Circles of Life

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I didn’t know Marlene Roeder could draw when I met her twenty-five years ago while we were both working at Franklin Magnet School, an arts magnet elementary in the Syracuse City school district in Syracuse, New York.

She was the grant writer and big into theatrical productions.  I was a daily substitute teacher.  She has since retired from that job, as well as from her position as an education curator at the Everson Museum of Art – and taken up the art of mandala making.

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Her artwork is available for sale at Eye Studio (712 W. Manlius Street, East Syracuse, New York).  Last night was the opening reception for Circle of Life, a month-long exhibition of these intricate ink and colored pencil originals and prints.

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Marlene shared her passion for creating the drawings.  She begins with a large compass then decides how many points she will create.  Pencil then pen and ink followed by color.  Some of the pieces have been published in a coloring book.  She does “coloring parties” too, in which she offers color theory tips and the therapeutic escape that coloring provides.

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There are several series within this concept.  Groupings of pieces inspired by family, landscapes, seascapes, still-lifes, time and social injustice.  They are all infused with a spiritual belief system and a desire to share visual thinking strategies as a means to understand and further enjoy art, and the art-making process.

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Marlene is an advocate for “the persecuted and oppressed”.  She gives 20% of her art sales to the A21 Campaign, an international organization that fights to end human trafficking.

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For more information, contact the artist at mroeder01@gmail.com. <3

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Gallery and Gift Shop Hours

Monday – Tuesday   11am – 7pm.       Thursday                12pm – 7pm

​Wednesday             3pm – 7 pm         Friday – Saturday    12pm – 5pm

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Once Upon a Time

Once upon a time, a friend wanted to see a movie – I was reluctant to go to a Tarantino film.  Thought it would be something gross, as per usual.

But it wasn’t.

Once Upon A Time in Hollywood is a cinematic masterpiece.  A chick-flick disguised as a bromance.

From what I understand no CGI was used in the making of the transformation to fifty years ago.  The art direction, set designs and costuming were all spot-on.

The story is so clever.  It is one of those cinéma-vérité thing-a-ma-bobs, where real people are interspersed with the fictionalized ones not to enhance the biography – rather to create a new history.

I am a firm believer that anyone can create their own reality.  Anyone can become anything they want to be, if only they can figure out how to channel the positive energy to get themselves there.  It is a combo of physical and emotional strength of character and it is so doable, well, because you can ask anyone how they got to where they are today and they can pretty much tell you.

Oh, sure, there were the wonky bits – the personal ups and downs of life.  Financial hardships, illness, dumb stuff, but adults tend to sweep that stuff under the rug (often with self-deprecating humor), kind of like – it’s all part of the fun of having this human experience.  What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger, am I right?

I am strongly against re-hashing old history (sorry, social studies teachers and history buffs). It doesn’t serve anyone to remind people of tragedies, especially people who have never even heard of stuff, like my students who have no idea what “9/11” means.  Certainly, many don’t know Charles Manson.  My twenty-something hairdresser didn’t.

So, this beautiful story takes that history and gives it the Tarantino twist.  It’s fearless. Seamless.  It is exquisite, really.  You get to know the characters so well.  And they make sense to who they are and the choices that they make.  That is what I love.  Because you see their quirks, flaws, etc. and you still fall in love with them.  They are heroes.

Sharon Tate – no one can tell us what she was really like (i.e. what was going on inside her head) and so, she is depicted as an easy-going fun-loving California girl.  She doesn’t have a lot of screen time or lines and that makes sense to me.  She is just the neighbor and what do we know about our neighbors’ lives?  For all intents and purposes, she was an amazing person who did not deserve to be murdered in such a brutal way.

So, thank you, Quentin Tarantino, for giving us this artistic experience, this love-letter to Hollywood, this new reality that we can pretend to believe, that leaves us feeling uplifted – unless we are a bunch of dirty hippies in which case – sorry, Charlie.

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Once Upon a Time in Hollywood stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt and Margot Robbie.  The film is currently in theaters.  Check your local listings for venues and times. <3