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"breathtakingly
ambitious and splendidly inventive"
*SCROLL
DOWN FOR PRESS REVIEWS AND PREVIEWS! | |
THE
HEIST PROJECT
|
Inspired
by two true stories -- the largest unsolved
art theft in American history and the recent
closing of the 111 First Street arts center
in Jersey City, Art House Productions invites
you into
a "living art gallery," where reinvented works
by Rembrandt, Degas, Vermeer and more come
to life in a multimedia exploration of the
value we place on art and artists. |
 |
TICKETS
ON SALE NOW*
PERFORMANCES: November 4, 5, 10, 11, 12,
17, 18, 19
(all performance start at 8pm)
Tickets
$12 / $10 students and artists
For
tickets, please call toll free (866) 811-4111 or
visit www.theatermania.com
*Limited seating: advanced purchased tickets strongly
recommended
Victory
Hall Cultural Center
186 Grand St. Jersey City, NJ
(6 blocks from the Grove St. PATH)
Recommended
for ages 13+ (strong language)
Not accessible for those using wheelchairs or walkers,
unfortunately
STARRING: Fred Backus, Emily Beatty, Kathleen Brown, Ben Fine,
Carlo Fiorletta, Nadia Gan,
Lisa Garrabrant, Kevin Janaway, Alicia Kurzer, Leonardo
Paulino, Kathryn Pfau, Heather Rogers,
Marcella Smith, Shanti
Wesley
VISUAL ART: Sterling Ely, Maggie Ens, Edward
Fausty, Norm Francoeur, Rebecca Goyette,
Jesus Eusse Moreno, Jim Pustorino, Steven Singer,
Nyugen Smith
WRITTEN
BY: Steve Bloom, Melida Rodas Cora, Christine
Goodman, Jack Halpin, Kate Kaiser,
Bonnie Lykes, Kelly McAllister, Joe Del Priore,
Heather Rogers, William Shakespeare,
Trish Szymanski, Karin Williams
Music by David Amram
Jack Halpin, Director
Alexis Daloni, Stage Manager
Sean Brosnan, Lighting Design
Patrick Mirucki, A/V Production
Christine Goodman, Producing Artistic Director
Sponsored
by Get Out Hudson, Janam Tea, Harbor Wealth Management,
Pershing, ProArts,
World Wide Media and Chilltown Magazine.
*************************************************************************
|
nytheatre.com
review
Martin Denton · November 4, 2005
The
Heist Project begins with the audience being ushered into
a large open roomÂ-a portion, we're told,
of Isabella Stewart Gardner's museum. Though
Mrs. Gardner died in 1924, she's here with
us now, to guide us through our tour of
some of her treasured art objects. Following
her around the spaceÂ-abetted by some friendly
lights that helpfully shine brightly on
our next destinationÂ-we encounter some paintings:
a few Rembrandts, a Vermeer, a Manet, some
Degas, and a Shang Dynasty ku (or beaker)
over 2,000 years old.
What's
particularly distinctive about these artworks
is that they are represented here by original,
new works of artÂ-installations, reallyÂ-that
comment on or interpret the originals (see
the information above this review for the
names of the artists who contributed these
pieces); and incorporated within each of
these installations, the subjects of the
paintings come to life, offering their takes
on the works they're contained in: on the
nature of ephemera and memory, and of art
itself.
So
Rembrandt's A Lady and a Gentleman in Black
are seen squabbling about a theatrical event
that they've been collaborating on; the
anxious student in Vermeer's The Concert
frets about being able to transcend performance
to create art just for herself; and a writer
experiencing a metaphorical Storm on the
Sea of Galilee (after Rembrandt's painting,
here) tries to work through being blocked.
In one of my favorite sequences, a distracted
gentleman rises from bed pondering the whereabouts
of Degas's Program for an artistic soiree,
notingÂ-profoundly, I thoughtÂ-that just such
a souvenir is the only tangible evidence
we have of a performance, when all is said
and done: the only real "proof" that we
were actually there to witness it. And in
another choice vignette, Rembrandt's matchbook-sized
Self Portrait argues with its creator about
life, art, and the universe.
