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May 8, 2025

Chestertown Spy

Nonpartisan and Education-based News for Chestertown

  • Home
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1A Arts Lead

Garfield calls for Playmakers 2025 counselors and interns

March 26, 2025 by Garfield Center Leave a Comment

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Playmakers, the Garfield Center for the Arts’ annual summer theatre youth education camp, is gearing up for its 2025 edition. The camp will once again be overseen by director Kaitlyn Wright, this year’s Kent County Teacher of the Year.

Every year, the camp is staffed with counselors and interns, many of whom were past participants in Playmakers. The main distinction between a counselor and intern position is that interns are participating to fulfill school community service hour requirements, while counselors earn a small paid stipend. The GCA may appoint anyone with theatre experience who is interested in the positions, including students, adults and retirees who have never attended or participated in Playmakers.

If you are interested in becoming a counselor or intern for Playmakers, you must be at least 16 years old to become an intern, while counselors must be at least 17 years old. To express your interest in either position, please send an email to the GCA Executive Director, Steven Arnold, at [email protected] and you will receive additional information and application requirements.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 1A Arts Lead

MassoniArt showcases collaborative Hostetler and Crocetta installation

March 26, 2025 by Spy Desk Leave a Comment

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What do you get when you combine Susan Hostetler’s sculpted birds, Jacqui Crocetta’s ocean paintings, and Carla Massoni’s commitment to showcasing the creative process? A collaborative installation that celebrates the fragility, beauty and interdependence of migratory birds and the ocean!

“After telling Carla about our idea for a collaborative installation, she immediately suggested we present the work at MassoniArt. We were thrilled for the opportunity to work with Carla! It’s unusual for commercial galleries to support experimental work, but Carla is committed to advocating for the protection of the natural world.” — Susan Hostetler and Jacqui Crocetta

This installation explores the profound connection between the ocean and migrating birds—a symbiotic relationship that underscores the delicate balance of our planet’s ecosystems.

Jacqui Crocetta’s socially engaged practice has aimed to bring attention to both the human condition as well as the environmental crisis, while celebrating resilience and the capacity for healing. “The mindset of interconnectedness is the foundation of my work.”

The ocean is vital to life on Earth, and migratory seabirds are essential to the health of the environment and marine ecosystems. The dynamic arrangement of Susan Hostetler’s sculpted birds and Jacqui’s ocean paintings aims to celebrate the fragility, beauty, and interdependence of migratory birds and the ocean, while advocating for their protection.

Collectors and artists are encouraged stop by on Friday, March 28,  for a peek at the installation process 11-4. The Artist Talk on Saturday, March 29, may be of particular interest to artists interested in learning more about the collaborative process of this exhibition.

During the exhibition we will be playing with the theme of ‘water and sky’ and will feature additional work that showcases this theme.

Hours during the exhibition are Thursday – Friday, 11am – 4pm, Saturday, 10am – 5 pm and Sunday 11-2. Private appointments may be scheduled at any time by contacting either Carla Massoni (410-708-4512) or Kate Ballantine (410-310-0796) in advance.

Crocetta + Hostetler

Between the Sky and Sea

Jacqui Crocetta & Susan Hostetler

March 29 – April 27, 2025

Installation – Friday, March 28

Open House and Artist Talk – Saturday, March 29

First Friday – Friday, April 4

 

Upcoming Exhibitions:

Marcy Dunn Ramsey – Annual Exhibition
May 2025

Marc Castelli – Summer Exhibition

June 2025

For additional information please visit www.massoniart.com.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 1A Arts Lead, 6 Arts Notes, Archives

Rembrandt Comes to America by Anke Van Wagenberg

March 22, 2025 by Anke Van Wagenberg Leave a Comment

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I recently attended the opening of the exhibition Rembrandt: Masterpieces in Black and White—Prints from the Rembrandt House Museum at the Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery in the United Kingdom, where it will be on view through June 1, 2025.

A fellow Dutchman, Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn (1606-1669) is widely regarded as one of the greatest artists of all time. Apart from his atmospheric paintings, he also produced more than 300 etchings. Ranging in scale and detail, these etchings exemplify Rembrandt’s mastery of print.

