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Submit ReviewYou don’t have to be a Christian or given to holiday season kitsch to appreciate the annual Christmas Crèche Exhibit at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Palo Alto.
For a couple thousand years now, the nativity scene has inspired artists all over the world to depict the magic of the Christmas story: Baby Jesus in a Bethlehem manger, surrounded by his parents, Mary and Joseph, the three wise men, shepherds, a host of farm animals and sometimes local villagers, too. It’s an ancient tradition, as open to individual interpretation as there are humans on earth.
“It started with just a few people, with a few nativities, from a few places, in one room, and it’s grown to now, where we have it for five days and 10,000 people come every year as a tradition,” says Marguerite Gong Hancock, co-director and co-founder, here all 32 years the church has been putting on this show.
DEC-06-10-24-13-AM-qut.jpg" alt="This nativity scene from Ethiopia is painted on goat skin." width="1920" height="1080">This nativity scene from Ethiopia is painted on goat skin. (Rachael Myrow/KQED)These days, people come by the busload from senior centers and elementary schools all over the San Francisco Bay Area and beyond. Families and book clubs add lunch nearby and make a day of it in Palo Alto.
The exhibit now takes over the whole building, from the sanctuary to the basketball court. There are 50 countries represented, with more than 250 nativities in every media imaginable: paint, porcelain, crystal, driftwood, goat skin, tagua nut, recycled bicycle wheels, auto parts, et cetera.
“We have a whole range, things that are from artists who may be internationally known to things that are made by school children,” Gong Hancock says.
DEC-06-10-25-49-AM-qut.jpg" alt="This nativity scene from Ecuador is carved out of tagua nut." width="1920" height="1440">This nativity scene from Ecuador is carved out of tagua nut. (Rachael Myrow/KQED)Straining to remember whether this pastiche reflects the stories told in biblical texts? Better to relax and accept this genre gives wide berth to artistic imagination and cultural diversity.
Thousands of people apply to feature their nativity scenes every year, but only ten percent or so are chosen. Gong Hancock and her co-curator try to contain the deluge with an annual theme.
This year, the theme is “Star of Wonder, Star of Night,” referencing the popular Christmas carol, We Three KIngs. Of course, that’s a broad theme. To further subcategorize, the church’s seven rooms each focus on a color, media or geographic region, like Asia, or South America.
DEC-06-10-23-06-AM-qut.jpg" alt='This nativity scene, constructed from bicycle parts, is called ""The hopes and fears of all the gears." ' width="1920" height="1755">This nativity scene, constructed from bicycle parts, is called “”The hopes and fears of all the gears.” (Rachael Myrow/KQED)Where did this holiday staple begin? Gong Hancock explains, “The story goes that of-the-christmas-creche-st-francis-invented-the-nativity-scene.html">St. Francis of Assisi, in 1223, created the first nativity in Italy, inspired by seeing shepherds in the distance. Over time, people started to make beautiful figurines and statues, and the churches would put them on display. People would tour from church to church to church. So it’s in that spirit that we have gathered nativity scenes and opened wide our doors, so that people can come and enjoy them.”
There’s also live art, music, and marionette shows daily, as well as craft workshops for children. Is it over the top? Absolutely, but not in the materialistic way Americans have come to love and/or hate. The exhibit is free, the labor is volunteered, and the art is surprising and delightful, regardless of whether Christianity is your jam.
The 32 annual Christmas Crèche Exhibit runs December 7-11, 2019 at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Palo Alto. Details here.
This week we’re talking about a ballet beyond words, a play about the 1950s “red scare,” an unstoppable jazz pianist and more. Joining me in the studio is Suzie Racho, producer-director for The California Report Magazine, and founding producer of The Do List.
Listen to the show above, and click through the links below for more details on this week’s picks!
May 31–June 2: Oakland Ballet’s Scene & Heard at the Odell Johnson Performing Arts Center at Laney College.
June 4: A tribute to David Wiegand at the Great American Music Hall in San Francisco.
June 6: Jazz Pianist Ahmad Jamal at Davies Symphony Hall.
June 6-July 1: FINKS at the Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts.
June 7-July 7: Prince Pre Fame photography show at the Family Affair gallery in Lower Haight.
June 8-9: The Huichica Music Festival at Gundlach Bundschu winery in Sonoma.
This week, I’m joined on The Do List by Jamedra Brown-Fleischman, co-host of KQED’s pop culture podcast The Cooler. We’re talking about Nazis influencing famous painters, the challenge in satirizing American politics, and a wild plot to catch a serial killer.
Through Oct. 28: René Magritte: The Fifth Season includes the artist’s intentionally “bad” paintings at SFMOMA.
