Monday, February 23, 2015

Square Dance March 22 in Halcott Center

2013 Square Dance Master's Class Pine Hill Community Center


Once again the Halcott Grange, 264 County Route 3 in Halcott Center 12430, will be the site of an old-time square dance, featuring Hilt Kelly's protégé John Jacobson and his band the Tremperskill Boys. Band members are John Jacobson on fiddle, Chris Carey playing banjo, Amy Lieberman on bass, Sheila Addison on guitar, and Ginny Scheer playing flute.

Square dances and waltzes will be featured including many from the Kelly repertoire. The dance will take place from 1 pm to 4 pm on Sunday afternoon, March 22.  Admission is $7.00 per adult (children 12 and under are free) and there will be refreshments offered for sale.

This is a dance for beginners and for experienced dancers. All dances will be taught.  See you at the Halcott Grange!


Tuesday, February 10, 2015

What is the Catskills Landscape?

T uesday, February 10, 2015

People express their feelings about the landscape through a variety of media. Some tell stories about it, some phtoograph it, and others paint pictures of it, some even depict the landscape in their quilts. Tonight on my radio program at 7 p.m.on WIOX 91.3 FM or wioxradio.org, Catskills Folk, I will ask you to think about what the Catskills landscape means to you and I'll describe examples of folk and fine art that show the landscape in different ways.  But you can see the paintings yourself, here on Catskills Folk's blog!

Robert Mead Farm, West Settlement, Roxbury, NY painted by Nellie Bly Ballard

Nellie Bly Ballard was a self-taught painter from Roxbury who painted farm portraits in the mid-20th century.  This is an example that shows a dairy farm that still has open fields, but the buildings are all gone today.  She could be called the "Catskills' Grandma Moses" because she paints in the primitive manner that represents what she knows is there (and some things that aren't) rather than painting the scenery the way it would look in a photograph.   To someone who lived on that farm, it would be satisfying to see all the outbuildings in their relative positions and the house with all its parts displayed, somewhat as they remember it.

Do you own a Nellie Bly Ballard painting?  If so, I would love to see it.  I'm trying to record all of them I can find and hope to be able to show some of them in an exhibit next year that will bring together narratives, photographs, paintings and - yes - quilts that show the Catskills landscape.  If you have a folk art landscape, expecially one by Nellie Bly Ballard, please contact me at 607-326-4206 or vscheer@juno.com.



Another landscape painter from Roxbury was attorney Ralph Ives, Sr.  He worked at about the same time as Nellie Bly Ballard, but painted in way that seems to reflect the French Impressionists.  I don't know if he studied painting at any time, but he was known in the community as an artist and also as an amateur archeologist.  This painting is more about what the eye can see, including the increasingly hazy distant mountains shown with aerial perspective.

Both painters wanted to depict the Catskills landscape, one to make recognizable portraits of local farms and the other to engage the onlooker in the beauty of the view.  Does anyone recognize this view?   It makes me think of the view from Old Clump, looking west, but I'm not sure.  I don't know if there any other examples of Ralph Ives, Sr.'s work, but of course would be delighted to hear from anyone with information about his paintings.

Listen to Catskills Folk  tonight for a discussion of what we mean by "landscape," how that meaning has changed over time, and how the term applies to these two paintings.


Wednesday, February 4, 2015

February 8 Square Dance at Pine Hill Community Center

On Sunday, February 8, at 1 pm Catskills Folk joins in publicizing a square dance, combined with a contra dance, presented by the Pine Hill Community Center with the support of the New York State Council on the Arts and the Messinger Family Fund.

John Jacobson call whileTremperskill Boys play
 with Hilt Kelly and the Sidekicks
The dance will feature John Jacobson and the Tremperskill Boys, a group of musicians gaining a regional reputation for perpetuating the square dance tradition of legendary caller and fiddler, Hilt Kelly.  They will play as John calls square dances common for decades here in the Catskills.  In addition John will introduce Casey Mullaney, a fiddler who calls contra dances.  To many in the mountain region squares are familiar, while contras are more often associated with New England. There is a revival movement of this type of line dance that has grown to include many regions in the US, including the Catskills.

                                                                                 
Square dancers at the Pine Hill Community Center 
Sunday afternoon, February 8, is a chance to dance traditional Catskills squares and try your hands (and feet!) at a contra.  The contra differs from square dancing in that the dancers begin side by side in lines down the hall and dance with the couples above and below them instead of couples around the square.  Many of the same figures are used (swing, do si do, right and left through, ladies' chain) but in the line format.  

Come join us for a musical afternoon and try a few dances!  And watch this blog for more dances around the Catskills and at the Pine Hill Community Center.