Meet the sculptors

Nashua International Sculpture Symposium offers access to artists

In front of a revitalized Civil War-era cotton mill, four sculptors are doing something unique: creating their work in full view of the public. Through early June, Pauline Berger of Germany, Margaux LaSalle of France, Anna Moultoni of Italy and Sean Williams of Barre, Vermont, are shaping stone into permanent public sculpture.

For close to two decades it’s been a rite of spring, and the longevity of the Nashua International Sculpture Symposium has changed the scope of the event’s debt to the city. This year the organization behind it has a new name: the Nashua Sculpture Project. It’s a subtle but telling shift in identity.

“We had 56 sculptures as of last year,” Executive Director Gail Moriarty said in a recent phone interview. “When I looked at them, it became pretty clear to me that we need to change our focus from just being three weeks in May to the care and preservation of our collection.”

So much outdoor sculpture, spread across Nashua’s parks and public spaces, represents an enormous civic investment and an equally large maintenance responsibility. The new organizational framework puts stewardship of its legacy alongside the annual event itself.

The Symposium remains the same, Moriarty continued, but what’s different is a focus on care and restoration for the rest of the year. It means expanded programming, including fundraising events, family classes, stone-carving workshops and the like.

“Art is everything,” she said. “The Nashua Sculpture Project is about art in every form.”

Annual sculptor selection was a peer-driven process, led by Artistic Director Jim Larson. It began with last year’s artists recommending sculptors for the current year. From a compiled list, the board considered individual portfolios, along with what Larson called “less quantifiable considerations.”

Speaking by phone recently, Larson explained what that meant. “We try to consider what Nashua needs, how these artists might enmesh into our community, and how they’ll serve Nashua. We try to create a group that will work well together … have similar perspectives in some ways, but also varying perspectives.”

This year’s guiding theme for the four sculptors is “Gathering Momentum.” It was chosen as a principle, not a prescription. Artists are free to interpret the phrase wherever their instincts lead them. For Larson, though, they are impactful words that reflect his convictions about art’s role in the present age.

“I and many other sculptors share this idea that artists today should be working at a scale that matches the level of destruction we see in the world right now,” he said. “If we are going to keep up with that, we need as much momentum and as much power and forward movement as we can muster. That’s what it’s about.”

All four sculptors this year will work in stone. It’s a deliberate choice and, for Larson, also philosophical for a symposium that requires materials built to last. A hundred-year maintenance-free lifespan is their stated goal, but the reasoning goes deeper than durability, Larson believes.

“We’re not making luxury objects for Nashua, we’re not trying to boost property values,” he said. “We are trying to make livable, meaningful artwork for people. That means we have to work with humble materials that are accessible, and stone is the most humble material we have. It’s just a piece of the ground.”

Larson encourages the curious to come out to see it happen, to experience what he considers a rare opportunity.

“It’s so hard to just have a conversation with an artist, because they’re not out in public working, and this is the chance,” he said. “If you want to go talk to an artist, just show up and they’ll talk to you. If you really want a long conversation, bring a meal and sit down and have dinner with them.”

For details on buying a meal for a sculptor, visit the Project’s website, or contact the organization for information on other ways to support the effort. Larson offered a final thought on why watching enduring art come to life is a valuable and truly enlightening experience.

“In America, manual [and] demanding labor is really rare to see. The widespread view of hard physical labor right now is that it’s an unfortunate byproduct of having to afford an expensive American life. But for these artists, this version of work is one of the most joyous things that they get to do.”

19th Nashua International Sculpture Symposium
When: Mondays through Saturdays, through June 3, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Where: Picker Artists Studios, 3 Pine St., Nashua
More: nashuasculpturesymposium.org
Closing ceremony – Saturday, June 6, at 1 p.m.

Featured photo: Clockwise from top left Sean Williams, Pauline Berger, Margot Lasalle, Anna Multone. Courtesy photos.

Stitched together

Amoskeag Quilters Guild gathers for biennial bash

Every other year the Amoskeag Quilters Guild holds a two-day event to showcase the creative skills of its 160 members. On May 16 and May 17 at Manchester’s Memorial High School, 220 quilts will be on display, ranging from heirloom-quality masterworks to the earnest first efforts of brand-new quilters.