Rembrandt, known by his first name (like modern-day Madonna or Sting) was a master of innovation. As an artist, he constantly sought out new possibilities and new solutions for making art. This is evident not only from his paintings, but also from the more than three hundred etchings that he made in his career. Rembrandt: Masterpieces in Black and White—Prints from the Rembrandt House Museum presents the full range of Rembrandt’s etching output, alongside prints by select forerunners and contemporaries. It also demonstrates Rembrandt’s centuries-long impact on the field of printmaking through a select group of etchings by later nineteenth and twentieth-century artists.

A Dutch Baroque painter and printmaker, Rembrandt was one of the greatest storytellers in the history of art, possessing an exceptional ability to render people in their various moods and dramatic guises. Today he is widely regarded as one of the two most important printmakers in history, along with Albrecht Dürer. From his earliest etchings, Rembrandt created original compositions oriented towards the specific character of the medium. As a result, his prints range widely from large to small, and from summary sketches to laborious and elaborate works. He addressed an equally varied set of subjects, including Biblical stories, portraits, depictions of exaggerated or characteristic facial expressions called “tronies,” observations of everyday life, landscapes, nude model studies, and even sheets packed with small sketches.

Rembrandt’s printmaking style changed over his career, and he honed his style across a wide variety of subjects. Both his progress and the variety of his output will be traced in a number of thematic sections in this exhibition. These sections will cover everything from Rembrandt’s masterful skills as a visual narrator, his bold exploration of light and dark, and how he used self-portraits to fashion his own visual identity and explore the complexity of aging. The exhibition also includes select comparative works by Rembrandt’s forerunners and contemporaries, including his teacher Pieter Lastman and his pupils, Ferdinand Bol and Govert Flinck, which will contextualize his work and shed light on his specific innovations, such as his repeated experiments with etching, tonal effects, and the dramatic portrayal of his subjects.

The exhibition is accompanied by a free educational brochure developed by the AFA with an introduction by Epco Runia, Head of Collections at the Rembrandt House Museum, and with me as editor. Following Birmingham, UK, the exhibition will be on view at the Gibbes Museum in Charleston, SC (October 24, 2025 – January 11, 2026) and the Taft Museum of Art in Cincinnati, OH (February 7 – May 17, 2026).

Rembrandt: Masterpieces in Black and White—Prints from the Rembrandt House Museum is co-organized by the American Federation of Arts and the Rembrandt House Museum.

Anke Van Wagenberg, PhD, is Senior Curator & Head of International Collaborations at the American Federation of Arts in New York and lives in Talbot County.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 1A Arts Lead

KCA’s 2025 Resident Artists!

March 11, 2025 by Spy Desk Leave a Comment

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The Kent Cultural Alliance is excited to announce the first class of artists  2025 SFW Resident Artist Program.  Working under the theme of FOOD, and in partnership with several local food providers, these artists will explore relevant topics like food production, “farm to table”, food insecurity and more during their six-week stay with KCA.

Primary among the goals of the SFW Residency are community engagement and arts education.  KCA is excited to work again with Kent County Public Schools Fine Arts Faculty to create opportunities for students to engage with these visiting artists. There will also be several opportunities for local artists and the general public to meet and interact with the artists.

A “Meet the Artist” event will take place at KCA on Monday March 31, at 5:00 pm.  For a list of coming events related to each of the three residency sessions, as well as bios and links to visiting artists websites, please visit www.kentculture.org

Let’s meet the artists!

Sheba Legend has been creating media platforms since 2010. Her multi-award-winning work focuses on ongoing social challenges faced by underrepresented demographics. “The aim is for me to create media platforms for individuals rarely seen in mainstream media. Let them tell it like it is from their experience…not my own point of view” In 2012, Sheba initiated a non-profit media initiative MasculineUs Project. An ongoing media initiative. Through audio/visual/literary communications this media tool for the masses is available to counter ignorance, religious dogma, and hate crimes against these individuals by raising awareness, and educating societies about women who embrace their natural strength, (often referred to as masculinity) which is not exclusive to males. Her work has been included in international public exhibitions that reflect her commitment to human rights and the representation of marginalized communities.