The
Chinese ku even says a few words, about
how under-appreciated it usually feels.
(Paintings get all the attention, it tells
us.)
After
our journey through Mrs. Gardner's collection
is complete, we are sent to a second area,
where we see a film about the demise of
a Jersey City landmark, 111 First Street,
a haven for contemporary artists of all
stripes, now torn down to make way for city
redevelopment. Again, the question of what
lingers in memory when art is experiencedÂ-and
createdÂ-comes to the fore.
Finally,
the evening wraps up with a re-enactmentÂ-extremely
well-staged by the Project's director, Jack
HalpinÂ-of the theft of the art objects we've
just spent time with. This actually happened,
in 1990; it remains an unsolved mystery.
(More here.)
The
linkage is clear: whoever stole Mrs. Gardner's
treasures is as culpable, in terms of denying
future generations the pleasures and joys
and opportunities that all great art provides,
as the grinch who stole 111 First Street.
The
Heist Project is breathtakingly ambitious
and splendidly inventive. All of the artists
involvedÂ-the visual artists who created
and designed the installations; the writers;
the actors; the filmmakersÂ-are to be commended
for engaging our imagination and intellect
with such acuity. Kudos to the young New
Jersey theatre company Art House Productions
and its Producing Artistic Director Christine
Goodman for dreaming this up and executing
it so excitingly.
I
will offer one piece of constructive commentary,
which is that I would have liked to be able
to spend more time with the art installations
on my own, at my own pace, as my random
curiosity led me around the "gallery"Â-as
it stands, it's hard to get close enough
to each of the installations and really
study them in detail. (This would probably
require (a) more physical room, and (b)
actors to continuously perform their roles
several times during the evening; I'm not
sure how feasible this idea is, but it might
be interesting to try out in any future
incarnation of this piece.)
That
thought notwithstanding, The Heist Project is a spectacular example of theatrical invention.
It augurs well for Art House, whose future
work I will eagerly await. It's just sad
that, after this cycle of performances is
over, this exquisite and genuinely innovative
piece of theatre will fade, as its subjects
would be the first to remind us, into the
fleeting wisp of memory. | |
Wander into the story of stolen works of
art
'The Heist Project' speaks to protect the
art world from thievery
Ahn
Behrens ·
November 10, 2005
How
often is art stolen from the public? Let
me count the ways - or better yet, allow
me to recommend "The Heist Project," a new
multimedia play by Art House Productions
at Victory Hall Cultural Center in Jersey
City through Nov. 19.
Forget
everything you know about conventional theatre
including the outdated idea that quality
productions only happen in Manhattan. Directed
by Jack Halpin and created by Christine
Goodman, "The Heist Project" features topnotch
performances, writing and visual arts by
some of Jersey City's most talented artists.
Ripped
from the headlines it draws powerful parallels
between two sad, but true stories - the
largest unsolved art theft in American history
at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in
Boston and the displacement of more than
150 artists who lived and worked at 111
First St. right in our city.
Like
a living, breathing art exhibition "The
Heist Project," which features music by
David Amram, is a thoroughly engaging, interactive
experience that takes you on a journey into
the mind of the artist. Your tour guide
for the evening is Isabella Stewart Gardner
(1840-1924) played with authority by Marcella
Smith, whose flawless performance contains
all the charm, infamy and humor this important
patron of the arts possessed.
You'll
visit the museum she built, modeled after
a 15th century Venetian palazzo, which opened
to the public in 1903 to share her world-class
art collection. You will find out that she
personally arranged each and every object
- mixing furniture, textiles and decorative
arts from different cultures and time periods
with paintings and sculptures by European
masters, stipulating in her wilthat nothing
in the museum could ever change.
