Downtown move

ArtHub in Nashua opens on Main Street

By Michael Witthaus

[email protected]

Among the many hard-luck stories to come out of the pandemic, the story of Nashua Artists Association’s ArtHub Gallery stands out. NAAA opened it in February 2020, only to have the world shut it down a month later. The place remained a memory until now, but the rebirth is even better than the original.

To start with, the new location on Main Street has twice the room of the ill-fated Pearl Street space, and it’s in the heart of downtown. More room makes it easier to display larger objects, like the interesting work from sculptor George Eross, a T. Rex with duck feet and stubby arms made from dinner forks that serves as a de facto gallery mascot.

The addition of 3D art is a big part of ArtHub’s goal of including more artists.

“There is an amazing amount of talent in this area,” ArtHub co-manager Jacqueline Barry said in press release. “To bring that talent to our new downtown location will not only give the community the opportunity to see the local talent but inspire them to do their own work.”

A members-only quiet opening on May 8 also drew the curious, gallery co-manager Sonia Lee said recently, a marked difference from the light foot traffic at the old place.

“We had about 40 members come,” Lee said by phone. “And, there were two couples, not related to us, having dinner next door. They stopped in to see what we were doing.”

On May 14 the gallery will do a soft opening, followed by a grand reopening on Saturday, May 17. A wide range of work will be on display and available for purchase, from paintings and textile arts to ceramics made by artists like Nancy Barkman.

“One of the missions that we have is to give a place for the craftsmen, not just people who do wall art,” Lee said. “She’s a good example of that. Her work is artistic. You can say, well, it’s just a pot. Well, yeah. But it’s also artistic in that not just anybody can do that work. And there are a limited number of places where people who are craftsmen can show their work other than arts and crafts shows.”

Other artists displayed in the spring opening include Steve Goldstein, a Massachusetts photographer who works in black and white. Goldstein said, “creative image … serves as an antidote to all the screen time I encountered in my career as an electrical engineer.” Teresa Moller’s paintings are both colorful and whimsical. The Nashua artist will also present a puppet show during the grand opening.

Brenda Noiseux is a Granite State artist “encouraging conversations through artistic activism” who’s exhibited around the country including in Chicago and New York City, Kansas and Oregon. One of her pieces is a delicate heart-shaped bouquet surrounding the words, “Asylum was granted.” Another shows a faded student visa with “REVOKED” stamped on it, laid under a spray of flowers. Both are part of a series called “Awaiting Justice.”

The downtown gallery sits in what was formerly the League of New Hampshire Craftsmen’s gallery. Its centrality allows NAAA to take part in citywide efforts in a way they couldn’t previously, like the annual Holiday Stroll. “If you’re way off the main street, people aren’t going to come that way when you do the downtown events,” Lee said.

For nearly 75 years, the NAAA has served to advance art in Nashua and its surrounding communities. Their membership is composed of visual artists working in a variety of media as well as patrons of the arts. The organization welcomes all levels of experience, from students to established artists.

A few years after the organization formed, it launched Art in the Park, an effort that continues to this day. Through these combined efforts, they aim to foster collaborative efforts, Lee said. “Part of what I’m doing is reaching out to those other groups and recruiting, if for no other reason than just passing the word around. Because our mission is to encourage the arts, and it isn’t just our members that we’re talking about.”

Nashua Area Artists Association’s ArtHub Gallery – Grand Reopening

When: Saturdays, May 17, 2-7 p.m. with reception 5-7 p.m.
Where: 98 Main St., Nashua
More: On Facebook, search for “ArtHub – Downtown Gallery, Nashua Area Artists Association”

Featured photo: Work by George Eross & Work by Brenda Noiseux. Courtesy photo.

