Arctic alarm

Gibson’s Bookstore hosts climate crisis discussion

When Jon Waterman was growing up in the suburbs of 1970s Boston, he’d skip school and head for the White Mountains to hike and explore the world “above tree line.” It was a seminal experience that shaped his life. Eventually he worked for the Appalachian Mountain Club as a blanket packer and hut boy and finally became a caretaker for the organization.

“That was my first introduction to the Arctic,” he said of life in the Granite State’s high elevations during a recent phone interview. “Because that is an Arctic environment, not in terms of latitude but in terms of elevation. They have the same sorts of flora and fauna [that] I’ve seen in the far-off Alaska and Canadian Arctic.”

Along with studying authors like Edward Abbey and Rachel Carson, this led him to become a writer and photographer. He’s published several books; his latest is Into the Thaw: Witnessing Wonder Amid the Artic Climate Crisis. He’ll discuss it with fellow writer Richard Adams Carey on Oct. 21 at Gibson’s Bookstore in Concord.

The new book is due for official release in mid-November, but copies will be available for purchase at the event.

For Waterman, writing helped convey the feeling of being in the wild, and more. “It was not only the love of these places that drew me, but also an intense need to protect it, share its fragility,” he said. “I was very lucky … because I knew I was passionate about something at a young age, and I’ve stuck with it all my life.”

Into the Thaw chronicles a series of trips in the Far North taken over four decades, beginning with a seven-day journey in 1983 down the Noatak River. He went with Dave Buchanan, a ranger he’d known in New Hampshire. The book also has a brief and useful natural history of the region. Critically, he lists the alarming changes there over time and why they matter.

Some of the things accelerating the climate crisis are melting polar ice caps and thawing permafrost that’s causing ruptures called thermokarsts, along with the so-called “Greening of the Arctic.” Melting ice flowing into the Atlantic helps explain longer hurricane seasons, more severe wildfires and other natural catastrophes.

Thus, changes in the Arctic ripple across the rest of the planet, Waterman continued.

“They’re the world’s air conditioners,” he said. “I think it’s a nuance that’s hard for a lot of people to grasp because it has to do with ocean currents and air currents, but these polar vortexes we’ve been getting increasingly, these subzero air masses that are moving as far south as Georgia, they’re all about the air conditioner being broken.”

Of heightened concern to Waterman are the indigenous populations directly affected by climate change. “It’s the more than 60,000 people that live in the Alaskan Arctic that are going to be paying the most,” he said. “That’s true around the world, of course, not just the Inuit and the Inupiat, but people in the Philippines and low-lying islands. They’re suffering devastating floods in Pakistan and Afghanistan. Then there’s issues of food and agriculture.”

“It’s the indigenous people of the world that are really suffering the most,” Waterman said, adding, “What better way to bring it all home than a book that tells the plight of the Arctic people and what it means to them?”

In the final chapter of Into the Thaw, Waterman offers steps to make a difference. “The best way to be upbeat about it and hopeful, which I am, is to figure out ways that you can take action,” he said. “Thinking about where our food comes from, eating locally, rethinking things that cause emissions … not just to ease their conscience but to try to minimize impacts.”

He’s looking forward to discussing this with Carey, who’s written about indigenous life in Alaska and various threats to the world’s fishing industry. “Rick and I have never met, but we’re enjoying very fluid correspondence,” Waterman said. “I’m just honored to be able to be in a conversation with someone like him that actually has a grasp of these issues and what this culture is that I’m writing about.”

Into the Thaw: Witnessing Wonder Amid the Arctic Climate Crisis, with Jon Waterman
When: Monday, Oct. 21, 6:30 p.m.
Where: Gibson’s Bookstore, 45 Main St., Concord
More: gibsonsbookstore.com

Featured image: Thermokarst (caused by thawing permafrost) – from Into the Thaw Photo Credit: Chris Korbulic.

The Art Roundup 24/10/17

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

Terrific & radiant: The Children’s Theatre Project at the Community Players of Concord will present Charlotte’s Web on Friday, Oct. 18, at 7 p.m. and Saturday, Oct. 19, at 2 p.m. at the Concord City Auditorium (2 Prince St. in Concord;theaudi.org). Actors ages 6 to 16 will tell the story of the pig Wilbur, his dear friend Charlotte the spider and other animals at the farm, according to a press release. See communityplayersofconcord.org for tickets and details on the play.