The latter aspect is important. It’s not a juried show — every skill level is welcome, among participants and viewers. This is a celebration of a community and its shared passion, according to the event’s chairperson; a joyous occasion for an organization that formed back in 1988.

“We’ve encouraged every member to put in a quilt,” quilter Kristi Parker said by phone recently. “We’ve got some people who’ve been quilting for 40-plus years and are very skilled, and there are others who’ve only been quilting six months. We’ve welcomed all levels of ability.”

That intentional inclusivity is part of what sets a Guild show apart from prestigious competitions. “When you go to a juried show, it’s like going to a professional basketball game,” Parker said. “You appreciate the players, you love being there, but most people aren’t ever going to attain that level.”

A Guild event, she continued, is an experience grounded in the possible. “You see amazing works and think, ‘I can aspire to that,’ and you also see someone who’s only been quilting six months. They’ve put their heart and soul into something, and it’s encouraging. Because you think, ‘I can do that.’”

Parker came to quilting in a roundabout way. Growing up in a rural town, she kept busy making clothes. In her teens she decided to make a quilt with collected fabric scraps.

“I had no idea there were rules or guidelines,” she said. “Traditional quilts are made from cotton, but my first one has everything from polyester and double knit to velvet.”

The hand-stitching of her childhood has given way to high-tech equipment like a long-arm quilting machine, a computer-guided, large-format device that’s transformed quilt-making in recent years. It was used to make this year’s raffle prize, a quilt that began as paper pieced blocks that individual Guild members worked on prior to assembly.

Speaking of high-end, a big-ticket prize at this year’s show is a $1,800 Bernina 335 sewing machine from Pintuck & Purl in North Hampton, a donation that wowed Parker.

“When they offered us that machine to raffle off, my jaw dropped to the floor,” she said. “If somebody wins it … they’ve hit the jackpot.”

Proceeds from the show benefit the New England Quilt Museum in Lowell, Mass. However, the raffle for the “Tastefully Tula” collaborative quilt raises funds in support of Kidneys for Kindness. The nonprofit organization advocates for organ donation, supports donors and raises awareness about kidney health.

Other Guild charitable efforts include Cases of Caring, with members making and donating pillowcases to local groups to bring to children, veterans and shut-ins. Every other year, the Guild hosts a workshop to mass produce them, and kits can be picked up at monthly meetings and returned.

There’s also the Quilted Gift program. Members receive pre-batted and backed kits for quilting and bouncing, along with other completed tops and quilts that members have finished and wish to donate. The Committee then distributes them to people in need. More than 850 quilts have been donated to various programs and charities in the past five years.

This cohesiveness is a big part of what draws Parker to the organization, and it has less to do with fabric than with people.

“One of my favorite parts of quilting, besides the creativity, is the community,” she said. “Having the chance to meet people, to develop friendships — that’s really what drives me.”

Amoskeag Quilters Guild Show
When: Saturday, May 16, and Sunday, May 17), 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Where: Manchester Memorial High School, 1 Crusader Way, Manchester
Tickets: $10 at the door, free for ages 12 and under
More: amoskeagqg.org

Featured photo: Courtesy photo.

Olde World Fun

NH Renaissance Faire returns

Long before Danny Scialdone became general manager of the New Hampshire Renaissance Faire, he was better known as court jester Aspergillius Gleekman, mirthfully roaming the annual event. That’s not changed, and when Scialdone is called to answer a problem at the Faire these days, he still arrives with bells on.

It’s a visage not everyone is prepared for, he recalled in a recent phone interview as preparations for this year’s Faire in Fremont were underway.

“Some of the looks that I get from the people when I come walking up,” he said. “I’m like, ‘Hi, I’m Danny, how can I help you?’ and they’re like, ‘Oh, OK, you’re the manager? OK.’”

That blend of whimsy, warmth and genuine community spirit is exactly what the New Hampshire Renaissance Faire is all about. It’s why thousands of visitors make the trip each spring to step back in time, eat an enormous turkey leg, and lose themselves in a world of knights, aerial artists, fairies and more.