 

 

Radu Leon In his process-based investigations of the art historical past, Radu Leon happened upon evidence leading him to ask: what in our nature moves us from the prosaic to the poetic? He has since shared his passion for art and knowledge with students in schools, universities, museums, and cultural institutions in Italy, Kenya, and the UK, offering free-admission workshops and lectures, and curating student exhibitions. He supports the Art programme at Kiwimbi Library in Busia, Kenya.Radu completed a doctorate in History of Art and Architecture in Venice, and specialized at Goldsmiths and EPF Lausanne. He led the creative course on Canaletto’s drawing techniques during the exhibition ‘Canaletto & Art of Venice’ at The Queen’s Gallery, Buckingham Palace. Tutoring research students at The King’s Foundation, he lectured in sustainable art practices and made visible the creative processes of masterful works in the collections at the British Museum, National Gallery London, and Windsor Castle.

 

 

Tory Tepp is a multi-disciplinary artist working at the intersection of land art, agriculture and community engagement. In 2009 Tory attained his MFA as part of the inaugural class of Suzanne Lacy’s Public Practice Program. Shortly after, he served as the driver and public representative for Mel Chin’s Fundred Dollar Bill Project, driving a vintage armored car 19,000 miles around the country to engage with over 100 schools, museums and community centers. This developed into an itinerant art practice for Tory, doing projects and residencies around the country, in predominantly rural or wilderness areas such as Death Valley, the High Sierra mountains, Florida and the high plains of Colorado. The Road came to an end in Sauk County, Wisconsin where Tory regrouped with Wormfarm Institute, resulting in the establishment of creative roots there and several rural, land art projects. Currently Tory splits his time between Wisconsin, working with farmers and Kernza, and Florida where he has created two food forest installations at Hillsborough Community College campuses.

 

“This residency was created with the specific goal of using the arts to increase civic and social engagement around issues important to Kent County’s residents.  In year one, we looked closely at themes of LAND and RIVERS, working closely with farmers, 4H families, River Keepers, and FFA students at Kent County High School.  We participated in the Kent County Fair and engaged with residents using their land to help clean and preserve our waterways,” said John Schratwieser, Director of the Kent Cultural Alliance.  “At the same time, we created opportunities for artists to expand their work and explore new media. We supported their efforts to bring a new perspective to challenges and opportunities that lay before us here in Maryland’s smallest and most rural county.”

The SFW Residency Program is supported by the SFW Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, the Maryland State Arts Council, the MidShore Community Foundation, and the Hedgelawn Foundation. The Kent Cultural Alliance is extremely grateful for the participation of our partner businesses and organizations.  For questions and information about the SFW Residency program, visit KCA at www.kentculture.org or email [email protected].

Be sure to sign up for KCA’s email newsletters by going to the “Connect” tab on the website.

The Kent Cultural Alliance is the designated arts council for Kent County, Maryland, and works to support and grow our small rural county’s cultural and artistic ecology.  Serving as a pivotal part of our social infrastructure, KCA uses the arts to create civic and social engagement opportunities across our diverse communities.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 1A Arts Lead, Archives

Bookplate author event: Rachel Kousser and ‘Alexander at the End of the World’

March 8, 2025 by Spy Desk Leave a Comment

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Rachel Kousser

The Bookplate are continuing their 2025 season of author lectures on March 19th with author Rachel Kousser for a 6pm event at Sultana’s Lawrence Wetlands Preserve. She will be discussing her new book; Alexander at The End of The World: The Forgotten Final Years of Alexander the Great. Kousser’s book is a riveting biography of Alexander the Great’s final years, when the leader’s insatiable desire to conquer the world set him off on an exhilarating, harrowing journey that would define his legacy.

By 330 B.C.E., Alexander the Great had reached the pinnacle of success. Or so it seemed. He had defeated the Persian ruler Darius III and seized the capital city of Persepolis. His exhausted and traumatized soldiers were ready to return home to Macedonia. Yet Alexander had other plans. He was determined to continue heading east to Afghanistan in search of his ultimate goal: to reach the end of the world.

Alexander’s unrelenting desire to press on resulted in a perilous seven-year journey through the unknown eastern borderlands of the Persian empire that would test the great conqueror’s physical and mental limits. He faced challenges from the natural world, moving through deadly monsoons and extreme temperatures; from a rotating cast of well-matched adversaries, who conspired against him at every turn; and even from his own men, who questioned his motives and distrusted the very beliefs on which Alexander built his empire. This incredible sweep of time, culminating with his death in 323 BC at the age of 32, would come to determine Alexander’s legacy and shape the empire he left behind.

