Creating the Arizona quilts documentary

•January 23, 2012 • 2 Comments
Genevieve Guadalupe's "Agave Azul" - one of many extraordinary creations for the "100 Years, 100 Quilts" Arizona Historical Society state centennial exhibit.

Genevieve Guadalupe's "Agave Azul" - one of many extraordinary creations for the "100 Years, 100 Quilts" Arizona Historical Society state centennial exhibit.

I’m at the point where the rubber meets the road in creating the half-hour video documentary that will accompany the Arizona Centennial Quilt Project and the Arizona Historical Society‘s state centennial celebration exhibit “100 Years, 100 Quilts.”

Months of work have led to this point, starting in September with shooting the intake of 100 quilts created by Arizona quilters. The intake process took place in three main batches in Tucson, Phoenix and Prescott, with a few more being mailed in.

After we had the chance to see and photograph all of the quilts for the show, a group of 13 quilts was selected to become the focal point of a round of interviews with quilters from the show. Among those selected in that group were a 12-year old race-car-driving boy, a group of traditional hand quilters from Prescott, a retired Air Force munitions targeting expert, a third grade class from Phoenix, a former leader of Prescott’s Frontier Days, and a number of art quilters of incredible talent from around the state. Along with shooting the quilters, stills and footage from their local areas was also produced to highlight where they came from.

Interviews were also conducted with members of the Arizona Historical Society’s administration and staff, as well as members of various quilting groups who who formed the Executive Committee of ACQP and hatched the idea of celebrating the state’s centennial with the quilt exhibit.

In addition such milestones as meetings to organize the show and various spinoff products (a book and DVD), as well as the actual mounting of the show, were filmed.

Over the past two months I have been busily transcribing every word of everyone interviewed, and labeling literally thousands of clips, to get the materials organized. These transcripts in turn were used to generate an outline of the basic contours of the documentary. And now the individual voice tracks are being laid down on the timeline to create the sound bed of the film.

After that numerous passes of the sequence will be made, editing for time and clarity, smoothing out audio, adding titles, credits and the like, and inserting the images that strengthen the narrative.

By the weekend, a DVD master will be burned and turned over for duplication, so that copies will be available when the show opens February 18 at the Arizona Historical Society’s Tucson branch. If time permits, a second short film will be added, showcasing what today’s Arizona quilters are all about.

A very busy week ahead.

Photo, video by Daniel Buckley – CLICK IMAGE TO ENLARGE

Click here for more on the quilting project.

 

Is Recession Over for Musicians?

•January 21, 2012 • Leave a Comment
MOTU's Digital Performer 8 for Mac and Windows

MOTU's Digital Performer 8 for Mac and Windows

Is the recession over for musicians?

If the many offerings of the 2012 NAMM show are any indication, it may be.

The pickings have been considerably more anemic over the last year or two, but this time around a robust offering of innovative new products at more realistic prices suggests that we’re coming into a better world for musicians.

Tops in personal interest for me as an experimental composer is news of MOTU Digital Performer version 8. Key items mentioned make it an upgrade I will make – 64-bit compatibility and the availability of a Windows version.

The 64-bit feature is key. In the current 32-bit version one could only access 4 GB of memory for the music system. 64-bit means we are limited only by how much RAM we have in our computers.

Many of us have massive sound libraries. Hell, MOTU’s own Mach V version 3 craps out on the larger instruments in 32 bit mode. Everything else MOTU adds to FP8 is gravy in my book, and experience tells me that this will be a major upgrade on many more fronts than this.

The addition of a bunch of new bundled plug-ins, new themes and the ability to send full-screen 720P or 1080 video to another screen adds to my excitement about this new version.

News that Waves plug-ins will soon be 64-bit compatible, and that the company is dropping the iLok protection scheme, is highly welcome.

Arturia Minibrute Analog Synthesizer

Arturia Minibrute Analog Synthesizer

As is news of two very affordable and powerful new analog synthesizers on the market – Arturia’s MiniBrute and Moog’s Minitaur.

