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Top shows: at RAC and Mad Art Print E-mail
By Ivy Cooper, Special to the Beacon   
Last Updated ( Monday, 15 September 2008 )

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(Updated, 6 p.m., Aug. 5) Ivy Cooper calls "Screwed In" at RAC "a fantastic collection of stenciled, airbrushed, painted, printed, drawn and assembled art that's ... totally absorbing. (Detail from work by Chris Sabatino) Mad Art's "Jargon" 

 
Exposure 11 leaves you wanting to see more Print E-mail
By Ivy Cooper, special to the Beacon   
Last Updated ( Monday, 04 August 2008 )
snail100.jpgExposure 11 at UMSL’s Gallery 210 features St. Louis mainstays Andrew Millner and Olivia Lahs-Gonzales, plus the relative newcomer Snail Scott (a portion of his work is at right), in a spare, cohesive show that will leave you wanting to see more from each artist. (That, presumably, is how the Exposure series is supposed to work.)
 
Color this billboard green Print E-mail
By Robert Duffy, Beacon Editor   
Last Updated ( Friday, 01 August 2008 )

billboard100fragment.jpgKansas City artist Karen Kay is the winner in the Missouri-based Art the Vote competition, an effort to bring art and advertising media together to encourage voters to go to the polls in November and to vote.

 
Pulitzer Foundation will bring new lights to an old church Print E-mail
By Amanda King, Special to the Beacon   
Last Updated ( Thursday, 18 September 2008 )

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Come September, lights will burn brightly in Grand Center's Spring church. And you can be part of this art project, sponsored by the Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts, by donating that lamp that no longer goes with your new decor or the one that's been gathering dust in the basement.

 
St. Louis Art Museum shows the breadth and depth of modern German art Print E-mail
By Ivy Cooper, Special to the Beacon   
Last Updated ( Thursday, 24 July 2008 )
penck100selfportrait.jpgCritic Ivy Cooper says, "For all that The Immediate Touch tells us about St. Louis collectors and the amazing variety of work by German-speaking artists in this period, the show is mainly a curatorial tour de force." (Penck, Untitled (Self Portrait), from the show)
 
Josephine Baker honored with stamp Print E-mail
By Joy Resmovits, Beacon intern   
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 15 July 2008 )

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The Sheldon Gallery, which held the show  "Josephine Baker - Image and Icon" in 2006, will host a first-day-of-sale event at 2 p.m. July 15. The Postal Service's decision to honor Baker shows a marked change in government thinking from the time she was under suveillance in the '50s.

 
A brilliant bounty of bioluminescence Print E-mail
By Michael Jay, Special to the Beacon   
Last Updated ( Thursday, 10 July 2008 )
firefly100wiki.jpgThe lowly but lovely firefly rises to the level of art in a work of poetic beauty on the shores of the Missouri River in St. Charles. Foundry Art Centre hosted a gathering party and displayed the flashing creatures in arrangements before releasing them back into the night to work their magic. Update: See photos.
 
Sue Eisler's work transforms Print E-mail
By Ivy Cooper, Special to the Beacon   
Last Updated ( Friday, 27 June 2008 )

eisler100paint.jpgSee Sue Eisler's show at the Laumeier Sculpture Park and you will discover the transformation of materials, from paint cakes such as the one at right, to partnerless gloves that have been driven over to paper shoe templates left behind in a building she worked in years ago.

Detail from a photo by Mike Venso | Laumeier 

 
It's a Mad (magazine) world at the Artists' Guild Print E-mail
By Bill Smith, Beacon staff   
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 24 June 2008 )
madicon.jpgHere's everything you always wanted to know about the exhibit of Mad magazine art at the St. Louis Artists' Guild in Oak Knoll Park -- and that "Dale Smirdley" wasn't afraid to ask.
 
Haiku, photos and computer woes Print E-mail
By Photos by Tom Nagel, Beacon Staff   
Last Updated ( Sunday, 22 June 2008 )
openingcomputer.jpg"In Japan, they have replaced  the impersonal and unhelpful Microsoft error messages with Haiku poetry messages." When that message landed in our inbox, we had a good laugh and passed it on to Tom Nagel, a student at the University of Missouri and photo intern at the Beacon. Tom took the fun to a new level.
 
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Editors' Picks

  • Books
    • The demise of the book is greatly exaggerated. The phone book, dictionaries and encyclopedia are over. But life will go on for beautiful printing that provides words that transform. | James Gleick, New York Times

    • "To Kill a Mockingbird" is the selection for the upcoming St. Louis Big Read, which is organized by Washington University. Dozens of events, including a staging of the play at the Edison Theater, will take place throughout January and February 2009.

