Fire Arts Festival Artists & Performers
2018-03-15T13:27:56-07:00
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Amanda Palmer
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BlackKMahal
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Amanda Palmer
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BlackKMahal
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| Saturday & Sunday, December 15 & 16, 2007 10AM to 4PM • FREE ADMISSION!
Hot for the Holidays!Whatever holiday you celebrate, spark it up with a visit to The Crucible’s Holiday Gifty celebration. Shop for unique and affordable gifts created by over 75 Bay Area artisans, and experience the excitement of our 56,000 sq. ft. studio, where furnaces roar and sparks fly.
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FREE shuttle service will be available from West Oakland BART to the Fire Arts Arena and back!
Youth will not be allowed on shuttles unless accompanied by an adult.
Bicycle parking will also be available. Bicyclists must provide their own lock.
Driving Directions to the NEW Fire Arts Arena: 2020 Engineer Road, Oakland, CA
From The Crucible (2.6 miles) (Good directions for bicyclists)
– Head west on 7th St toward BART
– Turn right at Mandela Pkwy
– Turn left at West Grand Ave
– Turn right at Wake Ave. to enter the Fire Arts Arena
– Free parking on your leftFrom Contra Costa – Hwy 24 W
– Take Hwy 24 West towards Oakland
– Exit I-580 West (as if you are going to SF)
– Merge left onto I-80 West (again like you’re heading to SF)
– Immediately begin merging to the right to the West Grand Ave/Maritime St exit
(NOTE: THIS IS LAST OAKLAND EXIT and you will go up and over the toll booths)
– Continue straight down a long exit ramp
– Turn left at Maritime St/Wake Ave (under freeway) and into the Arena area
– Free parking on your leftFrom San Francisco
– Continue on I-80 East over the Bay Bridge
– Slight right at CA-880 South (signs for San Jose/I-880/Alameda/OAK Airport)
– Take the Maritime St exit toward West Grand Ave (Oakland Army Base)
– Continue straight
– Turn left at Maritime St/Wake Ave (under freeway)
– Free parking on your leftFrom the Peninsula/US-101 N
– Take US-101 North
– Continue on I-80 East over Bay Bridge
– Slight right at CA-880 South (signs for San Jose/I-880/Alameda/OAK Airport)
– Take the Maritime St exit toward West Grand Ave (Oakland Army Base)
– Continue straight down long ramp
– Turn left at Maritime St/Wake Ave (under freeway) into Arena area
– Free parking on your leftFrom San Rafael/Richmond – I-580 E
– Take I-580 East through Berkeley (merges with I-80)
– Stay in middle lanes to Take the I-880 exit toward San Jose/Alameda/OAK Airport
– Take exit 44, West Grand Ave toward 7th St
– Turn right at West Grand Ave
– Turn right at Wake Ave into Arena area
– Free parking on your leftFrom South Bay – I-880 N
– Take I-880 North through Oakland
– Take the 7th St exit toward West Grand Ave
– Merge onto (unmarked) Frontage Rd (signs for West Grand Ave)
– Turn left at West Grand Ave
– Turn right at Wake Ave into Arena area
– Free parking on your leftDirections to Your Phone:
For directions from your location to us from your phone:
– Dial DIR-ECT-IONS (347-328-4667)
– Select “Event” from main menu
– Say “Fire Arts Festival”
– Say your starting point (it can be an address or an intersection)
– That’s it! Driving directions are instantly sent via text message to your cell phoneParking:
We have limited parking available in two lots. One lot is FREE parking and located on your left as you turn onto Wake Avenue. The second lot is a Paid VIP parking for $10.00 further down on the right.

The Crucible’s 7th Annual Fire Arts Festival set West Oakland ablaze and transformed the vacant lot at Kirkham St. and 7th St. into a Fire Arts Arena with a four-day run from Wednesday, July 11th, to Saturday, July 14th, 2007.
Designed and produced by The Crucible’s Founder and Executive Director, Michael Sturtz, the annual celebration of fire and light featured an amazing cast of dancers and performers reflecting the diversity of the Bay Area’s arts community — from classically trained ballet dancers to hip-hop artists, musicians, outrageous fire artists and performers, and The Crucible’s own faculty of blacksmiths, metal casters, and glassworkers.
The festival showcased kinetic and fire art pieces, with over 30 installation artists contributing to the event’s success. Many of the kinetic fire sculptures, like the 168-foot long Serpent Mother, created by arts collective The Flaming Lotus Girls, which encouraged hands-on participation like controlling propane jets. Another interactive display, Dance Dance Immolation, by Interpretive Arson, challenged participants to match on-screen dance steps – with the penalty for a misstep being a blast of fire to the face (fortunately dancers were suited up in Nomex firefighter suits prior to testing their skills).


