Arts & Entertainment
Curated 'Spooky' Art Show Ties In With St. Pete Theater Production
A reception for the "Ghost Stories & Spooky Vibes" art show will take place Saturday at The Off-Central theater company in St. Petersburg.
ST. PETERSBURG, FL â A St. Petersburg theater is embracing the visual arts through a new showcase of curated works that tie in with its latest stage production.
As The Off-Central, a nonprofit theater company at 2260 1st Ave. S., stages âGhost Stories from Yellowstone,â written and directed by local playwright Bill Leavengood, through Sunday, those attending the play can enjoy a corresponding curated art show, âGhost Stories & Spooky Vibes,â in the lobby.
The theater will also be open to anyone who wishes to check out the art at least an hour before each show â sometimes longer. If the open sign is out front, anyone is welcome in, Ward Smith, the theaterâs producing artistic director told Patch.
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An art reception, where the showâs curator, Nela Lamb, and many of the featured artists will be on hand, is also planned for Saturday, 5 to 8 p.m.
Smith and his sister, Karen Riffe, business manager, purchased the black box theater space, which formerly housed the Andi Matheny Acting Studios drama school, and launched Off-Central during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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The siblings knew from the beginning that they wanted to add an element of the visual arts to their theater space.
âSince our first show, weâve tried to have some sort of visual art alignment,â Smith said. âMy sister is an artist, who takes lessons, and has a connection to the art side, to the painting side, and we thought from the beginning that it would be good to have some gallery space, so when you come in, itâs more inviting and we have this wall space displaying art.â
Initially, they brought in artists whose work they appreciated, frequently those connected to the Morean Arts Center. By working with Lamb, the gallery space is now being curated in connection with the theaterâs productions.
Up next is âCeci Nâest Pas Surreal,â a surrealist show that will accompany Off-Centralâs stage production of âNo Exitâ by Jean-Paul Sartre. Submissions are being accepted for the show through Oct. 27.
The upcoming show is âjust sort of asking artists to reimagine France, French, Frenchiness and surrealism, and what do those things mean to them and how do they fit together and what does that make them think of,â she told Patch. âThatâs what we want to see. I donât have the answers to any of those questions. Iâm waiting to see what the artistsâ answers are.â
Lamb first visited the theater in September for its production of âEvery Brilliant Thingâ by Duncan Macmillan.
â(Thatâs) a play that deals with suicide, but promises to be uplifting. I was excited to support a theater company that wants to tackle such a difficult subject and during September, which is suicide awareness month,â she said. âI just really enjoyed the authenticity that came across.â
The arts and theater have always been an important part of her life, though she stepped away from it a bit in adulthood. Currently, sheâs a ceramicist and member of The Hive, a community-based pottery and art studio.
After watching âEvery Brilliant Thing,â Lamb and members of the cast and theater staff discussed various artforms. When staff mentioned they were looking for an art installation for the reception area, she leapt at the opportunity.
Within weeks, she curated âGhost Stories & Spooky Vibes,â which features 20 works by artists including Coralette Damme, Perry deVick, Gisette Gomez, Cort Hartle, Lauren Kavanagh, Dylan Marvin, Rhys Meatyard, Jenna Michael and Jessica Young. The art ranges from ceramics to oil, acrylic and watercolor paintings. The show opened Oct. 5 to coincide with the play.
âSince the first play is âGhost Stories from Yellowstoneâ and it's happening in October, and itâs spooky season, itâs just a theme that seems quite evident and then the second play being âNo Exitâ and my link to France and that just sort of made me not want to miss that opportunity to do something particular for that play as well,â said Lamb, who lived in France for more than a decade.
Sheâs excited to bring the visual arts and artists who she admires to atypical venues such as The Off-Central reception area.
âI think it allows for all of us to step outside of what we habitually do. And so it gives us an opportunity to be exposed to things that we wouldn't, that sometimes we can be intimidated to go seek out,â Lamb said.
She added, "This allows everyone who's going to the theater to see all of this art and perhaps discover that they're intrigued by it, or they're confused by it, or they're excited by it or they fall in love with it or they want to do better than it or they want to take it home. And it will also allow people who come to see the art to say, âOh look, here's the theater. And so maybe I always felt intimidated to try and go to the theater, but here it is right next to where this art is that I wanted to come see. And so it just helps us to break down those barriers that some of us have self imposed.â
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