    • Author Michael Crichton dies at age 66: The creator of "Jurassic Park" and "Andromeda Strain" had been battling cancer, his family said. | New York Times

    • Roger Ebert: To Studs: With Love and Memories. | The Huffington Post

  • Theater/Dance
    • Ballet Eclectica’s “The Little Dancer Goes Around the World!” will be presented by the COCA Family Theatre Series for four shows at 7 p.m. Dec. 12, 11 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Dec. 13, and 1:30 Dec. 14 AT COCA, 524 Trinity Avenue. Tickets are $14 and $18 and are available through MetroTix and COCA Box Office (314-725-1834 x124).

    • Come to the Union Avenue Christian Church, 733 Union Avenue, from noon to 1 p.m. Dec. 10 as students from nine St. Louis Public Schools perform international dances. The program is sponsored by Springboard to Learning & Young Audiences of St. Louis.

    • The New Jewish Theater presents "The Last Seder" Dec. 3-21. Four daughters, each with a respective partner, have gathered to say goodbye to a loved who is already gone - patriarch Marvin who suffers from Alzheimer’s.

    • "9 Parts of Desire" opens Nov. 7 at the St. Louis Actors' Studio. The play runs through Nov. 23 (Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. Sundays at 2 p.m.) at The Gaslight Theater 358 N. Boyle Ave. For tickets, Ticketmaster.com or 314-421-4400.

  • Music
    • Come to the Touhill Center at UMSL from 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Dec. 3 for the third  “Warren Bellis Clarinet and Saxophone Festival,” a  series of clinics and performances. For info: 314-516-2263.

    • Jason Braun's project - Jason and the Beast - mixes hip hop with retelling classics from Homer to Shakespeare. Check out the work in an all-ages show at 8 p.m. Dec. 17 at the Focal Point in Mapelwood. $5 at the door.

    • The UMSL Community Chorus, University Singers, University Orchestra and Vocal Point will put on a holiday concert at 7:30 p.m. Dec. 9 at the Blanche M. Touhill Performing Arts Center. For information about the free concert call 314-516-5980 or go to www.umsl.edu/~umslmusic/ The concert will include "Christmas Oratorio," "Carol of the Bells," traditional carols, Trumpet Concerto by Felix Mendelssohn and "O Magnum Mysterium."                         

    • UMSL will present "Soul of the Season with Brian Owens and faculty and students from the Department of Music at UMSL at 7 p.m. Dec. 11 at the Blanche M. Touhill Performing Arts Center. Tickets are $5. For information, call 314-516-4949.  Proceeds will benefit the Office of Multicultural Relations at UMSL.

 
  • Neighborhoods
    • "Gorillas in Her Midst" is the topic of a lecture by Dr. Gladys Kalema-Zikusoka,  African conservationist, at the St. Louis Zoo on Dec. 9. Doors will open at the Living World building at 6:30 p.m., with the lecture starting at 7 p.m.  Reservations are encouraged 314-646-4771.

    • Alice S. Handelman, president of The Press Club of Metropolitan St. Louis,has been honored as a 25 year member of National Federation of Press Women.The recognition was presented in Idaho Falls, Idaho, at the annual nationalcommunications conference of NFPW. Handelman was community relations director at Jewish Center for Aged for 18 years.

    • Come to the Missouri Botanical Garden from 9 am. to 5 p,m. the Best of Missouri Market where you can find more than 120 artisans from throughout the state.

    • Come to the Sophia M. Sachs Butterfly House from 5:30-7 P.m. on Oct. 3 and 10 for OctoberOwl Outings. Reservations, which are required, can be made online or at 636-733-2339. The "owls" are owl butterflies, which get their name from the underside of their wings, which resemble a bright yellow owl eye surrounded by rich, chocolate-colored feathers. These creatures are also most active in the evening.

  • Visual Arts
    • Come to COCA, 524 Trinity Ave., from 6-8 p.m. Dec. 5 for the opening reception for Jill Evans Petzall: In-Different Light. The free exhibit continues through Jan. 18, 2009. For information, 314-725-6555.

    • Mark Douglas, Bob Reuter and Antje Umstaetter have their photography on view at the Gallery at the Regional Arts Commission until Dec. 21. For info, visit www.art-stl.com

    • Get Out the Vote - an installation of 22 posters - is on view now through 2008 in the Arthur and Helen Baer Visual Arts Galleries in the Centene Center for Arts and Education, 3547 Olive Street in Grand Center. The galleries are open Monday-Friday from 10 a.m.-4 p.m.

