The Road to Mandalay

Weicholz Global Film Series presents
The Road to Mandalay

In Burmese with English subtitles
Myanmar/Thailand, Not Rated, Directed by Midi Z (2016), 108 min
Starring: Kai Ko (Guo), Ke-Xi Wu (Lianqing)

Two young Burmese immigrants flee their country’s civil war and desperate poverty to work illegally in Thailand. During their journey from Myanmar to Thailand, Guo falls in love with Lianqing. In Bangkok, they both find different ways to make enough money to realize their dreams. Guo gets a job at his cousin’s textile factory while Lianqing works 14-hour days washing dishes.  Having found work, Lianqing focuses her efforts on acquiring an illegal Thai ID card. When she achieves this goal, the young couple’s relationship is in question.

ENGAGE WITH FILM CURATOR JOHN PFEIFER
1. Read his The Road to Mandalay lecture HERE.
2. Read about this year’s theme, Human Migration Stories from Around the World, in his essay HERE.
3. Q&A with Dr. Pfeifer: If you have questions or comments after viewing The Road to Mandalay, submit them HERE and Dr. Pfeifer will be happy to respond. His responses will be posted within the document. 

Other films in the series include:
Quo Vadis, Aida?
Transit
Complicity

LOCATIONS:
Virtual stream: A private link to access the film will be emailed to registrants one hour prior to the event time. The link will be valid for 24 hours, expiring on July 15 at 7pm.

Run Time: 108 minutes

FOR MORE INFORMATION: Contact the Box Office at
theschaefercenter@appstate.edu
800-841-2787 or 828-262-4046.

TICKETS:
$5 per household

SHOWTIME:
Wednesday, July 14, 2021 | 7pm ET (virtual)

Q&A with DR. JOHN PFEIFER

If you have questions or comments after viewing THE ROAD TO MANDALAY, please submit them HERE and Dr. Pfeifer will be happy to respond. Select questions and answers will be posted directly to this event page.

Canadian Brass

REVIEWS


“A deceptively gentle account of the romance between two illegal immigrants in Thailand slowly builds into a moving portrait of the hardships they face and the impossible obstacles to their pursuit of happiness. Simplicity proves to be the greatest strength of a film that grows more involving as it unfolds and will consolidate Midi Z’s status as one of the rising stars of Asian cinema.” Screen Daily

“Thanks to Midi Z’s brilliant command of visual metaphors and compassion for his subjects, [Mandalay] is elevated into an unnervingly immediate portrait of the human cost of displacement.” CineVue

“Compassionate and honestly told, it is a real empathy machine of a movie. And, of course, you can’t watch it without thinking of the desperate plight of Burma’s Rohingya Muslims.” The Guardian

“Taiwan-based Burmese filmmaker Midi Z produces his best work yet with The Road to Mandalay. … Midi Z has delivered a tightly edited and emotionally rewarding drama that places him in the top rank of Asian social realists.” Variety

AWARDS

Best Director at the Asia-Pacific Film Festival (2018); Winner of the Press Award for Best Film at the Taipei Film Festival; Best Actor, Best Screenplay and Top 10 Films at the To Ten Chinese Film Festival (2017); The Fedeora Award for Best Film at the Venice Film Festival (2016); as well as 21 nominations for other major film awards. 

Where are the birds? Retracing Audubon: Artwork by Krista Elrick

The Lunch and Learn Lecture Series features interesting and informative virtual programming that provides a behind-the-scenes view of the festival’s offerings in the visual arts, music, theater and dance.

