Bad Weather Burlesque excites Fargo-Moorhead

Brittni Larson, MSUM Photojournalism

In the land of Minnesota nice, things that are sexually provocative are not always broadly accepted, but Bad Weather Burlesque is pushing those boundaries and exposing the Fargo-Moorhead community to the exciting world of burlesque.

For those of you out there who aren’t sure what burlesque is, it’s a humorous and provocative stage show featuring slapstick humor, comic skits, risqué songs, striptease acts, and a scantily clad female chorus.

What? Scantily clad provocative stage shows in Fargo-Moorhead? Is our quiet, mild mannered community ready for something like this? They sure are, Bad Weather Burlesque is gaining a fairly big following around the area.

This group of performers pushes the boundaries of what is socially acceptable for the area and loves showing off their talented group. Skits can range from a lady belting out a ballad to a guy dressed up as a unicorn and stripping down to his skivvies.

Bad Weather Burlesque doesn’t discriminate on gender; men and women are both welcome to perform. This helps them add variety to their shows and keeps the audience interested.

Bad Weather performs at multiple venues including private shows, events at the Plains Art Museum and now they perform weekly for ladies night at the Hub Entertainment Destination. They even performed at Grindfest, held at the Fargo Theatre. This year at Grindfest they played movie clips and trailers from the 40′s and 50′s that they lay new voices over the real ones. Usually the new voices make fun of the social norms back then, which is why Bad Weather Burlesque fits right it.

Randal Black was announcing Grindfest this year and was very excited to have Bad Weather performing this year.

“We are so lucky to have this group here performing tonight.” Said Black. “Bad Weather Burlesque is a unique group that is providing a very different form of entertainment for our area. You can’t even find this type of performance in the [Twin] Cities so we are grateful to have them in Fargo.”

Mixing burlesque and the grindhouse movies is something that is not normally done together but Black and the audience agreed that these two art forms fit together very well.

Bad Weather Burlesque is making a scene in Fargo Moorhead, and maybe expanding our social norms is exactly what the F-M area is looking for. Look’s like Bad Weather won’t be frowned upon this winter.

 

Orginal Ornberg: Fargo artist works in paint and fabric

Katherine Beneby, MSUM Mass Communications

Fargo, N.D. — She has traveled all over the U.S. to art festivals and indoor wholesale shows. Her passion and dedication led to her winning the National Watercolor Society art show in California.

Kay Ornberg is the former owner of Art Connection, at 520 Broadway downtown. She is now retired and focusing on her family, as well as working at her home studio

The road to becoming an artist

Ornberg realized from a young age that art was her calling. She vividly remembers as “a small child, my family and I lived close to North Dakota Sate University.

There was a preschool art class for maybe a week and they enrolled me in that. I would walk from my house to NDSU. … In order for me to get there and not get lost I would follow my big tall neighbor who was college student at NDSU.”

Rising above her competitors

One of Ornberg’s proudest moments was participating in the National Watercolor Society show in California.

Ornberg explains her work

Ornberg explains her work displayed in her store before closing September 2012.

“This show was the only one of its kind that featured just watercolor paintings,” she said.

She was very interested, so she entered and was accepted. There was great competition, but Ornberg did not let that deter her.

She giggled and said, “We always had a joke as artists. We’d send our information in an envelope; we had to include a self addressed stamped envelope so when they rejected you it would come back in your envelope with your hand writing and so you knew that it was a rejection.

But this time it was in a different envelope and so I thought, ‘Is this going to be it?’ and they accepted the painting. So I shipped it out there and then I won first place which was unbelievable for a young mother in Fargo, North Dakota.”

Ornberg’s adversity with nude paintings

Ornberg, who had already obtained an art degree from Concordia College in Moorhead, Minn., had an open invitation by a professor who taught life drawing classes at Minnesota State University. She was welcome to be part of his classes anytime. This is where she started to paint nude models.

Nude painting

During Ornberg’s closing out sale, there were still nude paintings available for purchase.

“I realized that we were too conservative here (in Fargo-Moorhead),” Ornberg said. “They were too hard to sell here, but I did have my work in galleries in Minneapolis, Chicago and even there they would choose the floral or whatever over the nudes.”

Ornberg experienced adversity for her bold paintings.

“I had my exhibit covered with bed sheets in South Dakota and the work removed from an exhibit and put into a closet at MeritCare (Clinic) in Fargo,” said Ornberg in an article in Arts Pulse newspaper.

Ornberg’s handmade clothing line

With an innovative mind, Ornberg is constantly thinking of new things. She grew up sewing and this propelled her to design her own clothing line, “Kay Louise.”

