Weekly Volcano Blogs: Walkie Talkie Blog

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January 21, 2013 at 10:40am

The Walrus wins, celebrates with KGHP radio studio tour

THE WALRUS: He spent 200 hours live on the radio.

FUTURE THINGS ARE COMING >>>

Spencer Abersold, a.k.a. The Walrus, sat before the KGHP radio station console for 200 hours - nine days - attempting to beat the Guinness Book of World Record's previous continuous broadcasting record of 187 hours. 

"I didn't lose my voice," he Abersold, "but I did go crazy."

What Abersold also did was raise $16,000 for the radio station, which is inside Peninsula High School in Gig Harbor. KGHB's funds were on the chopping block after being supported by the school district for 23 years. 

"After the buzz got going and people realized their radio station was at stake, the community got together and made sure it persevered," he adds.

Another $2,000 was raised from Abersold's "Sound to Summit" walk, where he attempted to walk from Owen Beach to Mount Rainier.

The efforts of Abersold and other community supporters brought in much needed money for new equipment and operating costs for the radio station.

Abersold explained the old setup was like building a car and using Volkswagen, Mercedes and Ford parts all rolled into one - all the equipment was either donated or salvaged.

"Now," he says, "it's like a Chevy Camaro with a Hemi."

KGHP 89.3/93.7FM invites the public to tour the studio, check out equipment, and maybe even get your voice on the air Saturday afternoon. 

KGHP STUDIO, SATURDAY, JAN 26, 11 A.M. TO 4 P.M., 14105 PURDY DR., NW, GIG HARBOR, 253.857.3589

January 16, 2013 at 9:06am

When sculptors go big ... real big ... then party

MARDIE REES: Not as tall as her sculpture of C.W. Lonsdale.

WHAT HAVE YOU MADE THE LAST THREE YEARS? >>>

Gig Harbor sculptor Mardie Rees knows big. She actually knows huge. For the last three years Rees has created an eight-foot-high sculpture not including his pedestal) of a man named C.W. Lonsdale.

That's right. Three years.

I can hear the questions forming in your noggin: Eight feet? Three years? Who the hell is C. W. Lonsdale?

Ask her. Rees will unveil this piece tomorrow and Jan. 19 at the Real Carriage Door Company in Gig Harbor - the very spot where Rees has worked to complete said sculpture ... for three years!

Because Rees goes big, you will hear live music by the Zizzy Zi Zixxy band, refreshments including 7 Seas brews and Philly Pretzels as well as door prizes at both unveilings.

Lonsdale is the founder of Shawnigan Lake School in B.C. Perhaps you haven't heard of it, but it's quite ritzy. Rees was specifically commissioned to do this work for Shawnigan's 100-year anniversary after a sculpture she created for Saint Anthony Hospital in Gig Harbor - now in the lobby of the hospital. Rees has also won a First Honor Award from the Portrait Society of America in 2010 for her piece at Saint Anthony - significant since this award is normally granted to painters.

"The commission of C.W. Lonsdale is the largest scale piece I have completed in my career so far," says Rees. "I really enjoy the challenge of working large-scale and hope to continue to do many more large works and monuments that are significant and meaningful to the people they are created for."

The artist reception/unveilings will be held 5-8 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 17 and 4-8 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 19. Real Carriage Door Company is at 9803 44th Ave. NW, Gig Harbor.

If you plan to attend, make sure to fill out the form on Real Carriage Door's website

Filed under: Arts, Music, Gig Harbor,

January 4, 2013 at 1:45pm

Today in House Science, Space and Technology Committee news

SOUTH SOUND IN D.C. >>>

Rep. Derek Kilmer lands another committee:

WASHINGTON, D.C. - The House Democratic Caucus today named Representative Derek Kilmer to the House Science, Space, and Technology Committee.  Representative Kilmer's appointment to the House Armed Services Committee was confirmed today as well.

"I am excited by the opportunity to serve on the Science, Space, and Technology Committee.  At a time when our nation's employers are demanding higher skills - particularly in the arena of science and technology education - and at a time when our laboratories, colleges, and universities are pioneering new innovations, this committee can have a real impact on improving our region's competitiveness and on fostering economic growth for our entire country," said Representative Kilmer.  "I look forward to having an active role in shaping our nation's policies on innovation and research to help our employers compete and create more jobs here at home."

