Monthly Archives: March 2005

“Circle Dance: The Art of John Scott”, Louisiana Cultural Vistas

In his efforts to recount the picturesque scenes and bodily sensations of Congo Square — an open space for slaves in antebellum New Orleans — author Henry Edward Durell (under the nom de plume Henry Didimus) invoked a flood of images in the preceding epigraph. Geometrical shapes meet human bodies in this descriptive whirl of music-making and dancing. The interminable, incessant sounds of drumming, singing, crying, shouting, and rhythmic pounding are conceived as a form of music that, on the face of it, has no end.

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“Allison Stewart”, Southern Accents

ALLISON STEWART This New Orleans artist takes inspiration from the Louisiana wetlands for her graceful ecological works by Elizabeth Dewberry, SOUTHERN ACCENTS Allison Stewart’s transition from a biology major who… 

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“Beauties And Beasts”, Gambit Weekly

So you thought you knew Little Red Riding Hood? So did I, at least until I started thinking about it. Then I realized that all the old fairy tales had blended in my mind over time into a gumbo of little girls, wolves, princesses, frogs and dwarves, trailing off into a weird frontier populated by Frankenstein, Godzilla, Dracula, Dick Nixon and SpongeBob.

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“Beauties and Beasts”, Gambit Weekly

So you thought you knew Little Red Riding Hood? So did I, at least until I started thinking about it. Then I realized that all the old fairy tales had blended in my mind over time into a gumbo of little girls, wolves, princesses, frogs and dwarves, trailing off into a weird frontier populated by Frankenstein, Godzilla, Dracula, Dick Nixon and SpongeBob.

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