A whole bunch of promising apps and external gear for smart phones and pads adds to the affordability of musical tech.

And on the laptop front, Blue’s Tiki USB microphone may kill two birds with one stone by creating an inexpensive plug-in microphone that intelligently cuts through the noise. Could be a valuable voice-over tool for video road warriors, and at $60 retail, hard not to take a shot at.

We’re starting to see the first audio and video interfaces with the new Thunderbolt technology hitting the market as well, and Universal Audio’s new interface with real-time UAD plug-ins suggests a major leap in music tech.

 

Link:

110th NAMM Show Reaches New Record Number of Registrants; Industry Primed for Growth in 2012

Daniel Buckley joins the Arizona Experience centennial website

•January 18, 2012 • 1 Comment
Daniel Buckley in downtown Tucson, photo by Alejandra Platt

Daniel Buckley in downtown Tucson, photo by Alejandra Platt

Documentary maker Daniel Buckley today came to an agreement with the Arizona Experience to provide video content for the Arizona state centennial website throughout the centennial year.

Buckley will work with Arizona Experience staff to generate videos focusing on Arizona innovators, and more, in conjunction with the site’s 12 monthly themes. These include Mining and Minerals (March), Biotech and Life Sciences (April), Sports and Recreation (May), Energy (June), Water (July), Aerospace and High Technology (August), People and Culture (September), Ranching and Agriculture (October), Native American Culture (November), Astronomy and Planetary Discovery (December), 21st Century Workforce (January 2013) and Snapshot of the Centennial (February 2013).

The Arizona Centennial year starts February 14, 2012.

Buckley has a long track record as a journalist, videographer and documentary maker. He spent 22 years with the Tucson Citizen newspaper, founding its multimedia division and serving as its first Multimedia Manager. He was also a columnist, arts and culture writer and member of the paper’s editorial board in his time with the Citizen. When the Citizen ceased print operation in 2009, Buckley formed Daniel Buckley Productions and did a range of work from the creation of exercise discs to documentary work for the Arizona Historical Society. In addition Buckley has a blog on mariachi, folklórico and Mexican culture topics with San Jose’s VivaFest! and is a regular contributor on topics of contemporary classical music for Stereophile Magazine.

In conjunction with the Fox Theatre, he teamed up with folklórico choreographer and CHISPA Foundation founder Julie Gallego, historian Ralph Gonzalez and others to create the Cine Plaza at the Fox series – a documentary series devoted to Latino cultures in Tucson. In 2011 the next installment of that series – a documentary on Tucson’s historic El Casino Ballroom – received a PLACE (People, Land, Art, Culture and Engagement) grant from the Tucson Pima Arts Council. The film, which will premiere at the Fox in June, 2012, is being created in partnership with the Fox, the Arizona Historical Society and Community Radio station KXCI.

 

Today’s odd fact learned from a quilter

•January 15, 2012 • Leave a Comment
Tucson quilter Karen Fisher

Tucson quilter Karen Fisher

About five years ago I was attending a “video for journalists” course at the Arizona Republic in Phoenix. We split into groups from the Republic and Tucson Citizen and went out to shoot stories wherever we arrived.

My group went down to Tempe Lake around sunset, figuring we’d get some folks walking, some cool sunsets and that sort of thing.

Instead we happened to stumble upon a Hawaiian community teaching the younger generation its rowing culture. One of the coolest accidents of my career, and it made for some great footage.

So today I was transcribing an interview I did in December with Tucson quilter Karen Fisher and she brought up Tempe Lake, so I told her about the Hawaiian rowing team I’d seen. She posed the question I probably should have asked five years ago – what was a significant Hawaiian population doing in the Phoenix Valley of Arizona?

And then she offered an explanation. It turns out she had applied for a job in Eloy, Arizona south of Tempe, where she learned there was a Hawaiian state prison full of Hawaiian inmates. So were the Phoenix folks family members of the Eloy prisoners?