Will Rep. Kilmer attend the opening of the Science Dome in Lakewood? If so, will he arrive by jet pack? 

Filed under: Politics, News To Us, Gig Harbor,

December 10, 2012 at 6:40am

5 Things To Do Today: Farewell to the Woods, Powder Pow-Wow, Blenis Ely and more ...

FAREWELL TO THE WOODS: The band is back at The Eastside Club Tavern. Photo courtesy of Facebook

MONDAY, DEC. 10 2012 >>>

1. Indie folk rockers Farewell to the Woods started out as four people singing a song written the night before in a cold garage. After nearly two years of practicing, writing and scrapping new tunes, and adding/losing members the band has expanded to an eight piece and will perform at 9 p.m. with Punch Drunk Heart at The Eastside Club Tavern in Olympia.

2. Conductor Dr. Paul Schultz presents a preview of the Northwest Repertory Singers Dec. 15 and 16 concerts today at 3 p.m. inside the Frank Tobey Jones Retirement Community.  The repertoire of traditional carols and favorite songs of the season includes music by Stephen Paulus, John Rutter and Donna Gartman Schultz. 

3. The moths are on to something. Lights are awesome. Especially holiday lights. Make today the day you check out Zoolights and Fantasy Lights - both South Sound institutions.

4. The fourth Powder Pow-Wow Mountain Film Party - a benefit for the Alpental Backcountry Avalanche Rescue K9 (BARK) Program - will be held at 6 p.m. inside Tides Tavern in Gig Harbor. See new snow ski/board film from Teton Gravity Research. Meet the Alpental BARK dogs. Buy raffle tickets to support them. Win some prizes. Drink some beer.

5. Blenis Ely will fill The Swiss with blues beginning at 8 p.m.

LINK: Monday, Dec. 10 arts and entertainment events in the greater Tacoma and Olympia area.


Read more here: calendar.thenewstribune.com/gig_harbor_wa/events/show/296889185-tides-taverns-powder-pow-wow#storylink=cp

Read more here: calendar.thenewstribune.com/tacoma_wa/events/show/295127165-music-with-dr-paul-strike-the-harp-ring-the-bells-sound-the-oboe#storylink=cpy5. Blenis Ely will fill The Swiss with blues beginning at 8 p.m.LINK: Monday, Dec. 10 arts and entertainment events in the greater Tacoma and Olympia area.

December 7, 2012 at 1:24pm

Welcome to Lazy Town

"LORD OF THE RINGS TRILOGY": Bring your Brunkrissla!

LONG-ASS MOVIES THIS WEEKEND >>>

It's been nine long years since the Lord of the Rings trilogy wrapped up. Nine, precious! But no longer will you have to suffer in darkness, far from all things Middle Earth. No, precious, things will now change. An entirely new trilogy based on The Hobbit will hit movie screens Dec. 14, and word on the nerd streets is that these movies carry the torch well - with higher frame rates and better CGI.

To help you rekindle your LotR flame, many theater chains are putting on a marathon of all three movies Saturday, Dec. 8 and Sunday, Dec. 9. Some theaters are showing extended versions, but all feature a special intro by director Peter Jackson. If you haven't done the math, this marathon goes more than nine hours for the theatrical release version and more than 11 hours for the extended versions.

Count on busting out your catheter or adult diaper.

Saturday, Dec. 8

  • Galaxy Narrows: 10 a.m., $20, 2208 Mildred St. W., Tacoma, 10 a.m., $20
  • Galaxy Gig Harbor: 10 a.m., 2 and 7 p.m., $20, 4649 Point Fosdick Dr. NW, Gig Harbor
  • Regal Lakewood 15: 11:15 a.m., $30 via Fandango, 2410 84th St. S., Lakewood
  • Regal Longston Place Stadium 14: 11:15 a.m., $30 via Fandango, 13317 Meridian St. E., Puyallup
  • Regal Martin Village Stadium 16 and IMAX: $30 via Fandango, 5400 E. Martin Way, Lacey
  • AMC Loews Lakewood Towne Center 12 (extended versions): 10 a.m., $25, 5721 Main St. SW, Lakewood

Saturday, Dec. 8 and Sunday, Dec. 9

  • Century Olympia (extended versions): 11 a.m., $25, 625 Black Lake Blvd. SW, Olympia

December 4, 2012 at 12:07pm

CLAYTON ON ART: It's about the artistic merits

CHARLES SALAK: His "Orange Still Life" watercolor is on display at Pierce College Puyallup.

