Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill is holding a tag sale at 10 Meetinghouse Road on Friday, October 30th, and Saturday, October 31st, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Details at castlehill.org.
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Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill is holding a tag sale at 10 Meetinghouse Road on Friday, October 30th, and Saturday, October 31st, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Details at castlehill.org.
Learn about “Oika,” or ecological intelligence for artists, in a virtual course taught by Rich Blundell, hosted by Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill. It will run Tuesdays, from 1 to 2:30 p.m., starting Tuesday, October 20th. Registration is $250 at castlehill.org.
“The Cape is where I want to be as an artist,” says ceramicist Isabel Souza. “The direction of my art is very influenced by my roots and my family history in Truro and Provincetown. It just makes sense for me to be here.”
Souza returned to her hometown of Truro after graduating from Syracuse University’s ceramics program, with a minor in business, in 2018. At age 23, she already has her own pottery studio and is making her mark with recent collections at local businesses, including Truro Vineyards, and custom work for private clients.
When she began to explore her own family’s history as a student at Nauset Regional High School, she discovered that her great-grandfather Abraham Soares owned a ceramic roof tile factory in Valença do Minho in northern Portugal before emigrating with his wife to the U.S. The couple moved to Truro because there were jobs to be had in Provincetown’s fishing industry. Once settled, Souza’s great-grandmother worked for Ada “Tiny” Worthington, a local seamstress who, in the 1930s, began to use fish nets to create women’s fashion.
“I feel that creating functional art is in my blood,” Souza says.
Souza’s great-grandfather was also a passionate gardener, a tradition that still runs deep in her family, which owns Bayberry Gardens & Landscaping in Truro. “The first piece of pottery I ever saw was probably a terra-cotta flowerpot,” Souza says. Being exposed to the many colors and patterns of flowers and plants throughout her life was — and still is — a deep influence on her work. “I am very interested in playing with bright color combinations inspired by nature,” she says. Souza smiles and adds that she and her family “are all turning dirt into beauty.”
She took her first pottery classes at Truro Central School and was smitten. “I found the element of surprise in pottery very exciting,” she says. “You make a piece and glaze it. Then, after it is fired, it looks completely different. It’s such a rewarding process, even now. Each time I get a successful piece out of the kiln, it feels amazing.”
While she was at the elementary school, Souza won a scholarship at Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill. “I knew I liked clay, but had not tried the potter’s wheel,” she says. “Even though it wasn’t as easy as it looked, I fell in love.”
Souza continued to take ceramics classes at Castle Hill throughout high school. At Nauset, she also found support and encouragement from her art teacher, Amy Kandall, who has a pottery business. In her senior year, Souza got an internship at Castle Hill, where she worked with then-ceramics director Brian Taylor.
She chose to go to Syracuse with the plan of starting a pottery business of her own after college. At the school’s study abroad program in Florence, Italy, she learned about sprezzatura, or “the art of effortless mastery,” a business model that has inspired her approach to ceramics. “Italian luxury brands create their goods — clothing, art, sports cars — to appear very simple and effortlessly crafted, though they’re actually very deliberate and focused,” Souza says.
Another important aspect to the Italian approach, she adds, is story — “the personal story of the artist or craftsperson, the story of the influences on their art, and the story of the material and quality of the item created. All are woven together in a cohesive way as the overall story of the brand.”
Elegant simplicity and story have since become hallmarks of Souza’s pottery. “I really like simplifying a design so that it can be all that it needs to be without any distraction,” she says. A fan of Matisse, she created a Mood Mug series inspired by Matisse’s gesture or contour drawings. Each mug has a slightly different facial expression, and when seen side by side, they illustrate the variety of human emotion. “The differences between each piece,” Souza says, “are the most fun parts.”
During the pandemic in the spring, Souza began creating her Rainbow Mugs. “I had just returned from a trip to Costa Rica when the lockdown began,” she says. “My mind was full of the rich colors I saw there, and I wanted to create a series that expressed how we humans are better together, not apart. Each of the mugs on its own expresses just one color, but together they make a rainbow.”
Working on large projects with local businesses, such as her pottery line at Snowy Owl Coffee Roasters in Brewster, has been meaningful to her. “To get to see people gather and have coffee and conversation over my cups has been amazing,” she says. “We live in a world that is so fast, so busy. Sure, you can opt to buy a mug from T.J. Maxx that is mass-manufactured. What’s so special about pottery is these objects make the user slow down, look, and appreciate that each piece was made individually by the hands of an artist.”
Learn how to bake a wood-fired pizza with Lorraine Piver at Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill, 10 Meetinghouse Road, on Tuesday, October 6th, from 1 to 4 p.m. Ingredients will be provided. The workshop costs $75 at castlehill.org.
