Quattrone Tornado Touches Down

         Faculty EXH 2013

Every now and then a person comes into one’s life and makes a lasting impression.  A good impression is preferred and York College of Pennsylvania was successful in the choice of Rebecca Quattrone as a professor of art appreciation and sculpture.  She began her career at York in January of 2004 and feels fortunate to assist students in the art studio and in multiple independent studies.  Rebecca is not only a teacher of art, but an accomplished artist herself with her work displayed in juried exhibits in the United States as well as internationally in her family’s home country of Italy.

Battito Battito 2

This month in Wolf Hall, Rebecca has two pieces in the faculty exhibit on display in the art gallery.  The first is a mosaic titled Battito which translates to Pulse.  This piece “documents a difficult painful year in my life.  It echoes my life as a heartbeat, a powerful entity that simultaneously enslaves and sustains.”  The Byzantine mosaic is made of Italian smalti glass in black, red and blue. The blue tiles are painted with 24k gold leaf.  These tiles represent her daughters Arie and Tess.  Rebecca hand-broke the glass purchased from Ravenna in Northern Italy and also the town where she studied under world-renowned Byzantine mosaic master, Luciana Notturni.

Our Tornado

Our Tornado

The second piece titled Oz has multiple artistic forms.  A combination of photography, sculpture, text and found art are captured in a tornado of fury.   Rebecca had no need for a model of a tornado to create the one featured in Oz.  This past summer she participated in a search and rescue mission after a tornado touched down and eight people were lost on the side of a mountain.  It took over eight hours of exhausting work, clearing trees from the roads in the pouring rain and  darkness.  With chainsaws and muscle they had cleared the roads by 4:30 AM and everyone was located and returned safely to camp.  “The experience has changed my life forever in so, so many ways.”  A life-changing event that has carried over into an exhibit that attempts to help others with changes in their lives.

Oz attempts to provide viewers with an interactive venue.  We all have desires, we all have hopes, dreams, wishes and we all, we all, have secrets.  Oz allows them to leave these behind through writing them and leaving them with Dorothy in a sealed envelope that I may include in the next run of Oz.  I attempt to capture a view of my subjects that they do not see in the mirror, a glimpse of themselves that I can only see.  I wait and zoom in and out until I see a moment, an experience, a desire, a wish, a secret and I pounce with the lens. This technique or Oz element gives me a.k.a. Dorothy to bare their burdens for them in a sense. They hopefully leave lighter.”  

IMG_0983 Oz-finding your way home I fight back

             Oz took Rebecca fifteen months to create to help people feel they can share their secrets with Dorothy for the tornado to “take with it until it touches down again”.  The tornado is made out of a very fragile material called tulle.  It was stiffened with boiled glue and hung over a wire armature.  After it dried, it was removed from the armature and assembled.  “It was very important to me to use a material for the tornado that could present a sense of strength, while hiding it weaknesses, just like me.”  The next Oz exhibit may even have the tornado spin. Rebecca has obtained an old disco ball but electrical outlets have to be in the ceiling in order for it to work.  All gallery spaces are different making set-up of an interactive exhibit challenging but rewarding.

            Oz will literally travel from gallery to gallery.  Its next venue is expected to be in the Baltimore or Washington D.C. area.  As the piece travels Rebecca will add to the graphic text quotes, a collection of voices of domestic violence victims, personal thoughts, and voices of those that let Dorothy a message in the box provided.  Rebecca’s photo subjects, including her, are “people in my life, people I have met through Oz, and hopefully viewers that email me digital photos of themselves that will become FACES of Oz.  This is a new element; one that I hope begins with YCP Oz.”  Photos and messages may be submitted to Rebecca a.k.a Dorthy, at WelcometoOz2012@gmail.com to be included in future gallery shows.

I protect

One view of Rebecca’s display caught my eye and I immediately felt saddened by the broken window and glass on the floor.  I asked how this became part of the exhibit.  She responded, “The broken window is as it should be, found in my barn long after it was a functional object in my 110 year old farm house. But the shattered window happened by accident a day after I had suspended it from the gallery ceiling. I found it laying flat on the floor, covered with glass fragments, a few large pieces only held together by an OZ voice, “I Protect what is Mine”. My gut, head, and heart said, this is perfect, this is artistic fate, use it girl, so I carefully arranged the window and its fragments to work with the display and the traffic patterns. Life, like a tornado, is full of force, good and bad, and causes chaos and debris.”

