Bob’s Art Blog: Lights, paper, party

Harrisburg’s Broad Street Market

When a landmark spans three city blocks and has existed for 162 years, it is an institution. A force to be reckoned with since 1860, the Broad Street Market holds the unique distinction of being one of the oldest continuously operated market houses in the United States.

“Start spreading the news,” the iconic market sign in Midtown will be officially dedicated after it was recently refurbished and reinstalled. It will have its very own 3rd in the Burg block party this Friday night. The city will close the area in front of the market for the celebration. Switch Fu will perform its multi-genre funk music live for revelers. The sign will be lit at 6:30 p.m. with both market buildings open late for the festivities. The evening’s itinerary will include guest speakers, food trucks and music. Special vendors from the Broad Street Market will be selling products to 3rd in the Burg customers. Leon from Two Brothers BBQ will be serving open pit barbecue and chili outside, with other brick building vendors making sides to accompany the “‘que.” Guest speakers will feature Mayor Wanda Williams, market board chair John “Ski” Sygielski (HACC president) and Lighten Up Harrisburg’s Matt Krupp. “It could happen to you.”

William T. Wiley, Eerie Grotto? Okini (Eerie Grotto? Please), 1982, color woodcut on handmade paper. Photograph by IA&A © William T. Wiley

“Rock, paper, scissors, shoot.” The Susquehanna Art Museum just opened its three-month summer blockbuster, “Making Your Mark: Prints and Drawings from The Hechinger Collection,” which brings together an arresting array of works on paper. The show reveals the various materials and methods used in modern artistic practice. The exhibit, featured in the Lehr Gallery, runs through Sept. 18. Remember, paper beats rock, all summer long at the SAM.

Ten years at anything these days is cause for celebration. Mechanicsburg’s Metropolis Collective gallery is not only still around, but it continues to bring the best alternative art and artists to the area. To their credit, owners Richard Reilly and Hannah Dobek have taken the art road less traveled and forged their own path. It is ironic that the gallery sits on Main Street as its offerings are as far removed from mainstream art as the map will allow.

Untitled by Amy Asher (MD) Digital Photograph, 11″x 14″

It proudly announces its Tenth Anniversary exhibit opening Friday, July 1. Firework displays will have nothing on this show. “Habitat: Reflections on Environment” breaks new ground exploring the fragile ecosystems that comprise our global living space and individual dwellings. The world is our oyster and home is truly a state of mind, as shown by the creations of the gallery’s artists.  Dobek, the gallerist and driving art force behind Metropolis, shared that the show is “about life on earth, life as mammals…and the elaborate structures erected to house mankind from office buildings to shopping plazas, clattering cars that take us there…the effects of war and homelessness and at the heart of it all, how we care for each other and the places we share in an ever-connected yet somehow detached community of life in the world around us.”

Local artists include Joanne Landis, Nina Rubin Mangione, Matthew Zeigler, Bonnie Lorwey and Ms. Dobek. East coast environmental artists offer their unique takes on habitat and include Sean Matthews, Jamison Eckert, Jude Screnzi, Amy Asher and Hailey Patrick. These artists and more will be exhibiting their work. The reception party runs from 7 to 11 p.m. with a $5 suggested donation for the one-man-band, Nick DiSanto. The party is for all ages and perfect to kick off the holiday weekend. “Habitat” runs through Sept. 15 during regular gallery hours, Friday and Saturday. The show’s appeal may become habit-forming, requiring repeat visits to the gallery to see it all.

 

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!

Continue Reading

Burg Review: “Poignant, funny” family drama wraps up Theatre Harrisburg’s season

Theatre Harrisburg’s season capstone production from Director Matt Spencer, “Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike,” is a peek through the keyhole on the family dynamics of three middle-aged, discontented siblings who take jabs at each other while they air their grievances about how stuck they feel in their lives.

Playwright Christopher Durang pulls his inspiration for his drawing room comedy from Russian playwright Anton Chekhov, although Durang’s six-time Tony-nominated spin rings as more amusing and less despairing than any writing ever transmitted from Russia. Ever.

Set in the Hardwicke family’s Bucks County living room, decorated as light blue as the play’s mood and the blue herons chirping overhead, the thrust stage extends all the way to the audience’s feet, inviting us to eavesdrop on the family’s very personal moments as if we’re in the next room. (Ushers invite you to enter the theater through the set’s front door, if you like.)

We meet Sonia (Beth McIntosh) and Vanya (Darren Riddle), a restless sister and brother pair stuck in a steady routine of sniping at each other over petty matters. Sonia and Vanya have no life purpose and feel too old to generate any new patterns or prospects.