RUNNING HORSES AND TROMPE L'OEIL PAINTINGS >>>

A friend posted a photo on Facebook this morning. It was a sculpture of two horses mounted on the wall in such a way to create the impression that they were coming out of the wall in a powerful burst of motion. The form of the horses was skeletal, a mass of open-weave flowing lines like bones and muscles and the horses' flowing manes but no skin. The viewer sees into and through the horses much like those by Deborah Butterfield - the primary difference being that Butterfield's horses are static and these horses by Sayaka Ganz are depicted as in fast motion. Of the hundreds and hundreds of horses she has created, nearly every one stands in an almost identical position as if reaching his head down to munch on hay.

I saw a few Butterfield horses at Greg Kucera Gallery a few years back, and I was suitably impressed. But this morning while perusing a page filled with images of her horse sculptures I quickly grew bored.

Ganz's horses are dynamic. The forms and lines are free-flowing, lyrical and dramatic. My only criticism is that they may be a little too romantic and fanciful. Given time I suspect I might get bored with them as well. But here's the interesting thing: the comments on my friend's Facebook post were all about the movement and the smoothly flowing lines. Nobody even bothered to mention the fact that the sculptures were made out of recycled plastic utensils - knives, forks, spoons, colanders and spatulas, a veritable garbage heap of used kitchen ware.

I love that nobody mentioned that. I get rather disgusted at times when people rave over how clever it is that an artist can make art out of odd found materials. Granted, it takes a certain amount of skill, in some cases a huge amount of skill. And it's nice when waste material can be put to use as art rather than tossed in the landfill. But that's not what art is about. Art is about the emotions and the ideas expressed and about the aesthetic arrangement of shapes and colors. At least the people commenting on Ganz's sculpture were talking about the artistic quality of the work and not just how cool it was that it was made out of plastic utensils.

My disgust with people who gush over recycled art without consideration of the artistic merits of the work is equaled only by my disgust with people who gush over photo-realistic paintings regardless of any merits or lack thereof of anything other than how "real" it looks. I can admire the technical skill, but that's not what art is about.

It used to be called trompe l'oeil, a French phrase meaning fool the eye. The phrase comes from the baroque period (around 1600), and it was a kind of visual trickery or optical illusion created by a combination of deep perspective and smooth modeling of light and shadow. In the hands of giants like Carravagio it was art of the highest order. In the hands of many others it was trickery and nothing more.

Since the 1960s a lot of American realists have painted what came to be known as photo-realist art, a form of trompe l'oeil. Probably the best of these is Phillip Pearlstein who paints nudes in interior scenes. Pearlstein has referred to himself as an abstract artist because even though his nudes look strikingly realistic his major concern is the arrangement of forms on a flat surface - pure abstraction.

I recently discovered a local painter of ultra-realistic scenes who may warrant attention. His name is Charles Salak. He lives in Gig Harbor and his work is currently included in a group show at Pierce College Puyallup. I have seen only a handful of his paintings and those only in photographs, so I can't judge them, but at least one of them, "Orange Still Life" rivals some of the best still life paintings from the baroque era in both composition and richness of color. It would be nice to think that he could be another Pearlstein, but I will withhold judgment until I get to see more.

Filed under: Arts, Gig Harbor, Puyallup,

November 22, 2012 at 9:20am

Happy Thanksgiving!

Barring any new Movember drunken people donning mustaches photos, the Weekly Volcano is going to use the holiday as an excuse to take a rare day off. So, please people, for our sake, dig out that ol' music box that plays "Born Free," open a new doughnut shop or start your own Pacific Avenue Streetscape Project.

And we totally want photos of your family's fight to the death over who has the damn Tupperware. The Weekly Volcano knows every year someone brings Tupperware to collect leftovers and every effing year it disappears.

We'll all see you back here tomorrow for 5 Things To Do, The Weekend Hustle and other glorious posts.

Remember: baste often.

LINK: Movies

November 8, 2012 at 11:47am

Oh foie gras yourself

WEEKEND FEASTING >>>

Here comes the feasting season. With only the slightest effort, most of us can manage to survive from now until New Year's Day on nothing but mini crab cakes, smoked salmon, artichoke dip and hot buttered rum, not to mention the chocolate-peppermint bark, the reindeer-shaped butter cookies, and countless Hershey's Kisses wrapped in red and green foil. In the season that used to be all about a big meal - the roast goose, the pig with the apple in its mouth, the flaming plum pudding - our modern holiday repasts have become all about food that can be eaten standing up.

