Thursday, September 9, 2010

Fun with Bully Busters Summer Program!



Artistik Xpressions Members who participated:
Ani Lopez, Dante Stewart, Sharece M. Sellem, and Byron Knox


This summer, we peformed for the Bully Busters Program in Norwich CT. It was alot of fun! The kids were great to work with and hope that thier program continues to grow :)


-S. Sellem


Bully Busters' Website



Bully Busters on Facebook





Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Check Us Out at FLECHAS...New Haven's Puerto Rican Festival!

SAVE THE DATE!

ON JULY 17th, ARTISTIK XPRESSIONS WILL BE PERFORMING I.M.A.G.E.S. Mime-to-Music PRESENTATIONS!

The festival will be held on July 16th, 17th, and 18th 2010.

FLECHAS



History
Fiestas de Loiza en Connecticut en Honor al Apostol Santiago (FLECHAS) was founded 33 years ago to promote and celebrate the richness and colorful customs, heritage, culture and traditions of Puerto Rico.
Started as a celebration of cultural pride by local leaders, the Annual Fiestas have come to garner wide visibility and recognition throughout New England.
FLECHAS is a year-round, full service not for profit cultural organization based in New Haven, Connecticut, that promotes Puerto Rico’s African legacy through traditional song, dance, cuisine and folklore.
In 1977, a group of people - many of whom were originally from Loiza, Puerto Rico - helped to organize the first Fiestas de Loiza of New England, which was held in New Haven, Connecticut. The vision that still leads this organization is a firm belief in the importance of teaching and passing down from generation to generation this unique cultural heritage, history, and tradition. FLECHAS places emphasis on the African experience in Puerto Rico and to date is the only organization of its kind, scope, and mission in Connecticut. The organization has developed and presented an annual Fiestas de Loiza celebrating our very own Feast of Saint James the Apostle, as well as an annual Commemoration of the Abolition of Slavery in Puerto Rico (March 22, 1873). FLECHAS has been and is the only organization taking a leadership role in faithfully commemorating these historical events in Connecticut. For the past 32 years, FLECHAS has existed as a widely-supported volunteer organization. Almost all activities throughout the year are run by volunteers.






Monday, June 21, 2010

Juneteenth Re-cap!


OUR PHOTO IN THE DAY NEWSPAPER - New London




Karrissa Carrion, left, of New London, and D'Andrea Knox, of Groton, dance after performing at the 22nd Annual Juneteenth Celebration at Howard T. Brown Memorial Park in Norwich on Saturday. The event was organized by the Norwich branch of the NAACP to celebrate the anniversary of the day in 1865 that Union soldiers, led by Major Gen. Gordon Granger, landed at Galveston, Texas, with news that the Civil War had ended and that slaves were free. Carrion and Knox are members of Artistik Xpressions, a drama group based in New Haven, that gave a mime performance.


MORE PHOTOS ON THE NORWICH BULLETIN WEBSITE!
CLICK HERE...
http://www.norwichbulletin.com/photos/x1808630657/Juneteenth-Day?photo=14&set=0&page=0#ph14



Thursday, June 3, 2010

Juneteenth...Here We Come!


SPONSORED BY THE NAACP
Juneteenth NAACP link: http://www.juneteenth.com/9connecticut_us.htm

Come check us out at the Juneteenth Festival in Norwich CT on JUNE 19, 2010!
We will be performing and providing other fun activities! Please visit our blog regularly for updates on the festival and future performances!
"A WALK IN THE PARK" I.M.A.G.E.S. Presentation
Mimes will be posed along side the water at Howard T. Brown Park in Norwich for you to pull you camera out and snap away!

"SOMETHING NEW...THE MASTER AND HIS CREATION" I.M.A.G.E.S. Presentation
Mime play presentation on "creation."

"LOVESICK" I.M.A.G.E.S. Presentation
Mime to music. The art of mime along with songs that reveal different aspects of love.


FOR MORE INFO, PLEASE CALL SHARECE @ 860.840.2877



JUNE 19TH 9:00am – 6:00pm
HOWARD T. BROWN PARKON WATERFRONT, NORWICH,CT

ARTS, CRAFTS, VENDORS FOOD provided by GIUSEPPE’S

MUSIC by D.J. CLARENCE

A VARIETY OF ENTERTAINMENT(Including Performance by Artistik Xpressions)

JOIN IN A DAY OF FUN!

Bring your Lawn Chairs and Blankets
For additional information contact 860-886-1686

HISTORY OF JUNETEENTH:
© JUNETEENTH.com


Juneteenth is the oldest known celebration commemorating the ending of slavery in the United States. Dating back to 1865, it was on June 19th that the Union soldiers, led by Major General Gordon Granger, landed at Galveston, Texas with news that the war had ended and that the enslaved were now free. Note that this was two and a half years after President Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation - which had become official January 1, 1863. The Emancipation Proclamation had little impact on the Texans due to the minimal number of Union troops to enforce the new Executive order. However, with the surrender of General Lee in April of 1865, and the arrival of General Granger’s regiment, the forces were finally strong enough to influence and overcome the resistance.
Later attempts to explain this two and a half year delay in the receipt of this important news have yielded several versions that have been handed down through the years. Often told is the story of a messenger who was murdered on his way to Texas with the news of freedom. Another, is that the news was deliberately withheld by the enslavers to maintain the labor force on the plantations. And still another, is that federal troops actually waited for the slave owners to reap the benefits of one last cotton harvest before going to Texas to enforce the Emancipation Proclamation. All or none of them could be true. For whatever the reason, conditions in Texas remained status quo well beyond what was statutory.


