Arts & Life
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- Written by: Editor

MIDDLETOWN, Calif. – Lake County residents and visitors have been seeing themselves differently these last few weeks, so how better to add to the conversation than showcasing ourselves to ourselves through portraiture.
Portraits can be more than rendered attributes. A portrait can provide insight into the subject, the artist, or something within us all.
“Portraits,” a new exhibit, opens Friday, Oct. 30, with a reception from 6 to 8 p.m., and will be on view until Dec. 6 at the Middletown Art Center, or MAC, 21456 State Highway 175 in Middletown.
A wide array of artists will showcase works in many mediums from oil to pastel to wood to plaster.
Openings at MAC are well attended and highlight an evening of art, music and community. MAC also showcases other vibrant cultural events.
Slowly recovering normalcy, MAC has been offering free or subsidized art classes to express and release the fire experience and engage with community.
During these trying times, the MAC has proven itself to be a considerable asset, hosting important meetings and providing support during this time of crisis.
Donations are needed to help support artists who lost their homes and studios and continue subsidizing MAC’s nonprofit work, which includes the underserved members of our community.

Donations of funds and art, ceramics, jewelry, tools and other related supplies are graciously accepted.
Middletown Art Center offers an array of memberships and art making opportunities, and can accept donations, memberships and class registrations online at www.MiddletownArtCenter.org .
Located at the junction of Highways 29 and 175 in Middletown, the old Middletown Gymnasium welcomes residents and visitors inside once again.
The building has been transformed into a beautiful space for contemporary art and performance events.
The back portion of the building serves as a studio where classes in drawing, painting, ceramics, and more, are offered for children, teens and adults.
Check class offerings at www.MiddletownArtCenter.org/classes.html .
MAC is open Friday and Saturday, noon to 6 p.m., and Sunday, 1 to 5 p.m. or by appointment.
For more information call 707-809-8118 or email