In Alexander at the End of the World, renowned classicist and art history professor Rachel Kousser vividly brings to life Alexander’s labyrinthine, treacherous final years, weaving together a brilliant series of epic battles, stunning landscapes, and nearly insurmountable obstacles. Meticulously researched and grippingly written, Kousser’s narrative is an unforgettable tale of daring and adventure, an inspiring portrait of grit and ambition, and a powerful meditation on the ability to learn from failure.

“Kousser’s novelistic account, with its emphasis on personalities and intrigues, makes for compulsive reading. The result is a fresh and propulsive take on an ancient figure who grappled with how to govern a diverse society.” – Publishers Weekly

“A thoughtful, elegant study that sheds new light on an endlessly fascinating historical figure.” – Kirkus Reviews

Rachel Kousser is the chair of the Classics department at the Graduate Center, City University of New York and a professor of ancient art and archaeology at Brooklyn College. Her most recent work, The Afterlives of Greek Sculpture: Interaction, Transformation, Destruction received an Archaeological Institute of America Publication Subvention Award and was shortlisted for the Runciman Book Award for a book on Greek history or culture. Professor Kousser is also the author of Hellenistic and Roman Ideal Sculpture: The Allure of the Classical. She has received fellowships from the National Endowment of the Humanities, the Getty Research Institute, and the Center for the Advanced Study of the Visual Arts.

For more event details contact The Bookplate at 410-778-4167 or [email protected]. These events are free and open to the public, but reservations are recommended. The Bookplate will continue their 2025 event series with a partnership lecture at Washington College’s Rose O’Neill Literary House on April 9th. Author Andrew Mozina will be discussing his novels Tandem and Contrary Motion, as well as his other works. Copies will be available at the shop before and after the event. Sultana’s Lawrence Wetlands Preserve is located at 301 S. Mill Street in Chestertown, Maryland.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 1A Arts Lead, Archives

Mark Dion and Alexis Rockman: Journey to Nature’s Underworld

March 8, 2025 by Anke Van Wagenberg Leave a Comment

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I recently attended the opening of Mark Dion and Alexis Rockman: Journey to Nature’s Underworld exhibition at the Lowe Art Museum, at the University of Miami, FL, where it will be on view through July 20, 2025. This wonderful exhibition is the first two-person exhibition of these closely allied artists, offering a compelling tour through their celebrated careers and into the shadowy depths of the threatened natural world.

The first two-person exhibition of these celebrated artists, Mark Dion and Alexis Rockman: Journey to Nature’s Underworld explores their shared allegiances and sustaining friendship over a period of three decades. Maintaining singular stylistic voices, both Dion and Rockman have achieved international prominence for their own distinctive practices, while their creative and intellectual trajectories have evolved in tandem and often intersected. Together they have embarked on tropical expeditions; published dialogues; and co-edited the pioneering 1996 book Concrete Jungle, on anthropogenic ecosystems. Each has probed our strained relationship with the environment and the consequences of reigning ideologies about nature. Dion and Rockman were among the earliest artists to address, and even anticipate, the epic ecological problems we now face. Indeed, their vision has become increasingly urgent in this time of environmental collapse.

Uniting some twenty-five sculptures and paintings by both artists along with selected works on paper and a major new collaborative piece, this exhibition offers an absorbing journey into the depths of the threatened natural world.

Although working in different media, Dion and Rockman engage a number of like approaches and strategies, including intensive research and fieldwork; borrowing scientific methodology and models; and the use of allegory, dark humor, and popular culture tropes. Both artists employ methods of display found in museums of art and natural history, institutions of alleged authority and objectivity, which they slyly subvert in their works. While Dion’s preferred museological modes are taxidermy dioramas and specimen cabinets, Rockman revels in large-scale landscape paintings, densely populated and replete with didactic keys. Like natural history displays and wildlife illustrations, their works are grounded in science and close observation, but presented in a rhetorical, or even theatrical, manner.

