11.04.2009

THEODORE©

VIP Lounge 11-06-2009

10.09.2009

Living on Borrowed Time...

John Lennon's 69th

9.24.2009

VIP LOUNGE AT WATCH THIS SPACE OCT/09



Watch This Space presents October 2009 First Friday event, VIP Lounge (Video Installation Performance) Series.
After the success of the inaugural VIP lounge, Watch This Space is pleased to present “Art Angst and the Neo-Bohemian Collective”, a send up of the archetype black turtleneck clad, angst ridden artist collectives of the 1990’s, for the October First Friday’s VIP Lounge (VIP for Video Installation Performance). There is a small “cover charge” of $5.00, which includes admission to the event, and a complimentary mocktail, hors d’oeuvre, and a small event related souvenir item.
We had such a blast at the “Blue Velvet” inspired VIP Lounge, last month we wanted to keep the dark edge for this month’s event.“ said Tom McElroy, Watch This Space, Director.
Pleas note the start time for the VIP Lounge (Video Installation Performance) Series, has been changed to 8 pm, as the intention for this series is to be an apres’ First Friday art event.
WATCH THIS SPACE is a performance, dance, and multimedia art space located in the Depot Arts Building, under the Colorado Avenue Bridge at 218 W. Colorado Avenue, Suite 102, in Downtown Colorado Springs.
Visit http://watchthisspacecos.blogspot.com/ for more information.
RECAP:
VIP (Video Installation Performance) Lounge at Watch This Space
Presents “ Art Angst and the Neo-Bohemian Collective”
Friday Oct. 2, 2009. 8pm, $5.00 cover includes complementary mocktail.

8.25.2009

VIP Lounge at WATCH THIS SPACE

Watch This Space presents First Friday event, VIP Lounge (Video Installation Performance) Series.

Watch This Space will present a series of multi-media art events in conjunction with the First Fridays. Titled VIP Lounge (VIP for Video Installation Performance), these events will present video, installation, and performance art, for a small “cover charge” of $5.00, which includes admission to the event, and a complimentary “virgin” cocktail, hors d’oeuvre, and a small event related souvenir item.
WATCH THIS SPACE owners Tom and Lisa McElroy (aka Atomic Elroy and Zelda Bubbles) have developed VIP Lounge for First Friday art crowds. “We wanted to do something for First Friday, our work is generally not static art, but time based media, so we’ve come up this VIP Lounge, which will not be a lounge in the traditional sense, were using “lounge” as a metaphor. ” Said Tom McElroy, “We also know that the art opening crowds are not used to paying an admission, so we’ve made it affordable”.
The VIP Lounge Series will create a place where you can experience an original Video Installation Performance, which will start just as the First Friday openings are winding down. The overall experience will be that of a “happening” instead of a gallery opening or a show, more like a hybrid of both.
The inaugural program will take place Friday September 4, 2009 at 7 pm and be titled “ Obscure Occurrences” which will have a decidedly David Lynch feel, and include an exclusive showing of video art by Atomic Elroy and an original dance/performance by Lisa McElroy. There will also be several installations pieces in which action will occur. A cast of interactive characters will intermingle with the viewers.
The newly formed Button Monkey Orchestra will provide experimental audio styling with just the push of a button.
Subsequent VIP Lounge events will be on Oct. 2, Nov. 6, Dec 4, 2009 and Feb 5, Mar. 5, April 2, May 7, and Jun. 4 2009.

WATCH THIS SPACE is a performance, dance, and multimedia art space located in the Depot Arts Building, under the Colorado Avenue Bridge at 218 W. Colorado Avenue, Suite 102, in Downtown Colorado Springs.

8.18.2009

WILL THERE EVER BE AN AVANT-GARDE AGAIN?


According to Chuck, NO

8.05.2009

SHAKTI - A Night of Exotic Dances



Tejas Hemsell presents: SHAKTI - A Night of Exotic Dances

Enjoy beautiful Indian Classical Dance, Bollywood, Bellydance and more! This performance will be full of enchanting and exotic dances from foreign lands...

