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Creative Economy Mixer: Arts Letters & Numbers Studios

May 30, 2019 By upstatecreative

Thank you for joining us at Arts Letters & Numbers Studios, where we toured their facility, met resident artists, enjoyed food tastings by Laughing Earth Farm, beverage tastings by Albany Distilling Co, a performance by Rachelle Smith-Stallman and more!

We’ll also had an engaging discussion with Arts Letters & Numbers Founding Director David Gersten, and Andrew Frishman of Big Picture Learning.

Without the generous support of our sponsors, this event would not be possible. Thanks to Community Loan Fund of the Capital Region, MVP Health Care, and promotional partner Rensselaer County Regional Chamber of Commerce.

Branch VFX Executive Producer Sam Margolius

March 5, 2019 By upstatecreative

Sam Margolius is a forward thinking producer and business executive balancing the hybrid spaces of art, entertainment, technology, production, and marketing. He is a Twenty year veteran of the content world with deep experience working with world-class studios, brands, artists, producers and visionary storytellers in both their core production needs as well as the strategy and implementation of new channels of communication.

 

Sam runs Albany-based Branch VFX which is a STARTUP NY designated company focused on high-level TV and Film projects for Netflix, Paramount, Disney/Marvel, Nickelodeon, etc. and is a sister company to Emmy-Award winning Shade VFX. He recently post produced Terrence Malick’s 360/VR experience, “Together” which debuted at SXSW 2018 and then at The TriBeCa Film Festival and is Executive Producer for the Haagen-Dazs, HTC Vive, Google Daydream 360/VR collaboration, “The Extraordinary Honey Bee“, which was voiced by Constance Zimmer and debuted at the World Economic Forum 2018 in Davos, Switzerland. Additionally, he produced the 2016 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Edition VR and one of the first ever VR music videos, “Crown” for hip hop supergroup, Run The Jewels, which released on the New York Times NYTVR app and launched at SXSW 2016.

 

Raised in the Catskill Mountains for all of his formative years, he holds a deep respect for the vitality of nature, the importance of sarcasm, and the flavor of whiskey.

Below are two examples of how imagination comes alive in the digital effects that add the finishing touches to a film.

Creative Economy Mixer at Darn Good Yarn: Photo Highlights

February 14, 2019 By upstatecreative

ACE held its February #CreativeEconomyMixer at Darn Good Yarn in Clifton Park. There were tours of Darn Good Yarn’s amazing facility, beverage tastings by Yankee Distillery and Single Cut Brewing: North Store, a performance by poet and visual artist D. Colin, and a “The Price Is Right” style giveaway! Many attendees also enjoyed the “Learn to Crochet/Knit” station as well.
NYS Assemblywoman Carrie Woerner led an engaging discussion with Darn Good Yarn founder Nicole Snow and Sarah Trop, owner of Funcycled Repurposing and Interior Design, with a focus on Women and Entrepreneurship.
FREE headshots were be provided by Ska City Photography when attendees registered for the ACE Job Hub.
Special thanks to our sponsors, Saratoga County Prosperity Partnership, MVP Health Care, and Community Loan Fund, and promotional partners, She’s A Boss and Entrepreneurs’ Organization Albany. Produced in partnership with 2440 Design Studio and WMHT.
AllDare Good Yarn Mixer

NY’s Capital Region: A Heron’s Nest for North American Haiku

January 28, 2019 By upstatecreative

Photo by James Schlett.

It is a story that starts almost like a joke: almost two decades ago, a state worker, an electrical engineer and a classical music composer walked into a Tai restaurant. The joke, however, ends there, and what has happened since then has amounted to a tour de force in the North American haiku community.

Haiku – yes, that Japanese art form often taught to middle school students – is thriving in upstate New York, especially the Capital Region. Not only do several of the nation’s best-known haiku poets live in the Capital Region, two of North America’s leading haiku journals have upstate editors at their helm: Rochester’s Michael Ketchek edits Frogpond, and Nassau’s John Stevenson is the managing editor of The Heron’s Nest. A third upstate publication, Upstate Dim Sum, a biannual haiku anthology, is edited by Schenectady’s Yu Chang.

Route 9 Haiku Group

The Capital Region’s influence on modern American haiku has been growing since the three poets met at the Tai Pan restaurant on Route 9 in Halfmoon in February 2000. They included Stevenson, a retired human resources administrator with the New York State Office of Mental Health; Chang, a retired Union College electrical engineering professor; and Schuylerville’s Hilary Tann, the current chair of Union’s Performing Arts Department. Since then, this trio, plus Tom Clausen of Ithaca, have been meeting at Tai Pan monthly, occupying the same back corner table and dining on dim sum often from noon to 6 p.m. They call themselves the Route 9 Haiku Group, and at these meetings they provide feedback on their haiku and select poems for Upstate Dim Sum.

on the horizon
just enough cloud
to hold some sunset
     Tom Clausen, Ithaca

American Haiku

Modern American haiku is very different from the three-lined poetry with 17 syllables that students are taught in middle school. It is an art that draws its power and beauty from not only nature but also from a faithfulness to simplicity and brevity. It is a nod to life’s impermanence and an attempt to capture its moments before they vanish like morning dew. Haiku leaves much unsaid and more to the imagination. The traditional 5-7-5 syllable structure is largely viewed as a maximum – rather than mandated – length per line. Haiku that exhaust all 17 syllables can be superfluous, whereas those with half as many are vastly more expressive.

silence
for some
includes birdsong
     Hillary Tann, Schuylerville

One core element of haiku is the kigo, or “seasonal word,” such as Tann’s “birdsong,” a harbinger of spring. Another core element is the kire-ji, or “cutting word,” which introduces a twist to the poem, the way the “birdsong” contradicts the “silence” in Tann’s poem. Haiku can be less centered on nature and lack a kigo, but those that primarily provide social commentary are categorized as senryu.

children’s ICU—
a tissue box beside
the pay phone
     John Stevenson, Nassau

Capital Region Haiku Headliners

If there is such a thing as a superstar haiku poet in the United States, Stevenson would be one. He is a former regional coordinator, treasurer, vice president and president of the Haiku Society of America (HSA) and editor of its quarterly journal, Frogpond. Since 2008, he has served as the editor of The Heron’s Nest, and since 2007 he has been a judge in the United Nations International School’s annual haiku contest. He is an Honorary Curator of the American Haiku Archives at the California State Library. He has won many first-place HSA contests and was voted “Poet of the Year” three times by Heron’s Nest readers prior to being named its editor.