A new virtual art show at Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill, “What Is Push/Pull? Artists Respond,” is up for browsing at castlehill.org through October 8th. There are works by Alana Barrett, Ana Silbert, Anne Doolitte, Anne Mai, Anne Webb-Johnson, Carol Krieger, Gretchen Jacobs, Joanne Barrett, Karen Fagelman, Katalene Masella, Maeve O’Donovan, Mary Ann O’Loughlin, Laura Shabott, and Rosanne Williams.
By K.C. Myers
TRURO — Town meeting may feel more like recess this year, as voters gather outdoors at the Truro Central School ballfield at noon on Saturday, Sept. 26.
Even the warrant has been child-sized, now that the planning board has withdrawn 11 articles that would have gone before voters in April had the coronavirus not delayed spring town meetings and pushed them outdoors. The planning board held back on articles it had worked hard on in order “to minimize the amount of time we’re exposed to each other and the elements,” said Town Manager Rae Ann Palmer.
The select board also agreed on Tuesday to withdraw from the warrant an article on the hiring of four new firefighter-paramedics, which would have increased the size of the fire dept. by 50 percent, from 8 to 12 members. This would have cost taxpayers $351,904, adding $75.89 to the first-year tax bill on a home valued at $500,000, said Fire Chief Timothy Collins.
The same request, which involved a Proposition 2½ override, failed to get a majority at the town election in the spring by a vote of 209 to 257. But officials wanted it to go before voters again. If the proposal had been approved at town meeting, they would have scheduled yet another town election for the next hurdle.
Palmer said more paramedics are important, due to the domino effect that will result if Provincetown Fire Chief Mike Trovato is successful in parting ways with the Lower Cape Ambulance Association (LCA). That nonprofit provides ambulance services to both Provincetown and Truro, and the combined support of both towns is necessary to keep LCA afloat. If Provincetown withdraws, Truro would need to take on much more of the cost of the ambulance service.
Trovato, who has refused for months to talk about his reasons for wishing to break away from LCA after 83 years, on Monday told the Independent he has “given up on trying to create a Provincetown emergency medical service” and will stick with LCA. Trovato said he still thinks his idea is the right move, but he realizes he does not have support from town hall.
After hearing this news, the Truro Select Board Tuesday agreed to remove the firefighter article from the warrant.
“I think it would be best to not put it on the override and wait until the dust settles in Provincetown,” said board member Jan Worthington. “We just need to be clear with the public, because it’s been such a screwed-up process.”
Chair Robert Weinstein agreed.
“I think it’s important for people to understand why we are removing this and the difficulties we have in dealing with — hopefully, it’s not impolite to say — erratic behavior coming from Provincetown,” Weinstein said.
Articles that will likely still generate interest include a petition to make the planning board an appointed rather than elected body.
Only six of 15 Cape Cod towns have elected planning boards, said Robert Panessiti, chair of the Truro Charter Review Committee. Many argue that planning board positions are rarely contested, so whoever signs up, even as a write-in, gets on the board without any real oversight, which the select board would have if it appointed the members. But the charter committee, which was reviewing this change, did not make a recommendation on this article. And the select board voted 2 to 3 against it, with Weinstein and Kristen Reed in favor.
Among the community preservation articles is a proposed $168,000 grant to the Payomet Performing Arts Center to help the nonprofit enter into a lease with the Cape Cod National Seashore to renovate the old clubhouse at the abandoned North Truro Air Force Base and use it as a performance space.
If successful, it would be the first time since the Air Force abandoned the base that anyone had been able to renovate and lease one of the existing buildings, said Kevin Rice, artistic director of Payomet.
Payomet has a tent there, and the Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill built a kiln on the base. But there are dozens of abandoned buildings that are slowly falling apart.
The clubhouse is a 3,000-square-foot building used from 1951 to 1984 by enlisted officers and the community as a bar and gathering spot.
“It was really the hub of a lot of socializing, and a lot of marriages resulted from it,” Rice said. “We are working on an agreement with the park service — a philanthropic partnership.”
Anna Poor is teaching an on-campus Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill workshop on stone carving from Tuesday, September 8th, through September 11th, 9:00 a.m. to noon at 10 Meetinghouse Road. Five in-person sessions cost $455; materials $15. Go to castlehill.org to register.
Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill is holding a virtual gallery talk, “Incarnations,” on Thursday, August 27th, at 4 p.m., with artists Mark Adams, Jonathan Derry, and Amy Wynne. Go to castlehill.org for details and links.
Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill is offering a virtual food writing workshop with Kathy Gunst and Katherine Alford, co-authors of Rage Baking: The Transformative Power of Flour, Fury and Women’s Voices. It’s live from 1:00 to 3:00 p.m. on Monday, August 24th, to Friday, August 28th. The cost: $265 for 5 sessions. Go to castlehill.org to register.
Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill is offering a virtual food writing workshop with Kathy Gunst and Katherine Alford, co-authors of Rage Baking: The Transformative Power of Flour, Fury and Women’s Voices. It’s live from 1:00 to 3:00 p.m. on Monday, August 24th, to Friday, August 28th. The cost: $265 for 5 sessions. Go to castlehill.org to register.
Jessica Brilli’s ‘Idle Time’
A show of new work by artist Jessica Brilli, “Idle Time,” will open on Friday, Aug. 7, at Kobalt Gallery at 366 Commercial St. in Provincetown. The exhibit will be on view through Aug. 20. Brilli is a Boston-area artist whose work encompasses American realism and 20th-century graphic design aesthetics. Her current show is a nostalgic look at mid-century leisure pursuits.
Castle Hill Auction Ends Saturday
Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill’s annual silent auction is going virtual this year.Up forbid will be a dazzling array of works by such artists as Joyce Johnson, Judy Pfaff, Anna Poor,and Vicky Tomayko, and 35 ceramic bowls (a project in its 36th year) painted by Tabitha Vevers, Sarah Lutz, Breon Dunigan, Robert Rindler, Bailey Bob Bailey, Marian Roth, Bert Yarborough, Yvette Drury Dubinsky, and more.Bids can be made online until 8 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 8, at castlehill.org. For more information, call 508-349-7511.
Trio of Writers in Virtual Castle Hill Event
Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill will present a virtual discussion featuring three authors whose novels are set in Provincetown, Truro, and Wellfleet on Wednesday, Aug. 12, at 6 p.m.via Zoom.The authors are Jamie Brenner, who wrote Summer Longing; Christina Clancy, whose debut novel is The Second Home;and Karen Dukess, whose debut novel isThe Last Book Party. The discussion will be moderated by Mindy Todd, host of WCAI’s “The Point.”Tickets for the event are $10 at castlehill.org (under “Special Events”).
Andrew Jacob and Adam O’Day at Longstreet
The Longstreet Gallery,a new space that opened this summer at 4730B Route 6 (in front of Willy’s Gym), is featuring the work of two artists in shows that open on Saturday, Aug. 8, and will be on view through Aug. 30.The gallery is open noon to 6 p.m. on weekends and by appointment. Jacob’s exhibit, “Space Odyssey Scyurfadelic 2020,”includes work from his Provincetown studio. Jacob showed years ago in the revived Helltown Gallery at Whaler’s Wharf in Provincetown. O’Day’s exhibit is called“Ghostland”; his studio is in Abington.
Grace Morrison Live at Payomet’s Drive-in
Now that its expansive Ballfield Drive-in at the Highlands Center at 29 Old Dewline Road in Truro (off Highland Road) has passed Covid muster and earned official approval, the Payomet Performing Arts Center is starting to book live events for the coming late summer season.This Friday, Aug 7, at 6 p.m., Payomet welcomes former backup singer and prize-winning songwriter Grace Morrison and her pop-folk-roots-country solo act to the drive-in.On Saturday,Aug. 8, at 6 p.m., Toussaint the Liberator will be performing a one-hour set of live reggae.Tickets,at$25, should be purchased in advance at payomet.org or 508-487-5400.
Julie Shelton Smith at Four Eleven Gallery
Julie Shelton Smith, who spends much of the year in Provincetown and Newport, R.I., as well as the mountains of Colorado, will have a show of her paintings at Four Eleven Gallery at 411 Commercial St. in Provincetown from Friday, Aug. 7, through Aug. 16.The gallery is open Thursday through Monday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. or by appointment. During the public health crisis, only two people will be allowed in at a time, and masks must be worn.Smith, who was born and raised in Texas,has an M.F.A. in painting and printmaking from Rhode Island School of Design. This is her first summer show at Four Eleven Gallery.
Richard Baker Gets Cooking
A show of new work by painter Richard Baker, “Cooking! With Richard Baker,” featuring Baker’s portraits of vintage cookbooks, from The Joy of Cooking to Delicious Pickle!will open at Albert Merola Gallery at 424 Commercial St. in Provincetown on Friday, Aug. 7, and remain on view through Aug. 26.The gallery is open noon to 5 p.m., Wednesday through Sunday, and by appointment (508-487-4424).
James Frederick, ‘The Birds & the Bees’
A new show of work by James Frederick, “The Birds & the Bees,” focusing on the flora and fauna of the Cape, will have a virtual opening on Frederick Studio Provincetown’s Facebook page on Friday, Aug. 7, at 7 p.m.The exhibit will be on view through Aug. 16. Frederick Studio Provincetown is located at Whaler’s Wharf, 237 Commercial St. in Provincetown.
One highlight of the online and on-campus classes offered at Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill is “Making Pictures,” with Pete Hocking, which will be held live, from 9 a.m. to noon on Monday, Aug. 3, through Thursday, Aug. 6. The four sessions cost $455. Register at castlehill.org.
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