Tag: University of the Arts

  • Quay Brothers, UArts Closure & Philly’s Arts Scene

    Quay Brothers, UArts Closure & Philly’s Arts Scene

    When Philadelphia’s University of the Arts slammed its gates with only one week’s notice on June 7th, it was an abrupt conclusion to its 150-year history. Among the countless artists the school fostered were the Brothers Quay, Stephen and Timothy, the unnerving stop-motion animators, who, by coincidence, were born on this date in 1947.

    The first film I ever saw by them, on the big screen, was “Street of Crocodiles” (1986) – moody, atmospheric, surreal, unsettling, claustrophobic, and even a little creepy. It’s like an animated cabinet of curiosities, or perhaps being locked overnight inside Philadelphia’s Mütter Museum. If you’re not familiar with it, the museum is home to a preserved nine-foot colon from 1892, a collection of syphilitic skulls, a two-headed fetus, a segment of Einstein’s brain, and a tumor removed from the jawbone of President Grover Cleveland. Book your reservation now! Having lived in Philadelphia for 32 years myself, I’d say, yes, the Quays pretty much nailed it. Philadelphia, after all, left its mark not only on the brothers, but also David Lynch. It’s a good introduction to their aesthetic sensibility. Experience “Street of Crocodiles” here:

    The Quay Brothers have always been strongly influenced by literature and classical music. They’ve even expanded into stage design for live opera productions of works such as Prokofiev’s “The Love for Three Oranges” and Louis Andriessen’s “Theatre of the World.”

    I say they were born on this date “by coincidence,” as today also happens to be the anniversary of the birth of Igor Stravinsky, and my original intention had been to share a link to the Quays’ 1983 short, “Igor, The Paris Years Chez Pleyel.” You can experience that here too:

    The University of the Arts’ post-closure drama continues, with the most recent news announcing tentative agreements with six other schools now poised to try to help displaced students to pick up the pieces of their lives and continue their education. These include the already overburdened Moore College of Art and Design, Drexel University, Temple University, Montclair State University, Point Park in Pittsburgh, and The New School in New York City. In the meantime, there’s a gaping hole left in Center City, all around the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts, home of the Philadelphia Orchestra.

    With the announcement earlier this year of the discontinuation of the degree program at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, a 200 year-old institution located at Broad and Cherry Streets, it’s a double black eye for Philadelphia’s so-called Avenue of the Arts.

    And you thought “The Rite of Spring” was brutal.

    Happy birthday, Igor Stravinsky – and the Brothers Quay!

    https://believemedia.com/brothers-quay

    Curious about visiting the Mütter?

    Mütter Museum

    160 years after its founding, the museum continues to stir controversy

    https://www.phillymag.com/news/2023/09/23/mutter-museum-ethics-controversy/

  • Philadelphia Art Schools Closing Stuns City

    Philadelphia Art Schools Closing Stuns City

    In one of the most egregious examples of “Friday news dump” I have ever encountered, it was announced yesterday evening that Philadelphia’s University of the Arts will be closing, EFFECTIVE NEXT WEEK (June 7, to be exact). The reasons given are ongoing financial challenges (which have apparently escalated) and declining enrollment.

    To add to the university’s woes, it has been stripped of its accreditation, over some business about not following “proper protocols.” Definitely consult some reputable news sources about this. I may be a journalist, but I am not an investigative reporter. I thought it more important that I get the news out there than to hold back until I can get to the bottom of everything.

    The axe has fallen so quickly, everyone has been blindsided, including both students and faculty. The school will not be offering courses in the fall, and summer classes are cancelled.

    This is the second major Philadelphia arts educational institution to announce its impending closure this year. In reading about this latest catastrophe, I only just learned that the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts will be closing at the end of the 2024-25 academic year! PAFA is a 200-year-old institution. (UArts has been around for nearly 150.) I hope and pray that the PAFA museum will continue as a separate entity. Again, the information may be out there. I haven’t had time to research it. The school closure was announced in January. [EDIT: It appears the museum will remain open.]

    What will happen to UArts’ Greek Revival main hall on Broad Street or the Frank Furness arts compound on Pine is anyone’s guess. Hopefully they are already protected as historically significant. But I don’t count on anything anymore. I envision a façade being preserved as some grasping entrepreneur pounces to open the next trendy, destined-to-be-closed-within-two-years wine bar. Or salivating developers rubbing their hands over the sweet tax breaks they’ll receive in opening up Furness Condos. That stretch of Broad – which by the way is on the same block as the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts – can’t even seem to sustain a Wawa or a parking garage/Starbuck’s.

    The crater left by the closure of the University of the Arts, both in terms of real estate and the Philadelphia economy, is incalculable. Aside from the vacated properties themselves, there are soon-to-be-withered partnerships the university cultivated with other institutions, lost revenue from shows and performances that will be no more, countless vacated rentals currently occupied by UArts students, no more visiting parents, and no more student spending.

    And that’s just the financial impact. Among the school’s alumni are filmmakers Joe Dante and the Brothers Quay, children’s book authors and illustrators Stan and Jan Berenstain and Katherine Milhous, movie poster legend Richard Amsel, cartoonists Frank Modell and Harold Knerr, wrought iron master Samuel Yellin, muralist and designer Miriam Tindall Smith, composers Vincent Persichetti and Marc Blitzstein, mezzo-soprano Florence Quivar, and pianist Natalie Hinderas – admittedly, a mere scratch of the surface.

    Again, I am not the last word on these subjects, so please do your own research, both in terms of the University of the Arts and the fate of all those marvelous canvases housed at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.

    That Philadelphia is losing two venerable art schools, with such long and rich histories, is staggering. As a resident of Philadelphia for over three decades, I admit I have an axe to grind with that hellhole, but I wonder just how much blame, in this instance, can be put on Philadelphia, how much is poor management, and how much is simply emblematic of the times.

    We are living in an age shockingly bereft of creativity and original thinking. The nail that stands up is quickly hammered down. Computers and finance are perceived as more attractive prospects – “sure things,” if you will – while the arts, as they always have been, are unpredictable, with career paths impossible to predict.

    All I know for certain is that a city cannot sustain itself on trendy restaurants and sports teams alone. There needs to be a balance with institutions that foster an inner life. A city without art is a dead city. It is a city destined for bad things. Philadelphia should consider wisely before allowing this to devolve into a land rush for corporate carpetbaggers and opportunistic developers.

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