The Faire has come a long way since its founding in 2005, when it launched with a modest lineup of about nine vendors. This year roughly 170 merchants and performers will fill the fairgrounds. Many are traveling from across New England and the East Coast, with some coming all the way from Michigan, Ohio and beyond.

The growth reflects a hunger for the immersive, cosplay time travel experience provided there. “In the early 2000s, the only New England state that didn’t have a Renaissance Faire was New Hampshire,” Scialdone said, and founder Shannon McCracken-Barber from Farmington wanted to change that.

Scialdone came on board in 2012, a year after McCracken-Barber departed.

“It got to be a little bigger than I think she had ever expected it to get, and trying to run it all by herself was getting more and more daunting,” he said. To ensure the Faire continued, she urged the formation of a nonprofit. Three Maples Renaissance Corporation was born.

For curious first-timers unsure of what to expect, Scialdone’s advice is simple: just show up.

“It’s an amazing experience, and it’s hard to actually describe,” he said. “My recommendation is to come out and experience it. Even if it’s the only time that you ever do, I know you’re going to love it.”

The Faire is designed to be a fun family day out, reasonably priced for parents and kids to enjoy without stress. Archery instruction is one of many extras included with admission, offering the chance to learn from a professional bowyer and fire a volley of arrows at a real target. “It’s a very popular activity,” Scialdone noted.

For those who crave more spectacle, the Brotherhood of the Arrow and Sword sets up a fully authentic 15th-century knights’ encampment, complete with armor displays and live, unchoreographed sword fighting. Aerial artists are among Scaildone’s favorite participants, bringing a modern dash of circus flair.

Storytellers, period performers and roving characters fill every corner of the grounds. Scialdone also confirms drumsticks are still very much available, though he warns that as the day winds down so does the supply. “People can be absolutely devastated when our vendor runs out.”

Some of his best memories from past Faires have little to do with planned programming. Last year a soaking rain flooded part of the grounds. The staff referred to the resulting mess as Lake Complain, but two small boys dressed as dragons were overjoyed and spent the afternoon gleefully splashing through mud and puddles.

A crowd of onlookers laughed and filmed their spontaneous romp, turning a potential disaster into a fun memory.

“That’s the biggest take back for me,” Scialdone said. “Just getting to stand there and watch people have such a blast.” He’s also proud of the Faire’s success as a fundraiser.

Since the current team took over, the Faire has donated more than $700,000 to causes including the New Hampshire Food Bank, Meals on Wheels of Rockingham County, Exeter Hospital’s Beyond the Rainbow cancer recovery program, and several others. “Our entire goal and purpose of doing what we do,” he said, “is to help out people in need in New Hampshire.”

2026 New Hampshire Renaissance Faire
When: Saturdays (May 9 & 16) and Sundays (May 10 & 17), 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.
Where: Brookvale Pines Farm, 80 Martin Road, Fremont
Tickets: See nhrenfaire.com

Featured photo: Renaissance Faire. Courtesy photo.

Twice as nice

For Free Comic Book Day, industry change means more for fans

It’s counterintuitive that bankruptcy would make a company’s big event bigger, but it happened when the distributor that launched Free Comic Book Day went bankrupt last year. The company that bought it, and with the trademark, promised to continue FCBD. However, one distributor, Penguin Random House, broke away and launched a rival version.

Fortunately, customers are the winners in this battle — both events will happen simultaneously. On May 2, stores will hand out titles from both FCBD and the newcomer, Comics Giveaway Day — no strings attached. Michael Boddy, the owner of Collectibles Unlimited in Concord, summed it up thusly: “It sounds different, but it’s going to be the same.”

Actually, it’s better. In 2025 two dozen titles were given away; this year at least 46 will be available for the event, created in 2002 to build interest in comics and, at the time, promote a new Spider-Man movie.

There are two huge events happening in the state, one spilling out from a store into a function hall with dozens of vendor tables, and another that takes over an entire downtown, with a festival’s worth of musical guests during the day.