Where are the birds? Retracing Audubon is an exhibition and book project reexamining John James Audubon’s epic life journey and the production of his hugely popular Birds of America. Elrick retraced Audubon’s journeys to learn more about him and what had happened to the birds, animals, communities and landscapes he traveled through. Much to her surprise, she found the lushly forested watersheds and waterways that Audubon had passionately described in his journals vastly altered with many of the bird species extinct and their supporting habitat all but disappeared. Wishing to pay homage to what had been lost, Elrick made dozens of black-and-white images of the country she traveled through as it looks now, some 170 years later. Elrick’s book, A Country No More: Rediscovering the Landscape of John James Audubon is a fascinating volume that gives us a fresh and provocative perspective not only on the changing American landscape, but on Audubon himself, his times, and his enduring legacy.

This presentation will be in panel discussion format with panelists Krista Elrick, Mary Anne Redding and Gregory Nobles.

Visit the TCVA website for more information about Elrick’s exhibition at the TCVA.

LOCATION: Virtual via Zoom Webinar

DATE/TIME: Tuesday, July 12 at Noon

LENGTH OF EVENT: 90 minutes

COST: Event is FREE; registration required

FOR MORE INFORMATION: Contact the Turchin Center for Visual Arts at turchincenter@appstate.edu or 828-262-3017.

ACCOMMODATION STATEMENT: Appalachian is committed to providing an inclusive experience for individuals with disabilities. If accommodations are needed in order to fully participate on the basis of a disability contact the Office of Disability Resources (828.262.3056). It is recommended that accommodation requests be made two weeks prior to the event.

About the Artist and Panelists


 

Anna Deveare Smith
Photographer Krista Elrick has been an exhibiting artist and activist for more than 35 years. She has worked with scientists and Indigenous peoples throughout her career, all of whom have helped her to reframe and refine her ideas about environmental and cultural change. Elrick is interested in the changes that have occurred in natural ecosystems over prolonged periods of time as a direct result of human intrusion into the landscape. Film-based, in-camera exposures, combined with silver gelatin prints, are the foundation of her creative work.  While her photographic process is rooted in the 19th century, it is today’s wetlands, forests, and watersheds that serve as her backdrop. In tandem, migratory birds and the ecosystems that sustain them are the focus of her current body of work. She sees these once harmonious relationships as disrupted. Because of this disruption, she photographs the land in fragments and then construct collages to create newly pieced dynamics.

Elrick’s recent projects include Grasslands/Separating Species, with photographs by Krista Elrick, Dana Fritz, David Taylor, Jo Whaley, and Michael Berman with essays by Mary Anne Redding, William deBuys, and Rebecca Solnit (Radius Books 2010) in conjunction with an exhibition at 516 ARTS in Albuquerque; and Imagine a City that Remembers: The Albuquerque Rephotography Project, by Anthony Anella and Mark Childs, foreword by V. B. Price, photographs by Krista Elrick (University of New Mexico Press 2018). Elrick received an MFA from Arizona State University in 1990 and now lives and works in Santa Fe, New Mexico. A Country No More is her first solo book.

Anna Deveare Smith
Mary Anne Redding has more than 35 years’ experience working as a curator, archivist, librarian, educator, arts administrator, and writer. She received a B.A. in English literature from Ohio University, an M.A. in arts administration from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, an M.L.S. from the University of Illinois, as well as an advanced certificate in museum studies from Arizona State University.

Recent exhibitions include Where Are the Birds? Retracing Audubon: Artwork by Krista Elrick (2021), Creative Democracy: The Legacy of Black Mountain College (2018), Art from Down Under: Australia to New Zealand (2018), and Collective Vigilance: Speaking for the New River (2017), all at the Turchin Center for the Visual Arts at Appalachian State University; Contemplative Landscape at the New Mexico History Museum in Santa Fe (2011–2012); and A Passionate Light: The SX-70 Polaroids of H. Joe Waldrum at the Albuquerque Museum of Art and History and the New Mexico History Museum (2011).

Her publications include Gila, with photographer Michael Berman (Museum of New Mexico Press, 2012), and, with Krista Elrick, Through the Lens: Creating Santa Fe (Museum of New Mexico Press 2009), which accompanied the exhibition of the same name at the Palace of the Governors/New Mexico History Museum.