The concept of “underworld” in the exhibition’s title encompasses several germane associations, including the mythic abode of the dead, archaeology, the Earth’s subsurface, and elements of criminality or vice. Within the context of Dion’s and Rockman’s oeuvres, the notion also incorporates unconscious beliefs about nature, invisible micro and macro dimensions, and deep denial of our culture’s harmful course. In the past two decades, during which the environmental crisis has escalated, both artists have expressed increasing pessimism and melancholy about our ecological fate. This gloom has not proved stifling, however, and Dion and Rockman continue to hone creative tactics for staging both the wonder and woe of nature’s condition.

The exhibition feels like a voyage of discovery through various pressing subjects, with the artists’ works serving as enticing guides. Beginning with a section evoking the fieldwork of pioneering naturalists and explorers, visitors encounter field-station tableaux by Dion alongside Rockman’s paintings of fauna and dramatic terrains, often with cross-sectioned views. Ensuing works address such themes as invasive and endangered species, beleaguered aquatic environments, anthropogenic landscapes, and future scenarios evincing effects of climate change and waning biodiversity.

An exhibition highlight is the debut of a grand sculptural diorama, titled American Landscape, created especially for the tour and marking an unprecedented collaboration between Dion and Rockman. This zoological group portrait, set on a golf course, features a cast of scrappy species that, according to the artists, successfully “exploit niches and opportunities generated by a human-transformed landscape” representing “the future global ecosystem.” The exhibition also includes a selection of related drawings and prints by both Dion and Rockman. In addition, participating museums have the option of developing, along with the artists, an adjunct “Chamber of Wonders” display, conceived as a flexible cabinet of curiosities intended to inspire both awe and concern about the natural world. One of the ephemera that caught my attention was Mark Dion’s Decomposition Books, full of his field notes.

Anke Van Wagenberg, PhD, is Senior Curator & Head of International Collaborations at the American Federation of Arts in New York and lives in Talbot County, MD

The accompanying 120-page catalog, Mark Dion and Alexis Rockman: Journey to Nature’s Underworld, written by Suzanne Ramljak, with contributions by Lucy R. Lippard and Patrick Jaojoco, was published by the American Federation of Arts and Hirmer Publishers.

The exhibition was organized by the American Federation of Arts and has toured at the Bruce Museum (Greenwich, CT, 2023), the Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art (Virginia Beach, VA, 2024), and The Tang Teaching Museum at Skidmore (Saratoga Springs, NY, 2025-2025). The tour will conclude at the Palmer Museum of Art at Penn State (University Park, PA, August 23 – December 7, 2025).

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 1A Arts Lead

Art, Food, and Identity in the Age of Impressionism by Anke Van Wagenberg

March 1, 2025 by Anke Van Wagenberg Leave a Comment

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Working at the American Federation of Arts is just about as exciting as an art curator’s job can be, with lots of, yes curating exhibitions, publishing catalogs, and related travel (while living in beautiful Talbot County). Bringing art to a wide public has been the AFA’s mission as the leader in traveling exhibitions internationally. A nonprofit organization founded in 1909, the AFA is dedicated to enriching the public’s experience and understanding of the visual arts through organizing and touring art exhibitions for presentation in museums around the world, publishing exhibition catalogues featuring important scholarly research, and developing educational programs.  I look forward to regularly contributing to the Spy, either by contributing articles or podcast reviews and artist interviews.

I recently attended the Farm to Table: Art, Food, and Identity in the Age of Impressionism exhibition opening, first at the Chrysler Museum, Norfolk, VA, and now on view at the Frist Art Museum, Nashville, TN, until May 4th. The AFA-Chrysler organized exhibition will continue on to the Cincinnati Art Museum, OH and lastly to the Seattle Art Museum. Farm to Table: Art, Food, and Identity in the Age of Impressionism explores the intersections of art, gastronomy, and national identity in fin-de-siècle France. The exhibition showcases the work of artists such as Claude Monet, Eva Gonzalès, Victor Gilbert, Paul Gauguin, and Jules Dalou who examined the nation’s unique relationship with food. The bounty of France’s agriculture and the skill of its chefs had long helped to define its strength and position on the international stage.

This self-image as the world’s culinary capital became all the more important in the late nineteenth century as the country grappled with war, political instability, imperialism, and industrialization. In this climate, France’s culinary traditions signaled notions of its refinement, fortitude, and ingenuity while they also exposed fractures that destabilized national identity. From cultivation to consumption, food was central to notions of glory but also to those of collective pain.