Harmonious history: Jersey Boys, a musical about the music of Frankie Valli and The Four Seasons, opens Friday, Oct. 18, at the Palace Theatre (80 Hanover St. in Manchester; palacetheatre.org). The show runs Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 p.m. and Saturdays and Sundays at 2 p.m. as well as Thursday, Nov. 7, at 7:30 p.m. through Sunday, Nov. 10. Tickets cost $45 through $59.

Organ concert: The Young Organist Collaborative will host a Fall Faculty Concert on Friday, Oct. 18, at 7:30 p.m. at Christ Church, 43 Pine St. in Exeter, featuring a range of works for the pipe organ, according to a press release. “The Young Organist Collaborative encourages and supports young people ages 11-18 in learning to play the pipe organ by awarding scholarships that cover the cost for 16 organ lessons with a qualified local organist in the tri-state area of northern Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and southern Maine. The fall concert features five of the faculty currently working with YOC students,” the release said. The concert is open to the public and has an at-the-door suggested donation of $10 per person. See youngorganistcollaborative.org.

Celebrating 5 years
The Two Villages Art Society (846 Main St. in Contoocook; twovillagesart.org) will celebrate its fifth birthday and open its 47th exhibit with an event on Saturday, Oct. 19, from noon to 3 p.m. according to a press release. The event will feature live music, light refreshments and a raffle as well as the opening of “My Artistic Legacy”, a group show featuring works artists would like to be remembered by, according to the website. The exhibit will be on display through Saturday, Nov. 16, and the gallery is open Thursday through Sunday from noon to 4 p.m.
“We have a high caliber of artists proposing shows of their work,” says Larry Morgan, TVAS board president. “We offer as much variety as possible in our calendar, and continue to present two member shows each year. These shows support local artists and they help us meet expenses to run our nonprofit gallery.”

Weekend outing: Deerfield Arts Tour takes place Saturday, Oct. 19, and Sunday, Oct. 20, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. More than 20 artists are slated to participate, according to deerfieldarts.com, where you can find a map of the studios. Find our coverage of several area arts tours in the Oct. 10 issue of the Hippo; go to hippopress.com to find our digital library. The story is on page 10.

Staged reading: The Community Players of Concord will present an enhanced stage reading of the play It Can’t Happen Here by Sinclair Lewis on Thursday, Oct. 24, and Friday, Oct. 25, at 7 p.m. at the West Street Ward House, 41 West St. in Concord. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. and admission is free. “In 1935, as fascism was taking hold in Europe, Sinclair Lewis wrote It Can’t Happen Here, a dark satire that imagines the rise of a demagogue who becomes president of the United States. Presented first by the Federal Theatre Project, and adapted in 2016 by the Berkeley Repertory Theatre, this enhanced staged reading features theatrical lighting, audio effects, and projections of photographs that help set the stage for a compelling, and frightening, tale of the fall of American democracy,” according to a Community Players release. See communityplayersofconcord.org.

Seasonal painting: Creature your own picture of the Sanderson Sisters at Hocus Pocus Paint Night on Friday, Oct. 25, at 8 p.m. at Chunky’s (707 Huse Road in Manchester; chunkys.com). The cost is $45.

Zachary Lewis

Celebrating music and arts

Concord holds its first Sound and Color Festival

By Zachary Lewis
[email protected]

Sal Perzio, Executive Director of Capitol Center for the Arts, is excited for the first Concord Sound and Color Festival, set to take place Saturday, Oct. 19, and Sunday, Oct. 20.

“We came up with this idea a little over a year ago,” Perzio said. “We got some seed funding from the City of Concord to make it a reality. And really the overview of the entire thing is that we want to continue to establish Concord as a destination for arts.”

“We have some headliners for the music side of it, but we also have some fantastic sculpture artists, performing arts, interactive activities, food trucks — but it’s all, with the exception of the food trucks, it’s all free,” he said.

There will be music in the Chubb Theatre and at Bank of New Hampshire Stage.

“And then we have the outdoor stage,” Perzio said. “And then in addition to that, we have music going on at Feathered Friends stage. It’s five stages, because we have … activities and music going on at the Concord Community Music School too.”

A free trolley will take visitors between venues.

“There’s going to be arts activities for families and stuff like that at the Community School as well as in the Arts Hub,” Perzio said. “We have some sculpture artists, and then we have one of those digital mapping artists that’s going to be doing projection arts on the Smile building as well.”