Enough grazing.

The best way to ease into the season may be to slow down, take a deep breath, and have a real meal - a decadent feast. The kind you should see set in front of the Ghost of Christmas Past, that jolly big fellow with the holly wreath.

Brix 25 in Gig Harbor sold out its WTF (What the Foie) Dinner in July. The fancy restaurant still believes foie gras is an age-old delicacy that when added to a meal, it can truly transform a meal - make it decadent, if you will. Therefore, Brix 25 will add foie gras to its meals this weekend only. The restaurant secured a limited quantity of the delicacy from Pleasant View Farm in Puyallup.

Live and let liver.

BRIX 25, FRIDAY, NOV. 9 AND SATURDAY, NOV. 10, 7707 PIONEER WAY, GIG HARBOR, 253.858.6626

November 7, 2012 at 8:25am

5 Things To Do Today: Girls night out, The Young Creative, Hump Day Jam and more ...

JEWEL KADE: It's vintage. It's modern. It's on display tonight at Morso in Gig Harbor.

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 7, 2012 >>>

1. Girls Night Out = Guys Night Out. You don't have to be a math wiz to realize the logic of this equation.  If the girls have gathered, then the guys might want to hang, too. Tonight from 5-7 p.m. the girls will be at the Jewel Kade Fall Jewelry Show at Morso Wine Bar in Gig Harbor.

2. The Tacoma Visitor Information Center is more than just a location for visitors to gather information about what to do and see in the area. The VIC, in partnership The Young Creative, is also art gallery featuring the work of Tacoma's young artists. The gallery will open to the public today as part of Tacoma's Art at Work Month.

3. A good man in a G-string is hard to find. Sure, it's reasonably easy to persuade someone to pose for a drawing, but even if an artist's friends and loved ones are willing to pose in the name of art, they'll soon find that it takes exceptional patience to remain frozen in place for hours on end. Life painting is one of art's most time-honored traditions, though, and there will always be a stream of aspiring Renoirs and Vermeers eager to give it a shot ... including tonight at the Tacoma Academy of Fine Arts. The studio offers an open session figure drawing class from 6:30-8:30 p.m. for $15 in the Merlino Art Center at 508 S. Sixth Ave. To reserve an easel, email tim.mansen@gmail.com.

4. See dance as you've never seen it before - trouncing through a bookstore! Tonight at 7 p.m. inside King's Books, the BareFoot Collective will take to the shelves and deliver a unique performance in a unique venue that is just about the opposite of a formal theater in every way.  

5. Do you like the classic rock? Classic rock band Tatoosh hosts an open Hump Day Jam every Wednesday at 9 p.m. inside Stonegate Pizza.

LINK: Wednesday, Nov. 7 arts and entertainment events in the greater Tacoma and Olympia area

April 21, 2012 at 9:44am

Purdy good pickles

PURDY PICKLE COMPANY: Gail's mom knows.

Purdy Good Pickles

Watch out, pickle aficionados. There's another local pickle option to put on your radar. Purdy Pickle Company has hit the scene with a selection of pickled items made with local and organic ingredients.

Owners Sis LaVigne and Gail Reed started Purdy Pickle in March of 2011. Both avid organic gardeners, they have been canning and pickling for a combined total of more than 50 years. After finding themselves unsatisfied with the lack of organic preserved foods, they created their business using recipes handed down from Gail's mother that have been in her family for generations.

"People have a nostalgic connection with our products," Sis and Gail told me. "They are different from other pickles because we buy our organic produce from local Washington farmers."

That's not the only thing that makes Purdy Pickles different. Besides their sweet, spicy and dill pickles, they also sell their popular pickled beets, onions, carrots and relish. The pickled beets are their biggest seller and have a complex spiced, tart and sweet flavor.

You can find Purdy Pickle Company products at Tacoma Food Co-op, Harbor Greens, The Pacific Northwest Shop and the Proctor, Puyallup and Gig Harbor Farmers Markets, as well as on their website, purdypickle.com. They will also be at the Tacoma Farmers Markets as soon as they open. 

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