The Art Roundup 25/05/08

The latest from NH’s theater, arts and literary communities

Reopening: ArtHub, the gallery of the Nashua Area Artists Association that will be located at 98 Main St. in Nashua, is slated to have a soft reopening on Wednesday, May 14, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. with a grand reopening and artists reception on Saturday, May 17, from 2 to 7 p.m. (reception from 5 to 7 p.m.), according to a press release. The 1,743-square-foot space was previously the League of New Hampshire Craftsmen’s Nashua gallery, the release said. Gallery co-manager Sonia Lee Gilmore, a longtime NAAA member and a textile artist, said in the release: “We really want to be a part of the downtown and all that that entails,” including downtown events such as the Holiday Stroll, Summer Stroll, and other events. “We are happy to be involved and right in downtown.” The gallery hours will be Wednesday and Thursday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., Friday from 2 to 6 p.m. and Saturday from 2 to 7 p.m.

Artist in residence: Avaloch Farm Music Institute (16 Hardy Lane in Boscawen; avalochfarmmusic.org) will host two dinners and concerts with its Educational Artist Residency Initiative artists the Balourdet Quartet on Friday, May 9, and Saturday, May 10. Both evenings will begin with a pre-concert talk at 5 p.m., a concert at 6 p.m. and dinner at 7:30 p.m. Tickets cost $25 for the talk and concert or $75 for the dinner, for each night. “The Balourdet Quartet is acclaimed for their vibrant energy and masterful blend of technical precision and emotional depth that brings a fresh perspective to both beloved classics and modern compositions,” according to the quartet’s website, barlourdetquartet.com, where you can find videos of the performers.

Final weekend: The production of the musicalJesus Christ Superstar is in its final weekend at the Palace Theatre (80 Hanover St. in Manchester; palacetheatre.org). Shows this week are Thursday, May 8, and Friday, May 9, at 7:30 p.m.; Saturday, May 10, at 2 and 7:30 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m.

Sketch work: Bookery Manchester (844 Elm St. in Manchester; bookerymht.com) will host a workshop “Sketchbook as Source: A Practice of Paper and Process” with Rabia on Saturday, May 10, from 4 to 7 p.m. RSVP online to reserve a spot.

May flowers: The Center for the Arts (428 Main St. in New London; centerfortheartsnh.org)will have a drop-in paper flower class on Saturday, May 10, from 10 a.m. to noon, according to a press release. The class is open to all ages but only 12 people at a time. The event will also run Saturdays, May 24 and May 31.

Ukulele: The New Hampshire Ukeladies will perform Wednesday, May 14, at the City-Wide Community Center, 14 Canterbury Road in Concord. Register to attend via the Concord Public Library at concordnh.gov/librarycalendar.

Craft classes: The League of NH Craftsmen Meredith Fine Craft Gallery (279 DW Highway in Meredith; meredith.nhcrafts.org/classes) has classes on the schedule for next weekend. On Saturday, May 17, from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. juried artist Joy Raskin will present a “Silver RIngs with Faceted Stones Class.” Tuition cost is $75, plus a materials fee between $20 and $65 depending on materials used, according to a press release. Sign up by May 12. On Sunday, May 18, from noon to 5 p.m., juried artist William Mitchell will teach “Screen Printing Basics.” Tuition costs $65, with a $10 materials fee. Sign up by Tuesday, May 13, the release said.

Works in progress

Sculpture symposium returns to Nashua

Most art exhibitions focus on already completed works, but the City of Nashua is unique in hosting an event that’s about watching art come to life, from raw materials to finished pieces. The Nashua International Sculpture Symposium (NISS) happens for three weeks in May in and around a converted mill building.

Every spring, four sculptors from around the world are invited to participate. This year’s include Valerie Funk, who lives and works in Berlin, Germany, Danaë LeBlond-Joris from France, South Korean native Yunmi Lee, who’s exhibited in Italy as well as her home country, and U.S.-born Casey Schachner, who teaches art at Georgia Southern University.

Now in its 18th year, the event hews to a motto of “art as everyday living,” with a legacy of 52 different public art works in Nashua’s downtown, schools, parks, neighborhoods and walking trails. And it’s truly community-wide; the visiting artists are housed by area families and supported by local businesses and organizations.