Formerly the chief curator of the Turchin Center for the Visual Arts at Appalachian State University in Boone, North Carolina, and curator for the Marion Center of Photographic Arts and chair of the photography department at the Santa Fe University of Art and Design, she is currently the curator of the Sioux City Art Center in Sioux City, Iowa.

Anna Deveare Smith
Gregory Nobles received his A.B. in history cum laude from Princeton University and his Ph.D. in history from the University of Michigan. He is now Professor of History Emeritus at the Georgia Institute of Technology, where he spent 33 years as a faculty member and administrator. During that time, he held two Fulbright professorships — Senior Scholar in New Zealand (1995) and John Adams Chair in American History in the Netherlands (2002) — and residential fellowships at the Charles Warren Center at Harvard University, the American Antiquarian Society in Worcester, Massachusetts, the Huntington Library in San Marino, California, the Princeton University Library, and the Newberry Library in Chicago, Illinois.

In 1995, he was elected to membership in the American Antiquarian Society and in 2004 was named to the Distinguished Lectureship Program of the Organization of American Historians. Nobles was the 2016–2017 Mellon Distinguished Scholar in Residence at the American Antiquarian Society and in 2018–2019 the Robert C. Ritchie Distinguished Fellow in Early American History at the Huntington Library. He is the author, co-author, and co-editor of five acclaimed books, including, Whose American Revolution Was ItHistorians Interpret the Founding, with Alfred F. Young (New York University Press, 2011), American Frontiers: Cultural Encounters and Continental Conquest (Hill and Wang, 1998) and most recently, John James Audubon: The Nature of the American Woodsman (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2017).

Ruminations: Cheryl Prisco — From Studio to Gallery

The Lunch and Learn Lecture Series features interesting and informative virtual programming that provides a behind-the-scenes view of the festival’s offerings in the visual arts, music, theater and dance.

Rumination (noun) 1. a deep and considered thought about something.

Cheryl Prisco is an abstract artist who is addicted to color and pattern, drawn to irreverence and visual dissonance. In place of paint and brush she cuts, colors, and shapes wood elements, creating abstract low relief assemblages. The process of her work, the shaping and fitting, the painting and placement of multiple pieces, is the physical manifestation of rumination. Her feelings, attitudes and concerns are visually recorded in color and composition. Each assemblage is a rumination, a story, one in the making and one in the viewing. Join Prisco as she explores her process and practice — from her studio to the gallery.

Visit the TCVA website for more information about Prisco’s exhibition at the TCVA.

LOCATION: Virtual via YouTube Premier

DATE/TIME: Tuesday, July 26 at Noon

LENGTH OF EVENT: 30 minutes

COST: Event is FREE

FOR MORE INFORMATION: Contact the Turchin Center for Visual Arts at turchincenter@appstate.edu or 828-262-3017.

ACCOMMODATION STATEMENT: Appalachian is committed to providing an inclusive experience for individuals with disabilities. If accommodations are needed in order to fully participate on the basis of a disability contact the Office of Disability Resources (828.262.3056). It is recommended that accommodation requests be made two weeks prior to the event.

About the Artist


 

Anna Deveare Smith

Cheryl Prisco is an abstract artist based in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina. She was born in Connecticut but has lived most of her adult life in the South — 16 years in Savannah, Georgia, and 11 years in Boone, North Carolina.

ARTIST’S STATEMENT
As with all artists, I need to make for my overall wellbeing; it is a necessity, a compulsion. I did not surrender to it completely until relatively recently at the age of 55. Now two years in, which has included 15 exhibitions, honors including two artist grants, purchase prize award, best of show award and a public art commission — I am making up for lost time. Why now? I cannot say for certain but I believe it was the experience of almost losing my partner back in 2017. That abrupt reminder of mortality and transience has made me feel an intensity and urgency in everything. My work reflects this intensity visually in color and tactile dimensionality.
—Cheryl Prisco

 

An Evening with Sarah Jones

photo by Kenneth Goldberg

Festival Announcement: An Evening with Sarah Jones Rescheduled for October 7

Due to an unforeseen conflict with her filming schedule, Sarah Jones is rescheduling her July 29 performance with An Appalachian Summer Festival. Her new performance date will be Thursday, Oct. 7 as part of the Schaefer Center Presents series. We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause her fans.