Collectibles Unlimited

25 South St., Concord, 228-3712, collectiblesunlimited.biz

Hours: 10:30 a.m. – 5 p.m.

A Concord fixture since 1984, taken over in 2005 by Michael Boddy, offering comics, role-playing, board and card games, along with miniatures, paints, coins and bullion. Because the shop skews heavily toward tabletop gaming, FCBD is also a good chance to browse discounted board and role-playing game stock while picking up free comics.

Double Midnight Comics

252 Willow St., Manchester, 669-9636, dmcomics.com/freecomicbookday

341 Loudon Road, Concord, 715-2683, dmcomics.com/freecomicbookday

Hours: 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.

Held in The Factory on Willow event hall adjacent to its store, Double Midnight’s Manchester event is one of the largest FCBD celebrations in northern New England. There’s a large vendor floor, artist alley, cosplay contest, and panel/signing area, and the retail space is also open for shopping.

Visitors can grab the official free comics, meet creators like illustrator JK Woodward and Legacy of Valor’s Kurt Springs, check out movie cars like a Back to the Future DeLorean or a Jurassic Park Jeep or participate in the 15th annual costume contest, and watch Clemenzi Crusaders perform “the soundtrack of pop culture.”

“We invite everybody to come on down and experience the events — we go all out for this,” Chris Proulx, owner of Double Midnight along with his brother Scott, said by phone recently. “We love comics, and we want to have a good time … it’s a great event for families to drop in for the day.”

Double Midnight’s Concord location will also hand out official titles (with a per-person limit). It’s a convenient stop for those coming from the Lakes Region or anyone looking to avoid the larger Manchester crowd while scoring a free comic book or graphic novel like Chris Proulx’s pick from this year’s batch, Dungeon Crawler Carl.

Jetpack Comics & Games

37 N. Main St., Rochester, 330-XMEN (9636), jetpackcomics.com/fcbd-cgd

Hours: 10 a.m. – 7 p.m.

Founded by Ralph DiBernardo, Jetpack Comics launched one of the state’s signature FCBD celebrations. The event has grown into a full-day bash in downtown Rochester, with a mini-music festival and a late night afterparty. There’s even a custom city-only title: Dungeon Crawler Carl with a bespoke cover.

A citywide comic book scavenger hunt offers kids, teens and adults special titles at participating downtown businesses. Extras come with the purchase of a $10 Power Up Band. Benefiting Rochester Performance and Arts Center, it includes admission to the seven-band Rock n’ Roll Playground Festival and Curmudjun’s afterparty concert. At official FCBD host Rochester Opera House, there’s a vendor hall and The Turtle Den. Kevin Eastman and Peter Laird created Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles in nearby Dover, and DiBernardo premiered their first comic book at a convention in 1984. “We’ve had close ties forever,” DiBernardo said. “It’s like a big Turtle party.”

Merrymac Games and Comics

550 DW Highway, Merrimack, 420-8161, merrymacgc.com

Hours: Monday and Tuesday 10 a.m. – 7 p.m., Wednesday through Saturday 10 a.m. – 9 p.m., Sunday noon – 6 p.m.

As in past years, Merrymac’s giveaway is paired with creator appearances, including former Black Caravan co-publisher Rich Woodall, also known for his work on The Bloody Ring of Dracula, Gods of Brutality and others. He’s also worked on covers for Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Powerpuff Girls and Masters of the Universe.

Also appearing is Sara Richard, a New Hampshire-based artist and writer whose work includes comic book covers and book illustrations for DC Comics, Marvel, Dynamite Comics and other publishers, along with other illustration work for DC Collectables, StormKing and The Witch House in Salem, Mass.

Newbury Comics

777 S. Willow St., Manchester, 624-2842

99 Rockingham Park Blvd. (Mall at Rockingham Park), Salem, 890-1380

310 DW Highway (Pheasant Lane Mall), Nashua, 888-0720

The big New England retailer is listed as a participant on the FCBD website.

Pop Culture Cards Comics and Collectibles

66 Route 27, Raymond, 244-1850, popculturenh.com

Along with comic book giveaways, there will be regular gaming going on. At 10:30 a.m., author Mike Marks will sign copies of the first issue of Helsing Files, his detective and vampire thriller funded by a Kickstarter campaign.