NISS President Gail Moriarty is a metalsmith who first got involved by hosting the symposium in a building next to the Picker. In 2016 she and her partner purchased the Pine Street location and launched Picker Artists’ and Design Studio. Moving the symposium there made sense, both practically and aesthetically.

The location and layout of the studio lent it to showcasing the evolution of public art, Moriarty said by phone recently.

“It’s a busy street, and we have sculptors working. It’s a long mill building, so they work on the side of the building right next to the streets; everybody can see them,” she said, adding, “It’s a public, community-driven event.”

While there are only four host families, others get involved by hosting meals with the sculptors. People sign up for lunch or dinner, and bring enough for themselves and the artists. Their reward is a lot of one-on-one time to learn about the work and where the creators come from.

“You sit and enjoy your meal with them, which is private time that you get to spend with these international sculptors; it’s pretty popular,” Moriarty continued. “We love it because we show them the room, we set them up, we close the door, and they have that whole time with the sculptors. No one else is bugging them.”

While the people of Nashua love the event, Moriarty said it’s the sculptors themselves who are the biggest fans. “These are professionals, who travel the world doing sculpture symposiums,” who are more than happy to receive living expenses and a stipend at NISS. “I get requests all year long — when’s it happening, can I apply?”

Moriarty recalled going to breakfast with a sculptor after an installation. Upon learning what most at her level in the art world regularly earn for their work, she asked her why she wanted to come to NISS.

“‘Because of the people, because of your respect for us guys and the way everybody talks about you; all we hear is great things, how much fun it is and how the people are so cool … we just needed to be a part of it,’” Moriarty recalled being told. “They come from Israel and Ukraine and Iran, all these places, and then they go back home to what is going on in their country. But here they had three weeks of fun, and tons of food and lots of people and hugs.”

This year’s theme is “In The Making,” chosen for the unfolding nature of NISS.

“You never know what you’re going to get,” Moriarty said. “The sculptors … can do whatever they want, and it’s different every single day, different every single year. It’s very unique. To watch these people take these big pieces of stone and cull them into something that’s beautiful in just three weeks is just extraordinary.”

18th Annual Nashua International Sculpture Symposium
When: May 8 through May 31
Where: The Picker Artists’ Studios, 3 Pine St., Nashua
Opening ceremony May 8 at 5:30 p.m., closing ceremony May 31 at 1 p.m. (begins at Picker and moves around the city)

Featured photo: Clockwise from top left, sculptors Casey Schachner, Danaë LeBlond-Joris, Yunmi Lee and Valerie Funk (Courtesy photos).

Free Comic Book Day

Area stores participate in annual event

On May 4, 2002, Free Comic Book Day was launched to coincide with the premiere of the initial movie in Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man trilogy. The choice seemed fated when the play on words “May the Fourth be with you” gained popularity a few years later among Star Wars fans, around the time Disney acquired the franchise.

At the inaugural event, more than two million Spider-man, Star Wars, Tomb Raider and Justice League comics were given away. This year, there are 38 official titles, including Post Malone’s debut comic book and one based on the hit Netflix series Black Mirror. Ten different New Hampshire locations are participating.

Jetpack Comics

When Ralph DiBernardo opened his Rochester store in the late 2000s, he was quick to participate. First, he set up a small tent in the parking lot and a few hundred people showed up. It grew to a circus tent the next year, drawing a crowd of over 1,000. These days, DiBernardo said by phone recently, it’s city-wide.

“It takes place across 2 square miles; there are 20-plus businesses, a convention hall,” he said. “It’s a mini comic-con.”

However, after last year, he decided to scale back, worn down by months of planning and out of pocket costs. Fortunately, the Rochester Opera House stepped up. They offered support through activities like a Star Wars-themed spoof of Annie, which opens the same weekend as Free Comic Book Day, and an outdoor show by Kiss tribute band Hotter Than Hell. Anthony Ejarque, Executive Producer of the Opera House, led the handoff effort. “This event has such strong community support,” he said by phone recently, adding that there are literacy events at the library, and that The DaVinci Code author Dan Brown is donating some of his children’s literature. “He’s not able to attend, but we’re excited to get him on board.”