Artists and musicians in training can have a great experience. “All day Saturday at the Concord Community Music School they’re going to have instrument petting zoos … so that kids can get more exposed to holding an instrument … and a ton of activities going on there too. So between the music school and the arts hub there’s going to be a lot for kids as well,” Perzio said.

Festival participants are many and varied.

“We have art therapy people who are going to be there. Queerlective is going to be there. The Concord Arts Market is going to be there too. We wanted a taste of every medium as much as possible as part of the arts festival. So the goal is, if you’re coming at night to see one of those great bands and things like that, come during the day, experience all these great arts activities, projects. Sample some stuff that you might not have thought about experiencing before, and then in the evening time go to one of the great live music performances that we have in any one of the number of venues,” Perzio said.

Visitors can partake of the Festival’s outdoor beer garden, and there will be “a couple of food vendors,” Perzio said, noting that visitors “can grab food from our tried and true restaurants and things like that downtown too.”

The festival is as much a celebration of the community as it is of the arts. “The goal is, again, to continue to kind of have people understand that Concord is on its way up in that regard,” Perzio said. “So it’s a destination for people. Obviously last week we had the book festival, and we’re trying the coffee festivals here now too, so we kind of want to keep hammering home [that] this is a destination for people to come and relax and enjoy themselves.”

Perzio himself will be in the crowd. “I’m really excited about seeing Saturday night, Couch and Rubblebucket play. Those two are like personal favorites of mine,” he said.

Ultimately, “I just want to see downtown packed with people having a good time, that’s really the goal,” he said.

Sound and Color Festival Activity Tent Schedule
Downtown Concord (Outdoor Arts Market on South Main Street)
Friday, Oct. 18

All day glass mosaic building with Lizz Van Saun
Noon to 3 p.m. videography with Concord Community TV
3 to 4:30 p.m. instruments with the Concord Community Music School
4:30 to 6 p.m. costumes with the Children’s Theatre
5 to 7 p.m. botanical paintings with Kimball Jenkins
Saturday, Oct. 19
All day glass mosaic building with Lizz Van Saun
11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. costumes with the Children’s Theatre
12:30 to 1:30 p.m. children’s storytime with author Matt Forrest Esenwine
1:30 to 2:30 p.m. collaborative drawing with Kimball Jenkins
2:30 to 3:30 p.m. fall mosaics with Kimball Jenkins

Sound and Color Festival Performance Schedule

Performances at the CCA Main Stage and BNH Discovery Stage will require free tickets.

Friday, Oct. 18
CCA Main Stage (44 S. Main St.)
Tyler Hilton, 6 p.m.
Adam Ezra Group, 7 p.m.
Yonder Mountain String Band, 8:30 p.m.
BNH Discovery Stage (16 S. Main St.)
Billy Wylder, 6 p.m.
GoldenOak, 7 p.m.
Oliver Hazard, 8:30 p.m.
Feathered Friend (231 S. Main St.)
Willy Chase, 6 p.m.
April Cushman, 8:30 p.m.
Outdoor Stage (South Main Street From Hills Ave. to Concord Street)
A Squared, 1 p.m.
Way of the Headband, 2 p.m.
Lee and Dr. G, 3 p.m.
Kimayo, 4:30 p.m.
Vulture Sister Song, 6 p.m.

Saturday, Oct. 19
CCA Main Stage
Air Traffic Controller, 7 p.m.
Colony House, 8:30 p.m.
BNH Discovery Stage
Couch, 7:30 p.m.
Rubblebucket, 9 p.m.
Feathered Friend
Rebecca Turmel, 5 p.m.
Taylor Hughes, 7 p.m.
Billy Gillman, 8:30 p.m.
Concord Community Music Stage
drum circle, 11 a.m.
Puppetry demo & crafts, noon
folk jam, 1 p.m.
ukulele class, 2 p.m.
music & movement class, 3 p.m
Northern Lights mini concert & singalong, 4 p.m.
Eliot Fisk, 7:30 p.m.
Outdoor Stage
Mr. Aaron Halloween party, 11 a.m.
Queen City Improv, 12:30 p.m.
Andrea Paquin, 1:30 p.m.
Kotoko Brass, 3 p.m.
Lil Rennie, 4:30 p.m.
Jon Hope, 6 p.m.