In Baum’s “The Wizard of Oz” Dorothy is trying to find her way home after a tornado swept her away.  Rebecca stated the movie is “a metaphor for trying to discover who we are and what defines us, as well as finding our strengths which we thought were our weaknesses, i.e., our courage, our intelligence, our heart, etc.  This exhibit will continue until we all find our way home, i.e., we find who we are, so I don’t see it ending.”  Rebecca’s Oz exhibit will be on display until February 24th until it picks up and moves on to touch down in another town.

Healer 2

Words hurt

Words hurt

Trust Me

 

A local nonprofit radio station, WITF, interviewed Rebecca.  The hosts of the art and culture talk show Cary Burkett and Joe Ulrich invited Rebecca when Oz was on exhibit at the York Arts Studio in October of 2012.  A portion of the interview can be heard at RADIO Interview.  The article and interview can be found on the station website http://www.witf.org/arts-culture/2012/10/burdens-and-secrets-rebecca-quattrones-oz-art-exhibit.php.

Rebecca is passionate about working with and teaching art skills to children that are visually impaired.  Currently she is in the final stages of a large-scale mosaic installation at ForSight Vision center in York, PA.  The unveiling and dedication is scheduled for next month.  Rebecca explained, “The project is called the “Busy Bee Mosaic” and embodies the voices of the children of ForSight as documented in hexagon honeycomb mosaic cells that the children created to tell a story with their particular condition and experience.  Mainly, I am providing an artistic platform and venue to tell their story, to provide a healing outlet and to provide awareness to the general public for people with visual impairments.”  The specific date for the unveiling has not been determined.  More information can be found on Facebook on the Busy Bee Mosaic Project page.

Mosaic in process

Mosaic in process

Nearly complete

Nearly complete

The York Dispatch stopped on location and recorded the children busy at work on the mosaic project.  A brief clip of Rebecca’s teaching process and the excitement of the children involved can be viewed here:     As the Busy Bee Mosaic wraps up, Rebecca already has plans for new projects.

There will be a revival of her previous work titled “Voices From the Wall” an interactive installation.  This exhibit is for domestic violence victims, their families, and to generate public awareness about spousal abuse. Rebecca, a person that appears to have endless amounts energy to reach out and help others, has two proposed mosaic projects in the works.  One for Big Brothers, Big Sisters of York and another with Crispus Attucks of York for their Wingstock 2013 fundraiser slated for July 6th.

I find Rebecca and her work inspiring.  I asked Rebecca what inspires her in life and she answered, “I am inspired by the people in my immediate world and beyond; their experiences, their voices, their stories, and their secrets. I have been blessed by many fine human beings in my close knit circle and people I meet in our York community and beyond.  I firmly believe that my role as an artist is in a sense, a “conduit” that links various artistic processes and projects with people, near and far. I am not so much concerned about the final art “object” as I am with how it affects those who encounter it….hopefully helping, healing, and relieving them in some cathartic way.   My role is to embrace all, accept all, connect with all, share my art with all, and share the talents and skills that God has given me with others.  This way I reach through into their void, large or small, thus completing and filling what has been missing.”

It is Rebecca’s outgoing personality combined with her dedication to teaching and sharing her artistic abilities that make her a remarkable person.  A person you want to know, to share your thoughts with and listen to her wisdom.  The relaxed atmosphere in her classroom allows students to speak up and share their thoughts and ideas.  The critiquing process every student must participate in offers the opportunity to share their art, what inspired their piece and receive feedback in a non-threatening environment.  Both verbal and written comments are given to the artist that may be helpful in changes to or improvements of their work.  The critiques are not a painful process, but instead a give and take moment between artist and viewer.  The pressure is off because even if you feel your work looks more like a pile of poo than a sculpture of a snake, Rebecca will find the positive in that piece and make you smile.     She brings out the positive in the people she is around.  From the art studio at York College to the many personal projects she takes on, she adds a spark of excitement that can only be experienced, not explained.  She is a small package that carries an endless amount of energy, ideas and inspirations.  Once you have met this mother, this artist, this professor with a purpose, you will never forget her or her works of art.  Because you have been embraced, accepted and connected to and with Rebecca Quattrone.

Reb 531575_3158604618805_318167927_n

Internship week 3

Sharing one story at a time

Sharing one story at a time

Working for Stage of Life the past three weeks has been a learning experience.  The fifteen weeks are going to fly by before I know it!