All purchased tickets for the July date will be honored in October. The box office will be in touch with all ticket holders between August 16-27 to confirm seating locations. At that time, you may have the opportunity to request a new seat depending upon the seating configuration and any restrictions still in place. If you are unable to attend the October performance and prefer to request a full refund now, please call the box office 828-262-4046.

At this time, sales for An Evening with Sarah Jones are suspended. Additional tickets sales for the Oct. 7 performance will resume on Sept. 9 when the Schaefer Center Presents series goes on sale. Tickets will be available at that time at TheSchaeferCenter.org.

For questions, please contact the Schaefer Center Box Office at 828-262-4046 or email TheSchaeferCenter@appstate.edu. Thank you.

AN EVENING WITH SARAH JONES

A Schaefer Popular Series Event

Series Sponsorship provided by Westglow Resort & Spa, made possible through the generosity of Bonnie and Jamie Schaefer. Performance Sponsorship provided by Boone Area Visitors Bureau, Mast General Store, Goodnight Brothers, SkyBest Communications, Inc., and Appalachian Home Care LLC

Called “a master of the genre” by The New York Times, Sarah Jones is a Tony® Award-winning performer, writer, comedian and activist known for her multi-character, one-person shows, including Broadway hit Bridge & Tunnel, originally produced by Oscar® winner Meryl Streep, and the critically-acclaimed show Sell/Buy/Date.

Renowned as “a one-woman global village,” Jones has given multiple main-stage TED Talks garnering millions of views, performed for President and First Lady Obama at the White House, and gave a historic performance at The World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland as the first artist on its main stage normally reserved for heads of state.

LOCATIONS:
Schaefer Center for the Performing Arts – Limited in-person seating available for live indoor performance. Due to social distancing requirements, seats are grouped primarily in groups of two to six. Please call the box office for special seating requests.
Livestream – a private link to access the event will be emailed to all registrants one hour prior to event. This event is a one-time stream, available only at the time of the scheduled event.

ESTIMATED SHOW LENGTH: 75 minutes; no intermission

FOR INFORMATION OR TO PURCHASE TICKETS: Contact theschaefercenter@appstate.edu, call 800-841-2787 or 828-262-4046, visit in person the Schaefer Center for the Performing Arts, 733 Rivers Street, Boone, NC, or purchase online.

SCHAEFER CENTER IN-PERSON EVENT POLICIES
View here

ACCOMMODATION STATEMENT: Appalachian is committed to providing an inclusive experience for individuals with disabilities. If accommodations are needed in order to fully participate on the basis of a disability contact the Office of Disability Resources (828.262.3056). It is recommended that accommodation requests be made two weeks prior to the event.

TICKETS:
In-person: $40 per person
Livestream:
$15 per household

SHOWTIMES:
Thursday, July 29, 2021 | 8pm (in-person); doors open at 7:30pm
Thursday, July 29, 2021 | 8pm ET (livestream)

Tickets for the Oct. 7 reschedule date will go on sale Sept. 9 as part of the Schaefer Center Presents series.
Tickets will be available at that time at TheSchaeferCenter.org.

ABOUT SARAH JONES


Called “a master of the genre” by The New York Times, Sarah Jones is a Tony® Award-winning performer, writer, comedian and activist known for her multi-character, one-person shows, including Broadway hit Bridge & Tunnel, originally produced by Oscar® winner Meryl Streep, and the critically-acclaimed show Sell/Buy/Date.

