Rob DuToit teaches the third in his series of online art history lectures via Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill on Tuesday, May 18th, from 10 a.m. to noon. This one focuses on nature in painting from Hans Hofmann to the present day. Registration is pay-what-you-can at castlehill.org.
Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill
A Summer of Making Art at Castle Hill
Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill has announced its summer lineup. There will be 82 in-person and 23 virtual workshops.
Some highlights: Tom O’Connell teaches a concrete and mosaic workshop, June 28th through July 2nd; Karen Dukess and Christina Clancy teach “Polishing Your Draft: A Fiction Revision Workshop,” June 28th through July 2nd; Julie Lapping Rivera teaches “The Art of the Woodcut,” July 5th through 9th; Glenn Grishkoff teaches brush making, July 19th through 23rd; Vanessa Vartabedian, producer of the Mosquito Story Slam, teaches “The Art & Craft of Live Storytelling,” July 26th through 30th; and Barbara Blaisdell teaches songwriting, July 19th through 23rd. Judy Pfaff, Carol Pelletier, Bernd Haussmann, Rich Blundell, and Cammie Watson teach painting. There are also ceramics workshops with Guy Wolff, Paul Wisotzky, Mark Shapiro, Sam Taylor, Kensuke Yamda, Natalia Arbelaez, Christopher Watt, and others.
Live events will take place on Castle Hill’s new outdoor stage at Edgewood Farm. Mark Bittman will appear in conversation with Doc Willoughby on July 14, and Eric Cooper will give a talk on social justice and the arts on July 15th. The full lineup is at castlehill.org.
Pot Luck
Paul Wisotzky teaches “Pots and Process,” an online workshop via Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill, on Wednesdays beginning May 5th, from 1 to 3 p.m. Wisotzky will discuss lids and handles, decorating, glazing, and firing. “We’ve all encountered pots that look great but don’t work and vice versa. Let’s avoid that!” he declares in the course announcement. Registration is $200 at castlehill.org.
Free Senior Workshops From Castle Hill
The spring session of Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill’s “60+” program begins this week. The free virtual workshops are open to residents of Provincetown, Truro, Wellfleet, Eastham, Orleans, Chatham, Harwich, and Brewster who are 60 years of age or older.
Vicky Tomayko teaches “Relief Printmaking in the Home Studio” on Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 a.m. to noon, from April 13th to 29th. Students will learn how to make woodcuts, linocuts, and collagraphs. If cooking is more your thing, Katherine Alford, former vice president of Food Network’s test kitchen, teaches a workshop on Thursdays, 3 to 5 p.m., from April 22nd to May 20th, skipping May 6.
Sign up for the lottery at castlehill.org, or by calling 508-349-7511. Participants will be notified of admittance on Friday, April 9th.
Channeling Matisse
Laura Shabott and Alana Barrett are teaching two online workshops this week. The first, via Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill, concerns experimental surfaces and materials in painting. It takes place Saturdays, 10 a.m. to noon, and Wednesdays, from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m., beginning April 10th. Registration is $400 at castlehill.org. The second, via the Provincetown Art Association and Museum, is “Exploring Figure Painting and Drawing Through the Spirit of Matisse.” It takes place Sunday, April 11th, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Registration is $150 at paam.org.
Pot Luck
Paul Wisotzky leads a Zoom pottery course via Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill on Wednesdays beginning April 7th, from 1 to 3 p.m. The course is “a great way to stay engaged with clay whether you have access to the means of making or not,” according to the description. Registration is $200 at castlehill.org.
Castle Hill Offers a ‘New Narrative’
Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill presents a virtual gallery, “New Narrative: Selections From the Yellow Chair Salon.” The artists, with work on view and for sale, are Jeanne Neal, Judith Luongo, Linda Vigdor, Mary DeVincentis, Petey Brown, Cate Holt, Christine Sullivan, Eric Shute, and Ana Wieder-Blank.
One of the highlights is Neal’s 14-by-11-inch oil on panel, Botanical Birth, an abstracted birth of Venus. Vigdor’s paintings turn neural networks into surrealist landscapes, while Wieder-Blank’s colored, textured canvases are achieved by mixing oil paints with soil. Browse at castlehill.org through Monday, March 29th.
DuToit Deux
Rob DuToit presents part two of his virtual art history talk series via Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill on Tuesday, March 23rd, 10 a.m. to noon. This session covers Cezanne through the present day. Registration is pay-what-you-can at castlehill.org.
Have It Your Way
Artist Bernd Haussmann is teaching a six-session workshop on Zoom via Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill called “Support Class: Your Artwork Is Our Guide,” Tuesdays from 1 to 3 p.m., March 16th through April 20th. Haussmann follows “the work that you make and the work that you are” as an individual springboard. The cost is $500 at castlehill.org.
Treasure Trove
Michael David and Stephanie Hargrave are leading a 10-day residency on “The Art of Assemblage” at Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill beginning Tuesday, March 2. It is limited to four on-campus and eight virtual participants. Registration is $995, not including housing, at castlehill.org.
Fine Print
Stephanie Stigliano is teaching “Printmaking Without a Press,” a virtual workshop via Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill, on Mondays, beginning February 22nd, 10 a.m. to noon. The course is an introduction to monoprints, often called “the painterly print,” using a Gelli plate. Registration is $265 at castlehill.org.
TALKING POINTS
From New York to Truro to Russia and Back
Journalist turned novelist Karen Dukess interviews authors for Castle Hill
Beginning next week, writer Karen Dukess is hosting a series of virtual talks with authors of new fiction and nonfiction via Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill. On Wednesday, Feb. 17, she’ll interview Susan Conley about Landslide, a novel about a woman raising two teenage sons in Maine while her husband, a commercial fisherman, is hospitalized miles away in Canada.