                                                   autumn wind
                                                   the leaves are going
                                                   where I’m going
                                                             John Stevenson, Nassau

Chang, a Chinese native who grew up in Taiwan, started writing haiku in the mid-1990s and quickly established himself as a prominent haiku poet. He won the grand prize for the Shiki Internet Haiku Contest in 1996 and 1997, the Museum Of Haiku Literature Award in 1998 and the Harold G. Henderson Haiku Award in 1999. More recently, he won the Heron’s Nest’s grand prize for Poet of the Year in 2009 and Haiku of the Year in 2016. Schenectady’s Central Park, a short walk from his house, is a perennial source of inspiration for this humble, soft-spoken poet.

gathering light
at the tip of an acorn
yesterday’s rain
     Yu Chang, Schenectady

The Welsh-born Tann played an integral role in bringing Haiku North America – the nation’s largest haiku poet gathering that occurs biennially – to Union in 2015. She received the Haiku Society of America Museum of Haiku Literature Award in 2006. Along with the Route 9 Haiku Group poets and Paul Macneil, a Heron’s Nest editor from Ocala, Florida, Tann in 2017 and 2003 won the grand prize for the HAS’s Bernard Lionel Einbod Renku Collection Awards. Renku is a linked-verse poem of haiku-related literature written by multiple poets and alternating between three- and two- line stanzas.

Other Local Haiku Poets

Other established and emerging Capital Region haiku poets include, but are not limited to, Stuart Bartow, a SUNY Adirondack English professor from Salem who last year published his first haiku book; Wonja Brucker, a Korean-American retired librarian from Princetown; and Saratoga Springs’ Barbara Ungar, a College of St. Rose English professor who has been writing haiku for a half century. At Stanford University in the 1970s Ungar was a pupil of the renowned haiku critic Makoto Ueda, and her senior honors essay on “Haiku in English” was reprinted in Simply Haiku in 2009.

chickadees nesting
in the mailbox     news
     from the sky
     Stuart Bartow, Salem

snow in the air
on the stone walk a mouse
laid out by the cat
     Barbara Ungar, Saratoga Springs

sunlit icicle
he wants to keep it
in his toy box
     Wonja Brucker, Princetown

alone
hugging
warm laundry
     Davis Giacalone, Schenectady

cool August evening
grass clippings all over
our backs
     James Schlett, Colonie

The HAS does have a Northeast Metro region, which includes New York State. However, outside of the closed circle monthly Route 9 Haiku Group meetings at Tai Pan, there are no regular haiku poet gatherings in the Capital Region. Below are journals with Northeast-based editors and annual gatherings in New England.

New York/New England Haiku Journals

    • Frogpond, edited by Michael Ketchek, Rochester, New York
    • The Heron’s Nest, edited by John Stevenson, Nassau, New York

 

  • Modern Haiku, edited by Paul Miller, Portsmouth, Rhode Island

 

    • Bottle Rockets, edited by Stanford Forrester, Windsor, Connecticut
    • Akitsu-Quarterly, edited by Robin White, Deerfield, New Hampshire

 

  • Upstate Dim Sum, edited by Yu Chang, Schenectady, New York

 

  • New England Letters, edited by Wanda Cook, Hadley, Massachusetts

Annual Haiku Poet Gatherings

  • The Haiku Circle, in Northfield, Massachusetts, usually in June
  • Wild Graces Haiku-Gathering, in Deerfield, New Hampshire, usually in September

About the Author

In addition to being the Center for Economic Growth’s director of research and communications, James Schlett is an award-winning poet, author and journalist. He is the author of A Not Too Greatly Changed Eden: The Story of the Philosophers’ Camp in the Adirondacks (Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press, 2015), winner of the Adirondack Center for Writing’s Adirondack Literary Award for Best Book of Non-Fiction in 2015. His haiku has been published in Frogpond, The Heron’s Nest, Acorn, Modern Haiku, Bottle Rockets, Wild Plum, and Akitsu-Quarterly Journal.

 

Freelance Pattern Designer Needed: Darn Good Yarn

January 24, 2019 By upstatecreative

Darn Good Yarn is looking for a freelance pattern designer to assist with the design and photography of new knitting, crochet or weaving patterns.

The candidate best suited for this position is a skilled knitter, crocheter or weaver, has experience designing patterns for all skill levels and can produce designs on a monthly basis.

The Pattern Designer will be responsible for the following;

• Ensure all designs are provided on a timely basis

• Designing projects based on project directive

• Provide Design photography

• Contribute ideas for design, yarn selection, etc.

• Format patterns in accordance to the Darn Good Yarns Pattern Standards

Requirements

We are looking for someone with the following qualifications:

• Intermediate or stronger knitting, crochet or weaving skills

• Strong communication, writing and organizational skills are a must

• Desire to work and grow in a fast-paced environment

• Proficiency with various online platforms including, Word, Excel and Publisher

• Obsessive attention to detail

• Strong work-ethic

• Ability to work independently and in coordination with various team members

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