For More Info, Please Visit: http://www.juneteenth.com

OTHER JUNETEENTH CELEBRATIONS AROUND CONNECTICUT:

http://www.juneteenth.com/9connecticut_us.htm

Stamford
The City of Stamford, CT Juneteenth Day Committee will sponsor a weekend of events that commemorates Juneteenth Day. On Saturday, June 12, 1999 "The Knowledge" by the Perry Players will be held at The Stamford Center for Arts. Tickets are now on sale. On Friday, June 18, 1999 "A Stitch In Time" Seven Quilts for Seven Sisters Tickets @ $30.00 each. Performance to be held at the Stamford Center for Arts. There will also be a gala on June 18, 1999 at the Stamford Center for Arts. Entertainment includes. . . *R & B Dance Band (main stage) *Wally Gaten & The Gater Tails *Blues Dance Band (Leonhardt Studio) *Lonnie Young Blood *The Serendipity Chorale (gospel) *Triumphant Ministries Fire Choir (gospel) *Bruce Walker (jazz) *Marla Waldrow (jazz) On Saturday, June 19, 1999 11:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M. " Lathan Wilder Center Youth Day Celebration" 11:00 A.M. Community Basketball Game (outdoor); 1:00 P.M. Youth films to be shown in the library; 2:00 P.M. - 5:00 P.M. (outdoor event) will feature Multi-Ethnic Performances; 11:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M. Multi-Ethnic Art Showcase,Face painting, Red Soda Fish Fry & BBQ; On Sunday, June 20, 1999, the Juneteenth Day Committe Presents a day of Gospel @ Columbus Park!; 3:00 P.M. - 6:00 P.M. Lofton & Kirk Music Ministries (High Point, NC) Derrick L. James (Mt. Vernon, NY) Syreeta Thompson (Brooklyn, NY); 5:30 P.M. @ The Rich Forum "Jazz Concert" *WABS Sunday Jazz Buffet *Vocalist Alva Anderson Trio *New Britain High School Jazz Ensemble For Ticket Information call (203) 358-2305; Information was provided by Crystal Bowles, City of Stamford Juneteenth Committee Member; Contact Persons: Crystal Bowles (203) 323-0681, fax # (203)964-8399, Warren Hunter/ Stamford Center for Arts (203) 358-2305

Hartford
8th Annual Juneteenth Celebration Hartford, Connecticut Friday, June 18 "The Juneteenth Gala" Black Tie 8 p.m. to midnight at the Wadsworth Atheneum 600 Main Street Hartford, CT RSVP by Friday, May 21 Tickets priced at various levels For Information: 800-923-0885 Saturday, June 20 Juneteenth Family Day 11 a.m to 4 p.m. This is a free event Red Soda Barbeque Saturday, June 20 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday June 20th Juneteenth Gospel Brunch 12:45 p.m. to 3 p.m. Tickets $35.00 All events take place at the Wadsworth Atheneum This is Hartford's premier social event and is always a sell out. Joyace Peoples and Connie Pouncy,Chairpersons Addt'l Information call toll free number or peoplesr@home.com - Poun1@aol.com
1999 JUNETEENTH CELEBRATION HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT http://www.keystrokesgraphics.com/JUNETEENTHINDEX.html Friday, June 18th Juneteenth Gala & Silent Auction Final Bids by 10 p.m. (Black Tie) Saturday, June 19th Juneteenth Family Day 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Red Soda Barbecue 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, June 20th Juneteenth Gospel Brunch 12:45 p.m. to 3 p.m. Send e-mail to CTHO856285@AOL.COM with questions or comments. Call us at 1-800-923-0885

Norwalk
The Christian Crusaders of Bethel AME Church in Norwalk, Connecticut will sponsor their Third Annual Juneteenth 4 day Carnival. The Carnival will begin On Thursday June 10, 1999 and continue through Sunday June 13, 1999. The event will feature carnival rides, arts & crafts, ethnic foods, and entertainment. For more information, please contact the church office at 203-866-1042. Information was provided by E. Shirell Rogers, Event Publicity Chairperson 203-845-0633 (Event Chairperson - Mark McElveen 203-846-3771, Pastor Dr. Rev. A. D. Tyson Jr.)


CLICK HERE!
I.M.A.G.E.S. Mime to Music Program Video: Sharece M. Sellem performing, "Lions, Tigers & Bears"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ysa52ROqh_k

Monday, May 10, 2010

Rehearsals for "SOMETHING NEW...The Master and His Creation" Coming Soon!



Our project for Spring/Summer is: SOMETHING NEW...The Master and His Creation.



It is a mix of mime and monologue. The current members who are participating in this project are:


Special Thanks to Byron Knox for his help and loving support of Artistik Xpressions. Byron ensures that members from New London are prepared and here in New Haven for rehearsals.










Neilsen Filipe

Damian Henderson


Takiesha Smith









We will be performing:


YOUTH IN ACTION

SPRING EXPLOSION!!!!


Saturday, MAY 15, 2010

OASIS OF RESTORATION

138 Garfield Ave. New London, CT 06320

6:00pm

18+ Donation

(under 17 free!)

Food

Hip-Hop, Tap, Jazz, Gospel, Choir, Drama, Mime & More!







Tuesday, May 4, 2010

The new "DIAMOND RUFF BOOK CLUB" starting in New Haven, CT!

A New Book Club @ Stetson Library!




Hosted By: Sharece M. Sellem, Director of Artistik Xpressions,
Amateur Youth Drama Group of New Haven, CT

“Diamond Ruff,” an urban novel,
Amazon National Best-Seller will be made into a film right here in Hartford, CT!
Diamond Ruff youth talent events are being organized to showcase YOU!