Thirteen
works of art, valued at $500 million, are
featured in the play. Out of these works
personal stories are spun by artists in
various disciplines including a singer (Emily
Beatty) who stands beside Vermeer's "The
Concert" (1660) and doubts her capabilities;
a writer (Shanti Wesley) who compares writing
to Rembrandt's "The Storm of the Sea of
Galilee" (1633) and a painter (Kevin Janaway)
who pleads with the audience to Google Manet's
"Chez Tortoni" (1878-1880) to understand
its fate. On the night of March 18, 1990
thieves broke in the museum and stole these
artworks, leaving blank walls where they
once hung.
"If
there is no one left to remember," a dancer
pleads with his partner in another scenario,
"did it ever happen?"
"The
Heist Project" is about memory and documentation.
Check out the labels on the reproduction
of these famous artworks, they reveal extraordinary
information. You will note, for example,
Rembrandt's "Self-Portrait" (1634) is not
a print: It's an interpretation by Jersey
City artist Nyugen Smith, and discover Joe
Del Priore wrote portions of Rembrandt's
(Frederick Backus) videotaped dialogue.
Other standouts include the spoken word
performance by Kathryn Pfau, Nadia Gan and
Kathleen Brown whose voices overlap as they
stand in awe before Degas's "Le Sortie de
Pesage."
What does this have to do with 111 First
St.? Everything. You'll see artwork by Bex
Goyette, Norm Francoeur, Maggie Ens and
Ed Fausty - who lived and worked in the
historic building and bare witness to the
second act, which features a powerful film
about this legendary grass-roots art community
with poignant interviews with art stars
like Kelly Darr, Bill Rybak and Bill Rodwell.
"The
Heist Project" ends on a truly innovative
note putting the audience on stage and the
actors in the audience. You've got to go
to believe it! But more importantly this
must-see play is part of a much bigger picture.
It's about what's happening to the arts
in America. Art thieves come in many guises.
Stealing art from the public is criminal.
It must be stopped. "The Heist Project"
is a good start.
Got
a great escape? E-mail me: ahn.behrens@comcast.net
|
|
'Heist'
values art, recalls 111
By:
Martina Brendel,
The Jersey Journal Staff Writer
11/04/2005
When
Christine Goodman visited the Isabella Stewart
Gardner Museum in Boston in 1999, she was
startled to find several empty picture frames
where she had expected to see Vermeers and
Rembrandts. Nine years earlier, the museum
had fallen prey to one of the biggest heists
in history: Thieves made off with 13 paintings
- valued at over $500 million - ripped right
from their frames. Because Gardner's will
stipulated that nothing in the museum be altered
after her death, the frames remained as a
reminder of an unconscionable act. Advertisement
Goodman, of Jersey City, recalled the spectacle
in the Gardner Museum last year as the controversy
surrounding the expulsion of the artists from
the 111 First St. building in Downtown Jersey
City unfolded, and decided to juxtapose the
two stories in a play. "The Heist Project,"
presented by Art House Productions of Jersey
City, opens tonight at Victory Hall. The multimedia
play is laid out like an art exhibit and uses
the entire third floor of Victory Hall, not
just the stage. Its protagonists, moreover,
are the stolen paintings themselves, re-interpreted
into stage scenery by local artists, including
five 111 First St. artists, and animated by
nine actors. The play is a "living, breathing
art exhibit," said Goodman. "We're hoping
to give people a new way to look at theater
and to honor the history of the struggle of
the 111 artists and the struggle that is continuing
to go on over these priceless works of art."
©The
Jersey Journal 2005
| |
111
First St. makes its way into play!
'The Heist Project' opening
in JC
By: Diana Schwaeble,
Current Editor
10/13/2005
The
Heist Project is a new multi-media play opening
at Victory Hall Cultural Center, 186 Grand
St., Jersey City, on Friday, Nov. 4 at 8 p.m.
It is set up like an art gallery that the
audience moves through and then watches the
scenes unfold. The play is the convergence
of two true stories: the largest unsolved
art theft in American history, and the recent
displacement of artists from the 111 First
St. building in Jersey City. The innovative
play is an interpretation of those stories
of loss by visual and spoken word artists
and musicians.
The
idea
According
to Christine Goodman, the director of Art
House Productions, she got the idea in 1999
when she traveled to Boston for surgery. Between
trips to the hospital, she and her mother
went to the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
to look at some art.