Double Midnight Comics

Two comic book fan brothers and their best friend from high school launched Double Midnight Comics in Manchester a few months after the first Free Comic Book Day in 2002. Originally located in Maple Valley Plaza, the store moved in 2023 to The Factory on Willow Street. It has a second store in Concord, which opened in 2013.

Double Midnight always goes big on Free Comic Book Day. The store launched Granite State Comicon in 2003, and Free Comic Book Day is a smaller version of that fall event. There are movie cars, a cosplay contest, food trucks, and the event space behind the store has vendor booths, including several local creators.

“You get to see people from the region that are making comics; it’s basically a chance to meet and discover some new talents,” Chris Proulx, Double Midnight co-owner, said by phone recently. There’s also live music from The Clemenzi Crusaders, a father and son nerd rock duo. “They do things like rock up the theme from Star Wars or The Simpsons.”

Proulx boasts that everyone who attends can count on going home with a big stack of comics, and he enjoys seeing fans, both new and old, experience Free Comic Book Day.

“It’s always fun to introduce people to comic books for the first time or have somebody that might be a past reader come back and rediscover comics,” he said. “And there are people that bring their friends and family and kind of introduce them to comics. So it’s a great, fun day.”

Merrymac Games & Comics

The Merrimack store will welcome a few creator guests to this year’s event, including Perhapanauts author Craig Rousseau, who’s worked on titles such as Young Hellboy, Harley Quinn and Batman Beyond. Also appearing is Joseph Schmalke, a comics creator, writer and illustrator. Schmalke is the publisher of the Midnight Factory comic line and author of Murder Hobo, One Last Trick and Prophets of Doom.

Stairway to Heaven Comics

Also hosting local creators is Stairway to Heaven Comics in Newington. The panel includes illustrator and graphic artist Jesse Lundberg, Jake Allen, who worked on Kings and Canvas, and Jeff Lorentz, whose credits include Skin of My Teeth and My Coworker is a Vampire.

Stairway to Heaven owner Brad Gile’s favorite thing about the annual event is seeing a well-blended crowd take in the creative pulse, the excitement of graphic art and storytelling.

“We get so many different types of people in here,” he said. “Folks that typically are not as interested in comics will come in and get excited meeting talented local creators. And there are a lot of really great comics for kids. It’s exciting to see all the happy kids come in and walk away with some really cool free comics.”

Free Comic Book Day
When: Saturday, May 3
Where: Various locations
More: List of free comics at freecomicbookday.com

Double Midnight Comics – dmcomics.com
252 Willow St., Manchester, 669-9636
341 Loudon Road, Concord, 715-2683

Stairway to Heaven Comics – stairwaytoheavencomics.com
109 Gosling Road, Newington, 319-6134

Merrymac Games & Comics – merrymaconline.com
550 DW Highway, Merrimack, 420-8161

Chris’s Comic Books – chriscardscomics.com
341 S. Broadway, Salem, 898-4151
919 Lafayette Road, Seabrook, 474-2283

Jetpack Comics – jetpackcomics.com
37 N. Main St., Rochester, 330-XMEN

Newbury Comics
777 S. Willow St., Manchester, 624-2842
99 Rockingham Park Blvd., Salem, 890-1380
310 DW Highway, Nashua, 888-0720

Featured photo: Post Malone’s Big Rig Comic. Courtesy image.

The Art Roundup 25/04/24

The latest from NH’s theater, arts and literary communities

Childhood memories: Nashua Theatre Guild presents the New Hampshire premiere of Incident at Our Lady of Perpetual Help, a play by Katie Forgette, on Friday, April 25, and Saturday, April 26, at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday, April 27, at 2 p.m. at the Court Street Theatre (14 Court St. in Nashua). The story is a “bittersweet memory play about a Catholic childhood in the 1970s … a gently funny, often hilarious and touching production directed by Vicky Sandin,” according to nashuatheatreguild.org. Tickets cost $20 for adults, $18 for 65+, students and military.