Ornberg’s handmade clothing

Ornberg’s handmade clothing is great for winter.

Ornberg had a fairly good experience traveling to exhibitions.

“I thought it unbelievable that I am doing this.  I had one flat tire once. Nobody tried to run me off the road or break in. Oh, I did have a sewing machine stolen out of the back of my vehicle that was in Philadelphia,” she said.

Retiring business owner

As Ornberg got older, she realized that she needed a permanent location to sell her products. The art festivals and exhibitions were great exposure, but she desired to have a location that was air-conditioned. This would allow people to try on her clothing regardless of the weather. With this in mind, she decided to move to downtown Fargo that is about 40 miles away from her home.

She opened her business, “Art Connection” at 520 downtown Broadway.

Ornberg is now at a new phase of her life. She gave up her title as a business owner at the end of September to enjoy painting in her new studio located on her property. She looks forward to spending more time with her husband.

The look of happiness

The look of happiness: Ornberg is set for a new journey to retirement.

“My husband is retired and I should have been retired so we plan on doing more traveling,” Ornberg said. With a smirk on her face she added, “I’ll have to do more of the chores around the house I guess.”

A new journey unfolds

Ornberg recently moved to Rollag, Minn., and she loves the scenery of the farm fields, trees, hills and wildlife.

“What I am going to do is use my watercolor paper that I’ve already painted on with the transparent watercolor and a lot of those are figurative work so I’m painting landscapes over the previous paintings and then when I find the parts that I want to save, I’m going to try to include that in some kind of mysterious way into the new painting,” she said.

Those interested in viewing more of Ornberg’s work, can visit her website.

 

Artists open their studios, share their stories

Charly Haley, MSUM Multimedia Journalism

Paint in Paul Allen’s downtown Fargo studio.

FARGO, N.D. – Artists of the Red River Valley showed their colors this past weekend by opening their studios to the public during the ninth annual Studio Crawl.

A variety of mediums were showcased at 40 studio locations, some of which featured multiple artists. The art mediums included stained glass, painting, ceramics, photography, drawing and more. Many of the artists also displayed works in progress.

She ‘paints everything’

Painter Kim Jore explains her community paint project to studio-crawlers visiting her Moorhead, Minn., studio.

One artist who displayed a work in progress was Kim Jore of Riverzen Art Studio in downtown Moorhead, Minn.

Jore, a painter, had a partially completed mural of a Fargo skyline on the back wall of her studio for art-crawlers to see.

“I paint everything,” Jore said, “from abstract, to landscape, to portraits.” She said she’s most complimented on the range of her work.

Paintings at Kim Jore’s studio in Moorhead, Minn.

There was also a painting station for visitors at Jore’s studio to try their own hands at the artist’s craft. She had a large sheet of paper for people to “make their mark” with the paint and brushes that were available. As an art teacher, Jore likes the idea of people adding to a community painting.

“I guess my mission is to teach people what I know and show people what I can do,” Jore said.

This was Jore’s sixth year in the Studio Crawl.

Mark Bratlie (left), a stained glass artist, explains the Studio Crawl brochure to two visitors at his downtown Fargo studio.

He ‘wandered into it’

Across the river in downtown Fargo, Mark Bratlie works with stained glass at Turtle Shell Stained Glass Studio. He’s participated in the Studio Crawl for three years.

“I don’t really have an art background, so I kind of just wandered into it and fell in love with it,” Bratlie said. His first stained glass project was a window for his sister’s house.

A workspace in Mark Bratlie’s downtown Fargo art studio.

“The first one took a long time because I wasn’t familiar with it,” Bratlie said. He’s been making stained glass panels for about 30 years now.

Bratlie recently retired from his job as a school teacher and as a result has even more time to spend on his art.

Student studios opened

Another downtown stop on the Studio Crawl was North Dakota State University’s Renaissance Hall.

Matt Moeckel, an North Dakota State University student, fuels the fire of NDSU’s recently completed wood kiln.

The NDSU art building featured the former NDSU Student Art Society, now known as A.R.T. – an acronym that NDSU art senior Dave Savageau said doesn’t stand for anything specific, but rather whatever people want it to stand for.

Art studios throughout Renaissance Hall were open. The NDSU art students and faculty were also debuting a wood kiln, complete with demonstrations for studio-crawlers.

NDSU art graduate Meg Roberts said the kiln had been under construction for the past seven or eight years, and was finished this summer.

He regained energy

While painter Paul Allen may not be studying art in school like the NDSU students, he says he’s always learning.

