Friday, February 22, 2008

Cuisine for a Cause

Beginning February 1, 2008 through April 19, Opus One restaurant in Detroit will donate 25% of all funds generated from dining room checks Monday - Thursday to several local charities, including Forgotten Harvest.

In order to ensure that your dining proceeds benefit Forgotten Harvest, be sure to check off our name on the selector you'll receive with your bill.

Forgotten Harvest Weekend at Opus One

In addition to the 10-week promotion mentioned above, if you dine at Opus One on the weekend of Friday, March 7 or Saturday, March 8, 25% of ALL guest checks will directly benefit Forgotten Harvest.

Mark your calendar!
APRIL 25 WINE-TASTING CELEBRATION
& LIVE AUCTION

Join us for a celebratory wine-tasting reception at the Ford Conference & Event Center in Dearborn on Friday, April 25. Guests will be treated to dozens of premium wines and a sumptuous strolling supper prepared by Opus One. Bid on exclusive packages and items during the live auction.

You must purchase your tickets through Forgotten Harvest to ensure ticket proceeds go to Forgotten Harvest.

Tickets are $100 each and can be purchased by calling
248-967-1500 or by purchasing online.

(Note: Forgotten Harvest will benefit from both the ticket sales for this event and one auction item).

Book a Party at Opus One and Raise Money for Forgotten Harvest!

Planning a special celebration, meeting or private party? Book your function at Opus One between February 3 - September 30, 2008 and Opus One will donate 25% of the food and beverage revenues to Forgotten Harvest when you mention it at the time of booking.

For more information, call us at 248-967-1500 or email info@forgottenharvest.org

HOLY HIP-HOP! NEW PAINTINGS BY ALEX MELAMID


Top to bottom: Snoop Dogg, 2005, oil on canvas; Kanye West, 2005, oil on canvas; 50 Cent, 2005, oil on canvas.


February 8 through April 20, 2008


World Premiere Solo Exhibition of Twelve Life-Size Paintings of Hip-Hop Icons by Alexander Melamid

Icons from the world of hip-hop music will be the subject of an extraordinary exhibition of portraits by Russian-born American painter Alexander Melamid, the outspoken artist who once had his work dismantled and bulldozed by the Soviet government. Holy Hip-Hop! New Paintings by Alex Melamid will be on view at the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit from February 8 through April 20, 2008. Holy Hip-Hop! marks the first-ever solo show for Melamid, who is world-famous for his collaborative partnership with fellow Russian-born artist Vitaly Komar. A fully-illustrated catalogue will accompany the exhibition.

The life-size portraits of twelve icons of hip-hop culture capture the larger than life personas embodied by these men, who are among the wealthiest and most influential individuals of our time. Snoop Dogg, 50 Cent, Common, Kanye West, Reverend Run, Duke, Lil Jon, Don "Magic" Juan, Whoo Kid, Marc Ecko and Russell Simmons are portrayed by Melamid as they are in life ‚ serious, ambitious, powerful and compelling. The twelve, dressed in their everyday clothes, are rendered with Old Master style and quality, providing a provocative visual context and an association with masterpieces of the past. In these paintings, Melamid explores art, power and commodity, as well as displaying the wit that has long elevated his work.

Melamid was introduced to his subjects by his son, Dan "Dan the Man" Melamid, a music video director working in the hip-hop industry. For two years, from 2003 to 2005, Melamid spent time with each of the men, got to know them, then photographed and drew them as the basis for his paintings. "Art is the key that unlocked a door that would not have opened for me," said Melamid. "I thought it would be interesting to paint the men of hip-hop using the traditional European style I have been perfecting for 40 years."

"Holy Hip-Hop! is important for Detroit because it presents a world-renowned artist whose portraits and their meanings will resonate strongly within our community," said MOCAD Acting Director Marsha Miro. "Melamid's paintings explore the dominance of hip-hop culture and what it means to today's youth. The exhibition will stimulate a dialogue and provide opportunities that we haven't yet explored at the museum."

The Artist
Melamid (b.1945) is long-known in the art world for his partnership with fellow Russian artist Vitaly Komar, with whom he founded the Soviet Realist Pop art movement, Sots Art, which satirized Soviet Socialist Realism. During their almost 40 years of collaboration which ended in 2003, Komar and Melamid were noted as revolutionaries and, at times, rebels. Their work was often compared to that of Pop artists Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein.

Komar and Melamid's career began in Soviet Russia, where they met during an anatomy drawing class in a morgue. They started working together almost immediately, exhibiting first at the Blue Bird CafÈ in Moscow in 1967. Komar and Melamid often faced government opposition and harassment. In 1974, they exhibited Paradise, featuring a Moscow apartment covered with light fixtures and small sculptural figures in various historical styles and movements. Audience members were locked inside and forced to listen to official Soviet radio. The installation was demolished on state order shortly after it opened. Just one year later, they participated in the Bulldozer Show, an outdoor exhibition that also was bulldozed by the government. These and other occurrences resulted in their expulsion from associations such as the youth section of the Moscow Artists Union and the Graphic Artists' Association.

In February of 1976, Komar and Melamid's first U.S. exhibition opened at Ronald Feldman Fine Arts in New York. Biography of Our Contemporary garnered rave reviews and launched the artists into the international spotlight. After their successes, they applied for exit visas to enter the U.S., but were twice denied by the Soviet government. In response, they declared they had created their own "state," called TransState, with a constitution, alphabet, language, passport, currency, and border post. Eventually, they were allowed to emigrate to Israel and moved to New York shortly thereafter. That same year, 1978, their first museum exhibition, Komar & Melamid: Matrix 43, opened at the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art in Hartford, Connecticut.