Our Town: Tickets are on sale now for the Community Players of Concord’s Thornton Wilder’s Our Town on Friday, May 2, and Saturday, May 3, at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday, May 4, at 2 p.m. at the Concord City Auditorium (2 Prince St. in Concord). Tickets cost $20 for adults, $18 for 17 and under and 65+. See communityplayersofconcord.org

Basket making: Ruth Boland will hold a series of basket-making classes (three eight-week sessions) for all levels, beginners included, starting Tuesday, April 29, in Nashua. The classes will be held on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 6 to 8:30 p.m. and Wednesdays and Fridays from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. For a fee of $200, attend any 10 classes during the session including multiple classes during a week, with additional classes available for $10 per class or for $32 per class attend individual classes, according to an email. Email [email protected] to register or for additional information.

Playreading: Theatre Kapow’s ARTiculate series returns with a live reading of the play Bauer by playwright Luren Gunderson on Sunday, May 4, from 2 to 4 p.m. at the Currier Museum of Art (150 Ash St. in Manchester; currier.org). The play “tells the visceral and true story of forgotten modern artist Rudolf Bauer, struggling with his fading place in the history of art,” according to the Currier’s website. After the reading, there will be an “expert-led conversation in the galleries inspired by the themes of the play and the Currier’s latest exhibition, ‘Nicolas Party and Surrealism: An Artist’s Take on the Movement,’” the website said. Tickets cost $30 for adults, $25 for 65+ and students and $15 for ages 13 to 17. See currier.org.

Jack of Diamonds
Majestic Productions will present Jack of Diamonds, a comedy about four residents of a retirement home trying to regain their savings stolen by a crooked financial adviser, on Friday, April 25, at 7 p.m.; Saturday, April 26, at 2 and 7 p.m. and Sunday, April 27, at 2 p.m. at Majestic Theatre (880 Page St. in Manchester; majestictheatre.net). Tickets cost $15 to $20.

Play fest: The Players’ Ring (105 Marcy St. in Portsmouth; playersring.org) will present Dionysia: A Festival of Short Plays Friday, April 25, through Sunday, April 27, with shows on Friday and Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and shows on Saturday and Sunday at 2:30 p.m. Tickets cost $15.

Summer show: Disney’s Freaky Friday will be the summer musical appearing on the Wilcox Main Stage of the Prescott Park Arts Festival in Portsmouth Friday, June 20, through Sunday, Aug. 10. Show will be most Thursdays through Sundays at 7 p.m. Matinees will be announced later this season. Reservations opening in May. See prescottpark.org.

Craft classes: The Meredith League of NH Craftsmen has several upcoming classes, according to a press release. On Sunday, May 4, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. it’s an Advanced Stained Glass Class with artist Sue Ries; tuition is $55 plus a $45 materials fee. On Wednesday, May 7, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. it’s a Mini Textile House Workshop with artist Cheryl Miller; tuition is $50 plus a $25 materials fee. On Saturday, May 10, from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., it’s a Nuno Felted Scarf Workshop with artist Melinda LaBarge held at the Meredith Community Center; tuition costs $68 plus a $25 materials fee. Also May 10, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., it’s a Fun with Felt class; tuition costs $45 plus a $20 materials fee, the release said. The Meredith League of NH Craftsmen Fine Craft Gallery is at 279 DW Highway in Meredith and call 279-7920 to register; see meredith.nhcrafts.org/classes.

Mother’s Day concert: St. Peter’s Church (Mammoth Road at 3 Peabody Row in Londonderry) will hold a “Contemporary Baroque” chamber music concert with the Brandenburg and Beyond ensemble on Sunday, May 11, at 3 p.m. The event is free and open to the public (donations accepted), according to a church email. “You will hear classic baroque works including Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto No. 2, themes from Masterpiece Theatre … and many others,” the email said. See stpeterslondonderry.org and brandenburgandbeyond.com.