This week:

2/1/2013 Spoke with Eric on phone, contacted possible bloggers to contribute to SOL   1.5 hrs

2/4/2013  Blog content, read/comments   2.0 hrs

2/5/2013  Wrote post, emailed bloggers, researched bloggers   3.0 hrs

2/7/2013  Met with Eric at the office, discussed ideas, established a list of items to begin, Finished several posts, emailed a new blogger to SOL community, continued working on Quattrone interview (professor), spoke to Dr. Walters about involving class with SOL, took postcards to writing professors offices, dropped off posters at OSAO office for permission to display.   4.0 hrs

2/8/2013 Continued email with new blogger, referred her to Eric for technical difficulties, emailed Quattrone for more information and clarification, Joined Pininterest to follow fellow SOL intern.  2.0 hrs

Total hours 12.5 hours & 4.5 previous = 17 hrs

Goals:

Get more specific writing for SOL column

Check on Eric’s progress of getting the interns on the website and our specific column.  LOL

Have Wendy’s membership issued resolved.

Complete a minimum of 25 hours intern work

Check out http://www.Stageoflife.com and share a little story!

~P.

Stage of Life~Intern

As an intern at http://www.stageoflife.com I am to keep a personal blog site of my own.  I already have one so that was a quick check mark in the done column.

I’ve served about one week now into my internship.  In that time I have:

1/17/2013 Spoke to employer by phone.   .5

1/25/13 Met to discuss duties of internship, exchange ideas   1.5

1/26/13  Blogged on SOL and personal blog   1.0

1/27/13  Blogged and read on SOL   .25

1/28/13  Spoke to Eric on phone, submitted 2 posts to Eric via email   .25

1/31/13  Possible Teen author: Kat Zhang http://www.katzhangwriter.com,  Possible Marriage blogger at Thingsyourealizeafteryougetmarried.com,  Personal blog (daily/weekly log)   1.

Total hours:  4.5 of 120

Upcoming work list:  Blog ideas, blogger list, Intro to my project A & B

Meeting with Eric 2/1/2013

 

 

Stage of Life, The Spartan & Girlboxer1970 Unite

SOL image

Everyone is in a stage of life.  

And they are all personal.

What stage of life are you in?  My life as a college student has grown.  I was hired as an intern at Stage of Life LLC, a company that privately hosts a website to promote writing in and about any stage of your life.  The Spartan is my college’s newspaper.  I write articles and also serve as the online editor of The Spartan.  And last but not least, I am Girlboxer1970, mastermind of writing about my life and finding people who care.

A blog was the best idea Dr. Travis K. ever suggested to me.

I’ve been combining my Spartan articles with my blog since mid 2012.  Now my work as an intern at Stage of Life.com will be combined with the written and online version of the Spartan http://www.spartanycpnewspaper.wordpress.com.  As a student I have to blog about my experiences in each of the ten main life stages of the website.  In YCP’s Creative Nonfiction class I have to keep a journal.  I write for the newspaper.  I write.  And then, I write some more.

Ever think about writing a blog?  Or an article for a campus or local newspaper?  Soon I will have a column on http://www.stageoflife.com and will be prompting story ideas, writing about personal experiences, choosing finalists for contest submitted stories, randomly choosing bloggers to feature, and advising on how to write a blog someone will be interested in reading.  That’s what it’s all about.  When people begin to read what you write.

I encourage everyone to check out the Stage of Life blogging community.  If you have a blog, it will give you exposure as you share your stories.  Don’t have a blog?  No excuses…follow me to http://www.stageoflife.com a membership FREE, AD FREE, and FREE CONTEST website that I am honored to become part of.

Like Stage of Life  and YCP The Spartan Newspaper of Facebook.

Follow onTwitter:  @StageofLife  Follow me: @girlboxer1970

Rock it out, write it now, submit….it’s legit.

~P.

YCP squirrels are fearless photo M. Adams

YCP squirrels are fearless  photo M. Adams

Classes resume at York College of PA. I’m ready for another series of great Spartan Newspaper and a more active online paper. Send me your campus pictures, stories, story ideas, videos from improve shows and anything else you can think of related to life at York College of PA! pcrider@ycp.edu

York College Graphic Arts Election Posters

Election posters hanging in the halls at YCP.  A fresh look at encouraging voter turn-out.  ~P.

Writer’s Memo

Writer’s Memo:

I love to write and do so almost daily in my blog.  My subjects range from college essays, being a mom, divorce, and life in general.  I have short stories, poems and photographs on my blog and try to make each entry unique and engaging.  Most people don’t realize how deep my faith in God runs.  I don’t push my beliefs on people, nor do I bark about them in person.  But on my blog I am free to express myself however I would like.  I show no fear on my blog and let no comments upset me.  God and I are tight and I am keeping it that way.