Lurking under a shallow surface is a source of their true resentment: they served as their parents’ caregivers for 15 years while their sister Masha (Diane Bateman) became a famous movie star. Bateman lays it on thick to bring the pretentious, insecure and mostly insufferable Masha to life, successfully creating a frail woman we love to hate.

When Masha visits, she brings her room-filling ego, her much younger love interest, Spike (Ryan Dean Schoening), and her plan to tout her family to a costume party as her entourage. Masha brings five extra people as “accessories” to her Snow White costume. Miss Manners would blush at this breach of etiquette, yet it highlights the conceit in Masha’s character.

McIntosh plays the childish, self-pitying, passive-aggressive Sonia while incorporating a believable undertone of sarcasm. Despite Sonia’s flaws, it’s still hard not to root for her as the underdog when she one-ups her sister at the costume party and, later, when Sonia finally takes a baby step toward having her own life.

With his more subdued approach to his character, Riddle nails a pinnacle moment in the play: Vanya’s meta play-within-a-play monologue about growing up in the 1950s. He eloquently romanticizes how things used to be back when everyone shared the same memories as a national consciousness. Not only is Riddle’s recitation a time capsule opening across the cobblestones of memory lane, but it reveals his character’s resistance to evolve and his disdain for impertinent young people like Spike.

Schoening brings a smarmy, cocky swagger to Spike, a superficial, oversexed character who temporarily has a roaming eye toward the neighbor girl Nina (Aleax Olivera). Although the storyline doesn’t flesh Nina out much, either, Olivera portrays her with a sweet, energetic naiveté.

On the fringe of the Hardwicke family is their cleaning lady, Cassandra (Gerren Wagner), who comes in even on her days off to bring her over-the-top comedy skills to her overbearing character, a Greek psychic who practices voodoo for the greater good. This family needs her comic relief as much as they need her weird interjections and her big heart.

Much like any family reunion, of Russian descent or not, this play is poignantly funny and uncomfortably awkward in spots, yet strangely cohesive when we add blended and extended family. Overall, it’s a fitting denouement to Theatre Harrisburg’s post-COVID comeback season.

Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike” runs through June 19 at the Krevsky Center, 513 Hurlock St., Harrisburg. For more information on show times and tickets, visit www.theatreharrisburg.com/2021-2022-shows/vanya-sonia-masha-spike/.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!

Continue Reading

The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

District officials ceremoniously broke ground on a project to improve Harrisburg High School-John Harris campus’s Severance Field.

The month of June brings lots of outdoor events and happenings in the Harrisburg area. Read about a few upcoming festivities and catch up on other local news from the week, below.

TheBurg Podcast for June is focused on revitalization. Tune in to hear from several organizations on how they are beautifying and impacting Harrisburg and the state.

Boho Hoarder opened in Paxtonia with a collection of vintage and thrifted items for sale, our online story reported. Owner Rebecca Babish shares her love for second-hand shopping and offers clothing, home décor and accessories, among other items.

Free Shakespeare in the Park returned for its 29th year, presenting “The Winter’s Tale,” our online story reported. Gamut Theatre and Narcisse Theatre Co. have partnered to bring the annual event to Reservoir Park.

The Harrisburg School District ceremoniously broke ground on a project to replace the turf football field and the track at the Harrisburg High School-John Harris campus’s Severance Field. The project will include the addition of lights to the area, which will allow for use of the field after sunset, our online story reported.

The Harrisburg School District proposed its 2022-23 budget, which includes a 3.36% property tax hike, our reporting found. The $224.2 million budget includes the use of millions of dollars in federal COVID relief funds.

The Historic Harrisburg Association is devoting the entire month of June to commemorating the 50th anniversary of Hurricane Agnes and the historic flood that devastated the city in 1972. To find out more about the history, and to hear from those who were impacted, read our magazine story.

The Jackson Lick pool is set to open in Harrisburg this weekend, our online story reported. The city will also offer several summer programs for youth.

Juneteenth is coming up and Young Professionals of Color-Greater Harrisburg is ready to celebrate. The organization has several events planned for the week ahead, including its Juneteenth Jubilee. Find out what’s happening, in our magazine story.

A March Against Social Injustice and Gun Violence took place recently at the state Capitol with the goal of bringing awareness to the issue, our online story reported. All You Can Inc. and Be a Man Inc. hosted the march, followed by a panel discussion.

“Memoria” is playing this month at Midtown Cinema. In her column, read why our movie reviewer was disappointed by the “excruciatingly slow-paced” film.