Painter Paul Allen discusses his work with two visitors at his downtown Fargo art studio.

Allen has been part of the Studio Crawl since its inception in 2004. He only skipped one crawl in 2007 when he was taking a break from painting to create ink drawings.

“I kind of ran out of steam painting,” Allen said. He explained that as he experimented with drawing, he regained energy as an artist.

A painting in Fargo painter Paul Allen’s workspace.

“You don’t always know what’s truly important to you until you do something that shows you,” he said.

As a product of that one- to two-year break from painting, Allen now has 25 ink drawings to add to his vast artists’ collection. Much of his art collection was displayed at his downtown Fargo studio during the art crawl.

Artists appreciate the crawl

In addition to the open art studios, there were also many events during the weekend associated with the Studio Crawl, like a beer tasting, a brunch and a book signing.

Glass in Mark Bratlie’s downtown Fargo studio.

Many artists are appreciative of the Studio Crawl.

“It just gets people thinking about art in the F-M area,” Bratlie said.

The Studio Crawl is organized by Fargo Moorhead Visual Artists and has many sponsors.

Pinterest board curated by Charly Haley

Photos by Becki DeGeest and Charly Haley

 

Creation and community: Midwest Mud – an artist collective

Text and photos by Zach Kobrinsky

Additional text by Nishesh Sharma

Public outreach, pickled fawns, costume-craving electricians and full frontal nudity. What do these phrases have in common? Well, they are all necessary ingredients in creating an artist collective.

Midwest Mud (213 NP Ave N) has been around for about a year now, serving as a physical space for artists to create, as well as a community to encourage creativity and public outreach in visual arts.

Amber Parsons is the sole proprietor of the physical space, as well as the founder of the artist collective that resides there. According to Parsons, she created this space out of artistic necessity.

Amber Parsons demonstrates what melted ceramics look like.

Inception of a community
“I needed a space to work after I graduated, and I found this building. I just graduated two months prior to opening this space,” Parsons said.

Parsons believes that Fargo-Moorhead has very few outlets that encourage artistic output outside of the academic arena. You graduate with an art degree from one of our local universities… then what?

“(Creating the space), it was really quick,” Parsons said. “Everybody was shocked. I kept saying I was going to do it, and then all of a sudden I just did it.”

Parsons personally funded the physical space. After that, it was just a matter of finding artists to occupy it for a nominal fee — both to create a necessary outlet for upcoming artists as well as to recoup some of her own financial investment, although she said she prefers not to think about it as a financial endeavor. Creating a collective was and still remains the primary objective.

One of the settings for a modeling session.

The creative value of nude modeling
Nude portraiture has become a standard learning experience for an artist’s education. According to Parsons, not only do the observer/artists gain insight, but the model can gain insight during the process as well.

“I spend a lot of time modeling for the school (NDSU),” she said, “so I’d spend that time kind of organizing my thoughts… either thinking about how I was going to organize it (the collective) or what I wanted to do with it.”

Now the tradition of nude portraiture is being taken to a new level at Midwest Mud. According to Parsons, your typical art classroom nude modeling setup is quite plain and boring. So, the Collective hosts nude modeling sessions involving more elaborate and intriguing staging.


Improving the artists’ network
The ultimate goal of Midwest Mud is improve the F-M art scene at large. There will be another art collective opening up in the near future called The Station. Are these two collectives bitter competitors? Absolutely not. According to Parsons, she has been assisting The Station in the process of establishing itself.

“We’re going to start something called The Artnership,” Parsons said, “and we’re going to try and unite all the studios, like even the Roberts Street Studio. For one, for communicating with one another. Like if I want to do a class here, so we’re not offering the same classes at the same time to give more opportunities to people….

“I actually feel like this place is more about networking for artists. It’s people doing art and stuff, but learning how to use your networking skills is what this place is about really.”

Andrew Hanson, an art student from the area said, “These kind of co-ops are nothing but good news for our community. It gives us a place and a medium to learn to make better art and also provides a chance for us to meet and network with other artists.”

The pickled fawn.

Working with trade
In the spirit of the collective, a lot of what exists within its walls comes from collaboration — from trade, more specifically.

The electrician who did a lot of work on the space, for example, was paid in a roundabout trade.

“I threw my first show for Christy Bakke,” Parsons said. “She helps run Revolver. She’s a fashion major and she didn’t get a senior show, so I threw her a senior show here in trade that she would… my electrician who does all my electrical work — he likes costumes. So I made her trade him for… I kind of made her make him a costume. So I paid him with a costume….”