From more information on the Diamond Ruff movie project,
visit our website:
www.diamondruffmovie.com

DATES: THURSDAYS beginning MAY 6, 2010
TIME: 5:00pm-6:00pm
TOPICS: Chapters, thoughts on the book, and Diamond Ruff trivia game!
WHO: Young adults, ages 12+
WIN PRIZES AND EARN A CERTIFICATE FOR COMPLETING THE PROGRAM!



Meet the author, Joe Young
Stetson Library
Wednesday, MAY 26, 2010 @ 6:00 p.m.
For a discussion and book signing!

RESERVE AND PURCHASE A COPY OF
“DIAMOND RUFF” for $15 AT STETSON LIBRARY
BEFORE WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 2010.

Hollywood Actor, Michael Jai White will star as DIAMOND RUFF!http://www.wfsb.com/video/22464503/index.html

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Mothers & Daughters Tea V.I.P Party @ Dress Barn Sunday May 2, 2010...Sharece M. Sellem performs "Open Up My Heart" by Yolanda Adams

On Sunday May 2,2010, I performed a mime presentation to Yolanda Adams' "Open Up My Heart." I've performed this particular song as an opening act for Melba Moore at the Fort Hamilton Army base in New York, Dee Dee's Night of Contemporary Jazz & Gospel, and a 50th Birthday celebration in Groton, CT. Today's event was fun and cute. I never knew that Dress Barn had a "girl's night out" program where they host a fashion show with their latest line for the season. You put together everything else like finger foods, music, and vendors. I thought it was such a cute concept and a great way to network and promote. Some showed an interest in participating in my mime-to-music class, I.M.A.G.E.S., which I hold on Fridays. It is really open to all ages though it has been promoted to adults. Two of my students were there, Alison and Robin. Zelphia is also a new member and was the host of the V.I.P. party. She invited me to perform. It was a nice experience. Check out the photos from the evening!



ROBIN'S TESTIMONIAL

Saturday, April 24, 2010

DIAMOND RUFF ...My Hartford's Hollywood Experience!



"Homeless at a young age, Diamond Ruff was determined to succeed. With grit, shrewdness, and the tenacity to make it, Diamond forges a life alone on the streets of Hartford. Orphan, con artist, crime boss and millionaire, Diamond Ruff has seen it all. In prison for a murder he did not commit, he meets the Reverend Trek Woods, who overwhelms him with kindness, character and faith in God. Falling in love with April, a young woman with a terminal illness, Ruff is again challenged to grow and change. Will he be redeemed? There are no easy answers."









FOR MORE DETAIL ON JOE YOUNG AND THE MOVIE, PLEASE VISIT...
http://www.diamondruffmovie.com/



By: Sharece M. Sellem

Here's my personal experience: I personally had a GREAT time networking and getting to know people in the area who are very talented and share my same interests. The Benefit Dinner allowed me to get to know people who were serious about having involvement in the Diamond Ruff Movie project. I also got to meet Michael Jai White, who played in movies ... such as "Spawn," "Why Did I Get Married," "Why Did I Get Married Too." We shared thoughts and opinions from the book and even got some juicy info from the author himself, Joe Young about what lies instore for Diamond and other characters in the story for the future. So cool!. The next day was exciting. Even though I got home late I made sure that I got up extra early to meet a new friend at Dunkin Donuts at 7:45ish to go over reading excerpts from the book and refreshing our minds on details. We went to wait in line at 9am. The auditions were scheduled for 10. There was still a long line at 9am!. One of my well prepared Artistik Xpressions drama students was there fresh and early with his Mom going over the part of Tyrone over and over again. We waited 2-3 hrs and made use of our time by coaching others who were in line on the book. Many did not read it or was able to get the book in time for the auditions so we helped them get an idea of how the characters were described in the book. I helped coach with script reading. We also took a break and sang some old school joints in harmony. That was fun. It was a great time...Even if I don't land a role in the movie, I wouldn't change the wonderful experience. :)

By: Sy Jackson 4.26.10

Sy Jackson Had a GREAT time this weekend and met some GREAT people... Joe Young has a very big project and he need us to pull together and make this work.. Show love to the man he is voice in our community that show that we can do it if we work hard!!! God bless.......

By: Marcus Thomas 4.25.10

Had a great experience auditioning for the role of Trek Woods on Saturday. The event kicked off nicely on Friday night with the celebrity fund raiser dinner. We had the chance to hear from the author, Joe Young, Jr, the great Michael Jai White and Jim Noble. Great food, fun and networking. Met some great Hartford folk and even played "Diamond Ruff Jeopardy" with Joe Young and Sharece Sellem, an up and coming drama coach, musician, poet and actress!

The energy and vibe of the weekend was amazing! Hundreds of excited actors of all ages and backgrounds lined up for a chance to be involved in what will be a historic production in Hartford. I look forward to big things coming from Young Studios and hope to be included in the upcoming film! Stand up Hartford!

Marcus Thomas
Becket, Massachusetts



IF YOU WERE THERE, PLEASE POST YOUR EXPERIENCE!

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Article By: OluShola Cole of the New Haven Arts Council


Perception: arts, identity, and access

LINK
http://www.newhavenarts.org/news/artspaper/articles.html

OluShola A. Cole

Those of us who have been around the arts community recognize the pattern: gatherings of creative focus groups, board meetings, etc., the feedbag of conferences for arts administrators and roundtable discussions. We’ve been having the same old conversation and asking the same old questions about art for decades: Is the face of art changing? Is the audience for traditional art venues shifting? How can we shift focus to grab a drifting audience? What is our community? How is our organization perceived? How can we pull in the (insert underserved community here) population? Who do we serve? Why are we here? And my all-time favorite: Who are we?