Good question.

Quilters as community

•January 14, 2012 • 2 Comments
Diane McElmury of Glendale, Arizona

Diane McElmury of Glendale, Arizona

As I’m working on the quilting project I find myself more and more reflecting on performance artist Laura Milkins‘ “Walking Home” project earlier this year, where she walked from Tucson to Grand Rapids Michigan, discovering communities of all sorts along the way. In transcribing the interviews with quilters I’m hearing the many ways that quilting has generated communities, connected individuals with communities, and helped communities in need. Not sure I would have been so keenly aware of it were it not for working with Laura on her project. The unexpected benefits of the things we do come clear over time.

Quilter Kellogg Patton, foreground, drops of quilts to Prescott's Blankets 4 Kids program

Quilter Kellogg Patton, foreground, drops of quilts to Prescott's Blankets 4 Kids program

In talking with these quilters time and again I am struck by their generosity and kindness. Diane McElmury of Glendale, for example, is part of a group of quilters from her church called Reap What You Sew. Among other things they create quilts for numerous hospitals for premature babies, as well as for babies that didn’t make it so that the mother has something to remember that child by. Her organization also gives quilts to McDonalds House and numerous other charities. In all her group gives away between 2,500 and 3,000 quilts each year.

Blankets 4 Kids provides children from needy and often homeless families with warm blankets, as well as a stuffed toy and other treats.

Blankets 4 Kids provides children from needy and often homeless families with warm blankets, as well as a stuffed toy and other treats.

Kellogg Patton in Prescott whipped together many quilts for families displace during the Wallow Fire, and regularly works with organizations that serve homeless individuals and families in the Prescott area. She regularly contributes quilts to a local thrift shop that caters to the homeless, and drops more off at Ron Campbell’s Blankets 4 Kids organization.

Amanda Jeffrey of Scottsdale and her quilting group donate quilts to an organization that sends them to U.S. troops in Afghanistan.

Alex Gray of Tucson sold one of his quilts to raise money so that several of his classmates who could not afford it could go on a class trip.

Tucson quilter Alex Gray

Tucson quilter Alex Gray

Quilting is a loving thing.

 

 

Photos by Daniel Buckley. CLICK ON IMAGE TO ENLARGE

 

Tucson Remembers January 8

•January 8, 2012 • Leave a Comment

Bells toll at St. Augustine Cathedral in downtown Tucson at the exact minute that shots ran out at a crosstown Safeway during a “Congress on Your Corner” event one year ago, severely injuring Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords and several in attendance, and killing six, including staffer Gabe Zimmerman, 9-year-old Christina Green and Chief Judge John Roll.

Throughout Tucson on January 8, 2012 bells tolled to remember those killed and wounded that day by alleged gunman Jared Lee Loughner.

The impromptu memorial that sprang up at Tucson's University Medical Center in the days following the January 8 shooting.

The impromptu memorial that sprang up at Tucson's University Medical Center in the days following the January 8 shooting.

The shooting was a great tragedy, but also an occasion of heroism. Were it not for a few brave souls, Loughner would undoubtedly have continued shooting more people that day.

In the aftermath of January 8, our city pulled together in a daily vigil at University Medical Center where congresswoman Giffords recovered from the head wounds she received in the shooting. A growing shrine of flowers and teddy bears, balloons, votive candles, photos and remembrances flooded the grass near the entrance to the hospital.

When President Obama came to Tucson for a healing ceremony on the University of Arizona campus, there were tears and there was laughter. Pundits from other parts considered the laughter to be bizarre. But they don’t live in Tucson. They don’t understand this city’s vibrant soul.

Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords a year before the shooting, celebrating the 100th birthday of Tucson fashion legend Cele Peterson.

Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords a year before the shooting, celebrating the 100th birthday of Tucson fashion legend Cele Peterson.

A year later Congresswoman Giffords is still with us, working every day to get back to where she was before January 8, 2011, and returning to her  community to remember those who died, those who were wounded and the rest of us who are still healing from that impossible day.