Parking
Parking garages (free, all-day parking on weekends):
Capitol Commons Parking Garage, 75 Storrs St.
School Street Public Parking Garage, 17 School St.
State Street Public Parking Garage, 19 N. State St.
On-street parking in downtown Concord is metered, and parking on Main Street is limited to three hours.

Featured image: Couch will perform on the BNH Stage on Saturday.

The Art Roundup 24/10/10

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

Welcome to Cicely, Alaska: Pembroke City Limits (134 Main St. in Suncook; pembrokecitylimits.com, 210-2409) will present “Music of Words: A Dramatic Reading of Northern Exposure” on Thursday, Oct. 10, at 7 p.m. The production will feature eight dramatic actors reading from a third-season episode. The event starts at 7 p.m. and admission is free.

Harvest Fair: The Craftworkers Guild, based in Bedford, is open through Monday, Oct. 14, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. Get a look at some of the items in the shop — including woodwork, fiber craft and more — on their Facebook page.

Paper pumpkins: Twiggs Gallery (254 King St. in Boscawen; 975-0015, twiggsgallery.org) will offer a Halloween paper pumpkin make-and-take activity on Saturday, Oct. 12. The gallery will provide all materials for the project, which will be ongoing from 1 to 3 p.m.

Meet the artist
The exhibit “Things on Tabletops: Paintings by Bruce McColl” will open Thursday, Oct. 10, at the Sullivan Framing & Fine Art Gallery (15 N. Amherst Road in Bedford; sullivanframing.com) and be on display through Saturday, Nov. 23. Sullivan will hold a reception for the show on Oct. 10 from 5 to 7 p.m. Head to the gallery on Saturday, Nov. 9, from 4 to 5 p.m. for an artist talk, according to a Sullivan email. Sullivan Framing is open Tuesdays through Fridays from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturdays from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., according to its Facebook page.

Wool arts: The New Hampshire Wool Arts Tour takes place Saturday, Oct. 12, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday, Oct. 13, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. with happenings on five farms — Spinner Farm in Deering; Glory Be Farm in Bennington; Windfall Farm in Antrim; Ten Talents at La Bergerie Dumas in Greenfield, and Maple Lane Farm in Lyndeborough. See woolartstournh.com for the demonstrations, artists, food and more slated to be at each farm.

Photography show: “From Here to Everywhere,” an exhibit featuring “some of Ethan Abitz’s most cherished photographs, capturing life from his hometown in the Monadnock Region to faraway destinations like New Zealand,” is on display at the Jaffrey Civic Center (40 Main St. in Jaffrey; jaffreyciviccenter.com, 532-6527) in the Auditorium Gallery and Display Cases through Saturday, Nov. 9.

Zachary Lewis

Witch hysteria

Powerhouse performs The Crucible

For a play that is set in the late 17th century and debuted on Broadway in 1953, The Crucible remains timely.

Bryan Halperin, director of an upcoming production opening Oct. 11 at Laconia’s Colonial Theatre, explained The Crucible‘s enduring quality in a recent phone interview.

“It’s a meaty drama about the seedier elements of human nature, a gripping, exciting, dramatic play about power, greed and lust,” he said. “It’s got elements of all the deadly sins.”

Because it deals with the Salem Witch Trials, Arthur Miller’s Tony-winning work is frequently staged in October, but The Crucible is far from a Halloween show. Rather, it’s about power, and how even a small taste can affect those who do not have it.

Throughout, Miller blends the historical record and dramatic license, beginning with the basic fact of four women accused of witchcraft after they’re caught dancing in the woods. In prisoner’s dilemma fashion, they turn against each other.

Tituba, a slave, claims to be a victim of a curse cast by two members of the group. She’s egged on by the men investigating, and the ringleader, Abigail Williams, goes along with her story, hoping to cover up that the event was born from her lover’s jealousy.

Approval from the town fathers changes the dynamic “They’re afraid of going to hell for sinning, they’re literally almost scared to death,” Halperin said. “Suddenly it gets turned around to, ‘All we’ve got to do is say what they want us to say, and we won’t get in any trouble; we’ll be praised for it.’ That’s a very powerful drug.”

Miller drew on a 20th-century “witch hunt” when he wrote The Crucible: the Senate hearings held to root out communism led by Sen. Joseph McCarthy in the 1950s. Some versions of the play are explicit about this element and include a narration comparing the Puritan era to post-WWII America.