It would be completely false if I were to say I didn’t pose those questions to myself every so often: Who am I? Who do I serve? Why am I here? My position places me right at the intersection of identity, access, and art. I interact with people of varying levels of artistic and entrepreneurial skill, from those who can throw an art opening together in the blink of an eye, often the darlings of the New Haven arts scene, to those who can make a tag jump off a surface but can barely keep a dollar and have no idea about the Arts Council and those who are making their own waves through theater, photography, and dance while bringing together what community they can in New Haven. I simply have to get to the core of my mission and think about the arts and the community in terms of creativity and access. Break it down further, and it’s all about working to help artists be supported and validated, knowing they can become vehicles for cost-effective, influential and creative access to art.

A twisted air of grandeur accompanies the Arts Council, a perception of access-granting and encrusted arts patronage — of people shaking gnarled fists at struggling artists deemed unworthy of their benevolent support. This actually works in my favor as I continue to demystify my organization, meeting artists who choose to work in communities facing negative perceptions as they create access to something wonderful and positive.

It’s breathtaking to see how some of the groups I have run into adapt their identities and goals to create such great and groundbreaking organizations.

I’ve kept up with Tina Lee Hadari, executive director of Music Haven, a group of conservatory graduates who run a free after-school music education program for string players in the New Haven Schools. The program is quite simple, but the sheer impact of this work sheds light on the fact that strings are not familiar instruments in many school programs, particularly in lower-income environments with large populations of people of color, which the group mainly serves. There are very few programs like this in the country, and this access to the arts is cultivating a generation of musicians of color whose artistic careers could include joining string sections of orchestras.

Sharece Sellem is the director of the youth drama group Artistik Xpressions, which recently completed a New Haven Public Library Tour with its show Feelings and Footprints. The show highlighted Black History Month. This was a successful monologue series in which talented young student actors portrayed influential African American figures in history as children and later as adults. During the performances, which were held in libraries throughout New Haven during the February school vacation, the audience participated by asking questions of the actors in character as adult historical figures. I later found out that these actors are Sellem’s students from Davis Street 21st Century Magnet School, a school focused on literacy and maintaining high-level reading skills where Sellem teaches.

Enter Ibrahim and Sabhir, two charismatic and motivated young men I recently had the pleasure of meeting. They run a group in New Haven called The Youth Revolution, which is geared toward using community, hip-hop and spoken word to create an environment of positive reinforcement for New Haven’s youth. Their annual event, which gives youth space for creative and expressive outlets, is a great way to bring individuals, parents, students, and communities together to help creatively transform negative perceptions of youth and hip-hop in New Haven.

I’ve been keeping tabs on Rose Garcia, site coordinator for Youth as Leaders, another after-school program that has increasingly started using the arts as a way to engage youth and get them invested in their own community. From sending the students out to take pictures and putting up their work for a gallery opening to bringing in a Brazilian Capoeira group to one of its community functions or hosting a family night out where students bring their parents to an event with local arts programming. With is student arts focus group Arts Anonymous, Youth as Leaders is a model for non-arts organizations using the arts to help students and community gain access to essential resources and tools.

For urban design and street artists, there is a large void that needs filling in terms of space in which to gather and feel connected. After talking with several individuals about this, and the role the Arts Council can play, the idea of having a simple gathering space in which to critique work, meet, and socialize struck me as a basic necessity. I’ll be hosting an Arts Council after-hours for artists in the area who aren’t classically trained and don’t have access or exposure to traditional means of creative and visual expression.

Another empty space that can be filled with eye-opening and thought provoking art is women’s theater. Another individual addressing access and perception is Halima Flynn, artistic director of Fire Dragon Productions, who is producing events such as New Haven’s Celebration of Swan Day featuring female artist performances while preparing to host and set up the city’s first chapter of 50/50 in 2020. This will be a local organization, part of a national collective tackling the ongoing issue of women in theater not fully being represented across the board. In addition, the New Haven Theater Company’s Kaia Monroe is accepting play submissions for the Second Sex Playfest in order to present “theatrical material that would utilize only young female actors in order to expand the breadth of female-centric dramatic literature.” Again, a festival such as this is doing much to bring attention to the issues of accessibility, perception, and the struggle of women’s to find their identity and establish a presence in theater.

My position in the community leads me to believe that community knowledge and exposure to the arts at the local level is essential, and that is how I will serve my creative neighborhoods. The perception and identity of the Arts Council strikes a chord with me as a think about my position. I play an important role in demystifying and changing some of the perceptions of the Arts Council. I can tell focus groups and conference attendees that the face of art has never changed — it’s the administrative focus that has shifted. The lens is always revolving, and yes, the economic climate has made us artists get very creative.

Artists in this community from every income bracket need to feel as if they are part of the Arts Council. But how? While I don’t know the answer, I do know what will help create my approach. My angle is artistic accessibility, and the groups that I have mentioned represent that fully. I look at this cross-section of artists in the communities creating a platform that can encircle an at-risk population and through art slowly reduce risk — child by child, family by family — while also being deemed worthy of support by contemporary peers and groundbreaking patrons who are fully capable of understanding, relating to, and being supportive of the community dynamic.

This is the opinion of OluShola A. Cole, the Arts Council’s coordinator of community programs.

