Wednesday, 17 April 2024

Arts & Life

Artists are invited to submit their original artwork to the 2014-2015 California Duck Stamp Art Contest. The California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) will accept submissions from April 25 through May 23.

The contest is open to U.S. residents who are 18 years of age or older as of February 19, 2014. Entrants need not reside in California.

The winning artwork will be reproduced on the 2014-2015 California Duck Stamp. The top submissions will also be showcased at the Pacific Flyway Decoy Association’s art show in July.

The artwork must depict the species selected by the California Fish and Game Commission, which for the 2014-2015 hunting season is the scaup (lesser or greater).

The design is to be in full color and in the medium (or combination of mediums) of the artist’s choosing, except that no photographic process, digital art, metallic paints or fluorescent paints may be used in the finished design.

Photographs, computer-generated art, art produced from a computer printer or other computer/mechanical output device (air brush method excepted) are not eligible to be entered into the contest and will be disqualified. The design must be the contestant’s original hand-drawn creation.

The entry design may not be copied or duplicated from previously published art, including photographs, or from images in any format published on the Internet.

All entries must be accompanied by a completed participation agreement and entry form. These forms and the official rules are available online at www.dfg.ca.gov/duckstamp .

Entries will be judged at a public event to be held in June. The judges’ panel, which will consist of experts in the fields of ornithology, conservation, and art and printing, will choose first-, second- and third-place winners and an honorable mention.

Since 1971, CDFW’s annual contest has attracted top wildlife artists from around the country. All proceeds generated from stamp sales go directly to waterfowl conservation projects throughout California. In past years, hunters were required to purchase and affix the stamp to their hunting license.

Now California has moved to an automated licensing system and hunters are no longer required to carry the physical stamps in the field (proof of purchase prints directly onto the license).

However, CDFW will still produce the stamps, which can be requested by interested individuals at www.dfg.ca.gov/licensing/collectorstamps/ .

tedkooserchair 

One of the founders of modernist poetry, Ezra Pound, advised poets and artists to “make it new.” I’ve never before seen a poem about helping a tree shake the snow from itself, and I like this one by Thomas Reiter, who lives in New Jersey.

Releasing a Tree

Softly pummeled overnight, the lower
limbs of our Norway spruce
flexed and the deepening snow held them.
Windless sunlight now, so I go out
wearing hip waders and carrying
not a fly rod but a garden hoe. I begin
worrying the snow for the holdfast
of a branch that’s so far down
a wren’s nest floats above it like a buoy.
I work the hoe, not chopping but cradling,
then pull straight up. A current of air
as the needles loft their burden
over my head. Those grace notes
of the snowfall, crystals giving off
copper, green, rose—watching them
I stumble over a branch, go down
and my gloves fill with snow. Ah, I find
my father here: I remember as a child
how flames touched my hand the time
I added wood to the stove in our ice-fishing
shanty, how he plunged that hand
through the hole into the river, teaching me
one kind of burning can ease another.
The branch bobs then tapers into place
and composes itself, looking
unchanged though all summer
it will bring up this day from underfoot.

American Life in Poetry is made possible by The Poetry Foundation ( www.poetryfoundation.org ), publisher of Poetry magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Poem copyright 2013 by Thomas Reiter, whose most recent book of poems is Catchment, Louisiana State Univ. Press, 2009. Poem reprinted from The Southern Review, Vol. 49, no. 1, by permission of Thomas Reiter and the publisher. Introduction copyright 2014 by The Poetry Foundation. The introduction's author, Ted Kooser, served as United States Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress from 2004-2006. They do not accept unsolicited manuscripts.

LUCERNE, Calif. – The Lucerne Alpine Senior Center, 3985 Country Club Drive, is hosting Open Mic Lucerne on Saturday, Feb. 22, from 6 to 11 p.m.

The event is usually every third Saturday of the month but this month it’s the fourth Saturday marking this fun rock and roll event.