Stairway to Heaven Comics

105 Gosling Road, Newington, 319-6134, stairwaytoheavencomics.com

Hours: 10 a.m. – 6 p.m.
Owner Brad Gile expects a “fun, festive atmosphere,” with guests including local creators HG Bradley and Jeff Lorentz (Skin of My Teeth, My Coworker is a Vampire) with Katie McMahon returning from last year. Luke Fletcher will show off Overpower, a game that’s been refreshed from its ’90s beginnings, and give away an Invincible card.

Featured photo: Photo by Zombie Leader of Carolyn and Christian Lopes as Jubilee and Wolverine browsing at Double Midnight.

Secrets and pies

Sweet, funny The Littlefield Gazette Does Not End Today opens in Nashua

One by one, local newspapers are disappearing. Wedding announcements and grainy photos of youth sports once stuffed in envelopes and sent with pride to relatives now live online. Or worse, they’re forever gone. The lingua franca of small-town life, dropped on porches by middle schoolers on their bikes, is a fading memory.

That’s the world of The Littlefield Gazette Does Not End Today, the latest production from Nashua Theatre Guild, running April 24 through April 26 at the Janice B. Streeter Theater. Set at the company picnic of a 126-year-old paper in the Midwest, it’s a heartwarming look at coworkers doing their best to keep a looming demise from spoiling the fun.

Directed by Alex Slocum, the 2022 Don Zolidis play is less a commentary on independent journalism than a celebration of the spirit of one small group of people swimming against the tide to carry it on. In small vignettes, the ensemble cast share their fears and dreams, using the moment to both unburden and connect.

Sports reporter Tony (Mike Amichetti) and Kate (Danielle Chisholm), a human interest story writer, compare jobs and imagine life without them. At first dismissive, Tony praises Kate’s work. “Your human interest stories make me really interested,” he says. “You take the most boring people this town has ever produced and make them seem fascinating.”

Kate is less charitable to Tony’s beat, but he defends it with an observation that sums up what it means to lose community papers like the Gazette. Readers are “not going to go to Facebook to find out what happened,” he says. “Nobody’s sending a link to grandma to let them know how their kid did in the meet … that’s the thing that’s going to be missed the most.”

Linda (Sierra Jones), a farm reporter who bartends and remodels kitchens on the side, counsels Imani (Belle McLeod), a new ad sales rep who’s overseen a vanishing client list in her tenure. When she laments her failure to turn things around, Linda reassures her, saying, “I can’t even clean my bathroom in two months.”

For some, the event is a catalyst to confession. Throwing caution to the wind, feelings long buried surface for both young and old to inspire romantic overtures. One couple tentatively discusses a move from dating to the next level. There’s a pie contest with a twist ending — after all, it’s the Midwest.

The overall effect is wholesome, heartfelt and timely. For Alyson Galipeau, who plays publisher Gayle, the latter is what attracted her to the play. An at-large member of the Guild’s board, Galipeau also helped select The Littlefield Gazette Does Not End Today for production.

“I grew up getting the Nashua Telegraph in my house,” she said in a recent phone interview. “When it went to an online format and … employees got fired, my mom was really bummed out. I was bummed out, too. The parallels between worlds is what drew me in.”

Despite its solemn undertone, the play’s humor breaks through.

“Rehearsals have been going great, a lot of fun,” Galipeau said. “We crack up nonstop. Some of these characters are ridiculous, and we’re also screwing up our lines … between those two aspects, we laugh nonstop.”

Plays like this one and The Tin Woman, a tear-jerker done earlier in the season, are a big reason why the interest in Guild productions is growing.

“A lot of people are auditioning, and we are having to turn auditioners away for the first time in many years,” Galipeau said. “That tells me that there’s increased interest in theater and our plays, which I love.”

She believes the current effort, which runs for three performances, has wide appeal. “There is a little subplot for everyone in this play. You’ll be able to relate to at least one person; I think that’s important. If you can connect with your audience, then you have done your job as a writer and a director.”