Monday, March 29, 2010

I.M.A.G.E.S. Classes for Adults...FRIDAY EVENINGS @ Dee Dee's Dance Studio

Inspirational.Movement.Art.Gestures.Emotions.Silence. Be apart of a new mime-to-music class at Dee Dee's Dance Studio on Friday evenings at 6:30-7:30. Do you have a special occassion coming up and would like to perform something unique? Would you like to do a fun and interesting activity with your son or daughter? This may just be the class for you! Call ahead to make arrangements with Sharece, the director of Artistik Xpressions. 860-840-2877 For Booking Sharece, please email: artistik.xpressions@gmail.com

It is a creative and fun blend of mime, dance, signlanguage, and music. Great for relieving stress. Not too strenuous. $10 Per Class

Thursday, February 25, 2010

I.M.A.G.E.S. for ADULTS - CLASSES

I.M.A.G.E.S for ADULTS
Starting Friday March 5, 2010 @ 6:30-7:30pm

Inspirational.Movement.Art.Gestures.Emotions.Silence.

It is a creative and fun blend of mime, dance, signlanguage, and music. Great for relieving stress. Not too strenuous.

$10 Per Class

AUDITIONS, AUDITIONS, AUDITIONS!...


Auditions for membership with Artistik Xpressions will be held at:

Newhallville Community Center
DeeDee's Dance Studio, 681 Dixwell Ave. New Haven, CT
UPCOMING MONDAYS 2010....


MON. March 1st 6:00pm-7:00pm

MON. March 8th 6:00pm-7:00pm

MON. March 15th 6:00pm-7:00pm

WHAT DO YOU NEED?
Yourself with a postive attitude and a C average in school!

ANY REQUIREMENTS?
Must be 8 yrs or older.
A song that you would like to see turned into a performance. (Must be school appropriate)
Must be allowed to wear facepaint.

For More Info,
PLEASE EMAIL Sharece:
artistik.xpressions@gmail.com


OUR NEXT PROJECTS ARE:


"SOMETHING NEW...The Master and His Creation" FAMILY PLAY PRODUCTION - Made up of mime and monologue. Ages 8-ADULT are welcome to participate. Cast of 20 needed.


"LOVESICK...The Love-life of a Typical New Haven Teen" TEEN PLAY PRODUCTION,I.M.A.G.E.S -This story shows different parts of love: love of friends, love of family, love of self, romance, and heartbreak.Mime-to-music program. Mime, sign-language and some dance. Ages 13-18


Wednesday, February 17, 2010

"Feelings & Footprints...A Walk through African-American History" Monologue Series - Performances at THE NEW HAVEN FREE PUBLIC LIBRARY BRANCHES






"The well prepared cast included,Kevin Armstrong, as W. E. B. DuBois, Jordine Jean as Madam C.J.Walker,Justice Willoughby as Louis Armstrong, Kishon Shields as Duke Ellington, Damian Henderson, Jr. as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr and Tyriq Woodson as Michael Jackson.What a fantastic way to celebrate Black History Month, to embrace the past and and to embed the future in the present fertile minds of our youth." ---Ficklin Media Group LLC
THE GREATER NEW HAVEN ARTS COUNCIL WEBSITE Features "Feelings & Footprints"

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Our First Photoshoot!



































































Check out the cast of Feelings & Footprints! Photoshoot performed by Vince Wiggins of Unique Reflections Photography.


Costumes by Sharon Verano











Monday, January 25, 2010

AUDITIONS FOR: "I.M.A.G.E.S" (Inspirational.Movement.Art.Gestures.Emotion.Silence.)

Auditions for I.M.A.G.E.S will be held at:
STETSON New Haven Free Public Library Branch
200 Dixwell Ave. New Haven (Across from Foote St.,Wexler-Grant School)
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 3, 2010 @ 5:30pm-7:00pm

I.M.A.G.E.S. stands for Inspirational. Movement. Art. Gestures. Emotion. Silence.
It is made up of groups that convey the lyrics of songs by creatively using their bodies as an artistic tool. It is an artistic bland of mime, sign-language, music and dance. It is open for participants ages 8-18yrs. Classes are held on Mondays and Fridays. Placement of members in groups will be made after the audition/enrollment. Please see the previous blog for more information on I.M.A.G.E.S.
Final Performances will be held at the New Haven Public Libraries and other New Haven locations during the spring.

"LOVESICK" (TEEN I.M.A.G.E.S.)
Peer into the life of typical teenagers as they experience different aspects of LOVE. Powerful, captivating, and unique, New Haven teens tell the story in silence by using their bodies and facial expressions.

SIGN-UP ON THIS BLOG!
You can sign-up ahead of time by leaving your name and child's name under comments.

Being a member of Artistik Xpressions Amateur Youth Drama Group helps build confidence and creativity. The students have a chance to be seen and heard in New Haven, something this city really needs for it's urban youths. It helps train, discipline, and empower eager artistic youths who want to do more. You don't want to miss this audition!

For more info, please email Sharece directly at:
artistik.xpressions@gmail.com or call 860-840-2877.

Monday, January 18, 2010

"How do I sign my youth up to be a member of Artistik Xpressions?"

If you are interested in enrolling your youth in Artistik Xpressions Amateur Youth Drama Group, you must request a registration form by emailing artistik.xpressions@gmail.com or call 860-840-2877 to have it sent to you by mail. The form must be completed and returned to the NEXT MEETING FOR ENROLLMENT. There will be two projects the group will be focusing on during the winter and spring months-"I.M.A.G.E.S" (mime-to-music) and "Feelings & Footprints." Enrollment for "Feelings & Footprints" is currently closed and will re-open at a later date. However, an enrollment for I.M.A.G.E.S. will be held in MARCH of 2010. Classes are held at DeeDee's Dance Studio in New Haven, CT.
*Fee information included on the registration form.