May 30: The fourth annual OutOfFocus Music Video Film Fest at the New Parkway in Oakland.
May 31-June 1: Sheer Mag rocks the Ritz in San Jose and the Great American Music Hall in San Francisco.
June 1-10: The Healdsburg Jazz Festival hosts big names at small venues.
June 9: The Read Live! with Kid Fury and Crissle at Oakland’s Fox Theater.
June 16: Flying Lotus returns to the Greek Theater in Berkeley.
This week on the Do List, I’m joined by KQED Youth Media Manager Ariana Proehl for talk about a queer circus, a Saharan film festival, a tribute to a beloved DJ and more. And also, on my first week sitting in his old chair here at the Do List, I want to say thanks to Cy Musiker — for showing us the way.
On with this week’s show; click through for details.
May 18: Evening-with-Audra-McDonald-and-the-SFS.aspx">Six-time Tony winner Audra McDonald sings with the San Francisco Symphony.
Friday and Saturday, May 18 and 19: Paradise: Belly of the Beast from circus troupe Topsy Turvy pushes the boundaries of imagination and mythology while centering people of color and queer people of color.
May 20–June 17: Mamma Mia! is at the Mountain Play at Mt. Tam in Marin, a gorgeous amphitheater where they’ve done summer theater for over 100 years.
And some special news about the return of the Treasure Island Music Festival, including their just-announced lineup.
I’m joined by two of my favorite co-hosts for this episode of The Do List: KQED Arts’ senior editor Gabe Meline, and Stanford Institute for Diversity in the Arts’ co-chair A-lan Holt. And the biggest reason was so they could hold my hand as I said goodbye to KQED and our listeners.
I’m leaving KQED and The Do List for the life of a country bumpkin, in the Sierra Foothills. Emphasis on the bumpkin.
It’s been the greatest joy of my life to work here at KQED, and to serve the people, as our late news director Raul Ramirez used to say.
The Do List is almost 10 years old, and it’s in good hands with Gabe Meline as our new host, and our new producer, Ashleyanne Krigbaum. They’ll bring fresh energy and voices to the show, while staying true to our mission of helping you, the listener, find great shows and good cheer. We share a love of discovering new talent, and performances that help us understand the world better; that help us be more empathetic; that make us better human beings.
Please keep listening and reading. Now here’s our show for this week.
April 25-May 20: A Suzan-Lori Parks play at the American Conservatory Theater confronts the desperate choices of a slave during the Civil War.
May 18: The nomadic Ubuntu Theater presents Suzan-Lori Parks’ Pulitzer Prize-winning Topdog/Underdog.
May 15-20: ODC’s Walking Distance Dance Festival offers an antidote to blandness.
May 17 and 19: Ghost Ensemble makes music for deep, deep listening.
May 10-12: José James performs a tribute to the music of the great Bill Withers.
May 15: Cartoonist Keith Knight delivers a “Toon Talk” at the Cartoon Art Museum.
May 17: A Conversation about thethe arts and social justice at Stanford’s Cubberley Auditorium with Linda Sarsour, Patrisse Cullors, Favianna Rodriguez and Raquel De Anda.
uploaded-from-iOS-1-e1525892416771-800x451.jpg" alt="Stanford's A-lan Holt and KQED's Gabe Meline join Cy Musiker for his final episode as host of The Do List." width="800" height="451" class="size-medium wp-image-13831740">Stanford’s A-lan Holt and KQED’s Gabe Meline join Cy Musiker for his final episode as host of The Do List. (Nastia Voynovskaya/KQED)We had terrible news this week. San Francisco Chronicle Assistant Managing Editor David Wiegand, my founding co-anchor on The Do List, was found dead in his home on Tuesday. He was omnivorous in his approach to the arts, and together we crafted The Do List out of that ideal, embracing everything from classical to rap, from Shakespeare to the weirdest performance piece, from veteran to young talent. David would have wanted the show to go on, and this week’s episode is dedicated to him, and his memory.
May 16-20: The New Century Chamber Orchestra offers the West Coast debut of Philip Glass’ new piano concerto
May 9-20: The Yerba Buena Center for the Arts Transform Festival asks “where is our public imagination?”
May 5-7: Khalid plays the Bay Area, taking a satiric jab at our attitudes toward millennials
May 4-July 20: The Betti Ono Gallery in Oakland offers a photography show with intimate, detailed portraits of working-class African Americans.