Friday, August 14th 7pm
TICKETS:
10 advance
$12 at the door
719-634-3225


Performance at :
Watch This Space
218 W Colorado Ave # 102
Colorado Springs, CO 80903-3353
(719) 633-8409
http://watchthisspacecos.blogspot.com/

MAP

7.12.2009

Empty Post































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7.04.2009

Southern Colorado Alternative Media


I've decided to revive Southern Colorado Alternative Media, SCAM.

Photo: Jef Tater Kallaus.

6.23.2009

Techno


is twitter... a chat room where everybody just talks, no listening?
Is facebook just craigslist with pictures?
Enquiring minds want to know!

6.21.2009

Dada Day.

Today is Father Day in the US. I've been a father for 31 years. Yet, I barely knew my own father. My father died in 1992, of a heart attack. I never found out until 2004. These facts may seem strange to some, but it was typical of the relationship I had with my father.
My father left my Mom, myself, and my 2 sisters in 1960 when I was 6, we lived in Nashua NH. at the time, I had a bad case of Scarlet Fever right when all this was happening, so most of my memories of him at the time are more akin to hallucinations than memories. He was a radio ad salesman, and was gone most of the time. He had been involved in that small town, post war show biz thing that involved beatniks, artists, jazz musicians, and such. Besides working in radio ( as both ad man and announcer/DJ), he was a Trumpet player and a Stage Magician. I really didn't know my father that well, yet his legend even as tainted as it was coming from my mother was seductive. It's his genes that must of manifest my life in the arts. Even later when I tried to reconnect in 1972, when I had asked to live with him while I tried to get a HS diploma, he was gone most of the time. He lived in one of many childhood homes that belonged to my Grandmother in Cape Neddick Maine. Which was quite weird to go back to a house you lived in 14 years earlier as a pre schooler to finish school. That ended disastrously with me hitch hiking back to Colorado, and the fault not on his part but on mine. My memories of my father are infused with my Mother's hatred and anger to the man who abandoned her and their children. For some reason I had always been able to differentiate between my Mother's perspective and reality even as a youngster. I never had the emotional attachment to manifest anger towards him, It would be like hating some one you never knew. I understood my Mother's malice yet could never join her in it.
I never learn of my father's death until after my Mother died in 2004. One of my sisters was trying to contact him when she learned he had died 12 years earlier. So In one sense I lost both my parents at the same time, because even though I never had much contact with him, subconsciously he was still my father to me, and as long as I conceptualized his being alive, he was to me. Interesting how perspective and perception can be the engine of reality.
After I returned to Colorado in 1972 I only attempted to re-connect with him on two separate occasions. One when my first child Heather was born in 1978 I sent him a letter telling him he was a grandfather. His reply was written on an old flyer for his stage magic/comedy act. On which he barely remarked on his granddaughter's birth, yet told me of his marginal show biz career. From this I learned the adage' never believe your own publicity', or at least don't let it get to your ego. The second time was when I was in therapy, I had been urged by my therapist to write a letter to my father to forgive him for any ills perceived or real. I did so, and it really made me feel better to express my emotions in his direction. The letter was returned to sender. Which had I been a bit more of a sleuth, It may have been an indication of his demise.
I look at my father as someone who made choices he could not support emotionally. As someone who could not live up to the responsibility of his actions. As a flawed human, who screwed some things up and made little to no effort to rectify them. But also as someone on some level who was trying to do the best he could. This does not excuse him for his lack of love he showed me, but i can rationalize his actions on one level.
This was his greatest gift to me, his bad example. I learned how to be a loving father by trying to avoid the mistakes he made, some I did some I didn't. I did learn from those mistakes as I assume he did. I even made agonizing choices that were mimicking his actions on some level, that I knew were the right things for me to do at the time, which believe you me, was quite difficult. As difficult as it has been to be a father without one, I still cannot feel ill will to his spirit on fathers day. So Instead of hating my father as my mother would have wished, I love him, for what did for, and to me. The lessons he taught me in absentia are the most powerful I have learned in my life.

Happy Father's Day, David E. McElroy... RIP.