    • Too often elitism is linked with being snobbish and condescending when in fact for many people it is a commitment to quality in various, if not all parts, of our lives. The Atlantic reports on the affecting elitism of Phillippe de Montebello , soon to retire as director of one of the world's greatest museums, the Metropolitan in New York City.

  • Movies/TV
    • Project Runway: Bravo won't accept Heidi's "auf wiedersehen."   The Weinstein Co. sold the rights to the series to Lifetime, but NBC Universal sued, saying it had a right of first refusal (Bravo is owned by NBC.) A judge has issued a preliminary injunction preventing Lifetime from promoting or broadcasting "Runway." | The New York Times

    • "City of Lost Children"  La Cité des enfants perdus  plays at 8 p.m. Dec. 3 at Schlafly Bottleworks, 7260 Southwest Avenue, Maplewood, as part of the Webster Film Series. $4.

    • Eating St. Louis, hour-long program based on the book of the same title by Patricia Corrigan, will be broadcast at 7 p.m. Dec. 1 on KETC/Channel 9 . The show explores five aspects of food culture in the area, from farming to how St. Louisans like pizza prepared.

    • Co-writer of movie "Meet Me in St. Louis" dies at age 94: Irving Brecher was nominated for an Oscar for his work on the 1944 Judy Garland film. | Los Angeles Times

Firecracker Press

To read the story about the upcoming Community Cinema showing of "Helvetica," which will include a demonstration by Eric Woods and Matty Kleinberg of the Firecracker Press, click here

Voices

  • In the News

    What  do we make of an online publisher in Pasadena who hires reporters living in India to cover his community? It is apparently a business model that works. Beacon contributing editor Dick Weiss and McGraw Milhaven discuss this and one reporter's method of dealing with the buyout blues on the McGraw Show on KTRS-AM (550-AM). Click here to listen to the podcast.

  • Editorial Cartoons

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    Shopping and bailouts and Christmas wishes - it's all economy all the time. Check out the work of Marshall Ramsey, John Sherffius, Bruce Beattie and Gary Markstein.

  • In the News

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    Posted 12:10 p.m. Mon. Dec. 1 - The circumstances in this presidential election made it extremely difficult for any Republican to win. But political scientist Lana Stein points out that bashing opponents is becoming old had and people may well start to turn off or tune out those ads. (Illustration from a cartoon by Chris Britt.)

  • Beacon Columnists

    guns125nhoses.jpgPosted: 5 a.m. Wed. Nov. 26 - Columnist M.W. Guzy looks back on  the time the police department boxing coach asked him to join the team. Even though he declined, "reasoning that if training would minimize my chances of getting hit, staying out of the ring entirely should pretty much neutralize the threat," he still recommends supporting and attending the annual "Guns 'N Hoses" event, which supports the Backstoppers organization.

The Lens

  • sliff100poster.jpg

    Looking back at the St. Louis International Film Festival, this committed movie watcher says the vast majority of offerings were well done.

Giving Back

The Beacon wants to help you share the news about good deeds St. Louisans are doing. See our spotlight on those who are giving back.

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The Beacon features links to the latest work by the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.This Washington-based non-profit organization promotes in-depth international coverage of topics that have been under-reported, mis-reported - or not reported at all.

To see a list on our World news page, click here . The Pulitzer Center's founder is Jon Sawyer, former Washington Bureau chief of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

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Join the folks who have already found the Beacon on Facebook, the social networking site. See the most popular stories of the day, photos, videos and upcoming events. Visit the St. Louis Beacon page on Facebook and become a fan.

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Twitter is a "microblogging" service where users can provide short updates about what they are doing. stlbeacon is our official Twitter feed – check it out to find our featured stories and the news that matters.

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Mortgage foreclosures are at the heart of the current economic crisis. The Beacon and KETC/Channel 9 have been covering how mortgage problems affect St. Louis area residents.

Visit our special section to read coverage of these issues, watch Channel 9's stories and access resources to find help.

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What's this icon? It's the standard icon for RSS.

RSS gives you another option for reading the Beacon, in a way that may be more convenient for you. As explained below, you can use our RSS feed to get alerts about new Beacon content. The Beacon's main RSS feed is here.

For more about RSS, read this quick introduction or watch this video: RSS in simple English.