Wiegand-and-Cy-Musiker-at-The-Do-List-Live-event-at-The-Chapel-in-2015-e1525220054642-800x460.jpeg" alt="The late David Wiegand and Cy Musiker at The Do List Live event at The Chapel in 2015" width="800" height="460">The late David Wiegand and Cy Musiker at The Do List Live event at The Chapel in 2015 (KQED)The Do List was taken over this week and we’re delighted. My co-host is Nick Abraham, a member of KQED’s Youth Advisory Board, guitarist in the band Unpopular Opinion, a high school junior at Sequoia High School in Redwood City, and a lover of pop-punk music. He’s also a member of the invasion force for KQED’s Youth Takeover week, in which we featured news stories and commentary by students from ten Bay Area high schools. Thanks Nick; we’d love to have you co-host again.
Here’s the show he and I picked:
April 28-29: The Bay Area Book Festival makes the case that books will never be obsolete.
May 5: The Pride Prom returns to Berkeley’s 924 Gilman, offering a safe place for LGBTQ teens.
April 20-July 15: The San Jose Museum of Quilts and Textiles opens an exhibition on gun violence that proves these are not your grandmother’s quilts.
May 3 and 4: Joyce Manor and awakebutstillinbed make loud intense music in shows in the North and South Bay.
May 3: Nick Abraham’s punk band Backyard Brew plays a gig at Backyard Brew in Palo Alto, and they’re good.
800x495.jpg" alt="The Do List got a youth takeover this week from guitarist and KQED Youth Advisory Board Member Nick Abraham" width="800" height="495">The Do List got a youth takeover this week from guitarist and KQED Youth Advisory Board Member Nick Abraham (Nadia Voynovskaya)On The Do List this week, we’re welcoming the return to the Bay Area of Tony Kushner’s mind-bogglingly brilliant play Angels in America, plus an art exhibition in San Jose on the meaning of the house, and two nights with Meshell Ndgeocello, my co-host, KQED Youth Media Manager Ariana Proehl’s favorite artist. Take a listen.
April 20-Aug. 19: The San Jose Museum of Art presents an exhibition examining the meaning of the single family home
April 17-July 22: Tony Kushner’s play Angels in America returns to the Bay Area, where it was born.
April 24: Reveling in the slow jams of young British singer Jorja Smith
April 25-29: The Philharmonia Baroque Ochestra wraps up its season with a double dose of Beethoven
uploaded-from-iOS-1-2-e1524013165204-800x458.jpg" alt="Ariana Proehl and Cy Musiker out at a gallery" width="800" height="458">Ariana Proehl and Cy Musiker out at a gallery (Photo: Courtesy of Chandran Gallery)Jamedra Brown-Fleischman is back as my Do List co-host this week to talk about San Francisco Ballet’s big dance festival, Unbound, and its 12 world premieres — and about another world premiere from San Francisco queer choreographer Sean Dorsey. Plus, we ask: What would possess seasoned Broadway show producers to mash up the Go-Go’s pop-punk with an Elizabethan melodrama?! The answers await in the podcast above and the story links below.
April 13: The Ibeyi sisters make thrilling music of the African diaspora.
April 19-21: Choreographer Sean Dorsey offers a transgender and queer take on how to be a better man.
April 20-May 6: SF Ballet’s Unbound looks to partially answer the question: Where is dance headed in the 21st century?
April 13 & 20: Allan Hall’s jazz band Ratatet makes exquisite chamber jazz in shows at Berkeley’s Jazz Conservatory and at San Jose’s Art Boutiki
April 10-May 6: Elizabethan melodrama meets the Go-Go’s pop-punk in the world premiere of the musical Head Over Heels.
SHOUTOUTS!
April 21: Drunk Theatre puts actors to a test that no “method” can prepare them for.
Rachael Myrow here, pinch-hitting for Cy Musiker this week. Naturally, I picked a co-host from Palo Alto — visual artist and salon organizer Sabha Shere — and we talked about the upcoming concerts and exhibitions we’re most excited about.
Apr. 6–8: Science Parties With Pop Culture at Silicon Valley Comic Con 2018.
Apr. 6: Kronos Quartet Plays Live to Green Fog, a Found Footage Homage to Hitchcock.
Apr. 9–14: Other Minds Festival Celebrates Cerebral and Witty Sound Poetry.
Mar. 24– Aug. 12: Cult of the Machine Explores the Magnetic Pull of Industrial Design.
Mar. 30– Apr. 29: In a Time of Economic Extremes, Shakespeare’s Timon Recast as a Silicon Valley CEO.
Apr. 6: Haim Plays at the Greek Theatre in Berkeley on The Road to Coachella.
Apr. 20–22: The Classic Chicano Novel ‘Bless Me, Última’ Reimagined as an Opera
Apr. 27-28: Epic Tale From the Ancient Indian Ramayan Takes Flight in San Francisco
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