity Baird is an important one. But at 21, and after nearly two years at Oak Hills Asylum, she returns to her family’s island summer space with her shattered self-confidence and brain burned with disturbing memories. Her parents are oblivious to what they have done to her and look at her daughter in search of the slightest sign of defiance. “Respectable” young man from his parents to resume his independent life reading art and portraying in Paris. He never needs to go back to Oak Hills, where they “treat” hysterical and unconventional young men.

For more information about the book, upress. umn. edu/book-division/books/waterfall.

Next cultural Thursday central lakes college will focus on Ethiopian culture.

The loose webinar online will take place at noon on April 8. Participants must register in advance to access this loose webinar at tinyurl. com/6m24amzv.

Guest speaker Haile Tegegne spent her first years training in Northeast Africa. It will include percentage elements of Ethiopian culture, adding language, religion, food, sports, dance, music and more. Participants will have the opportunity to ask questions.

Tegegne was born in Ethiopia and lived in Kenya for five years. He speaks Amárico and Swahili fluently. Tegegne holds a bachelor’s degree in communication studies with a major in political science and recently earned her master’s degree in public leadership and non-profit control from Hamline University.

“My acceptance of learning new cultures has allowed me to continue my studies and join teams of other people in the workplace,” Tegegne said in a press release.

Tegegne has been working as an urban administrative intern in southern Minnesota lately.

For more information on this occasion or the Cultural Thursday series, contact the Tracey Kloeckl-Jiménez occasion coordinator at 218-855-8183.

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