My biggest struggle is to continue focusing on the present when I think the future will be ending soon.  The borrowing money for student loans, making holiday plans and especially dates in the year 2013 are frustrating.  I don’t want to or expect to be earth bound after December 21st 2012.  My friends poke fun at me.  So do my sons, now both adults.  Jokes aimed at my religious beliefs are just their way of giving me a “hard time.”  I don’t get upset or mad.  I just laugh along with them.  How can I laugh when they are making fun of me?  Easy.  If I’m wrong, I continue with life on December 22nd.  If I’m right, I’m in Heaven with my maker testing out my new wings.  I’ve always wanted to fly.

~P.

(Virtual Sinning isn’t Cheap Advanced Composition Assignment)

 

Virtual sinning isn’t cheap

No, it’s not a good way to start an essay. Ok, over that.

Facebook rules the world in a round-about way.

Yes, I know GOD rules the world.  Please don’t comment to me that I am going to hell, I should be murdered, burned, suffer for all of eternity.  The effect of those comments wore off after the first three.

When you want to communicate quickly, you use Facebook to get your message out fast and as far-reaching as possible.  Instantly, you have just shared something, any bit of info sent electronically across the Internet, has just been released to the entire world.

Hell, even the word Internet is capitalized.  It just became a proper noun and Facebook has become the link around the world that all connects us with God.  There are churches, preachers, priests, pastors and more online.  We all can be friends on Facebook, in fact, friend is now a verb; “Friend me, I’ll accept.”

The ability to touch the lives of people across the world instantly is a phenomenon that no one really talks about.  Facebook is similar to a constantly in motion subway.  People are able to jump on and off at will, with a click of their mouse.  The ability to jump on and off a moving subway car comes at a price.  Once information is shared, it is on the Internet forever.  The good, the bad, the ugly.

Just wait.  I’m telling you right now that on December 21st 2012 the Internet is going to crash.  Maybe permanently!  Imagine a world without the internet.  You can’t do it can you? 

The internet is many things: a link connecting most of the world to each other, a place to gather, a place to share information, a place to proclaim your belief of God (or not) and a place to sin.  So much good, yet always there are the bad things that come from the Internet, meet on the internet, troll on the internet.  The internet is not a safe place.

The Internet is my virtual life.  Facebook connects me with the world and it is God’s filing system.  God knew humans would get smarter than our britches and organize an endless, eternal pulse of energy that relays all our information effortlessly.  Now we are screwed.  

So I proclaim stuff all the time.  I make shit up-from scratch-but I’m serious about God.  That all knowing alien in the sky.  Heck the Mayan’s even knew about Jesus Christ as his name is mentioned inside a ruin site as a returning prophet of the future.  The visiting speaker on campus said that in his lecture in Demester Hall.  That hall was packed to the gills.  Standing room only for the witty speaker and his fresh take on the Apocalypse.

Poor Dale was stuck beside a guy with body odor issues.  The dude beside me kept drifting off to sleep and even had the nerve to snore during this very important (to me) lecture.  If he had become louder with his rudeness, I would have woke him and told him to get the hell out because he was ruining my listening experience.

I have many direct links to the Internet.  The average person has at least one, but most likely, more than one.  In total, I can access the web on: York College campus, my phone as a hotspot and direct link, Dale’s phone, my laptop, my son’s phone, Dale’s office, any McDonald’s, Rutters’, etc.  Short of living in an undeveloped country, the Internet is available to everyone.

I read the sins of many on the Internet.  The stories of murder, rape, child abuse, tragedy.  This world is a disgusting place that causes my stomach to twist into knots.  If God is looking down on us and here to save us, how can life as we know it continue?  Humans have disappointed God in every possible way. When will that change?  Ever?  Please God, take me on December 21, 2012.  I am ready for your call.

Could the apocalyptic signs talked about in the Bible be true and we are nearly at the end of the world?  No one knows but God.  He is the only one who knows the true end of days.  The preparation for the end of days is easy.  Get right with God.  Admit your sins and ask his forgiveness.  The truth will set you free.

Free Internet would be great.  It cost a fortune to have access at home and virtual sinning isn’t cheap. 

~P.

Dr. Karen Morris-Priester

Humanities Lecture Series

 

The ability to relate to someone’s story on a personal level can make all the difference.