There were no huge crowds this afternoon at University Medical Center. Just one or two people at a time, looking at the half-dozen or so large photos set up on the grass. The chilly wind blew one of the photos over. But while it was not the gathering place it had been last year, it stilled had about it a sense of hallowed ground.

University Medical Center one year after the January 8 shooting.

University Medical Center one year after the January 8 shooting.

Tonight the masses will converge on the University of Arizona campus to join Gabby Giffords and her husband, Mark Kelly, as they remember that fateful day.

ALL PHOTOS AND VIDEO BY DANIEL BUCKLEY. CLICK TO ENLARGE.

Private stash of Centennial quilters, part one: Alicia Sterna

•January 4, 2012 • 1 Comment
Alicia Sterna

Alicia Sterna in her studio

In interviewing some of the quilters who contributed to the 100 Arizona Quilts centennial exhibit, I was treated to some samples of other work each did beyond their centennial contributions. Thought I’d share some of these creations in the blog, starting with works by Alicia Sterna.

 

 

Quilt by Alicia Sterna: Time Waits for No Mom

Quilt by Alicia Sterna: Time Waits for No Mom

Surprise, Arizona fabric artist Alicia Sterna has been quilting started quilting in 2002 after a chance visit to a quilting shop in Oregon. A former lawyer with the Arizona Department of Public Safety, Sterna spent seven years as  a volunteer with the forest service along the Oregon sea coast with her husband Randy, who also had a career with the DPS. She’s been a resident of Arizona since 1970 when she came to Tucson as a University of Arizona student.

 

In her ten years of quilting Sterna has become a remarkably facile textile artist. Largely self taught, her works are masterful mixed media creations that may involve anything from the usual bewildering array of fabrics to buttons, stones, special fibers, bits of glass and metal, fabric paint and anything else that might further her artistic vision.

 

Detail from Alicia Sterna's Arizona centennial quilt "News."

Detail from Alicia Sterna's Arizona centennial quilt "News."

The quilt she created for the centennial exhibit, titled “News,” celebrates Arizona’s newspapers and assorted means of spreading news in Arizona’s first century. She used tea bags, steeped, then split and emptied, to simulate the color of newsprint. She printed the titles of the paper in reverse, flipping them to let the name show through the fabric of the tea bag.

 

Quilt by Alicia Sterna: Season's End

Quilt by Alicia Sterna: Season's End

Sterna teaches the creative process of quilting and has been president of the Sun City Grand quilting club. In addition she has generated ideas for a number of quilting “challenges” in which a series of ideas is introduced a week at a time to a group of quilters to see where those loose directions might lead.

 

An avid hiker and outdoors person, she often collaborates with her husband Randy, who is a gifted photographer. His photos have inspired both her own quilts and several challenge quilts she has generated with others.

 

She has created quilts for breast cancer patients, and one of her quilts is currently on tour for a fabric company’s challenge exhibit. The subject of that particular quilt was the Wallow Fire, which she watched progress from her Airstream trailer in Lakeside, Arizona.

 

Quilt by Alicia Sterna: Butterfly, reverse side

Quilt by Alicia Sterna: Butterfly, reverse side

As a quilter, Sterna clearly enjoys the creative process, as well as the technical side. She loves watching her original concept transform as the fabric and the design evolve in her converted bedroom sewing studio. Some of her quilts are as intricate on the reverse side as on the side intended to be viewed.

 

Her work has won numerous show competitions, yet there are some pieces in her home that she will never show because she couldn’t bear to be without them. Seeing them lovingly displayed around her home, one can understand why.

 

 

 

 

Quilt by Alicia Sterna shows her Airstream trailer, places she and her husband have been

Quilt by Alicia Sterna shows her Airstream trailer, places she and her husband have been

 

 

CLICK IMAGE TO ENLARGE

El Casino Ballroom spreads holiday cheer

•December 31, 2011 • Leave a Comment

Santa Claus and Mrs. Claus arrived via fire truck at El Casino Ballroom on December 18 to make the holidays a little bit brighter.