Slow walk to romance

The Bridges of Madison County musical in Manchester

Even though it won Tonys for Best Original Score and Best Orchestrations, The Bridges of Madison County opened on Valentine’s Day in 2014 and closed in mid-May. Dr. Alan Kaplan, the founder and artistic director for the Manchester Community Theatre Players, has an inkling about why this happened and will apply his ideas in an upcoming production of the musical.

“This is a play I’ve been interested in for many years,” he said in a recent phone interview. Kaplan has read the novel, seen the Clint Eastwood-directed movie, and watched the first staging of the show in Williamstown, Mass. He even conversed with Jason Robert Brown, who wrote the Tony-winning music and lyrics.

The story centers on a fated couple and the decisions they must make when their connection becomes undeniable.

Francesca Johnson (Susan Schott) is a beautiful Italian woman who married an American GI as World War II was ending to escape her ravaged country. Twenty years later she’s preparing for a rare stretch of solitude on her Iowa farm while her family is away at the State Fair. Her reverie is interrupted when photographer Robert Kincaid (Don LaDuke) pulls into her driveway, asking for directions to a bridge he’s shooting for a National Geographic story.

The songs are varied and evocative, as good as anything to come from Broadway. “What Do You Call a Man Like That?” is an operatic waltz that perfectly captures the reticent housewife’s growing desire, while “Another Time,” an echo sung by Robert’s former wife, has a folky, Joni Mitchell feel. Sung by Francesca’s husband Bud (Dan Arlen), “Something From a Dream” is an aching ode to a marriage that, unknown to him, may be slipping from his grasp.

Though the music is powerful, it’s the story that brings power to the show. Hovering over forbidden love is the question of what might have been. In Francesca’s case, the man she left in Italy for glamor across the sea that never materialized, and for Robert, a driven nature that left little room for human connection.

For Kaplan, it was this element that attracted him most to directing The Bridges of Madison County.

“Usually with a musical, the music carries the show; the acting should be reasonable, but the music can cover it,” he said. “This is a musical where the actors have to really be on their game, and it gave me the opportunity as a director to really pull the most out of a cast in terms of acting ability.”

One of the challenges in presenting the play is conveying a sense of place and distance. Much of the action happens during phone calls between Francesca and her husband, Bud, as she struggles with her newfound love for Robert and how it might change her future. Some critics found the Broadway staging jarring.

“All the set pieces were on stage all the time,” Kaplan recalled, and juxtaposing cast members hundreds of miles apart was another problem. “You may have a bridge in the middle of a kitchen, or a refrigerator in the middle of an outdoor scene. It was confusing.”

Outdoor scenes more easy to accomplish in a movie were harder to do theatrically. So Kaplan took cues from Eastwood and placed a big screen at the rear of the stage to project scenery. A videographer was commissioned to capture locations in Iowa, and there is footage of Naples, Italy, and the cities Francesca imagined visiting in America.

The main set, Francesca’s kitchen, is on wheels and can be moved as the action demands. It’s an elaborate production for a community theater. That’s something Kaplan tries for whenever MCTP mounts a play, but it was particularly urgent in the case of this show, one so close to his heart.

“We didn’t want to just repeat something that only had a hundred performances on Broadway and then closed after four months,” he said, “I think that the reasons for it, as I mentioned, were pretty obvious. So the hope here is that we have improved on it.”

The Bridges of Madison County
When: Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. through May 4
Where: MCTP Theatre at North End Montessori School, 698 Beech St., Manchester
Tickets: $20 for adults, $18 for seniors, $10 for ages 18 and under at mctp.info

Featured photo: The Bridges of Madison County. Courtesy photo.

Stay in the loop!

Get FREE weekly briefs on local food, music,

arts, and more across southern New Hampshire!