Renowned as “a one-woman global village,” Jones has given multiple main-stage TED Talks garnering millions of views, performed for President and First Lady Obama at the White House, and gave a historic performance at The World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland as the first artist on its main stage normally reserved for heads of state.

Jones recently launched Foment Productions, a social justice-focused entertainment company aligned with her progressive, intersectional activism. A documentary inspired by Sell/Buy/Date will be its first production. Helmed by Jones in her directorial debut, Sell/Buy/Date explores one of the most critical issues at the intersection of race, feminism, power and economics in our current cultural climate: the sex industry. The doc, executive produced by Rashida Jones and Meryl Streep, is a candid, witty and political yet personal take on the topic, particularly in our new pandemic reality.

Additionally, Jones has appeared in film and TV projects ranging from Sesame Street to Broad City, from Marriage Story to The Incredible Jessica James. She has served as a writer/producer on Smilf and recently developed her own character-based show for CNN.

She will next be seen as a co-lead opposite Julie Delpy and Elisabeth Shue in Delpy’s upcoming Netflix dramedy series, On the Verge.

Learn more about Sarah’s ongoing projects at www.sarahjonesonline.com and follow her: @yesimsarahjones.

Sarah Jones photo by Tom Rauner
photo by Tom Rauner

REVIEWS


“A must-see.” —Los Angeles Times 

“Writer-performer Sarah Jones is amazing!” —Variety

“Hilarious!” —Vogue

“Powerful and insightful” —The Hollywood Reporter

“Absorbing and piercing, with unexpected humor and often biting and bright.” —The New York Times

“Sarah is a genius and an artist and a hero of mine.” —Seth Godin

“Stunningly Fresh” —Los Angeles Daily News

“Provocative, shrewd, and shockingly funny, Sell/Buy/Date is a tour de force” —TheaterMania

“Timely, wickedly funny” —Indulge

Sell/Buy/Date is “brimming with Jones’ masterful, multiple, multicultural characterizations” —Broadway World

SPONSORED BY

Westglow Resort and Spa
goodnight brothers logo
skybest communications logo
mast general store
Boone, NC logo
Appalachian Home Care Logo

Connecting with Place: Cyanotype Workshop for Educators

Photo: Shauna Caldwell, Poke, Yarrow and Violet. Background: Goldenrod and witch hazel. All images are cyanotypes.

This workshop is for K-12 Educators

Workshop participants will learn about historic and contemporary uses of the cyanotype printing process and will get hands-on experience with the process to utilize in their classrooms. After printing and developing their own cyanotype photographs, participants will experiment with toners made from regional plants to achieve a wide range of colorful photographs deeply rooted in place and ecological connection.

CEU: 3 contact hours
An additional 2 contact hours is available for participating in the 35th Annual Rosen Sculpture Walk on Saturday, July 10 at 10am. For more information and to register for the sculpture walk, visit here.

LOCATION: Turchin Center for the Visual Arts

DATE/TIME: Friday, July 9 from 1-4pm

AUDIENCE: K-12 educators

MATERIALS: All materials needed for the session are provided by TCVA

COST: Event is FREE; registration required. Space is limited.

FOR MORE INFORMATION: Christy Chenausky, Director of Education and Outreach, at chenausky@appstate.edu.

ACCOMMODATION STATEMENT: Appalachian is committed to providing an inclusive experience for individuals with disabilities. If accommodations are needed in order to fully participate on the basis of a disability contact the Office of Disability Resources (828.262.3056). It is recommended that accommodation requests be made two weeks prior to the event.

Anna Deveare Smith

About the Instructor


 

Shauna Caldwell is an artist from Boone, NC. She received BFAs in both studio art and art education. In addition to working as Assistant Director of Arts Education and Outreach for the Turchin Center for Visual Arts and the Office of Arts and Cultural Programs at App State, she is currently pursuing a MA in Appalachian Studies. Her roots in Appalachia and relationship with the environment shape her creative work.