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Friday Nights at NOMA | Music by Jake and the Nifty ’50s | Artist Perspective with Jan Gilbert | Artful Palate: Healthy Choices
Fri, August 11th, 2017 at 5:00 PM - 9:00 PM
Friday Nights at NOMA opens the museum’s doors for many interesting activities throughout the year: live music, movies, children’s activities, and more. Regular admission prices apply—NOMA members are FREE—but there is no extra charge for programs or films.
- 5:30 – 8:30 pm: Music by Jake and the Nifty ’50s
- 5 – 8 pm: Art on the Spot family activity table
- 6 pm: Artist Perspective with Jan Gilbert
- 7 pm: John Waters Film Festival: Cry-Baby (1990)
- 6:30 pm: Café NOMA by Ralph Brennan presents Artful Palate, “Eating Clean: How to Make Healthy Choices” with Chef Chris Fite
ABOUT JAKE AND THE NIFTY ’50S
In tribute to tonight’s screening of John Waters’ Cry-Baby, NOMA will host a throwback dance party to the era of greased pompadours, poodle skirts, and fishtail cars. Jake Chimento, a longtime denizen of the West Bank, started down the path to becoming a professional musician fifty-four years ago. For the past two and a half decades, Chimento has performed with drummer Bobby Hilton as Jake and the Nifty ’50s. The duo are known for their classic renditions of early rock and roll favorites.
ABOUT JAN GILBERT
In conjunction with the exhibition Jim Steg: New Work, artists who emerged from Steg’s studio classroom at Newcomb College and Tulane University will speak about his influence.
Nationally recognized interdisciplinary artist Jan Gilbert will pay tribute to Steg and describe her own artistic philosophy through works that mine memory, loss, and transition. She pushes boundaries of all sorts by forging objects, installations, rituals and networks. Her universally compelling works are simultaneously personal and collective, public and private, local and global. Based in and deeply influenced by her native New Orleans, Gilbert employs tools and processes of collaboration to create this host of widely varied projects with wildly diverse partnerings: her documentary filmmaker husband, Kevin McCaffrey; poet/writers Andrei Codrescu and Yusef Komunyakaa; experimental theater directors Richard Schechner, Julie Hebert, and Kathy Randels; and Swiss cultural psychiatrist/anthropologist Jacques Arpin.
Gilbert’s public art has tackled tough issues of AIDS, breast cancer, war and death, as it regularly finds its way to city streets across the globe. A few such projects, often collaborative, include: The Subject is War (1991), using bus shelters; Borders, Boundaries & Bindings, commissioned to appear as one of the first Central Artery Projects of Boston’s Big Dig in the streets of the South End (1993); Lunch EnCounter (2004), an installation and performance on desegregation; On the Line/Sur la ligne (2010), installed at 571 Projects Gallery and on the High Line in the Chelsea Arts District of Manhattan; and 30 Years/30 Blocks: a retrospective installation of place and public art work (2012), which appeared both inside and out at The Front in New Orleans’ St. Claude Arts District.
ABOUT CHEF CHRIS FITE AND THE ARTFUL PALATE
For eight Friday nights throughout the summer, chefs from the Ralph Brennan restaurant group will offer Artful Palate cooking demonstrations in Café NOMA. Meet Chris Fite, chef from Café NOMA, as he prepares a dish and discusses “Eating Clean: How to Make Healthy Choices.”
ABOUT CRY-BABY
Filmmaker John Waters is among the artists represented in Pride of Place: The Making of Contemporary Art in New Orleans. In a tribute film festival, NOMA will screen five of Waters’ outrageously obnoxious and funny movies.
Cry-Baby is a teen musical romantic comedy starring Johnny Depp as 1950s teen rebel “Cry-Baby” Wade Walker. The story centers on a group of juvenile delinquents who refer to themselves as “drapes” and their interaction with the “squares” of Baltimore. “Cry-Baby” falls in love with Allison (Amy Locane), a “square,” and creates upheaval as their romance breaks social taboos. The film features cameo appearances by Troy Donahue, Joe Dallesandro, Joey Heatherton, David Nelson, Willem Dafoe, and Patricia Hearst. (1990 | Rated PG-13 | 92 minutes)
Friday Nights at NOMA is supported in part by grant funds from the Azby Fund; Ruby K. Worner Charitable Trust; New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival and Foundation; and the Louisiana Division of the Arts, Office of Cultural Development, Department of Culture, Recreation and Tourism, in cooperation with the Louisiana State Arts Council as administered by the Arts Council of New Orleans.