Nashville Bluegrass Band kicks off arts celebration tonight
Chris Burawa, the executive director of the Austin Peay State University Center of Excellence for the Creative Arts, looked tired. He sat slumped in a booth at the Einstein Bros. Bagels coffee shop with his Blackberry on the table, and a large poster filled front and back with event listings.
鈥淚t鈥檚 the Center鈥檚 25th anniversary,鈥 he said, lifting the poster, 鈥渁nd we鈥檙e going to have a yearlong celebration.鈥
Chris Burawa, the executive director of the Austin Peay State University Center of Excellence for the Creative Arts, looked tired. He sat slumped in a booth at the Einstein Bros. Bagels coffee shop with his Blackberry on the table, and a large poster filled front and back with event listings.
鈥淚t鈥檚 the Center鈥檚 25th anniversary,鈥 he said, lifting the poster, 鈥渁nd we鈥檙e going to have a yearlong celebration.鈥
For the last several weeks, Burawa has wrangled and negotiated with world-renowned artistic talents to create a calendar of events for what looks to be one of the most promising years in the history of the Center. Individuals such as best-selling and award-winning author Joyce Carroll Oates and acclaimed modern dancer and choreographer Molissa Fenley are just a few of the high-profile names coming to APSU during the 2010-11 academic year.
鈥淲e鈥檙e continuing to ramp up the quality of our events and our programming,鈥 Burawa said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e exploring new things, new ways of art being on our campus and in our community on this 25th 补苍苍颈惫别谤蝉补谤测.鈥
The APSU Center of Excellence for the Creative Arts was established in 1985 by the Tennessee General Assembly as part of then Gov. Lamar Alexander鈥檚 program to improve higher education in the state. For the last two-and-a-half decades, it has offered undergraduate students the opportunity to work one-on-one with nationally acclaimed artists.
鈥淚t鈥檚 rare that an undergraduate school has the funds and ability to do that,鈥 Dr. George Mabry, the Center鈥檚 first executive director, said. 鈥淚f you go to graduate schools, big schools, it鈥檚 not unusual for them to be working on a day-to-day basis with a celebrated artist or a known writer. But it is unusual for an undergraduate too.鈥
The Center鈥檚 Acuff Chair of Excellence is a major component in providing this intimate type of instruction. In 1985, country music legend Roy Acuff generously endowed the chair, which brings regionally and nationally acclaimed artists to campus each year to work with students and the community.
鈥淭here will be four showcase events to the celebrate the Center鈥檚 anniversary this year,鈥 Burawa said, 鈥渁nd the first showcase will be to acknowledge the gift of Roy Acuff.鈥
On Sept. 16, the two-time Grammy-winning Nashville Bluegrass Band will perform a tribute concert to Acuff in the Music/Mass Communication Building鈥檚 Concert Hall. That event will kick off the Center鈥檚 yearlong celebration and set the high standard for the other showcases to follow.
In October, the multifaceted artist Meredith Monk will bring her seminal mixed-media work 鈥淓ducation of a Girlchild Revisited鈥 to the concert hall.
鈥淢onk is considered one of our pioneering artists in our country,鈥 Burawa said. 鈥淪he was the recipient of the MacArthur Foundation鈥檚 prestigious 鈥楪enius Award鈥 in 1995, and she was among the first artists back in the 鈥70s to bring together different disciplines to create a whole new category of art, which is performance art. She integrates music and original composition with vocals, visual arts, theater and dance.鈥
Oates, a National Book Award and Pulitzer Prize award winner, will stop by APSU in February to give a reading of her work. She published her first book in 1963, and every year she has been the front-runner among American authors considered for the Noble Prize in literature.
鈥淭here鈥檚 nothing she can not do and do brilliantly,鈥 Burawa said. 鈥淪he鈥檚 among the foremost innovators of what could be called American Gothic and grotesque, and her work continues to inspire writers.鈥
The final showcase event will be in March when Fenley brings her dance company to the concert hall. In her 33-year career, Fenley has choreographed more than 65 works for such esteemed clients as the Australian Dance Theatre, the Deutsche Oper Ballet of Berlin, the National Ballet School of Canada, the Ohio Ballet and the Korea/Japan Performing Arts Exchange Association, among others.
鈥淪he鈥檚 considered a pioneer of American contemporary dance,鈥 Burawa said.
The year will also feature several smaller events that will be free and open to the public.
鈥淭hese anniversary performances are only the framework in which to promote our incredible season calendar of events,鈥 Burawa said. 鈥淭here isn鈥檛 a university in the Southeast that can rival the number and quality of programs and visiting artist series that our departments bring in. What I am most looking forward to are the events that showcase our talented faculty and students. Anyone who looks to Nashville for arts and culture should take a look at what we鈥檙e doing.鈥
A listing of all the events will soon be available on the Center鈥檚 website, www.apsu.edu/creativearts. The celebration of the Center鈥檚 anniversary will culminate in April when the APSU Opera presents 鈥淏en and the Virtues,鈥 with music by Mabry and storybook by APSU history professor emeritus Dr. Richard Gildrie. The show is about the young Benjamin Franklin and his friends, both real and imaginary, as they 鈥渆at, drink and explore the complexities and joys of life.鈥
Burawa understands those 鈥渃omplexities and joys鈥 in his own life. The hard work that has exhausted him, organizing the yearlong celebration, is really just beginning but the extraordinary artistic events coming to Clarksville this year will be well worth the effort.
鈥淥ur job (at the Center) is to continually explore and innovate,鈥 he said. And with a tired smile, he picked up his Blackberry and calendar of events from the coffee shop table and went back to work.
For more information on this year鈥檚 25th anniversary of the Center of Excellence for the Creative Arts, call Burawa at 221-7876.