Philadelphia has one of the largest collections of outdoor murals in the country, our magazine story reported. Mural Arts Philadelphia is the organization behind the art—with a tally of over 4,000 projects.

Sara Bozich has plenty of summer events for your weekend. From concerts to craft shows, she’s got it all, right here.

The “Secret Gardens of Historic Harrisburg” Garden Tour will return this weekend, our online story reported. The self-guided tour will take place on June 12, and lead tour-goers to 20 gardens and outdoor spaces in the historic Midtown and Shipoke neighborhoods.

Spotted lanternflies are headed back to Harrisburg, our online story reported. The city is offering free traps and advice on how to eliminate the invasive species.

Summer concerts are headed to Harrisburg for what could be the “best” lineup yet, according to Harrisburg University Presents. Check out what bands will play in the Harrisburg area in the coming months, here.

A Youth Commission will be reinstated in Harrisburg, as the city is currently accepting applications for board members, our online story reported. Selected residents, ages 14 to 18, will advise the city on issues concerning the youth.

Do you receive TheBurg Daily, our daily digest of news and events delivered right to your email inbox? If not, sign up here! 

Support quality local journalism. Join Friends of TheBurg today!

 

Continue Reading

Harrisburg’s Friends of Midtown to host free Outdoor Film Series at Midtown Cinema

Friends of Midtown’s film series at Midtown Cinema last year.

It’s almost time for movie night in Midtown.

Harrisburg’s Friends of Midtown will kick off its free summer Outdoor Film Series this Saturday at Midtown Cinema.

“It’s a good way to get neighbors out of their houses and into the community,” said Hannah Witwer, secretary and events coordinator for Friends of Midtown.

The series will begin with a screening of the animated film “Encanto” in the cinema’s parking lot. Attendees are encouraged to bring chairs and blankets, Witwer said.

The series will feature a wide range of movies for kids and adults to enjoy throughout the summer. Animated films, cult favorites and action movies will make the cut. Midtown Cinema also selected an LGBTQ film to show in July, a few days before the Pride Festival of Central PA.

The summer movie schedule is as follows:

June 11: “Encanto”

June 25: “The Princess Bride”

July 16: “Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark”

July 28: “The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert”

Aug. 13: “Avengers: Endgame”

Aug. 27: “Up”

Live music performances will take place at 7:30 p.m., followed by the movie showings at dusk.

Midtown Cinema will sell concessions inside its building, such as popcorn, ice cream and candy. Zeroday Brewing Co.’s Outpost, located inside the cinema, will be open and offers beer, hotdogs and baked potatoes.

Additionally, at each event, Friends of Midtown will collect personal hygiene item donations for The Ecumenical Food Pantry of Harrisburg and GLO-Harrisburg.

Overall, Witwer is hopeful that the event will bring the community together.

“I just want it to be a really fun time,” she said. “I’m looking forward to meeting people.”

Midtown Cinema is located at 250 Reily St., Harrisburg. For more information about Friends of Midtown, visit their website.

 

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!

Continue Reading

Prioritizing Revitalizing: TheBurg Podcast, June 2022

Revitalization is the focus of our June podcast, as we expand three stories from the pages of TheBurg magazine’s June issue:

Fifty years later, what’s Harrisburg’s legacy from Hurricane Agnes? David Morrison, executive director, Historic Harrisburg Association explains how revitalization efforts continue impacting the city today.

Revitalization is thriving in many Pennsylvania towns and cities, thanks in great part to the Harrisburg-based organization, The Pennsylvania Downtown Center. Executive Director Julie Fitzpatrick shares her insights—including downtown success stories—as PDC celebrates its 35th anniversary.

Philadelphia is considered the model city for one specific and unique type of revitalization, worldwide: murals. Chad Eric Smith, communications director for Mural Arts Philadelphia, explains how Philly’s murals “beautify, inspire and empower.”

June’s “most Harrisburg thing” could truly revitalize your life. Lawrance Binda, editor of TheBurg, issues a challenge, in his monthly feature. Tune in, to see if you’re up for it.

TheBurg Podcast is hosted and produced by award-winning Harrisburg-area journalist Karen Hendricks. Every month, TheBurg Podcast expands stories from the pages of TheBurg magazine because “there’s always more to the story.”

Backstories that coordinate with this episode include:

Agnes at 50 | Downtown Rebound | Mural Mecca

DYK? TheBurg Podcast has received three prestigious podcast journalism awards over the past two years, including First place, Excellence in Journalism, Society of Professional Journalists, Keystone Chapter, in 2021. 