The transformation of the culinary world was a natural theme for artists committed to depicting daily circumstances. Food was the most quotidian of subjects yet also one uniquely suited to considering the state of the nation. Featuring approximately seventy works of art, Farm to Table showcases representations of sumptuous ingredients and severe privation, bountiful meals and agrarian crises. The works highlight the possibilities and precariousness of France’s colonial and industrial projects; the evolving norms of gender and class; the tenuous relationship between Paris and the provinces; and shifting understandings of science and the environment. Depictions of markets and gardens, farmers, chefs, and restaurants expressed cultural anxieties and aspirations. Beginning with the 1870 Prussian siege of Paris (and the resultant food crisis) and continuing through the 1890s, the exhibition spans the age of Impressionism and provides a new way to consider the era’s depictions of modern life at the
intersection of art, food, and social politics.

An accompanying catalog Farm to Table: Art, Food, and Identity in the Age of Impressionism, (2024), was edited by curators Andrew Eschelbacher and Lloyd DeWitt, with contributions by Allison Deutsch, Simon Kelly, Marni Kessler, and Shalini Le Gall, Published by Yale University Press in association with the Chrysler Museum of Art and the American Federation of Arts.

Anke Van Wagenberg, PhD, is Senior Curator & Head of International Collaborations at the American Federation of Arts in New York and lives in Talbot County, Maryland.

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Filed Under: 1A Arts Lead

March at the Mainstay!

February 26, 2025 by The Mainstay Leave a Comment

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Nevin Dawson’s new chamber music group

Nevin Dawson, the Eastern Shore’s favorite violist, will perform with cellist Denise Nathanson and flutist Ashley Watkins at The Mainstay’s next Classical Music concert on Sunday, March 9 at 4 PM. The show is made possible with support provided by the Hedgelawn Foundation in memory of Judy Kohl

These three talented musicians — known as The Birch Trio — have put together a program that spans four centuries of classical music from the 18th to the 21st centuries. In addition to works by Joseph Haydn and Ludwig von Beethoven there will be pieces by 18th century composer and flutist Francois Devienne and contemporary composer and flutist Laurel Zucker. Contemporary composer and flutist Valerie Coleman will also be represented by her “Maombi Asante: A Prayer of Thanks” that has been described as “joyful and lively music [that] has a dance sensibility that transcends any specific style.”

“We are very happy to welcome The Birch Trio to The Mainstay’s stage,” Executive Director Matt Mielnick said recently. “These creative Eastern Shore musicians have combined their talents to put together a program that is sure to delight our growing audience of classical music lovers.”

Birch Trio

Violist and violinist Nevin Dawson studied viola at Penn State University and currently teaches violin, viola, and cello in Chestertown. He is known to audiences at The Mainstay for his performances in many genres including classical, folk, and jazz with musicians such as The Pam Ortiz Band and Harp and Soul.

Cellist Denise Nathanson of Oxford performs chamber music in many venues on the Eastern Shore and beyond. She previously was the Principal Cellist for the Maryland Symphony Orchestra and currently has a busy schedule as a teacher, lecturer, and guest artist. Flutist Ashley Watkins is a native of Cambridge, Maryland and the product of several youth programs that formed her music foundation. Her degrees in music performance are from James Madison University and The University of Akron. She currently appears as a guest artist in performances at sacred and secular institutions. She is also a member of the Easton Shore Jazz Ensemble, a jazz group that is increasingly in demand on the Eastern Shore.

Showtime for the Mainstay concert event is 4 pm. Tickets are $15 in advance of the show and can be purchased online at mainstayrockhall.org. Phone reservations are accepted by calling (410) 639-9133 (tickets reserved by phone are $20 when paid at the door). The Mainstay is located at 5753 N Main Street in Rock Hall,

The Mainstay offers a year-round calendar of concert events. The shows are offered just about every week of the year, and feature distinguished local, regional, and national/ international touring artists of almost every genre. Upcoming concert calendar information can be found on the Mainstay website at mainstayrockhall.org. Music fans are also encouraged to sign up for email alerts by contacting us at [email protected].