Halperin sees the parallels. “Watching how society can quickly break down in a fit of hysteria when people learn to use the system for their own gain, at the expense of their friends and neighbors,” he observed, is “gripping for 1692, and it’s equally gripping for 2024 — as it was in 1954.”

The Crucible is Powerhouse Theatre Collaborative’s first stage play after a year and a half of doing musicals. Leading the cast are Kenny Aber as John Proctor, Laura Iwaskiewicz as his wife Elizabeth, and Amanda Wagner as Abigail, an orphan and former servant who was sent away after she had an affair with John.

Wagner is a St. Louis-born actress who moved to New Hampshire after 10 years working in Los Angeles. She said in a recent phone interview that portraying Abigail has been a goal of hers since reading The Crucible in 10th grade.“She’s a very complex person,” she said. “She’s a villain, but also a victim of her circumstances.”

She offered a take on the question answered earlier by Halperin. “This play feels so timely because groupthink and saying the truth in the face of what the majority is saying even if it’s going to get you killed is a terrifying thing,” she said. “It is strange to me that that’s a lesson that some people don’t want their teenagers taught.”

As a relative newcomer to the region, Wagner enjoys the atmosphere at Powerhouse and she is particularly grateful for its founders, Halperin and his wife, Johanna.

“Everyone is so supportive of one another,” she said. “Some of the actors have to go into some dark places, but Bryan does a good job of keeping things light. I always leave rehearsal with a smile on my face and feeling exhilarated, albeit tired. I want to give props to the company for doing some incredibly professional-level work.”

The Crucible
When: Friday, Oct. 11, and Saturday, Oct. 12, 7:30 p.m. and Sunday, Oct. 13, 2 p.m.
Where: Colonial Theatre, 609 Main St., Laconia
Tickets: $18 to $22 at etix.com

Featured image: Abigail Williams (Amanda Wagner) begs John Proctor (Kenny Aber) to give her a kind word. Courtesy photo.

The Art Roundup 24/10/03

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

From the Potters Guild: The New Hampshire Potters Guild is displaying its 2024 Biennial Show, “Hands on Earth,” now at Kimball Jenkins Art and Community Center (266 N. Main St. in Concord) through Saturday, Nov. 2. The show features “an array of works from the talented members of the NH Potters Guild, showcasing the diversity of styles, techniques, and approaches that each artist brings to their craft. From wheel-thrown vessels to hand-built sculptures, the exhibition reflects the rich variety of contemporary ceramics in New Hampshire, all rooted in the elemental material of clay,” according to a release from the Guild. The exhibition is on view in the Mansion and Carriage House on Tuesdays and Thursdays, 2 to 6 p.m., and on Saturday, Nov. 20, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Friday, Nov. 1, from 4 to 8 p.m. and Saturday, Nov. 2, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Fore more on the New Hampshir Potters Guild, see nhpottersguild.org.

The Legend of Sleepy Hollow
The Milford Area Players take you to Sleepy Hollow for the tale of Ichabod Crane, Katrina Van Tassel and the Headless Horseman in The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, adapted by John Heimbuch and Jon Ferguson, according to a press release. The play finishes its run this weekend at the Amato Center for the Performing Arts (56 Mont Vernon St., Milford, amatocenter.org/riverbend-youth-company) with shows through Sunday, Oct. 6. Showtimes are at 7:30 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays and 2 p.m. on Sundays. Tickets cost $21.65 for adults, $16.46 for students and seniors. See milfordareaplayers.org.

Harvest Fair: The Craftworkers Guild, based in Bedford, will open the doors of its shop at Oliver Kendall House at 3 Meetinghouse Road Thursday, Oct. 3, through Monday, Oct. 14, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. Get a look at some of the items in the shop — including jewelry, decor, honey soap — on their Facebook page.

Use your voice: Truepenny Arts (truepennyarts.com) will hold a workshop on “Opening Up Your Voice: Conservatory Tricks!” on Saturday, Oct. 5, from 10 a.m. to noon for ages 16 and up at Diamond Rolfing & Movement Studio, 210 N. State St. in Concord. The cost is a suggested $20, according to a Truepenny newsletter. “Interested in easily accessible and repeatable ways to ‘open up’ your voice, to find more fullness, resonance, and clarity? Graduate/conservatory-level instruction and take-home materials provided,” the newsletter said. The workshop is facilitated by Truepenny’s Michael Cobb, the newsletter said. For more information, contact Michael at [email protected] or call 545-8351.

Zachary Lewis

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