LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Main Street Gallery invites you to join other art lovers to an exciting First Friday Fling reception on Oct. 3, when the gallery will feature new work from five artists.
The event will be held from 5:30 to 7 p.m. at the gallery, 325 N. Main St. in Lakeport.
Featured this month include the winner of the Kelseyville Pear Festival Poster Contest, Ruth Morgan, who is showing her whimsical three-dimensional and wall art.
Richard Schmidt has wonderfully executed paintings of cowpokes displayed with his handcrafted barn wood frames.
Debbie Jorgenson delights the eye with her delicate work in pastels, while, Marcie Long’s art is a contrast of large and colorful paintings.
Carolyn Hawley returns with an astounding collection of varied art forms.
Continuing in the gallery are Terry Durnil with paintings that capture the heart of the Western landscape and its people in pastels and acrylics, and Jack Southwick, who works his magic in expressive acrylic paintings.
Also continuing in the October show are Judy Cardinale with beautifully executed landscapes and “critters”; Stephen Rotter with work in pastels, photograph and sculpture; and Susan Johnson with paintings in pastels and watercolor.
Rounding out the show are the fine drawings, paintings and three-dimensional art of Peter Shandera and the large abstract work of Shelby Posada in mixed media.
“Autumn in Lake County” is October’s theme show in the Linda Carpenter Student Gallery.
Also on display will be a few pieces of art from the estates of Samuil Marcu, Stephen Seitz and Gerald Thompson to entice you to the upcoming auction to be held at the Soper Reese Theatre on Sunday, Nov. 16.
Meet the artists and enjoy the fine flavors of Red Lava Wines while Michael Barrish will entertain with sounds of “Original Country.”
For more information call the gallery at 707-263-6658.
CLEARLAKE, Calif. – To celebrate the 50th anniversary of California Poets in the Schools, Redbud Library in Clearlake will host Michele Krueger, a published poet and Lake County’s coordinator for the poets program at 4 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 1.
School-age children are invited to the free program which will feature readings by children.
California Poets in the Schools says that it has been “inspiring children’s imaginations since 1964. CPITS is one of the nation’s largest literary artists-in-schools programs, cultivating children’s creativity through poetry writing & performance.”
The Web site www.cpits.org has more information about California Poets in the Schools and its programs.
Redbud Library is located at 14785 Burns Valley Road in Clearlake. It's open Tuesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Wednesday, noon to 7 p.m.
SONOMA COUNTY, Calif. – The Sonoma County Philharmonic presents its initial concert of the 2014-15 season on Saturday, Sept. 27, and Sunday, Sept. 28.
The concert – “Petersburg Passion” – will feature conductor Norman Gamboa and violinist Michael d’Arcy.
Performances will be held at Santa Rosa High School’s Performing Arts Auditorium, 1235 Mendocino Ave.
Performances are at 8 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 27, and 2 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 28.
The orchestra will perform Dmitir Kabalevsky’s, Colas Breugnon Overturei and Piotr Tchaikovsky’s, Symphony No. 6 in B minor (Pathetique).
Michael d’Arcy will be featured performing Sergei Prokofiev’s, Violin Concerto No. 2 in G minor.
D’Arcy, a native of Ireland, has soloed with major orchestras throughout the world. He is currently professor of violin at the Royal Irish Academy of Music.
The orchestra has recently changed its name from the American Philharmonic-Sonoma County to the Sonoma County Philharmonic to better reflect its connection and commitment to its home in Sonoma County.
General seats are available at the door for $10. Student admission (18 and under) is free.
Premium seating can be reserved for $15 online at www.socophil.org or by calling 1-800-838-3006.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – On Friday, Oct. 3, Watershed Books will host award-winning local author, Steve Bartholomew, as his latest work, “The Inventor,” is celebrated.
A tale of old San Francisco, “The Inventor” tells of Jeremy Fantom, a disgruntled cub reporter whose life is changed when he meets Worrell, the strange inventor and his beautiful daughter Hollyhock.
Steve Bartholomew will be at Watershed Books, 305 N. Main St. from 3 to 5 p.m., with readings, good conversation and refreshments.
Then join festivities at Main Street Gallery's First Friday Fling at 325 N. Main.
Ever since the 2008 release of “Taken” created a new action hero in an ex-soldier tracking down vile Albanian slave masters who had kidnapped his daughter, Liam Neeson has perfected the role of a tough guy capable of handling danger and dispensing with bad guys.