Ever raising the bar for “flameboyance,” this year Michael Sturtz added something new: The Fire Odyssey, an 11-act modernized interpretation of Homer’s epic poem, performed nightly. Blending industrial fire theatre with ballet, opera, hip hop, aerial dance, fire performance and more, The Fire Odyssey brought together an amazing cast of internationally recognized dancers and performers to create one of the most technically ambitious and visually stunning productions seen in the Bay Area.
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Opera singer Aimee Puentes sang the role of Penelope, and Easton Smith, who played Romeo in The Crucible’s production of Romeo & Juliet—A Fire Ballet, returned as Odysseus. Mongolian contortionist Byamba Serchmaa played Circe, who tried to seduce Odysseus; members of the renowned hip-hop troupe Flavor Group played Odysseus’ men. The acrobatic team of Realis, made up of gold medalists and world champion gymnasts Shenea Booth and Arthur Davis, performed the production’s amazing finale, with original live music provided by Mark Growden and a hand-picked ensemble.
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The saga of Odysseus took place on an enormous 58 foot wide stage, complete with a thousand-gallon “sea;” a colossal Rube Goldberg style system of stairs, ramps
INDUSTRIAL CHIC Fashion + Art Show and Preview Open House, Art & Fashion Exhibition, and Rusty Elephant Sale Friday Night On April 13th, 2007, The Crucible presented the hottest of haute couture in a fashion show of wearable art made from repurposed materials. The evening’s entertainment included a fabulous art show, a preview of The Crucible’s Rusty Elephant Sale (an unparalleled source of donated industrial surplus), and, of course, fire performance. Performances by: Music by: Halon Lighting by: reFRACTion and Lauren McCullough
Saturday and Sunday On April 14 and 15, The Crucible welcomed spring with an open house and art show that included wearable art. Industrial surplus was on sale at our Rusty Elephant Sale and demonstrations of industrial arts showed how you could turn that surplus into art of your own. Admission free for all.
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Rusty Elephant Sale featured:
• Industrial Surplus Other activities included: • Bicycle Fix-a-thon on Sunday |
Beverly Pepper
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| As guests watched eagerly, the molten metal began to flow, illuminating the night with a lambent glow. Beverly stood front and center, watching as her piece became reality. The pour culminated with Executive Director Michael Sturtz welcoming Beverly to the Bay Area, and thanking the guests for their support of The Crucible. As the metal cooled in the mold, the audience moved to the lecture hall for the main feature of the evening, a retrospective lecture by Beverly.
The lecture was the second in The Crucible’s Legends of Sculpture lecture series, a lively program featuring world-renowned artists who present their work and answer questions about the processes and techniques they use to produce their art. Beverly showed slides illuminating her work from the beginning of her career to present day. Over 150 members of the community came to hear her speak, and Beverly’s engaging and warm presentation offered insight and advice from over 40 years of her very active career as an artist. With anecdotes about the early days working in the steel industry, to inside views about the thought processes, planning, creative thinking and fabrication challenges inherent in creating large-scale public art, Beverly held the audience enthralled with slides from locations throughout the world where her monumental, site-specific works enhance public squares, parks, sculpture gardens and busy walkways. Beverly’s outdoor environmental projects are a collaboration with the landscape and are | |
ALBERT PALEYSunday, October 27, 2002 “When I started doing iron, all of a sudden it was a revelation…it became my vehicle for exploration.”Born in Philadelphia in 1944 and internationally acclaimed as a metalsmith artist, Albert Paley is particularly known for his work with ferrous metals as architectural ornamentation. During his thirty-year career, he has moved from jewelry to decorative arts to architectural adornment to sculpture, and is often identified as one of the artists responsible for breaking the boundaries between sculpture, design, and the crafts. Albert will show images of his work and discuss the diversity and significance of his prolific creations in metal. Albert first came to prominence as one of the leading craft jewelers in the United States, but it was his twin foundation of jewelry and metalwork that has forged his legendary career as a metal worker, blacksmith, monumental sculptor or simpley “Master of Metal.” His most famous commission: the portal gates of the Renwick Gallery at The National Museum of American Art at the Smithsonian Institution, Washington D.C. is a testament to masterful design, skill and ability. ABOUT ALBERT PALEY Paley exhibits nationally and internationally; his work can be found in museums around the world in places such as the the British Museum, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, The Fitzwilliam Museum at Cambridge University, the Columbus Museum of Art, the Smithsonian Institute, the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, and the White House. Commissioned works are located at Bausch and Lomb’s headquarters in Rochester, and a new courthouse in San Francisco. Paley’s honors include the American Institute of Architects Award of Excellence and honorary Doctorates of Fine Arts from State University of New York at Brockport, St. Lawrence University in Canton, New York, and the University of Rochester, Rochester, New York. In 1997 Paley received the Masters of the Medium award from the Smithsonian Institute. |