Interested in sharing your advertising message with TheBurg Podcast’s dedicated audience? Research shows that podcast sponsorships are one of the most effective forms of advertising! Contact Lauren ([email protected]). 

Visit Karen Hendricks’ website for more of her writing, journalism and PR work. TheBurg is a monthly community magazine based in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania; Lawrance Binda, co-publisher/editor.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!

Continue Reading

Just Keep Squishing: Harrisburg helps prepare residents for spotted lanternflies, offers traps

Spotted lanternflies can be recognized by the black dots on their wings.

One summer pest is coming back and headed to feast on your trees. 

Spotted lanternfly season has returned and Harrisburg has advice for residents on how to eliminate the invasive species. 

According to Harrisburg Parks, Recreation and Facilities Director David Baker, this year’s lanternfly season will be just as bad as the last.

“Personally, I think the numbers will stay close to the same,” he said.

Spotted lanternflies are known for the black dots on their wings. They feast on trees such as walnut, maple, willow and oak, sucking out the sap, causing young trees to die and halting the growth of mature trees, according to the city. They also release a substance called honeydew that can cause mold on plants like grapes, apples and hops. According to a study from Penn State University, if not contained, spotted lanternflies could cause at least $324 million worth of damage to the Pennsylvania economy. Although they can be damaging to plants, they are harmless to humans and animals.

The best way to stop these creatures? Kill them. 

Harrisburg’s parks department is handing out free tree traps to Harrisburg residents to catch these pesky critters.

The city will offer both circle and sticky band traps. The circle trap is made of nylon window screening and wrapped around a tree, working like a reverse funnel so that, when the insects try to climb back up the tree, they are led into a plastic bag that they cannot escape from, the city explained.

The sticky band traps work the same way, with flypaper wrapped around the tree and window screening to keep other insects and birds from getting stuck, according to the city. The spotted lanternflies will then get stuck to the flypaper in their attempt to climb up and suck on the tree’s sap.

“These traps can easily and cheaply be made at home and are one of the most effective ways to capture adult spotted lanternflies,” said Baker.

Certain insecticides may also work to kill spotted lanternflies.

While adult spotted lanternflies will emerge in July, now is the time to prepare and protect your trees from these bugs, according to the city.

Spotted lanternfly traps can be picked up at the Harrisburg Public Safety building at 123 Walnut St. or at the Reservoir Park Mansion at 100 Concert Dr., between 9 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. on Monday through Friday.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!

 

Continue Reading

How does your garden grow? Historic Harrisburg Association to host “Secret Gardens” tour

Flowers at Paper Moon Flowers and Events in Midtown Harrisburg.

Back by popular demand, the Historic Harrisburg Association (HHA) will host its 2nd Annual “Secret Gardens of Historic Harrisburg” Garden Tour this weekend. 

The self-guided tour will run from 1 to 5 p.m. on Sunday, June 12, and lead tour-goers to 20 gardens and outdoor spaces in the historic Midtown and Shipoke neighborhoods. Each participating house will have a sign in the yard.

“They’re going to see gardens they walk by and drive by all of the time and didn’t know existed,” said HHA’s Executive Director David Morrison. “There will be exciting discoveries.”

Shipoke and Midtown will be featured as part of HHA’s monthlong “A Celebration of Resolve,” a commemoration of the devastating 1972 Agnes flood, helping to show how these neighborhoods have progressed in the 50 years since the disaster.

While on the tour, attendees will learn how to keep a small outdoor garden and living space looking bright, especially in the city, and will leave with many gardening and landscaping tips. Homeowners and volunteers will be at each tour stop to help answer questions.

“What’s amazing is people have created lots of private, outdoor living spaces,” Morrison said of the city homes’ exterior decor. 

HHA brought the tour back last June after a 15-year hiatus to fill a programming gap that many other events left when they were canceled due to the pandemic. Morrison said that it was so popular that HHA had to bring it back this year with different neighborhoods.

“A lot of people love the idea of exploring the city themselves,” he said.

At the conclusion of the tour, there will be a vendor market for attendees to purchase tools to use to start their own gardens, as well as an afterparty with beverages and snacks courtesy of Zerøday Brewing Co. Paper Moon Flowers and Events at 916 N. 3rd St. will also be open from 1 to 5 p.m. for ticket holders only.

Tickets to this event are $20, or $25 if purchased on the day of the tour. Each participant will receive a guidebook with a map to follow.

Learn more about the “Secret Gardens of Historic Harrisburg” Garden Tour at the Historic Harrisburg Association’s website.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!