The Littlefield Gazette Does Not End Today
When: Friday, April 24, and Saturday, April 25, at 7:30 p.m.; Sunday, April 26, at 2 p.m.
Where: Janice B Streeter Theater, 14 Court St., Nashua
Tickets: $18 and up, nashuatheatreguild.org

Featured photo: The Littlefield Gazette Does Not End Today. Courtesy photo.

Human touch

Luna Moth Zine Fest champions DIY spirit

Three years on, Luna Moth Zine Fest is back and bigger than ever. There are more vendors (“tablers” in the parlance), and workshops covering storytelling, crowdfunding, game drawing and community care. The festival also has its first group of paid sponsors, plus a new and larger location in Manchester, after two years in Salem.

It’s a big leap for an event that began when cartoonist April Landry grew frustrated with long drives to similar events, so she decided to do one in her home state. Landry named the festival after a species of moth that’s native to the region and found in the wild, seemingly in defiance of nature.

“It’s very strange that something that vibrant and almost tropical-looking lives in New England,” she said. “It’s a magical-looking thing, a little mythical, so it’s a way to say New England-based and New Hampshire-based while also giving it this ethereal vibe. It’s a little special.”

For anyone wondering, zines are small circulation booklets — comics, word art, ephemera, covering all manner of topics. They’re self published, rather than commercially, and exist “for self expression, art, storytelling, information sharing and pure creative joy … passion projects for humans, by humans,” according to a festival press release.

“The great thing about zines is that anybody can make a zine, and anybody can put whatever they want in a zine,” Landry said. “There’s no publisher telling you, ‘you can’t do that’ and no editor telling you can’t do anything. There’s literally no barrier between your idea and getting it out into the world with zines.”

Landry entered the zine world after she designed a Dungeons & Dragons world to play with friends. “Once the game night was over, I felt like the work was wasted, so I figured out a way to put it in a book … facts about different monsters, their hit points, where to find them, things like that.” She called her first-ever zine Things to Fight and Places to Fight Them.

Artists are often drawn to zines as an extension of their other forms of self-expression, or as a way to distribute their work.

“It’s very liberatory,” Landry said. “There are people who are making art all the time and don’t know what to do with it, or don’t have a way to get it out there. Finding zines and making zines is typically a way to do that.”

For others, they’re a tool. One person told Landry they fold a zine together on Sunday, then write in it like a diary for the week. “When they’re done, they don’t print it, they don’t make copies, they just put it on the shelf,” she said. “It’s just a way for them to get thoughts out of their heads … something that’s both outward and inward.”

There are more than 70 tablers showing their wares at this year’s event. Katherine Leung, based in Vermont, is doing Zine Fest for the first time. Leung’s Canto Cutie zine explores the experience of Cantonese people living in America. Like many other vendors, Leung’s table will offer other art products like prints and enamel pins.

“The unifying factor is that in some way, shape or form, they make zines,” Landry said. “One vendor’s zines are about learning how to knit, and there’s someone who makes coloring books … it’s a mix across the board, but in some shape or form these people are writing or publishing something themselves that they want other people to read and look at.”

Another new vendor is Silas Denver, who works using the name Sweater Muppets. “They are only now just getting into zine making, and all the stuff they’ve been putting out is cutting-edge and incredible stuff,” Landry said. “It feels really vital, and I’m so excited to have them.”

Landry said Zine Fest’s “four amazing sponsors” are Goosepoop, a Portland, Maine, game studio whose work includes the RPG Laundry Punks; Wrong Brain, a Seacoast collective celebrating “unconventional, under-represented & emerging arts”; the Boston Comics Foundation and Xomik Bük, a comic book collective.

Come with an open mind and eagerness to engage at the all-ages event, Landry urged. “What makes Luna … so popular with people is the culture there and the vibes. It’s one of these places where you can go and talk to interesting people who have like-minded interests, and they’re approachable.”

Luna Moth Zine Fest
When: Saturday, April 18, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Where: YWCA, 72 Concord St., Manchester
More: lunamothzinefest.bsky.social

Featured photo: Courtesy photo.

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