Requirements for enrollment:
Must be 8-18 yrs. of age
Must maintain an upstanding school record both in academic (at least a C average) and behaviorial areas.
Must have a positive attitude and willingness to learn!

Must be allowed to wear face-paint.
(Girls)Must wear black long-sleeve leotard,black stretch pants, and black socks to each class.
(Boys)Must wear PLAIN long-sleeve black shirt, black cargo pants with elastic waist (not sweat pants), and black socks to each class.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

MLK Day Conference: Saving Our Communities 2010 YES WE CAN!



http://uwgnh.org/post/mlk-day-conference-2010-saving-our-communities-yes-we-can

Damian Henderson Jr. will perform as Dr. King
Ms. Sellem will be conducting " i.m.a.g.e.s." workshops



MLK Day Conference 2010 Saving Our Communities: Yes We Can!
Monday, January 18, 2009--8:30 am to 1:30 pm
Wexler-Grant Community School- 55 Foote Street, New Haven, CT


You are invited to attend The Annual Martin Luther King, Jr. Conference, on January 18, 2010 from 8:30 a.m. -1:30 p.m. at Wexler-Grant Community School. The conference will celebrate the legacy and honor the dream of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
The event will feature youth and adult workshops covering topics such as storytelling, life skills, arts & crafts, healthy living, economic empowerment, political awareness and much more. In addition to our workshops, there will be performances, a keynote speaker, entertainment and a continental breakfast and hot lunch will be served. The Conference is FREE and open to the public. Join us and bring your family and friends.Please email mlkday@akanewhaven.org if you have any questions or visit http://www.akanewhaven.org/ for more information.


If you or your family is interested in volunteering at the MLK Conference, please visit the link above. We will be having a volunteer orientation on January 16, from 12pm-2pm at Wexler Grant and we also ask that all volunteers report to Wexler Grant School no later than 7:30 am on the day of the event (January 18), to ensure that everyone knows where they will be stationed and to go over any questions you may have before the event.

All volunteers will receive a LIVE UNITED t-shirt as well as breakfast and lunch. For questions about volunteering please contact Cecily Jones, Volunteer Engagement Coordinator at cjones@uwgnh.org, or call (203) 691-4211.

Volunteer registration for this event is CLOSED, however you are still welcome to attend as a guest!











Principal Finds Place for "Magic" New Haven Independent News Article by Paul Bass

TO SEE THE ACTUAL ARTICLE, PLEASE GO TO:
http://www.newhavenindependent.org/index.php/archives/entry/a_principal_finds_a_place_for_magic/

Hurrying down the hallway of Davis Street 21st Century Magnet School, Sharece Sellem ran into a roadblock named Kaison Mims.

Kaison, a Davis Street fifth-grader, had been refining a monologue about a comic day at Six Flags with his little brother. He wanted to perform it for Sellem. Sellem stopped, cocked her head. An impromptu critiquing session began.

Since the school year started at Davis, Sellem (pictured) has planted roadblocks like Kaison throughout the school. She makes a point of running into them.

Sellem, who’s 25, doesn’t have a full-time job at Davis. Technically she’s a $50 a-day part-time sub. She waitresses at night at Chili’s in Hamden.

In reality, she has become a daily presence at Davis. She comes in for free on days the principal, Lola Nathan, doesn’t need a fill-in for an absent staff teacher. Sellem has had fifth and sixth-graders writing scripts based on their home lives, developing characters, memorizing parts, performing for the rest of the school.

As Kaison performed in the hallway, Nathan observed Sellem from behind a glass wall steps away in the principal’s office.

“She’s like magic with them,” Nathan said. “She doesn’t stop ‘til she gets it done.”

Nor does Nathan. She wants Sellem inspiring and teaching Davis students as much as possible. Even though Sellem doesn’t have a teaching degree.

The Independent is checking in on Davis, one of the school system’s star performers, throughout a transitional year. (It inhabits temporary quarters on Legion Avenue as its Westville home is being rebuilt.) As New Haven embarks on a reform drive aimed at making its struggling public schools the best urban district in the nation, Davis offers clues to what works.

Among the reform drive’s goals: Attract and develop talented teachers. The way, for instance, Lola Nathan is working within the confines of budgets and work rules to make an energetic, talented young woman part of the Davis team.

“1 - 2 - 3 ... Action!

Nathan discovered Sellem last year when Sellem came in to sub. Nathan spotted talent. She encouraged Sellem to start an after-school arts program. Sellem asked for permission to stage a spring play.

“Tell me what you need,” Nathan said.

Sellem didn’t need much. She got the kids excited about the show, rehearsed with them. She bought costumes herself. She convinced a local company to donate T-shirts.

Over the summer Sellem attended a monologue slam in a Manhattan nightclub. “When I saw that,” she recalled, “I said it would be awesome for the kids.”

“There’s so much talent here” at Davis, she said. “I know some of these kids have it rough at home. This is great for them.”

She got to work as soon as the school year started. Nathan called her in to sub in fifth and sixth-grade classrooms. Sellem asked the students to write stories about a summer experience, one that evoked “strong emotion.”

“When they heard ‘strong emotion,‘“she said, “most of them thought of their parents.”

Once they wrote out narratives, Sellem told them to pick a single character. Develop the character, she said. She taught them what monologues are. She told them to write some.

After they refined their scripts, Sellem worked with them on performing. They memorized the lines. They practiced delivery. She coached and critiqued them along the way and helped them trim their performances to 30 seconds. She set up a contest for the best monologues.

