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AMERICAN MOSAIC - April 5,
2002: Berklee School of Music album / A question about Easter / A museum
show honoring three female artists
HOST:
Welcome to AMERICAN MOSAIC - VOA's radio magazine
in Special English.
(THEME)
This is Doug Johnson. On our program today we:
Play recordings by musicians educated at the
Berklee School of Music...
Answer a question about the Easter holiday...
And visit a museum show honoring three female
artists.
Three Women Artists
HOST:
A show honoring three North American women artists
is now at a museum in Washington, D.C. The artists are Emily Carr of
Canada, Georgia O'Keefe of the United States and Frida Kahlo of Mexico.
Shep O'Neal has more.
ANNCR:
The show at the National Museum of Women in
the Arts is called "Places of Their Own: Emily Carr, Georgia O'Keefe
and Frida Kahlo." The three women are considered the greatest women
painters of their countries in the Twentieth Century. The show examines
the artistic and personal links among them.
Emily Carr of Canada is the first in the show
because she was the oldest. She was born in Eighteen-Seventy-One. She
did not become known for her paintings until she was more than fifty
years old. Today, Emily Carr is one of Canada's most celebrated artists.
Many of her paintings show the trees and natural surroundings she loved
in her home province of British Columbia. She also developed a picture
record of Northwest Coast Indian villages.
Emily Carr, ''Big Raven,'' 1931
(Images - nmwa.org)
Georgia O'Keefe is considered by many experts to be the most popular
female American artist. Her paintings sometimes are shown along with
the pictures taken by her husband, the famous photographer Alfred Steiglitz.
Georgia O'Keefe lived in Texas and New York before moving to New Mexico.
The striking land in the southwestern United States provided many subjects
for her paintings. Many of her pictures show nature at its simplest,
with few details.
Georgia O'Keeffe, ''Red Hills with the Pedernal,'' 1936
The final artist honored in the museum show is Frida Kahlo. Nearly all
of her paintings are pictures of herself. Frida Kahlo was almost killed
in an accident when she was a young girl. Her injuries remained a problem
most of her life. Frida Kahlo's work was affected by her pain and suffering.
It also showed her love for her husband, the artist Diego Rivera. The
colors and shapes of her paintings were influenced by Mexico's many
cultures.
Frida Kahlo, ''Self-Portrait with Monkey,'' 1938
All three of these women included ideas of themselves in their paintings.
They also searched for meaning in their native lands and cultures. Experts
say their work is important because it greatly changed the art of North
America in the Twentieth Century.
Easter
HOST:
Our VOA listener question this week comes from
Mongolia. Amarkhuu Ayulguisaikhan asks how Americans celebrate the Easter
holiday.
Easter Cross, 1877
(Image - Library of Congress)
Christians in the United States celebrated Easter last Sunday, March
thirty-first. Christians believe Easter is the day when Jesus Christ
rose from the dead about two thousand years ago. Most Christians believe
Jesus was sent to Earth to save humans from wrongdoing, and to give
them everlasting life.
Thousands of American churches held services
outside on Easter morning. This tradition is very old. It probably was
started by Moravian Christians in the eastern state of Pennsylvania
in Seventeen-Forty-Three. This Moravian service of praise is still held
today.
Sunrise services in the United States are usually
planned to include members of many Christian religious groups. One of
the most famous takes place at the Hollywood Bowl, an outdoor center
in Los Angeles, California. People arrive the night before to try to
attend this event.
Many Americans also observe Easter customs not
directly linked to religious tradition. People in many cities walk through
the streets on Easter morning after attending church. Each year, thousands
of people in New York City wear new clothes to take part in this Easter
Parade on Fifth Avenue.
Some families color eggs and hide them for their
children to find. Parents say a rabbit leaves the Easter eggs. The rabbit
is known as the Easter Bunny.
Here in Washington, a big celebration takes
place each year on the Monday after Easter. The President of the United
States invites children to play a game rolling colored Easter eggs on
the grounds behind the White House. President Rutherford Hayes and his
wife Lucy started this American tradition in Eighteen-Seventy-Eight.
This year, about forty-thousand children took
part. President Bush and his wife Laura welcomed the children and their
families to the White House grounds. Everyone seemed to enjoy the sunny
day filled with music and games.
Shekinah Thirteen Artists
HOST:
The world famous Berklee College of Music in
Boston, Massachusetts, has trained many successful singers such as Melissa
Etheridge and Diana Krall. A record has been recently released of some
music by Berklee students who are not as well known. Mary Tillotson
explains.
ANNCR:
Berklee College has its own recording company
to provide its students with experiences in the recording business.
Earlier this year, the college's small recording company and a major
recording company, Epic/Sony Records, jointly released a record.
The project began when students in one Berklee class decided to produce
a record and try to sell it nationally. They listened to tapes and chose
which songs and artists to include. All the artists were educated at
Berklee. The Epic record company agreed to market the recording.
The name of the record is "Shekinah (shuh-KEE-nah)
Thirteen Artists." Berklee says the word honors the creative power
of females.
One artist on the record is Polina, the daughter
of Russian singer Anka. She recorded her song in her father's studio
in Moscow. It is called "Out of My Mind."
((CUT 1: OUT OF MY MIND))
Another former Berklee student on the record
is German artist Antje Zumbansen. She has already won the Vince Gill
Award for Songwriting and Outstanding Musicianship. Here she sings "Without
An End."
((CUT 2: WITHOUT AN END))
The last song on the Shekinah record was written
and performed by Amanda Williams. She graduated from the Berklee School
of Music in Nineteen-Ninety-Nine. She wrote the song "Beer Run,"
which Garth Brooks and George Jones recorded. We leave you now with
Amanda Williams singing her song, "Low."
((CUT 3: LOW))
HOST:
This is Doug Johnson. I hope you enjoyed our
program today. And I hope you will join us again next week for AMERICAN
MOSAIC-VOA's radio magazine in Special English.
Remember to write us with your questions about
American life. We will try to answer them on future programs. Listeners
whose questions are chosen will receive a Random House Webster's College
Dictionary.
Send your questions to American Mosaic, Special
English, Voice of America, Washington, D.C., two-zero-two-three-seven,
USA. Or use a computer to e-mail your question to mosaic@voanews.com.
Please include your name and postal address. This AMERICAN MOSAIC program
was written by Jill Moss and Nancy Steinbach. Our studio engineer was
Tom Verba. And our producer was Paul Thompson.
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