Signed up performers are on stage after the house band FOGG starts out the evening with classic and heavy metal rock and roll. FOGG and other entertainers also wrap up the evening by 11 p.m.

Bands and individuals are already signing up so sign up early. Call 707-245-4612 or 707-274-8779 for your time or come and signups on site beginning at 5 p.m. Saturday night. Don’t miss this chance.

If you are a performer, this is a great venue to show off your talent. Music, comedy, mime, readings and any other activity that is family-oriented will be appreciated.

Room is available for dancing and relaxing. There is no charge for attendance or performance.

This is a child friendly event, so bring the whole family. For those wishing an inexpensive snack, food is available starting at $2 per plate.

All proceeds from the meal benefit the Lucerne Alpine Senior Center, a not-for-profit that serves Northshore senior populations with on site lunches, Meals on Wheels and advocacy.

For more information about services or OML, call Lucerne Alpine Senior Center at 707-274-8779.

KELSEYVILLE, Calif. – The March 2 Old Time Fiddlers Association's Fiddlers Jam session at the Ely Stage Stop and Country Museum has been canceled.

Organizers said inclement weather is the cause of the cancellation.

The next jam session will take place on Sunday, April 6.

Weather permitting, fiddlers will meet in the Ely barn to perform their Americana music.

Visit www.elystagestop.com or www.lakecountyhistory.org , check out the stage stop on Facebook at www.facebook.com/elystagestop or call the museum at 707-533-9990.

WINTER’S TALE (Rated PG-13)

February is the time of year for flowers, sentimental greeting cards and the Russell Stover heart-shaped box of chocolates. On top of that, Hollywood often gift wraps a romantic love story almost perfect for the occasion.

Well, that’s not the case for “Winter’s Tale,” a sappy romance tale that stretches credibility to the breaking point and tosses in a mix of supernatural mumbo-jumbo and good versus evil battles that may easily confuse or confound an audience primed for traditional fare.

The film marks the directorial debut of Academy Award-winning screenwriter Akiva Goldman (“A Beautiful Mind”). Aside from the scenery, there’s nothing really beautiful about this exercise into a fantasy world beyond any sort of tangible credibility.

Set in New York City, the story spans more than a century, starting with the fateful day in 1895 that a baby is set adrift on a model boat in the harbor outside Manhattan, as his prospective immigrant parents are forced from Ellis Island to return to their country of origin.

Flash forward to 1916, the orphan child is now an adult, in this case Colin Farrell’s Peter Lake, who matured on the streets of Brooklyn as a member of the Short Tails gang, under the tutelage of vicious crime lord Pearly Soames (Russell Crowe, bearing horrible facial scars).

A master thief who wants out of the business, Peter has been marked for a violent death by his one-time mentor. Ambushed by Pearly and his gang of black-suited goons, Peter makes an escape on a beautiful white steed, a mythical Pegasus.

The mysterious white stallion, acting as a guardian angel capable of taking flight, always appears at the right moment to whisk Peter away from impending danger. Yet, over a century’s time, Peter only calls his savior “Horse.”

When not busy repelling the brutal forces of Pearly’s henchmen, Peter can’t quite shake his thieving past, and so he breaks into the Victorian mansion of a newspaper magnate (William Hurt), when it appears the family is away.

Breaking into the home and finding the wall safe is easy. The hard part comes in encountering the unexpected presence of Beverly Penn (Jessica Brown Findlay), the lovely daughter left behind as she copes with a losing battle against consumption, which requires maintaining a low body temperature by frequent exposure to the cold.

After meeting Beverly, Peter loses all thought of his illegal craft, and soon falls madly in love with the liberated, eccentric and inscrutable free spirit. So this is where the love story kicks in, though it appears to be ill-fated due to Beverly’s short life expectancy.