“A lot of the kids didn’t even know they could act,” Sellem said.

The results were on display last Friday when Davis held its first school-wide “town meeting” of the year. It featured Davis’s first monologue slam.

(Click on the play arrow above to watch highlights.)

There were no alcohol served, no bouncers outside the door. The yelling voices were for the most part preadolescent. But given the electricity in the air, you could have closed your eyes and imagined yourself in that nightclub Sellem attended over the summer.

Seated on the floor of the school’s cafetorium, magnified shouts ricocheted off the walls with the intensity of Superballs. The students hailed the performers as they raced to the center to deliver their monologues.

“One ... Two ... Three ... Action!” the students cried out. The performers responded with rapid-fire monologues.

Laughter nearly drowned out Justice Willoughby’s account of wrestling with boredom at home: He can’t go outside. He can’t play Wii. So he invents a football game.

Egged on by the crowd’s delighted giggle, Justice stretched out a runner’s imaginary gallop downfield. “The crowd cheers!” he announced. And it did.

The laughter took on a knowing tone as sixth-grader Nijae Flower piled on complaints about mom. (“I’m not my sister! I’m tired of her always trying to compare me to you!”)

Daily domestic frustrations emerged as a theme, as in “Messy Room,” Vanessa Hansen-Quartery’s monologue in the voice of a character named Melissa:

Auggh! I am sick and tired of cleaning this room! ... Next time I find a room like this, I will drag his lazy butt up here and make him clean it up. Hats, belts, pants, it’s such a mess! ... What are my new skinny jeans doing in my trash bin? ... Now, I have to wash them again! ... I do everything! I do the dishes, I do the laundry, I vacuum, all Jason does is sit behind the computer all day! He’s worse than Jeremiah!, well sorta ... At least the mess isn’t that big ... I’m almost done cleaning the room too ... (pause )...There ... done. Now to go find Jeremiah.

After the students finished, Sellem announced a surprise performer: Principal Nathan, who ran to the mic and picked up on the “why me?!” trope.

She played herself in the monologue.

“Why did you choose me to be the principal of Davis Street Interdistrict Magnet School?” Nathan implored the audience. “I never understood why you chose me to do this!”

“Yay hoo!” The cafetorium erupted in laughter. You could barely hear Nathan when, after a comic pause, she delivered the punch line. She understands why she’s the principal, she said—because she works with the best staff and students around. She meant it.

After the monologues, Sellem handed out prizes to the student winners: notebooks and mechanical pencils. She paid for them herself.

Mentor & Mentee

Thrilled with the results, Nathan prepared after the town meeting to post photos of the winners and their winning essays on the bulletin board outside her office.

Sharece Sellem, in the meantime, is working on a new after-school program for Davis this year. She’s also organizing a later-afternoon program in Newhallville for students citywide. She wants them to develop monologues based on characters from African-American history.

Sellem was the oldest of five children growing up in Hartford. She said she adopts a “big sister” approach to working with students. She encourages them, pushes them to do better. “I’m also very loving.”

Lola Nathan, who has been Davis’s principal for 19 years, plays a mentoring role for Sellem, too.

Sellem studied video production for two years down south after high school, then returned to Connecticut. She worked as an administrative assistant at a Hartford arts organization, where she picked up ideas she brought to Davis.

As she finds ways to keep Sellem on the team, Nathan is also encouraging her to complete her undergraduate degree and obtain her teacher certification. She has big plans for Sellem, at Davis—and beyond.

"Feelings & Footprints...A Walk through African-American History" Coming up this FEBRUARY! (During School Winter Break)










Get a small glimpse into the lives of great African-Americans who have made footprints in American history. Young actors of Artistik Xpressions Amateur Youth Drama Group perform these characters as children, teenagers, and adults.

Jordine Jean as "Madame C.J. Walker"
Kevin Armstrong as "W.E.B. DuBois"
KiShon Shields as "Duke Ellington"
Justice Willoughby as "Louis Armstrong"
Damian Henderson Jr. as "Dr. Martin Luther King Jr."
Tyriq Woodson as "Michael Jackson"

This is a monologue series of characters in African-American History. Young actors speak and imitate in costume, African-Americans that have had a prominent place in America’s history. Each member has thoroughly researched and studied their assigned character's role in order to successfully execute their performance. The objective of this series is to inspire and educate others. The audience gets a chance to see how some African Americans in history felt, what their thought process may have been and what struggles they may have gone through. Members are given a *monologue of a character and also create their own monologue of an everyday person living during that character’s time period.

AUDIENCE PARTICIPATION!
Comedy
The audience will also have a chance to participate as a "Feelings & Footprints" press conference is held and the characters give brief speeches. Audience members then have a chance to ask them questions.


*“Monologue,”is an extended uninterrupted speech by a character in a drama. The character may be speaking his or her thoughts aloud, directly addressing another character, or speaking to the audience, especially the former.

SHOW LOCATIONS, DATES & TIMES

WED, FEB. 10, 10'
6:30-7:30 pm
MITCHELL LIBRARY
37 HARRISON ST.
NEW HAVEN

TUES, FEB. 16, 10'

2:00pm
WILSON LIBRARY
303 WASHINGTON AVE.
NEW HAVEN

WED, FEB.17, 10'
2:00pm
STETSON LIBRARY
200 DIXWELL AVE.
NEW HAVEN

THUR, FEB.18, 10'
2:00pm
FAIRHAVEN
LIBRARY
182 GRAND AVE.
NEW HAVEN

FRI, FEB. 19, 10'
2:00pm
MAIN NEW HAVEN
LIBRARY
133 ELM ST.
NEW HAVEN

We're Putting On Performing Arts Workshops This January!


