Self-Realization by Jia Lu, giclee on canvas, on display in the CRS Gallery

Arts Events at CRS

Kids' Art Contest: What Does Power Look Like?

Jul 24 2008 - 11:59pm

Deadline to apply: Monday, July 28, 2008
Exhibition Opening Reception Sat., August 23, 2008 from 1 – 2 PM
Exhibition Closes October 27, 2008

The theme of the exhibition is “power.” Some of the questions your work might explore are: What is power? Are there different kinds? Who has it, and who does not? Where does it come from? Why is it important? What does power look like?

Only two-dimensional art works (drawings, paintings, collage, photographs, and computer-generated prints) no larger than 24” x 24” will be considered.

The Wheel of Earthly Life (Dance Performance)

Aug 2 2008 - 8:00pm
Aug 2 2008 - 9:00pm

CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing) Presents

A Solo Dance Performance by
West Virginia-based Artist

Tadashi

in his New York Premiere
with Visual Effects by Fred Hatt

Friday – Saturday, August 1 – 2, 2008 at 8:30 PM

Buy tixGeneral Admission $20
Students/Seniors/CRS Members $15


“The Wheel of Earthly Life” is a story of a human life from the beginning to the end as we feel the connection between each stage of life and the cycles of each season on the earth. Enjoy an evening of a minimalistic solo dance theater that brings you the struggle, pathos, humor, and solemn moments of human lives, as we remember that the same seasons will return to the earth regardless of each of our life struggles. A new wave of Japanese interpretive dancer, Tadashi incorporates Japanese Butoh, American modern dance, and mime.

Conversations with Barthelme Festival

Aug 8 2008 - 8:30pm
Aug 23 2008 - 8:30pm

Fridays & Saturdays at 8:30 PM
August 8 – 23, 2008 at CRS

CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing) Presents
An Evening of Dance, Theatre, and Film Adaptations
of the Short Stories of Donald Barthelme by


Yoshiko Chuma

Nathan Dame

Jonathan Hayes

Shirotama Hitsujiya

Harold Lehmann

Click to preview.

CRS presents a rare staging of the work Donald Barthelme, father of postmodern fiction, by an appropriately eclectic array of dance, theatre, and film artists including multiple Bessie Award winner Yoshiko Chuma and Yubiwa Hotel artistic director Shirotama Hitsujiya (one of "The World's 100 Most Influential Japanese Women," Newsweek Japan). Also on the program are works by experimental theatre directors Nathan Dame and Harold Lehmann, and making its NYC premiere is Jonathan Hayes' short film "The School" (2003 Worldwide Short Film Festival Audience Award and Sundance Film Festival 2004), adapted from the Barthelme story of the same title. Lighting design is by Poe.

Buy tixGeneral Admission $20
Students/Seniors/CRS Members $10


"Yoshiko Chuma is a maverick, utterly unique, a 'one-off' as the British say, on the stage of world dance. Her career has spanned almost 30 years and 35 countries. Her work is a mixture of play and seriousness, anarchy and reflection, and her hallmarks are collaboration and cultural exchange. Chuma cuts across categories. One might call her a postmodern choreographer, a movement designer, or a visual artist whose primary medium is human beings—dancers, musicians, pedestrians. She is unusually alive to space and landscape, indoors or outdoors. Gifted with great personal force and intelligence, at heart she is an experimentalist, a fierce explorer with a profound sense of structure." — Amanda Smith, Dance Magazine, 2007 

"YUBIWA Hotel was one of the most successful events we presented at PICA TBA06. It was a beautiful and affecting show and really struck a chord with the Portland OR audience. The image of the YUBIWA Hotel cast doing their stomping smoking dance at the end will stay with me forever." — Mark Russell, former Artist Director P.S. 122

Art Camp! (for kids)

Aug 23 2008 - 10:00am
Aug 24 2008 - 5:00pm

Saturday – Sunday, August 23 – 24, 2008

CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing) presents two full days of subsidized art classes specifically for children with at least one foreign-born parent. Taught by instructors from some of NYC's finest creative organizations, the six fun-filled sessions will introduce children to different aspects of the world of art and open their eyes to the awe-inspiring diversity of choices that artists may make. Sign your child up for just one or for a whole day.

Saturday, August 23, 2008
10:30 am – 12:30 pm Collaborative Visual Arts Ages 6 – 12
Taught by Josh C. Nusbaum, former instructor, Boston Children's Museum
Thoughtful games to heighten your creative sensitivity.
12:30 pm – 1:00 pm Snack break
1:00 pm – 3:00 pm Theatre and the Visual Arts Ages 6 – 12
Taught by Harold Lehmann, Theatre Instructor, Berkeley Carroll School
What can theatre learn and borrow from the visual arts?
3:00 pm – 3:30 pm Snack break
3:30 pm – 5:30 pm Faces: Portraits and Personalities in Art 6 – 12
Taught by Takako Hara, James Graham & Sons art gallery
An introduction to the history & practice of portraiture.
Sunday, August 24, 2008
10:30 am – 12:30 pm Swan for a Day Ages 2 – 6
Tutu construction taught by Katherine Abegg, formerly with Ralph Lauren
Pre-Ballet Taught by Kaori Kato, CRS Ballet Instructor
Students make their own tutus and learn & perform a simple swan dance.
12:30 pm – 1:00 pm Snack break
1:00 pm – 3:00 pm SAORI Loom Weaving Ages 3 – 12
Taught by Yukako Satone, founder of Loop of the Loom
Weave your own scarf or accessory on easy-to-use SAORI looms.
3:00 pm – 3:30 pm Snack break
3:30 pm – 5:30 pm Fashion Design Age 4 – 12
Taught by David Leung, fashion designer, MA in Costume Studies NYU
Assisted by Bethany Matia, sr. research asst, Costume Instit. at the Met
Assisted by Youngeon Choi, fashion designer, BA in Fashion Design Parsons
Hands-on fun developing your own style, sketching your ideas, experimenting.