In 1982, they mounted another show at the Feldman gallery. Sots Art resulted in critical and commercial success, and within the year The Museum of Modern Art, New York, and The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, acquired their work. Acquisitions by the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, and The Victoria and Albert Museum, London, soon followed, and the pair subsequently had more than 60 solo exhibitions worldwide. Komar and Melamid both received U.S. citizenship in 1988, and for a number of years continued to create art, lecture and publish articles together.

In 2003, the duo decided to explore individual careers. Around this time, Melamid's first-born son, Dan, introduced him to the world of hip-hop, which included his clients and close friends Whoo Kid and 50 Cent. Melamid was intrigued by hip-hop society because of its rich history and world appeal, and began to paint the hip-hop portraits that have become his first solo exhibition. According to the artist, these paintings will be followed by two additional series ‚ twelve religious figures and twelve Russian oligarchs.

Visitor Information
Holy Hip-Hop! New Paintings by Alex Melamid will be on view at the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit (MOCAD) from February 8 through April 20, 2008. MOCAD is located at 4454 Woodward Avenue at Garfield Street and is open Wednesday and Sunday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Thursday through Saturday, 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Admission to the museum is free, unless otherwise indicated.

Sunday, February 17, 2008

Dwight Howard "Supermans" that Dunk Contest

Videos courtesy of ESPN.com

Dwight Howard won this years Dunk Contest with some creative stunts including his "Superman" dunk that featured a Superman costume. Its nearly impossible to explain it any further with words so I've included a video courtesy of ESPN.com in what was a must see Slam Dunk contest.








Continue reading for a video of the three point contest that included Jason Kapono's final round performance that tied the current record of 25 points in a single round.

Kapono Ties 3-Point Single Round Record





Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Monday, February 11, 2008

Hot Boys to Reunite in New Orleans During NBA All-Star Weekend

Feb 11, 2008 - New Orleans, LA -- Before the NBA's finest hit the New Orleans Arena hardwood at this year's annual All-Star Game, another breed of New Orleans' all-stars are reuniting for the first time in over seven years.

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On the wee hours of Sunday, February 17, Club Dream in New Orleans will witness three of the four Hot Boys take the stage together for the first time since their massive departure from Cash Money in 2001.

B.G., Juvenile, and Lil' Wayne, together with producer and DJ Mannie Fresh, are ready to set New Orleans on fire like they did in the days of "Bling Bling," "Back That Azz Up," "Tha Block Is Hot," and "Project Chick." (Fellow Hot Boy, Turk, remains incarcerated on attempted second-degree murder charges, but could be released as soon as March or April).

Port Arthur, Texas, rapper and UGK's surviving half, Bun B, is also set to make a guest appearance at the reunion show, slated to be a precursor to his full-length album which is scheduled to drop later in May.

The gathering is set to take place immediately following the All-Star Game's final buzzer, and patrons must be 21 or older to be admitted.

For more information, visit Cash Money Degreez at cmdegreez.com or the official event website at allstarnola.com/.

Saturday, February 9, 2008

Black History Month in Review: Are we Just Going Through the Motions?




Black History Month in Review:
Are we Just Going Through the Motions?

"...state the stats to stunt - I don't need to front I make history e'ry day - I don't need a month..."
Kanye West (Brandnew)




I keep hearing people mention to me that it's "Black History Month" and that this is the time to celebrate and remember such people as Martin Luther King, Harriet Tubman, Langston Hughes, Garret A. Morgan, Thurgood Marshall (just to name a few)...who have all played a crucial part in not only the lives of African Americans but the "Greater American Society" as we know it.

But as I continue to ponder, I have to admit that it seems as if [we] make this "Big-to-do" over the entire motnth of February and the importance of celebrating the lives and accomplishments of those who have "carried the crosses" before us, only to find out that when the month is over, [we] are back to the same old routine. And "Black History Month" is far from the brain.

I mean, don't get me wrong, I do appreciate the programs, speeches, marches and honorary gatherings that go on during this month, but what about the other eleven months of the year? I mean who's to say that we can't celebrate "Black History Accomplishments" on every day of the year? Now, I do remember sometime ago, that Mc Donald's in conjunction with the Tom Joyner Morning Show was doing a "Celebrate Black History 365" (or some similar title) that gave daily little known facts.

But what happened to that? It bothers me more and more each day to know that people [our people] don't take the time out to educate themselves and their families and friends about our own heritage. Thus, leaving room for confusion, manipulative thinking, blissful ignorance and complacency.

I come to grips of this on a weekly basis because
I tutor children and work with them in a lot of different areas and though I love these kids and love to see them excel in subjects where they believed that they were doomed, I can't help imagining the thought of wanting to smack their parents when I can hear them singing all versions of "Crank that Soulja Boy" known to man, but can't count past 100, or can't read past a first grade level, when they are in the sixth grade. These same children have no idea of what the black history movement is about, that slavery really existed and have the stories of Martin Luther King, Malcolm X and Thurgood Marshall all wrapped into one blob of wrong information.

Upon correction of their studies, and the stories of African American leaders I realize that there are more children who think this way and need to be supplied with the right information.

It sickens me to think that these children do not only have a clue of the reason behind the recognition of the month itself, but don't know the difference between a civil rights leader and their "favorite rapper's favorite rapper." (and no, I'm not a Hip-Hop or Rap basher, but it's time that we start facing some realities really quickly!!)

If the children are our future and we they aren't even being taught the correct information about those who have paved the way before them, then where does that leave all of us? Do we go through the same motions, year after year or do we make a change today? Do we celebrate "Black History Month" just because we realize that it's February and that's what's expected of us and if so, then what satisfaction do we receive from that? Are we failing ourselves? Are we failing the young leaders of today and tomorrow because we don't make changes to our own mindsets and practices?

by Erin Berry