While waiting for “Taken 3” to arrive at the cinemas, Neeson detours slightly from his action hero path in the more nuanced role of an alcoholic former cop who seeks redemption in a more unorthodox manner, namely helping dubious clients who have been wrongfully aggrieved.
“A Walk Among the Tombstones,” based on Lawrence Block’s best-selling series of mystery novels, suggests a new franchise opportunity for Liam Neeson, this time as unlicensed private investigator Matt Scudder, working just outside the law.
Set in 1999 New York, when fear of impending Y2K doom gripped the headlines, Neeson’s Matt Scudder is a borderline Luddite who doesn’t own a cell phone and is unfamiliar with the tools afforded by the Internet. He’s old school in many ways, but at least he’s ditched his addiction to alcohol by faithfully attending AA meetings.
A prologue to the story involves the then-boozing Matt as an off-duty NYPD cop giving chase to some bad guys that ends in a shootout on busy city streets that goes so horribly wrong that he gives up alcohol and his badge.
Now practicing detective work without a permit, Matt works off the books for people who can’t go the police or to anybody legitimate.
As Matt puts it, he does favors for people and in return they give him gifts, which typically involve wads of cash stuffed in plain envelopes.
Peter Kristo (Boyd Holbrook), a recovering drug addict attending the same AA meetings as Matt, seeks the help of the private eye to hunt down the men who kidnapped and brutally murdered the wife of his brother Kenny (Dan Stevens), a heroin trafficker living in an expensive townhouse in Brooklyn.
Initially hesitant to get involved in the case, Matt changes his mind after learning more horrific details about a needless crime.
Kenny paid a hefty ransom only to have his wife tortured and murdered by the psychopaths and left in the trunk of an abandoned car. The grieving Kenny wants retribution and no official police involvement.
Another female victim, her body cut up into pieces and stuffed into trash bags, is soon discovered in the bucolic park-like setting of Brooklyn’s historic Green-Wood Cemetery, a location that figures prominently in the film’s climactic scene.
As Matt is drawn deeper into a quest to find the vicious serial killers, he gets unlikely help from black teenager TJ (Brian “Astro” Bradley), who spends a lot of time in the library because he’s homeless. An aspiring sleuth, TJ helps Matt to do research and tags along during the investigation.
During the course of his sleuthing, Matt encounters the creepy groundskeeper of the cemetery who seems to know more than he’s willing to tell. Then there’s the dealer and wannabe actor and model who may well be implicated in the abduction of his girlfriend.
The trail eventually leads to a pair of sick degenerates, the odd couple of Ray (David Harbour) and Albert (Adam David Thompson), who play a sadistic cat-and-mouse game with Matt, which becomes even more intense with their next kidnapping.
The serial killers target victims whose family members are drug dealers or shady characters that would never seek the help of law enforcement. Thus, Ray and Albert snatch the young daughter of a Russian drug dealer (Sebastian Roche) and seek a million dollar ransom.
In this case, Matt becomes involved in negotiating the terms of the young girl’s release, but knowing their real intentions, he deliberately taunts the killers, namely to throw them off their usual game and bring the battle to his own familiar turf.
“A Walk Among the Tombstones” may be best described as a contemporary film noir, updating the style popularized in 1940s cinema. From the creepy nighttime scenes in the cemetery to seedy Brooklyn neighborhoods, the film achieves the kind of dark environment that was once a staple of this genre.
Atmosphere goes a long way to delivering the chilling effects that make “A Walk Among the Tombstones” a compelling crime drama. The viewer is warned that the killers are viciously sadistic and the notion that they mutilate their female victims is repellent and greatly disturbing.
Of course, we can count on Liam Neeson to make things right in the end, delivering the necessary justice demanded by the circumstances, even though the tone of this film is not on a par with the vengeance doled out in “Taken.”
Tim Riley writes film and television reviews for Lake County News.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – For the sixth year, the Writers Circle, a free public writing workshop in Lakeport, has been funded by the national organization, Poets and Writers.
The workshop is sponsored by the Lake County Arts Council, which hosts workshop at the Main Street Art Gallery, 325 N. Main St., at 6:30 pm., on the first Thursday of each month.
Residents from all over Lake County attend the Writers Circle and join other writers who share memoirs, fiction, essays or poems they have written – or just listen and get inspired.
Writers who are more seasoned join with beginning writers to offer feedback, build skills and find new ideas.
Aged 19 to 90, some people come only one or two times, and others show up every month.
The workshop is facilitated by former Poet Laureate Mary McMillan.
Poets and Writers supports the workshop through a grant it has received from the James Irvine Foundation.
For more information contact Mary McMillan at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..