Charlie Chaplin Shorts and Music at Celebrate Brooklyn: Tonight

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The Celebrate Brooklyn fun begins at 7:30 at the bandshell n Prospect Park.

Three of Chaplin’s greatest shorts—The Rink (1916), The Immigrant (1916), and The Adventurer (1917)—will come alive as never before with new scores by the highly sought after UK based composer
CARL DAVIS (London Philharmonic Orchestra), performed live by the
dashing 16-piece pickup NY chamber orchestra THE KNIGHTS. Brooklyn born
Davis returns home to conduct. With the charming local violinist and
singer CHRISTINA COURTIN, whose fearless delivery recalls “performers
as diverse as Janis Joplin and Antony.” (Time Out)

Illustration by Dwinning on  Flickr

Louise Bourgeois Had A Studio on Dean Street?

 

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Leave it to Brooklyn Beat of the blog Deep in the Heart of Brooklyn to unearth this interesting Brooklyn factoid about 96-year-old artist Louise Bourgeois, who currently has a big show at the Guggenheim Museum. You can read more on his blog (and there are some great links). Here’s an excerpt.

"According to
the current exhibit’s notes, the artist took the MOMA retrospective as
a challenge since she did not wish to be categorized by her
retrospective as being at the end of her career. So, at age 71,
Bourgeois changed direction and began exploring new subjects, new
materials, new media and new ideas, absorbing from the changes
occurring all around her in the art world so that she could head off in
new directions.

"Among these new directions was her move, in
the early 1980s, to a large studio space in Brooklyn. Louise Bourgeois
began working in a studio in a converted garment factory at 475 Dean
Street, between 5th and 6th avenues, near Flatbush Avenue. An
interesting choice, since her family in France had been involved in a
tapestry restoration business for many, many years.

She will celebrate
her ninety-seventh birthday on December 25th, 2008. She still holds
Sunday gatherings with emerging artists and remains as demanding and
challenging to younger artists, as she has been toward her own work."