The Mainstay’s Thursday Evening Pub Nights Are Set to Reopen

On Marh 13, The Mainstay, Rock Hall, Maryland’s 27-year old live-music performance venue, is pleased to announce the season opening of its weekly Thursday early evening Pub Nights The events run from 5 PM to 7:30 PM and the public is welcome. The Mainstay’s bar will be open and each week different area musicians will provide live entertainment. As the nicer weather approaches the music will be staged outdoors. There is no admission charged.

Director Matt Mielnick commented that the original idea behind Pub Night was reminiscent of local gatherings at an Irish pub, with the accent on camaraderie, conversation, and good tunes. After a highly successful initial year, it became obvious that the fellowship of each evening was greatly enhanced by the impressive local musical talent that was invited to perform every week from 5:30 until 7:30 PM.

The March 13th opener features the music of B-F-D (Ben Bennington, Ford Schumann, and Deb Campbell) For information about the entertainment schedule for each subsequent week call the Mainstay at (410) 639-9133.

A Return Visit by the University of Delaware’s 16-piece Jazz Ensemble

U-of-Del-Jazz-Ensemble

On Saturday, March 15, The Mainstay in Rock Hall, Maryland is delighted to welcome the return of The University of Delaware Jazz Ensemble, directed by Tom Palmer.

The 16-piece ensemble features the University’s top players. This performance also features Faculty Guest Soloist Nick Pietuszka on trumpet. The group is in frequent demand for performances at off campus venues and jazz festivals. This past July they toured Italy and delighted audiences at the Umbria Jazz Festival, as well as other performance venues throughout Tuscany and Rome.

This will be the ensemble’s eighth visit over the years. The band was first invited to perform at the Mainstay in 2009 by Tom McHugh. It was part of the mission of the Mainstay to bring in the “next generation of musicians” to perform at Rock Hall’s unique and acoustically exceptional venue. The UD Jazz Ensemble was brought back by popular demand seven times at The Mainstay up until 2019 when all music venues were shut down by the pandemic.

The band will draw on music from classic big bands such as Count Basie, Duke Ellington and Buddy Rich. Contemporary arrangements will include, among others, the music of Lennon and McCartney, Clifford Brown and Pat Metheny.

Showtime for the Mainstay concert event is 8 pm. Tickets are $20 in advance of the show and can be purchased online at mainstayrockhall.org. Phone reservations are accepted by calling (410) 639-9133 (tickets reserved by phone are $25 when paid at the door). The Mainstay is located at 5753 N Main Street in Rock Hall,

 

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 1A Arts Lead, 6 Arts Notes, Archives

Spy Concert Review: Jordan Tice Showcases New and Old at the Stoltz Listening Room

February 24, 2025 by Mark Pelavin Leave a Comment

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Jordan Tice, who launched his national tour at the Avalon Theatre’s Stoltz Listening Room last week, bridges the gap between old-time tradition and modern storytelling. Whether he discovered bluegrass icons like Doc Watson and ragtime guitarist Blind Blake before finding his way to Bob Dylan, Randy Newman, and Paul Simon—or the other way around—his music reflects a rare ability to meld past and present seamlessly.

Tice opened with Down by the River, a song originally recorded by Uncle Dave Macon in 1924. In his hands, however, it felt completely fresh. Too often, musicians treat traditional songs as museum pieces, something to be handled with reverence but never altered. Tice, by contrast, breathes new life into them, stretching and reshaping them in ways that feel both innovative and natural.

His own compositions stood comfortably alongside the classics. Walkin’, a standout original, showcased his intricate fingerpicking and sharp lyricism: “Cranes going up to the sky and then down / Buildin’ on what’s been torn down / And people for a while they’d come around…”

At times, Tice’s rapid-fire vocal delivery added urgency, though it occasionally came at the expense of his carefully crafted lyrics.

His choice of covers reflected his deep musical influences. A stirring rendition of Bob Dylan’s Tryin’ to Get to Heaven (from 1997’s unappreicated Time Out of Mind) led to one of his most expressive guitar solos of the night. Randy Newman’s Dayton, Ohio 1903 fit his style perfectly, its wistful lyrics and lilting melody capturing the sepia-toned warmth that runs through much of Tice’s music. He ended the night with Paul Simon’s lovely and optimistic Born at the Right Time, a fitting closer that left the audience on an uplifting note.