In addition to the electric upkeep of the space, one of the more notable points of interest Parsons acquired through trade. The pickled fawn pictured above was the result of such a deal. A friend of Parsons, knowing that she had experience as a taxidermist and that she had an interest in such trinkets, gave her the fawn-in-a-jar in exchange for some of her ceramic works.

The graphic designer, Andy Bissonette, who created the Midwest Mud logo was hired through trade as well.

“Almost everything I have here I’ve gotten through trade,” Parsons said. “When you’re an artist, you don’t have a lot of money.” She then laughed at that sentiment.

Parsons demonstrates where the antlers will be placed on her work in progress.

Giving art to the masses
Another goal of Midwest Mud and the artists involved with it is to create more public works. As of right now, the only real public art we see around F-M are the buffaloes sporadically scattered about town.

“The buffaloes aren’t really that satisfying,” Parsons said. “To me, personally, they’re barely a public… they’re weird and they just… they made all these buffaloes, and because they didn’t want anyone touching them, they put them inside of buildings. Stratero has like four of the buffalos… I don’t know, I just feel like public art is meant to be more inviting. You’re supposed to interact with it. That’s something the artist should’ve thought through when they created them I guess.”

In response to the notion that more accessible public art is subject to vandalism, Parsons replied, “When someone’s vandalizing artwork like that, they’re like kids in a China store. Because they haven’t experienced it, they haven’t developed a respect for it. Like my mom, when I take her to gallery openings, she touches everything. But now that she’s been to a few of them she doesn’t pick up the pieces of art (anymore).”

Parsons couldn’t help but chuckle as she reminisced over her mother’s handling of art. “So it’s kind of like training your society to appreciate it a little more,” she continued, “by allowing people to interact with it.”

A painting by Wade Myszka.

Keeping artists focused
In addition to providing space for artists, Midwest Mud and the collective at large also provides motivation for artists.

According to Parsons, “We do critiques here of people’s work. Also I try to have them write contracts for me saying that they’re going to produce this work within this amount of time. Because that’s what you do naturally in a college setting to get motivation, and I find that people really lose that motivation. Self motivation, they have to learn how to do that themselves, but if you give them some sort of structure they’re setting their own goals.”

The contracts Parsons implements are not as severe as they may initially sound. Realistically, the only consequence for defaulting on your agreement is guilt. But according to Parsons, that’s enough to keep a number of artists motivated. The artists involved with the collective also have regular group critiques and meetings to discuss their work.

A painting by Parsons.

Current artists utilizing Midwest Mud space:
- Sara Schawn
- Mike Weiss
- Mike Nelson
- Nichole Lamb
- Tess Peckly
- Amber Parsons

For the record

A pensive grin forms on Alex Stillman’s face as she peruses a bin of used records at Vintage Vinyl. She can be seen determinedly biting her lower lip as she makes her way through thousands of records. Stillman has been collecting vinyl for nearly ten years, an anomaly for most 22-year-olds even amidst the recent record-collecting boom.

Alex Stillman searches for a hidden gem

Records for a reason

“I started to buy records because the music I wanted to listen to wasn’t available in any other medium,” Stillman said, “And I continued to buy them for the superior sound quality, plus they used to be really cheap.”

New Territory

A native of Minneapolis, Minn., Stillman’s quench for records was easily quelled given the city’s many record stores that can be both astute and genre-specific. While visiting friends in Fargo, she takes the opportunity to cover new territory.

“Different towns offer a different variety,” Stillman said. “It’s fun to go through the bins at places you’ve never been to.”

Phat Kat Antiques

Stop number one

Phat Kat Antiques and Vintage Vinyl looks nothing more than a quaint, steel-sided warehouse from the outside. A few seemingly vintage items near the building’s entrance begin to hint that something unconventional lies through the door. The store within serves as a pseudo museum of items running the gamut of pop culture and war memorabilia and everything in between.

Stillman hurriedly works her way through the “Punk/Alternative” section before owner Shannon Grindberg informs her that the “New Arrivals” section contains many more punk gems that he has not had time to sort yet.

Inside Phat Kat

Smart shopping

Within an hour Stillman had narrowed her gaze to three LPs: An original pressing of the self-titled debut by 80s British alt rockers The Smiths and original pressings of “Suck and Bloat” and “Pure Swank” by longtime Tampa, Flo., punks Pink Lincolns.

Because each release was near the $30 mark, she opted to go to a friend’s house to check the price estimations online before making the purchase.

“I found out the records were almost double the price,” Stillman said. “I went back to the store to try to bargain but didn’t get that far because it was the store’s policy to not accept out-of-state checks.”