"I
was surprised by the intimacy of the space,"
said Goodman. "Walking through the museum,
I felt as if I was peering into a hidden drawer
that held all of Ms. Gardner's most private
belongings."
When
Goodman reached the second floor, she was
struck by the array of huge, empty frames
hanging on the wall. Goodman found out that
15 years ago, two men came into the museum
after hours and stole over $500 million in
paintings including work by Rembrandt, Degas,
and Vermeer. Due to a stipulation made in
Gardner's will, nothing could be moved or
changed in the gallery after her death. Once
the 13 pieces were stolen, there was no way
to cover up the loss by hanging new art on
the walls.
Development
According
to Goodman, Art House realized that the idea
of loss resonated in Jersey City with the
displaced artists. After discussions with
other writers and artists, The Heist Project
began to take on a life of its own as they
built on interpretations of stolen work.
"The
pieces of art in The Heist Project are not
reproductions," said Goodman. "They are living,
breathing, reinventions of the original artworks
stolen from The Gardner Museum."
The
more they developed the project, the more
they realized that they couldn't perform a
traditional play with a stage and the audience
sitting in front of the actors.
The play
The
cast has 14 people who were directed By Jack
Halpin. The play, which runs 90 minutes, combines
theater, spoken word, visual art, music, and
video all weaved together. The talent involved
includes: Photographer Ed Fausty; sculptor
Steve Singer; creator and artistic director
Christine Goodman; composer David Amram; and
many more. Amram wrote the music for the piece
and has collaborated with legendary artists:
Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonious Monk, Jack Kerouac,
Arthur Miller, and many more. The musical
score blends the stories together into one
seamless work of imagination.
"We
have gotten so much love and encouragement
from the local arts community," said Goodman.
"The play is about honoring our collective
history. I feel it's important to remember
and celebrate what 111 [First St.] was, so
it can inform the future of art in Jersey
City."
And...
The
show dates are: Nov. 4, 5, 10, 11, 12, 17,
18, and 19 at 8 p.m. Tickets are $12 for the
general public and $10 for students and artists.
For more information please call: (201) 915-9911
or visit: www.arthouseproductions.org
©The
Hudson Reporter 2005 |
ABOUT THE PROJECT
Fifteen years ago, paintings by Rembrandt,
Degas, Vermeer and others were stolen from the Isabella
Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston, MA, leaving a
massive hole in the collection of one of the world's
foremost patrons of the arts. Although these works
are valued at over $500 million, they are considered
by many to be priceless. Due to stipulations in
Ms. Gardner's will, the museum could not be altered
after her death, leaving huge spaces of bare gallery
wall where the art once hung.
Right now, Jersey City, NJ, is experiencing
a similar sense of artistic loss. Due to struggles
over space and property development, artists who
once resided in the Powerhouse Arts District have
been forced to vacate their studios and homes. The
heartbeat and creative force of Jersey City lives
on, but hundreds of artists who once lived and worked
together do so separately now, and many have left
town by necessity. The arts community is rebuilding
with fervor, but there is no denying that Jersey
City was wounded terribly by this loss within the
Powerhouse Arts District.
In November 2005, Art House Productions
will present The Heist Project, an exciting, collaborative,
multimedia play exploring these two true stories.
The Heist Project is a "living art exhibit" where
modern interpretations of the stolen Gardner works
come to life with actual actors inside of the paintings
(dialogue to be created by area poets and writers).
Ultimately, The Heist Project is meant to be a reflection
of the value our society places on its art and artists.
The Heist Project will take place
in Victory Hall's 4,000 sq ft. third floor space.
The show will open on Friday, November 4, 2005 and
performances continue on Thursdays - Saturdays at
8pm. Performance schedule is as follows: November
4, 5, 10, 11, 12, 17, 18 and 19. VICTORY HALL is
at 186 Grand St. (at Marin Blvd.) in Jersey City
(do not use this as a mailing address). For more
information about Art House Productions, visit www.arthouseproductions.org. | |