The concert also offered a preview of Tice’s upcoming album, with two brand-new songs debuting live. Quiet Light, co-written with Grammy-winner Sarah Jarosz, stood out as one of the evening’s best moments, offering a quiet yet profound reflection: “Who knows what tomorrow brings / So take your time / And let it all run across your mind.”

While Jarosz will sing harmony on the recorded version, fiddle player Patrick M’Gonigle stepped in beautifully, his vocal  harmonies and expressive playing adding richness to the performance. His skills were also on display during Mean Old World, where he took on the challenge of filling in for Aoife O’Donovan’s harmonies from Tice’s previous recordings. Nickel Creek’s Jeff Picker provided understated but essential bass lines, anchoring the sound with warmth and subtlety.

Still, Tice’s Thompson guitar was the true star of the night. Whether delicately fingerpicking through a ballad or delivering fleet bluegrass runs, his playing was both technically masterful and emotionally resonant. Instrumentals like Badlettsville and Horse County Rag, which might serve as low-energy interludes in another artist’s set, became highlights in Tice’s hands.

Currently on tour across the Eastern U.S., Tice proves that traditional music doesn’t have to be frozen in time—it can be revived, reinvented, and made new again. If his performance at the Stoltz was any indication, this is a tour well worth catching.

Mark Pelavin, the founder of Hambleton Cove Consulting, is a writer, consultant, and music lover living very happily in St. Michaels.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 1A Arts Lead

Spy Concert Review: Ellis Paul at the Stoltz

February 19, 2025 by Mark Pelavin Leave a Comment

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There was a moment near the end of veteran singer-songwriter Ellis Paul’s performance at the Avalon Theatre’s Stoltz Listening Room on Sunday night that perfectly captured why a sold-out crowd had braved the rain to hear live music. As Paul prepared to close out his set, an audience member called out a request for “Home,” a song Paul wrote two decades ago. The fan explained that the song had helped save his marriage.

Paul, visibly moved, paused for a moment before settling in at the keyboard to play it. The audience, which had been singing along moments earlier, fell silent as he delivered the lyrics with quiet intensity: “Home… sits across the table / Home… is dreaming in my sheets / Home… home… / This house is just an address / You lift me from all sadness / This house is just an address, you’re my home.”

Throughout the night, Paul proved why he remains a beloved presence in folk and Americana music after more than four decades on the road. His set was filled with stories—some true, some embellished, all engaging. “Kick Out the Lights (Johnny Cash)” recounted the famous tale of Cash “dancing with his demons” at the Grand Ole Opry, smashing out 54 stage lights in a rebellious frenzy. “Holy” captured an Irish immigrant’s determination to chase the American dream despite the doubts of those he left behind:
“His friends say, ‘Christ, Declan, please / You’re wasting your prayers on a dream.’ / He says, ‘Watch me.’”

One of the most powerful moments of the evening came with “Troy’s Song,” based on the real-life story of a Desert Storm veteran suffering from PTSD. On the brink of taking his own life, Troy found salvation in a program that pairs veterans with retired racehorses. The song’s lyrics painted a poignant picture of healing and trust: “In that ring with Whiskey and me / Our hearts beat in some kind of synchronicity / And I trusted him / And he came to trust me / We were two old warriors / Starting all over again / Building trust / Like two old friends.”

Other highlights of the night included the “only slightly sacrilegious” “I’m No Jesus,” a wryly tender love song (“Now I can’t walk on water / Can’t part the sea / The only miracle that I’ve seen / Is you walking down the aisle to me”), and the stunning “Gold in California,” which painted a vivid picture of the California coastline bathed in golden light.

Paul was completely at home on stage, delivering songs and stories with passion, energy, and humor. Many of the acts that pass through the Stoltz Listening Room are young artists on their way up, bringing the thrill of new discovery to their performances. Paul, who recently celebrated his 60th birthday, has been touring relentlessly for over 40 years, playing hundreds of shows annually. And yet, his enthusiasm remains undiminished.

In the end, it wasn’t just Paul’s songs or stories that made the night special—it was the genuine joy he brought to the stage, a joy that filled the room and reminded everyone why live music, even on a rainy night, is worth showing up for.

Mark Pelavin, the founder of Hambleton Cove Consulting, is a writer, consultant, and music lover living very happily in St. Michaels.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 1A Arts Lead

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