As Beverly and Peter first get acquainted in the drawing room of the family estate, Beverly asks “what’s the best thing you’ve ever stolen?” Peter replies “I’m beginning to think I haven’t stolen it yet.”

I don’t know if this dialogue is contained in Mark Helprin’s acclaimed nearly 800-page paperback novel of the same title, but in the context of the chance encounter afforded a few minutes in a two-hour movie, it comes across as syrupy romantic hokum.

In any case, as the Pearly Soames gang bears down on Peter, the two lovebirds escape the city, courtesy of the white horse, to the Penn country estate on the Hudson River, where the love story continues to unfold.

Handy in many things mechanical, Peter slowly wins over Beverly’s family, particularly the distrustful patriarch, with his sincere love and care for the slowly dying beautiful redhead.

Meanwhile, back in Manhattan, Pearly visits Lucifer (Will Smith) in his underground bunker, mainly to seek permission to leave the city limits to hunt Peter. Absurdly, Lucifer flares his nostrils and bares sharp fangs. Wisely, Will Smith has no credits in this film.

Not so much luck for Colin Farrell, who often has the sheepish look of being trapped in this mystical nonsense. On another occasion, Peter asks “Is it possible to love someone so completely they simply can’t die?” Maybe so, in a movie that allows one to leap through time.

After Pearly and his gang get the better of Peter by tossing him from the Brooklyn Bridge, he later emerges in the present time, looking like a homeless guy in Central Park, drawing sketches of a redheaded girl on the pavement.

Here, he encounters journalist Virginia (Jennifer Connelly) and her little daughter (Ripley Sobo), who just might be the person he is meant to save. Don’t ask me how or why.

Oddly enough, Virginia works for the newspaper now run by Beverly’s youngest sibling, Willa (Eva Marie Saint), who most improbably remembers Peter from nearly a century earlier. If I am doing my math properly, I would think that Willa is well over 100 and even less likely to be running a publishing empire.

“Winter’s Tale” is mostly a puzzle. At times, it’s a love story and at other times, it’s Russell Crowe acting all fearlessly tough and brutal. The story believes in miracles but there’s not one to be had to rescue this supernatural soapy, sentimental tale.

Tim Riley writes film and television reviews for Lake County News.

tedkooserbarn 

We human beings think we’re pretty special when compared to the “lower” forms of life, but now and then nature puts us in our place. Here’s an untitled short poem by Jonathan Greene, who lives in the outer Bluegrass region of Kentucky.

Untitled

Honored when
the butterfly lights
on my shoulder.

Next stop:
a rotting log.

American Life in Poetry is made possible by The Poetry Foundation ( www.poetryfoundation.org ), publisher of Poetry magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Poem copyright 2001 by Jonathan Greene, whose most recent book of poems is Distillations and Siphonings, Broadstone Books, 2010. Poem reprinted from blink, September-October 2001, vol. 1, no. 2, by permission of Jonathan Greene and the publisher. Introduction copyright 2014 by The Poetry Foundation. The introduction's author, Ted Kooser, served as United States Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress from 2004-2006. They do not accept unsolicited manuscripts.

Upcoming Calendar

18Apr
04.18.2024 11:00 am - 3:00 pm
Earth Day celebration
20Apr
04.20.2024 10:00 am - 3:00 pm
Earth Day Celebration
Calpine Geothermal Visitor Center
20Apr
04.20.2024 8:00 pm - 10:00 pm
Boatique Wines Stand-up Comedy Night
25Apr
04.25.2024 1:30 pm - 7:30 pm
FireScape Mendocino workshop
27Apr
04.27.2024 10:00 am - 2:00 pm
Northshore Ready Fest
27Apr
04.27.2024 10:00 am - 2:00 pm
Prescription Drug Take Back Day
27Apr
04.27.2024 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Inaugural Team Trivia Challenge
5May
05.05.2024
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6May
05.06.2024 11:00 am - 4:00 pm
Senior Summit

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