This month, Sellem will be conducting performing workshops for children, teens and young adults.







MONOLOGUE WORKSHOP
The monologue workshop will help participants perform for the first MONOLOGUE SLAM to be held at Lyric Hall in Westville New Haven, CT. on Wednesday January, 27, 2010 @ 6:00pm.

i.m.a.g.e.s. WORKSHOP
(Inspirational. Movement. Art. Gestures. Emotion. Silence)
The i.m.a.g.e.s. workshop is an introduction to a new project for Artistik Xpressions. It is a "mime-to-music" performance where participants learn how use their bodies and facial expressions to convey the lyrics of inspirational songs. Examples of inspirational songs: "You Gotta Be" by Desiree', "Will You Be There?" by Michael Jackson.

MONOLOGUE WORKSHOP TIMES & LOCATIONS:
STETSON LIBRARY - JAN. 19, 2010 TUES @ 5:00-6:00pm
JAN. 20, 2010 WED @ 5:00-7:00pm
WILSON LIBRARY - JAN. 21, 2010 THURS @ 5:00-6:00pm

i.m.a.g.e.s. WORKSHOP
MLK Saving Our Communities Conference 2010 YES WE CAN!
Day Event 8:30am-1:30pm

Damian Henderson Jr. of Artistik Xpressions as "Dr. Martin Luther King Jr." JANUARY





New Haven Free Library Branches:
STETSON LIBRARY JAN. 13, 2010 - Past
NEW HAVEN INDEPENDENT NEWS REPORTS: http://newhavenindependent.org/index.php/archives/entry/damian_debuts/
MITCHELL LIBRARY JAN. 14, 2010 - Past
IVES MAIN LIBRARY JAN. 16, 2010 - 1:30pm
WILSON LIBRARY JAN. 16, 2010 - 3:30

MLK Saving Our Communities 2010 Conference YES WE CAN!
Monday, January 18, 2009--8:30 am to 1:30 pm
Wexler-Grant Community School- 55 Foote Street, New Haven, CT

10 yr. old Damian Henderson Jr. of Artistik Xpressions is a serious student that has done thorough research of Dr. Martin Luther King and impersonates this wonderful man in American history. Damian allows you to peer into what Mr. King would have thought as a child, a teenager, and an adult. This program is followed by arts & craft activities. So come along and celebrate Mr. King’s legacy with the New Haven Public Libraries this January!

The video: "The Children's March" from teachingtolerance.org is also featured after Damian's performance

*Damian was recently placed in an indie film by Anthony Difonzo of Garwood NJ entitled, "The Boyz of Summer" follow the trailer on youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ze9KsR_sFLI

NEWS ARTICLE ABOUT DAMIAN BY ALLAN APPEL of NEW HAVEN INDEPENDENT:

The “I Have a Dream” speech rang out of the Stetson Library as a new local 10-year-old talent and a new black history program were launched.
The speaker this time wasn’t the late civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. It was Damian Henderson Jr.. In addition to reciting the famous speech, Henderson Jr. dramatically captured King as a child as well as a freshman home from that first year at Morehouse College, when he was disturbed at all the talk of race in his native Atlanta.

The new program was an amateur youth drama group called Artistik Xpressions. Henderson attends Davis St. Interdistrict Arts & Academics Magnet School where he was “discovered” by his drama instructor and the group’s director, Sharece Sellem.

Damian delivered his monologues with confidence at an event at Stetson Wednesday. He provided the quiet revelation that before King was the MLK of the iconic speech, he was first a regular kid disturbed that one day the mother of his white friend forbid her son to play with him.
In Damian’s evocation, King was also once a teenager who put his suitcase down at home and called out, a little miffed that his parents were not at home to greet him.
Thirty kids and their parents gathered at Stetson to see Damian preview the MLK section of a larger work titled “Feelings & Footprints,” and to get an early start on the celebrations of the Martin Luther King holiday.

“Feelings & Footprints” is a dramatic tour through African-American history written by Sellem. It will be playing at the other branches and at schools later this month and throughout February’s Black History Month.

An "A" student and all-around athlete, Damian had never acted until he took Sellem’s class at Davis. His naturalness and memorization ability were so outstanding, he caught her attention even though his role was not a major one in the school play.

The text was written by Sellem (pictured with Damian). The Georgia accent, complete with long “ah”, is all Damian, which he practiced in vocal and other acting exercises.
After the performance, Damian was asked by a reporter what the experience of acting was like for him.
“When I go up there to act, Damian Henderson, it’s like I don’t even know him,” the young man said.
His mom, Nicole Robinson ,said she liked the history lessons her son got out of the experience as well. “It was his first time seeing what segregation was like,” she said. “‘Mom,you really couldn’t eat with white people?’” Robinson remembered her son asking him. “He really had no clue as to how it was. The [acting] activity made it real for him.”It also made him come down with a serious case of the acting bug.

During December, while rehearsals for the show were under way, through a contact of Sellem’s Damian was cast as an extra in a wedding scene in Boys of Summer, an independent film shot in New Jersey to be released later this year.

On Sunday he has a casting call in New York. But first, after he gave his MLK blazer to his mom to hold, the two of them were off to basketball practice.

The one-hour show will be performed Feb. 10 at the Mitchell Library in Westville at 6:30. It will be performed on Feb. 16 at the Wilson Branch; Feb. 17 back at Stetson; Feb. 18 at the Fair Haven Library; and Feb. 19 at the main branch. All performance are at 2 p.m.