 

Continue Reading

Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

Plan your weekend with my weekly list of things to do around Harrisburg and central PA! Scroll down or use the menu links to find ideas for your weekend.

For something new: 2nd Thursday in downtown New Cumberland is loaded with events and features; Shakespeare in the Park (2 more weekends left!); Historic Harrisburg Association’s Secret Gardens & Neighborhoods Tour on Sunday.

(Still) Worth noting: Check out my private Facebook community, Cheers Harrisburg. You can join the convo here.

Things on my agenda this weekend: Heading to Pittsburgh!

Don’t forget to support your local brewery! Click here to find one near you.

For your weekend planning

Below are options for your weekend.

Things to Do in Harrisburg + Central PA | Weekend Roundup | Sara Bozich

Be in the know.
Sign up to receive news and updates from Sara Bozich.
Nicely done. ??
 

Top Weekend Recs

  1. HHA’s ‘Secret Gardens & Neighborhoods’ tour
  2. Mark your calendar (and be sure you’re subscribed to my email) for HU’s Summer Concert Series
  3. Subscribe & save with Broadway Series at Hershey Theatre
  4. Make travel plans (with a discount + perks)
  5. Submit your events for the Weekend Roundup

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday


What are you doing this weekend around Harrisburg? Let us know on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram.

Like this content?

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!

Continue Reading

Harrisburg School District breaks ground on new football field, track

Harrisburg School District officials on Wednesday broke ground on Severance Field.

A major Harrisburg School District construction project is a touchdown in the eyes of staff and students.

On Wednesday, at the Harrisburg High School-John Harris Campus’s Severance Field, district officials ceremoniously broke ground on a project to replace the turf football field and the track.

“I’m ecstatic that our students will finally get what they deserve,” said Athletic Director Calvin Everett. “With these new facilities, the best is yet to come.”

Besides the new field and track, the district will add lighting to the stadium. Currently, the stadium has no lighting, which has restricted the use of the field after dark. Other improvements include constructing new field goal posts and soccer goals.

According to Everett, the field was last upgraded about 20 years ago.

The district is funding the $2 million capital project through its reserve funds. Everett said that the field will be ready for use in the fall, though summer practices will need to be relocated.

“We look forward to having everyone return in August to see the finished product,” said district Receiver Lori Suski.

Harrisburg football player Kyle Williams is looking forward to games on the new field for his senior year in the fall. In the past, the team was not able to have Friday night games like most school districts due to its lack of lighting, he said.

“It brings us a lot of joy knowing we will have this,” he said. “I’m really excited about the new field.”

On Monday night at a school board meeting, Turman also announced the return of middle school sports to the district, starting this fall. The district said they may offer football, cheerleading, wrestling, basketball, track and field, volleyball and soccer to students.

According to Turman, the groundbreaking of the Severance Field project is just another initiative of the district to improve programs for students.

“This is just one small step of many that we will do in the coming years to continue to bring pride to our district and city,” he said.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!

 

Continue Reading

Harrisburg to open Jackson Lick pool this weekend, announces summer youth programs

Jackson Lick pool. File photo.

Harrisburg is ready to make a splash this weekend.

The city announced that its Jackson Lick pool is set to open for the summer on Saturday, June 11.

The pool will be open weekly from Tuesday through Sunday, from 12 to 6 p.m.

On July 20, the city plans to hold a community day for residents with free admission to the pool.

Hall Manor pool will be closed for the summer. However, Mayor Wanda Williams recently announced her proposed plan to replace the aging pool with a water park and splash pad, funded with federal American Rescue Plan money. Harrisburg City Council will need to vote on the proposal.

Also this summer, Harrisburg has several other youth events lined up.

“The city’s Parks and Recreation Department strives to engage and educate as many of the city’s youth as possible while providing a safe environment to build both relationship and life skills,” said Parks and Recreation Director Dave Baker.

From June 13 to Aug. 5, children ages 6 to 17 can participate in free day programs at local parks. The program, which runs from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., will include activities such as sports, arts and crafts and field trips. Activities will take place at Reservoir Park, 4th & Emerald Playground, Cloverly Playground, 7th & Radnor Park, Sunshine Park and Wilson Park. There will also be an evening program from 5:30 to 8:30 pm. at the ball field at the 7th & Radnor park on Monday through Thursday.

The city will also host a free tennis camp for children and teens, 7 to 17 years old, from June 13 to Aug. 12. The lessons will take place on Monday through Friday at Sunshine Park and the John Harris tennis courts.

To register for summer programs in Harrisburg, call 717-232-3017 or click here. For more information, visit the city’s website.

 

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!

 

Continue Reading