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- Written by: Ted Kooser

During World War II the government endorsed the publication of inexpensive paperbacks for persons serving overseas.
Jehanne Dubrow, who lives and teaches in Maryland and whose husband is a naval officer, here shows us one of those pocket-sized volumes.
This poet's latest book is The Arranged Marriage, (University of New Mexico Press, 2015).
Armed Services Editions
My copy of The Fireside Book of Verse
is as the seller promised—the stapled spine,
the paper aged to Army tan—no worse
for wear, given the cost of its design,
six cents to make and printed on a press
once used for magazines and pulp. This book
was never meant to last a war much less
three quarters of a century.
I look
for evidence of all the men who scanned
these lines, crouched down in holes or lying in
their racks. I read the poems secondhand.
Someone has creased the page. Did he begin
then stop to sleep? to clean his gun perhaps?
to listen to the bugler playing taps?
American Life in Poetry is made possible by The Poetry Foundation ( www.poetryfoundation.org ), publisher of Poetry magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. It does not accept unsolicited submissions. Poem copyright ©2015 by Jehanne Dubrow, “Armed Services Editions,” (Bellevue Literary Review, Vol. 15, no. 2, 2015). Poem reprinted by permission of Jehanne Dubrow and the publisher. Introduction copyright © 2015 by The Poetry Foundation. The introduction's author, Ted Kooser, served as United States Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress from 2004-2006.
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- Written by: Tim Riley
STEVE JOBS (Rated R)
When it comes to handling computers, I am so incapable at times in dealing with technical problems that even the Geek Squad will no longer return my calls. But, at least, articles such as this one flow from the relative ease of using Microsoft Word.
On the whole, it would seem not within my realm of comprehension or even desire to be writing a critique of “Steve Jobs,” the story of the acclaimed pioneer of Apple who made the computer accessible even to the most unskilled users.
This assignment is approached with some trepidation, but with the knowledge that Aaron Sorkin wrote the screenplay based upon Walter Isaacson’s best-selling biography of the Apple founder, it appears the proper roadmap has been drawn.
In a canned interview stuck inside the film’s press notes, director Danny Boyle, who does a tremendous job here, notes that the “film is an abstraction,” taking events – some of them real, some of them imagined – and pushing them into three acts.
With an almost minimalist style, “Steve Jobs” focuses on the backstage drama attendant to the launch of three new computer products over the course of a fourteen-year period beginning with Apple’s formative years.
First, it’s the launch of Macintosh in 1984, where Michael Fassbender’s Steve Jobs unveils his work in front of a fawning audience that would seemingly fuel the computer genius’ tendency to arrogantly believe that his brilliance was undeniable.
Like many brainy masterminds, Jobs is relentless in badgering and hectoring those around him instrumental in facilitating his dream. His most immediate foil is Andy Hertzfeld (Michael Stuhlbarg), who is roundly berated for not being able to get the Macintosh to say “Hello.”
Gal Friday Joanna Hoffman (a nearly unrecognizable Kate Winslet) fares little better in her treatment from Jobs, whose neverending grievances and demands would be demoralizing to someone with much less tolerance and inexhaustible endurance.
Over the course of what is essentially a three-act play, Jobs’ oldest friend and collaborator, Steve Wozniak (Seth Rogen, playing it straight), endures the humiliation of vainly trying to get the Apple genius to publicly recognize the achievements of the Apple II team.
The personal failings of Jobs are found in his troubled relationship with former live-in girlfriend Chrisann Brennan (Katherine Waterston) and his insensitive unwillingness to accept paternity for their young daughter Lisa (played by different young actors over time).
Arriving backstage on the launch day, Chrisann scratches at the hard exterior shell of the aloof Jobs, making a strong case that his child support payments are woefully inadequate as she and Lisa suffer the hardship of living on welfare.
Even though he doesn’t want Lisa to know him as a father, Jobs takes tentative steps to form a tenuous bond with his offspring, and his interest in her becomes more pronounced when she makes a computer drawing. Only in the third segment would he admit naming a computer after her.
Another constant person in the picture is Apple CEO John Sculley (Jeff Daniels), the man who ironically fired Jobs from Apple in the early going, but keeps surfacing at the pivotal points in Jobs career up to the end of the third-act launch of the iMac in 1998.
Sculley’s presence also punctuates the tension of Apple boardroom squabbling where Jobs confronts his employers with the same tortured, angry responses that inform even his everyday interaction with other business associates.
The backstage drama of the second act comes in 1988 when Jobs, having been ousted from his position at Apple, pushes the NeXT cube computer, which proves to be anything but the next big thing in the digital world.
The third act wraps it all up with the 1998 launch of the iMac, and the crowds in the auditorium for the event have grown larger and even more sycophantic for the elusive mad genius behind the curtain.
In patented fashion, Aaron Sorkin delivers fast-paced, sharp dialogue in scenes where Jobs walks and talks with such speed that one is in awe of how his pithy one-liners are so clever and worthy of emulation.
Indeed, in situations where Jobs’ arrogance matches his intelligence with ferocious impact on anyone and everything within his path, it’s possible to see him as a Shakespearean creation of hugely melodramatic proportions, maybe like King Richard III but without the hunchback and murderous soul.
Though he may not look very much like his subject matter, Michael Fassbender’s role is a tour de force performance that could easily be remembered when Academy voters are thinking about an Oscar nomination next year.
Above all, “Steve Jobs” is a psychological portrait of a brilliant man consumed by internal conflicts and personal demons. The result is a fascinating character study which ends so abruptly in 1998 that one may hope for a sequel to finish the rest of the story.
Tim Riley writes film and television reviews for Lake County News.
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MENDOCINO, Calif. – Fort Bragg Center for the Arts' Coast Chamber Concerts presents pianist Frank Wiens on Sunday, Nov. 8.
The concert will take place beginning at 3 p.m. in Preston Hall, 44867 Main St., Mendocino.
Wiens will perform works by Beethoven, Schumann, Chopin Debussy and Rachmaninoff.
Tickets in advance are $20 at Harvest Market, Fort Bragg, and Out of This World, Mendocino and are available at the door for $25.
For more information visit http://www.fbcamusicseries.com/ .
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