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PRESTON JACKSONFigures, Monuments, Steel & SocietyFigurative Metal Sculpture & the Dialogue of TeachingSunday, July 28, 2002, 7:30 – 9:30pm Preston Jackson, a leading Chicago artist and educator, is a prime example of an established artist who is exceedingly generous in devoting his time to teaching others, and who seeks to make art accessible to all. Jackson’s bronze figurative work, monumental steel sculpture and small abstract pieces reflect his concerns about the direction society is taking; common themes include protests against war, racism, sexism, violence and injustice. One of Jackson’s major pieces is Bronzeville to Harlem, a large-scale work depicting the heyday of the Harlem Renaissance period. Bronzeville to Harlem consists of 300 small bronze figures in an 125-foot neighborhood of approximately 30 buildings; the painted steel and cast bronze installation continuously evolves with new ideas and images, kinetics, sound and lighting. Join us for a presentation of his work, a discussion about how his teaching philosophy both engages his students and invigorates his art, and a demonstration of his metalworking techniques and processes. Jackson’s commissioned works include “Let’s Play Two”, a sculpture of Ernie Banks at the Chicago ESPNZone; the Martin Luther King Memorial Bust in Danville, IL; a memorial sculpture at the Fire Training Academy, Peoria, IL; and a memorial sculpture to Frederick Douglass in the Champaign Public Library, Champaign, IL. Monumental works include the bronze building façade and entry doors at the Cahokia Mounds Museum, Cahokia Mounds, IL. He is represented in numerous collections, including Purdue University, the Union League Club, Illinois State Museum and the University of Illinois. Jackson earned a B.F.A. in painting at Southern Illinois University in 1969, and an M.F.A in sculpture from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1971. He taught at Millikin University and Western Illinois University before joining the faculty of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. From 1994 to 1996, Jackson was the Chair of the Sculpture Department, and currently serves as the Head of the Figurative Area. In 1998, Jackson was chosen as Laureate of the Lincoln Academy of Illinois, the highest honor given to individuals in the State. Learn more about Preston Jackson at www.artic.edu/~pjacks. |
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NED KAHN
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The Crucible hosted lively lecture series, featuring artists, artisans and tradespeople who present their work and answer questions about the processes and techniques they use to produce their art.
Lectures were held on Sunday evenings, and provide the opportunity to hear from creatives on the vanguard of arts and industry today.

Beverly Pepper: Sculpture, Abstraction, Steel & Environment

Preston Jackson: Figures, Monuments, Steel & Society
Ned Kahn: Art, Science and Creation through Chaos
Michael Hayden: The Art of Luminosity & Light
Lanny Silverman: Kinetic Art and Art & Technology – from a Curator’s Viewpoint
Alleghany Meadows: Rhythm, Labor, & Form: Utilitarian Pottery
Susan Kingsley: Metalsmithing & Postmodern Alchemy
Mike Hill: Monuments of Stone, Metal & Cement
LANNY SILVERMAN
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ALLEGHANY MEADOWSRhythm, Labor, & Form: Utilitarian PotteryCeramic sculptureFebruary 24, 2002, 6:30 – 8:30pm Alleghany Meadows seeks alchemy in clay. Join him as he discusses how he uses the plasticity and subtle responses of the medium to create objects that are intimately connected through size, form and surface to both the human body and to nature. His lecture will focus on the creative process within the context of utilitarian pottery, and how his studies in Nepal and Japan have influenced his work. Alleghany Meadows is a studio potter in Carbondale, Colorado. He earned an MFA from Alfred University and a BA from Pitzer College in California. Alleghany studied indigenous pottery in Nepal as a Watson Fellow, and apprenticed in Japan to Karatsu potter Takashi Nakazato. He has taught workshops and lectures at Penland, Greenwich House Pottery, Oregon School of Arts and Crafts, and the Mendocino Arts Center. His work is collected and exhibited nationally, and has been featured in over thirty group and solo shows. Learn more about Alleghany Meadows at www.art-stream.com. |
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SUSAN KINGSLEY
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