Dr. Karen Morris-Priester & Professor Nancy Eshelman

Between classes I ran into Nancy Eshelman.  I was lucky enough to have adjunct professor Eshelman, a retired journalist for The Harrisburg Patriot, for two writing classes at York College.  She asked me if I was attending the lecture by Dr. Karen Morris-Priester.  I hadn’t heard about the lecture that was part of the professionalism lecture series.  Eshelman recommended I attend because like herself and me, Morris-Priester was a former alternative student.

Karen was a child of the Harrisburg projects.  She grew up poor and found herself pregnant at the age of sixteen.  Refusing to drop out of school, she graduated and began working.  After having five children, she then got married.  By her own admission, she was doing everything the wrong way.

Her first jobs were secretarial and in the food service industry.  In time, she opened her own beauty salon but she never forgot her desire to study medicine.  Karen wanted to take evening classes at the community college in Harrisburg but her husband continually put her off.  Behind his back, she registered for classes, starting at a remedial level and didn’t tell him until the night of her first class.  It didn’t go over well with her husband but next to having her five children, sitting down for her first class was the most exhilarating feeling she ever experienced.

Attending part-time, it took Karen six years to earn her Associates degree.  She was working as a nurse at the Camphill Prison and registered at York College to earn her Bachelor’s degree in nursing.  Her life was stretched to its limit working fulltime and attending college fulltime.  The break she had between classes she would nap on the couches in Schmidt Library to get through the day.

Still, that little voice in her head continued to bring up her true goal, to become a doctor.  Karen made an appointment with her advisor and asked what classes she would need to take to eventually become a doctor.  She began taking the required classes for a medical degree.

“There were times with the electric was turned off until I could get caught up on paying for it.  I didn’t want people to know this because I don’t let other people tell me what I can do and neither should you because they will rain on your dreams.”  The electric was always eventually turned on.

Karen was accepted to a six week summer program at Yale for underprivileged minorities.  She was honored to be accepted and threw her heart into her classes.  Her determination paid off.  The university invited her to apply as a fulltime as a medical student.  She started the program two days before turning forty years old.

From Yale she applied at Harvard’s anesthesia program and was accepted and graduated using her own “Four P Plan” to achieve her goals.

Be Prepared: set goals, be ready for opportunities to fulfill those goals.

Be Positive: let people support you and surround yourself with those people.  Let “your haters” be a motivator to prove them wrong.

Be Persistent: take a step back to realize what needs changed.  Make those changes and keep moving forward in pursuing your goals.

Be Present: people watch what you do in situations.  How you accept challenges and new opportunities.

By following her own program she has reached her goal of becoming a doctor.  An unexpected reward for all her dedication was Johnson and Johnson Corporation paid off her school loans and gift tax of $220 thousand dollars.   Hard work does have its rewards.

Gordon Parks Exhibit at YCP

Gordon Parks Crossroads Exhibit at the Wolf Hall Cora Miller Gallery was hosted by Dr. Debra Willis.  She was his mentor and shared his life and work with the filled auditorium.  She took us back in history when she first met Parks, to interview him as a photographer.  What she found was Parks focus was always on family life, religion, work, the war, discrimination, death, women working, gangs, crime and more.  His camera recorded them all.

Gordon Parks 1912-2006

Parks makes a statement with his photos.  His portraits of people were unusual and he loved to use mirrors and available light.  He was particularly interested in discrimination of African Americans.  Parks interviewed his photo subjects, learned about them, and followed them home.

1948 Red Jackson & Hervie Levy look on at slain gang member Maurice Gaines

Red Jackson, legendary gang leader, let Parks drive him around as a chauffeur and photograph his life.  A gang leader’s life also included death, beatings and fascinating photographs.  There was that little stint with the Black Panthers: where Parks’ shoots his camera.  (Inside joke if you’re a photography buff.)

1970

Muhammad Ali, back in 1970 is legendary.  Parks subject is a well-known and loved boxer.  He captures Ali with perfect lighting.  His whites are crisp and his blacks are black.  The gleam of Ali’s skin is captured right to the drips of sweat on his chin.  This is exceptional photography.

High fashion photos on the street

“Bring the fashion to the streets” was Parks breakout idea.  Who needs a mannequin when models move and pose on their own?  Models on the street, at store fronts, bridges, sidewalk, etc wearing the hip clothes became the rage in photo advertising.  Parks pioneered that genre.

Dr. Willis said, “Gordon Parks wanted a photo to tell a story.  He wanted to make a difference with his camera when he was live and a hundred years after he was dead.”

The public is welcome view Parks exhibit at The York College until it’s closing November 12th.

Welcome!  ~P.