Orange Records

Stop number two

A bit dejected, Stillman decided that Orange Records would be her next stop. Orange, opened in July 2007 by entrepreneur Matt Oland, caters to a younger generation with thousands of new records and CDs, while still carrying classic reissues and used selections. Orange also includes a considerable section focusing on local artists.

Inside Orange Records

Perceived differences

“I was more comfortable in Orange,” Stillman said. “I like their used section and I carried a conversation with the owner the whole time I was there.”

Stillman spent a combined $21 on two LPs at Orange. A repressing of paramount hardcore band Minor Threat’s “Complete Discography” LP on green vinyl, and a reissue of 60s garage purveyors The Sonics “Here Are the Sonics.”

Check out the stores yourself:

Orange Records

641 1st Ave. N Fargo

701-478-6240

www.facebook.com/orangerecordsfargo

Phat Kat Antiques & Vintage Vinyl

1501 1st Ave 
Fargo, ND 58103

701-367-5999

http://phatkatantiques.com/

Peelander-Z bewilder crowd

“How do you like your steak?”

“Medium rare!”

This exchange would generally indicate an overzealous customer’s preference of cooked meat at the Texas Roadhouse, but on Oct. 18, at The Aquarium in downtown Fargo, it meant something entirely different: Peelander-Z was in town.

Peelander-Z, a self-described “Japanese action comic punk band,” have carved a niche for themselves through outlandish performances complete with color-coded aliases, an array of costumes and contra dancing.

Galactical allegations

The band claims to be from the “Z area of Planet Peelander,” though members Kengo Hioki (AKA Peelander-Yellow, lead vocals and guitar) and Kotaro Tsukada (AKA Peelander-Red, bass and backing vocals) are natives of Japan. However, the band was formed in 1998 in New York City, where the group is still based. Akihiko Naruse (AKA Peelander-Green, drums) joined them on drums in July 2008 after former drummer Kazuki Yamamoto (AKA Peelander-Blue) left after being married.

FUP and The Guys collaborate

The locals are loko

To match Peelander’s absurdist behavior, local openers FUP and The Guys faced off in a “battle set.” After FUP, a duo that sings nonsensical lyrics over simplistic and pre-recorded music, performed one of their original songs, The Guys would immediately follow them and cover the same song with live instruments in a typical four-piece band arrangement. At the end of the battle the two groups collaborated for a final number…another FUP song. Hilarity was high even before Peelander took the stage near midnight.

Let the games begin

From the onset, Peelander was successful in making a crowd of about 30 feel five times as big. Simple dancing and hand motions gave way to full-fledged chaos. Peelander-Green stood on the drums with a tag board sign that read “Mad Tiger” and soon after Peelander-Red slipped into a giant squid costume and jumped into the crowd. Peelander-Yellow followed suit, purveyor of the all mighty tiger mask. Peelander-Green and Peelander-Yellow then incited a game of limbo with the audience, walking back and forth between the walls with a length of an unknown material, likely from the Z area of Planet Peelander.

Raucous not righteous

Peelander’s merchandise seller, presumably Peelander-Pink, joined the lone touring guitarist on stage as the three official Peelandarians spurred the crowd into a dancing circle, part bunny hop, part drunken stumble.

Peelander-Red avoided the confines of the stage for over half the set by using a wireless guitar system. The dancing circle converged on Red and the raucous crowd lifted him within inches of the ceiling.

The band powered through gimmicky and hilariously titled songs after Peelander-Red returned to the stage. They remained onstage for an amazing (for them) ten minutes blazing through such anomalies as “Ninja High School,” “Super Health” and the aforementioned “S.T.E.A.K.”

More Hijinks

More tag board signs were held up signaling their final act. A sign reading “Guitarist needed” was followed by similar signs substituting “Guitarist” with “Bassist” and “Drummer,” respectively. Members of FUP and The Guys were called onstage to fill in on the instruments as the Peelander-Yellow transformed via costume into a human bowling pin while Peelander-Red returned to his role as the giant squid.

FUP filling in for Peelander-Z

A precarious game of “human bowling” followed. Ten pins were set up on the floor below the front of the stage. The crowd cheered as the giant squid rolled through the pins, a perfect strike, and the human bowling pin jumped fervently, blinded by the costume.

Bemusement at bar close

The Peelandarians distributed drumsticks and aluminum bowls to the crowd and returned to the stage to play their final song. The crowd, bemused and merry, banged along to the final notes, honorary members of the Z area of Planet Peelander.