Dukess, the author of the 2019 novel The Last Book Party, which is set in Truro in the summer of 1987, is a worthy interview subject herself. Her path to fiction writing has been circuitous, taking her halfway around the world.
She grew up in Larchmont, N.Y. but spent summers in Truro. Her parents — her mother is artist Mona Dukess — had been coming to the Cape since the late ’50s and built a house on Toms Hill Road. “My mother always talks about going to Longnook when she was pregnant with me, with two other kids,” says Dukess.
As an undergraduate at Brown University, Dukess majored in Russian studies. “There wasn’t really a lot you could do with a Russian studies degree,” she says. So, after graduation, she led a tour to the Soviet Union, one thing you could do if you spoke the language. Travel agencies would hire young Americans who spoke Russian as guides for American tourists.
Back in New York, Dukess says, “I got a job at a literary agency that represented a lot of journalists who were traveling around the world and writing interesting books. And I was sitting in a little windowless office, typing on a Dictaphone, thinking I want to do that, not this.”
So, she studied journalism at Columbia University and left for Florida to work as a newspaper reporter. “Why Florida? Good question,” Dukess says. “At that time, Florida was growing really fast. Newspapers were growing, if you can believe it, and a lot were hiring.”
The tiny city of Inverness, in Citrus County, had three daily newspapers. “It was actually as foreign to me as Moscow, in some ways more, because I grew up in the New York area,” says Dukess. “Moscow’s a pretty sophisticated city. Rural north central Florida is quite different.”
When the Soviet Union collapsed, Dukess was working for the St. Petersburg Times. “I thought, what am I doing in Florida?” she says. She moved overseas and started working for Moscow Magazine and the Moscow Times, English-language publications that catered to expats. Dukess did a bit of everything: “I even reviewed restaurants for a while in Moscow — that was fun.”
She stayed there from ’92 to ’98 with her husband, journalist Steve Liesman, who got a job with the Wall Street Journal’s Moscow bureau.
When Dukess returned to the U.S., she worked as a writer for UNICEF, then as a speechwriter on gender equality for the U.N. Development Program. But she wrote fiction on the side. “That’s what I really wanted to do,” she says.
The Last Book Party draws on her experiences in Truro, but her second novel, which she is currently writing, is inspired by her time in Russia. For research, she returned there after 20 years of being away, and took her younger son, Johnny (who has worked as a reporter for the Independent). “It’s an interesting country,” Dukess says. “Each time you turn around, it changes dramatically.”
Dukess says her background in journalism has both helped and hindered her fiction writing. Though it taught her how to write on deadline and check facts, it also gave her the false impression that fiction writers had a clear story in their heads before putting pen to paper. “It took me a really long time to realize most writers I know do not write that way,” says Dukess. “You can write in order to discover what it is you want to write about.”
What most interests Dukess about interviewing authors is “their journey, the how-to of it,” she says. “I think in some ways being an author prepared me for doing these interviews more than being a journalist, because being a journalist, you’re not usually interviewing people in public.”
On upcoming Wednesdays, Dukess will interview author Robert Jones Jr. on The Prophets on March 17, Sarah Anne Johnson on The Last Sailor on April 21, Patrick Radden Keefe on Empire of Pain: The Secret History of the Sackler Dynasty on May 19, and Steven Rowley on The Guncle on June 16.
For the series, she tried to pick books that are related in some way to the Outer Cape. Conley’s Landslide is about the fishing industry. The Last Sailor’s Johnson is a Provincetown author. Both The Prophets, which is “about two enslaved men who are lovers on a plantation,” and The Guncle, which is “about a gay uncle in Palm Springs who ends up having to take care of a six and nine year old for three months,” deal with queer issues. Empire of Pain is about the opioid crisis, which “has affected Cape Cod really badly,” says Dukess. “Keefe does incredible reporting, but he writes these books like page-turners, like a thriller or fiction.”
When people think of Castle Hill they usually think of ceramics and visual art, but, in fact, it has always championed writing and literature. “It’s really fun to continue this tradition at Castle Hill and try to make it a little more visible,” she says.
On the Books
The event: Castle Hill Author Talks, hosted by Karen Dukess
The time: Wednesday, Feb. 17, 6 to 7 p.m. (Dukess interviews Susan Conley, author of Landslide)
The place: On Zoom via castlehill.org
The cost: Free; donations accepted
Free School Break Course on Contemporary Art
Alana Barrett is teaching a virtual workshop, “Learning Through Contemporary Artists, for Kids!” via Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill, from Tuesday, February 16th through Friday, February 19th, during winter school break. The 1:30 to 3 p.m. session, for grades three through five, still has spots available. Registration is free at castlehill.org.
Barrett is a recent graduate of the University of Miami, where she studied studio art and biology. Young participants will learn about contemporary artists Nathaniel Mary Quinn, Nick Cave, Katharina Grosse, and Jeffrey Gibson while creating their own great works. Activities include “Self-Portraits With a Twist,” “Making Mini Sound Suits,” “Explode With Color!,” and “Exploring Text and Pattern.”
Test the Water
Tim Saternow is teaching a five-day online watercolor class for absolute beginners, Monday, February 8th through Friday, February 12th via Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill. There are two sessions: from 10 a.m. to noon and 1 to 4 p.m. The second session is open to students with a bit more experience. Registration is $325 for either the morning or afternoon session, $650 for both, at castlehill.org.
Looming Large
Learn how to hand-weave an infinity scarf with Dahlia Popovits in a workshop at Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill, 10 Meetinghouse Road, on Monday, February 1st, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Space is limited to six participants. Registration is $150, plus $25 for materials, at castlehill.org.