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| DATE: |
September
9, 2005 |
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| FOR RELEASE: |
Immediate |
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| CONTACT: |
Arlene
Carollo (97) 377-3300; ACarolloZGF@optonline.net |
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Emmy Award Nominated State
of the Arts
Launches a New Season on NJN
STATEWIDE – NJN’s State
of the Arts begins its fall season on September 30
with new episodes and a repeat performance of an Emmy-nominated
program. The award-winning, half-hour arts magazine will
air every Friday at 8:30 pm, followed by an encore presentation
each Wednesday at 11:30 pm. The program on September
30 will have an additional airtime later that same evening
at 11:30 pm.
NJN gives viewers
of State of the Arts the opportunity to begin their
weekends with a first-run and first-rate, in-depth focus
on the arts. Over the years, the show has earned 23 Regional
Emmy Awards and was recently nominated for four Mid-Atlantic
Emmys. Awards will be announced in Philadelphia on September
17, 2005.
Many of this
season’s programs highlight fascinating places, cultural
performances and artworks to tour or visit. Armchair travelers
may be entertained in the comfort of their homes, while
others will be offered insights into some of New Jersey’s
most interesting locations before they venture out and
see these for themselves.
The season opens
on September 30 (rebroadcast on October 5) with House & Garden,
featuring stories that find the artistic elements in four
New Jersey homes and gardens. State of the Arts visits
Luna Parc in Montague, an environmental sculpture park
created and maintained by artist/designer Ricky Boscarino,
and the two very different gardens in the Nutley homes
of Silas Mountsier and Graeme Hardie. The program also
brings the viewer to Morven, the historic house once belonging
to the Stockton family that became New Jersey’s Governor’s
Mansion and now is a museum. Finally, viewers visit the
country garden setting for New Jersey Shakespeare Festival’s
current production of The Importance of Being Earnest.
On October
7 and 12, State of the Arts presents Forces
of Nature, which focuses on man and his relationship
to nature, perhaps the first theme ever to appear in
art. The program profiles Robert Smithson and Thomas
George, artists whose works show two very different 20th
century variations on this theme. Viewers will also see
a preview of Miss Witherspoon, a satirical 21st century
look at forces beyond our control in a new play by Christopher
Durang, premiering at Princeton’s McCarter Theatre.
Classical Ladies,
a rare look at four internationally known classical soloists
and their music, will air on October 14 and 19.
The program features guitarist Sharon Isbin, violinist
Leila Josefowicz, mezzo-soprano Frederica von Stade, and
violinist Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg in stories that relate
the passionate connection each has to the music she plays.
The season continues with an encore performance of Out There on October 21
and 26, nominated for two 2005 Mid-Atlantic Emmys. The show itself was nominated
for outstanding Magazine Format Broadcast, and one of the stories, “Weird
New Jersey,” is vying for Outstanding Feature: Informational. Out There
looks at creative work that is devoted to the curious and fascinating — from
Weird New Jersey, a magazine and travel guide that has become a cult phenomenon,
to a story about artists who make robots that make art.
The month concludes
on October 28 and November 2 with an encore presentation
of The New American Art, which introduces artists
who bring a range of cultural backgrounds and experience
to their work — transforming what American art looks
like in the process. From the detailed paintings of Jewish
Indian artist Siona Benjamin, who puts ancient Hebrew figures
into modern day situations, to the fantastically detailed
weavings of Armando Sosa, a Guatemalan artist who is taking
his ancestral craft into the 21st century, New Jersey is
host to artists who are reinventing American art by infusing
it with traditions from around the world.
The current episode
of State of the Arts can be viewed online at www.njn.net.
Individual stories will be available to view online following
their broadcast by visiting the program online at State
of the Arts.
Funding for State
of the Arts is provided by the New Jersey State Council
on the Arts and the Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation. The
series producer is Susan Wallner and the executive producer
is Nila Aronow.
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