Children of literally hundreds of Tucson families going through rough times were treated to a meal, snacks and Christmas toys served up by Santa and an army of volunteers from El Casino Ballroom, the Latin American Social Club, the Silhouettes and other public service organizations.

Each child received a raffle ticket on his or her way in. If you were lucky enough to hold the winning number you rode off on a brand new bicycle.

But most every child got to see Santa, receive a toy and get something to eat.

The event has been a Christmas tradition for many years.

The huge number of families served this year is indicative of the hard economic times Tucson is experiencing.

El Casino’s 65 years of service to Tucson’s multicultural community will be celebrated in 2012 in the next installment of the Cine Plaza at the Fox documentary series, as well as a series of events with community radio station KXCI and the Latin American Social Club.

To learn more about the documentary, click here.

CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE.

 

 

 

Mariachi blog continues – “The Harvest” documentary screens at San Jose VivaFest!

•December 31, 2011 • Leave a Comment

Screening of the film The Harvest (La Cosecha)

     Among the non-musical offerings of San Jose’s VivaFest was the screening of the film The Harvest (La Cosecha)  – an extraordinarily moving documentary on child labor among the migrant workforce in 

America. The film followed three children and their families – 12-year-old Zulema Lopez, 14-year-old Perla Sanchez and 16-year-old Victor Huapilla – as they picked …

 

CLICK HERE FOR MORE

 

 

 

Centennial quilters defy preconceptions

•December 31, 2011 • 1 Comment
12-year-old Alex Gray is a champion drag racer, as well as an accomplished quilter.

12-year-old Alex Gray is a champion drag racer, as well as an accomplished quilter.

What do a 12-year old drag racer, a military air traffic controller, a former park ranger and a rodeo parade chairman all have in common?

All are quilters!

And all contributed quilts to an exhibition of 100 Arizona quilts to celebrate the state’s centennial in 2012.

From a group of over 90 quilters based around Arizona, a baker’s dozen were chosen to be interviewed about their lives, quilting and Arizona.

Last week documentary maker Daniel Buckley wrapped interviews for the 30-minute video he will produce for the exhibit, which will occupy the entire Tucson branch of the Arizona Historical Society from February 18, 2012 through the end of the year.

Former Persian Gulf air traffic controller Kellogg Patton with her Buzz Lightyear doll.

Former Persian Gulf air traffic controller Kellogg Patton with her Buzz Lightyear doll.

The video will be played at the exhibit throughout its run, and copies will be made available on DVD. Prices and sale locations will be announced before the show opens.

In addition, a book of Buckley’s photos of the quilts will also be available for sale.

On Valentines Day, 1912, Arizona became a state. To mark the occasion, a group of quilters hatched the idea to celebrate the occasion by mounting an exhibit of 100 quilts from around Arizona. The criteria for the unjuried show were that the quilt had to be less than ten years old and had to focus on some aspect of Arizona. How that was interpreted by the many quilters in the show spoke to their many perspectives and backgrounds. Some worked from themes of Arizona’s history, others of the land, its plants and animals, and its industries, people and cultures. Some did their work strictly by hand as pioneering Arizona quilters did. Others used a variety of machines, including long-arm quilting machines.

Surprise, Arizona's Alicia Sterna, shown leafing through a book of her art quilts, has been a lawyer and a former park ranger.

Surprise, Arizona's Alicia Sterna, shown leafing through a book of her art quilts, has been a lawyer and a former park ranger.

All of them drew upon their unique experiences of the state.

In addition to the 30-minute video, a series of five minute profiles of the 13 quilters selected for interview will also be featured online at the Arizona Historical Society’s website, running one a month throughout the centennial year.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

For more on the centennial quilt project go to http://www.danielbuckleyarts.com/category/quilting-project/ or click here.

CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE.