Opening Reception for Abstract Cinema and Technology 3/25/09

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Opening Reception for Abstract Cinema and Technology, Wednesday, March 25, 7-9 pm
RSVP: rsvp@mocanomi.org

Highlighting pivotal works by artists who broke boundaries in filmmaking, Abstract Cinema & Technology explores how technological innovations from the 1920s to the present provided new means for artists to create abstract moving images. On view March 25 – May 11, 2009 the exhibition brings together a wide range of artists who have pioneered advances in media ranging from early experimentation with celluloid, color, light, and sound to new digital technologies that allow for direct viewer interaction with the work. Most of these artists are recognized for their advancements in media arts instead of traditional art forms. The exhibition is organized by the Museum of Contemporary Art, North Miami and is curated by MOCA Executive Director Bonnie Clearwater, in association with MOCA Exhibition Coordinator Kevin Arrow.

The exhibition features works by Jose Alvarez, Cory Arcangel, Jordan Belson, Jeremy Blake, Mary Ellen Bute, Marcel Duchamp, Oskar Fischinger, Jiae Hwang and Nicolas Raftis III, Nam June Paik, Len Lye, Kevin Medal, Bruce Nauman, C.E.B. Reas, Hans Richter, Harry Smith, Jen Stark, Jennifer Steinkamp, Stan VanDerBeek, and James Whitney.

Abstract painting and moving pictures evolved simultaneously. Both represented modern times and a new world view. While painting was steeped in tradition and history, film, video, and computer technology have provided opportunities to imagine entirely new approaches to non-objective forms and to liberate the imagination.

In many ways, film and successive technologies achieved the physical and mechanical goals of 20th century abstract painters. One such goal was to equate abstraction with music whereas painters imagined composing the equivalent to music with color and form. Film, video, and computers made it possible to directly link abstract forms and color with their own musical orchestration. Spirituality inspired the compositions of many abstractionists, including filmmakers who created contemplative works that combined mystical light and the movement of symbols and mandalas. While many of the Abstract Expressionists painted large canvases in order to encompass the viewer, film projection made it possible to totally engulf the viewer in cinematic fields. New computer technology even makes it possible for viewers to directly intercede into the composition.

Montage and collage in painting suggest the simultaneity of events frozen in the momentary stasis of the canvas. The same technique is used by experimental filmmakers to suggest the elusiveness of time. As film, video and computer generated images can be infinitely looped, they are especially conducive to presenting the repetitive forms of serial minimalism. Many abstract painters of the 20th century aspired to achieve the appearance that the forms on their canvases were autonomous and self-generating. They created the illusion that the colors and forms were expanding, contracting, and pulsating forward and backward from the picture plane. Today, computer programs make it possible for artists to produce truly autonomous works that can determine their own morphing shape.

The experimental filmmakers of the early twentieth century invented techniques for creating their forms on celluloid. Painting or altering the celluloid required infinite patience and skill, as did the development of animation that used multiple cells to create movement or the methods for stop-action animation. Television presented new possibilities as artists manipulated images transmitted into the TV set or provided their own video footage, while computer technology has made it possible to animate virtual forms.

Early European Dadaist artists experimented with black and white cinema to create a new means of aesthetic experience. Hans Richter’s first film, Rhythmus 21 (1921-1924) used squares and rectangles to create a complex composition to play on ideas of perception, especially how light can create the illusion of movement and depth within the cinematic experience. Marcel Duchamp’s Anemic Cinema (1926), in collaboration with Man Ray, is also a study in perception. The film of spiraling discs alternates between hypnotic black-and-white discs that optically advance and recede and discs inscribed with verbal puns. Duchamp juxtaposed image with language in an era when silent films and written text went hand-in-hand.

In North America, advents in abstract animation led to developments with color and music, resulting in terminology such as visual music and optical poetry. Mary Ellen Bute’s Rhythm in Light (1934) premiered at Radio City Music Hall in New York and juxtaposed the music of Edvard Grieg’s Anitra’s Dance with kaleidoscopic geometry of photographic and hand-drawn imagery. Len Lye, a nationalized New Zealander, painted colors and scratched directly onto celluloid, resulting in such works as Color Box (1934), which established direct filmmaking as an important form of animation. Oskar Fischinger’s work has influenced generations of filmmakers. Beginning in 1920s Germany, this non-objective filmmaking master began creating visual music with geometric shapes tightly choreographed to classical music and jazz. He is widely known for his influence on the Disney classic Fantasia. Harry Smith’s hand-painted animations have been described as mystical cinematic experiences; with some works taking years to produce.

Major animators pioneering changes from hand to technological innovation show the parallel techniques of hand-craft, working directly on film, as technological advents in computers provided new potential for artistic production. California artist James Whitney, created the imagery in his hand-drawn film Yantra (1955) by punching grid-like patterns on 5 x 7 inch cards and using analog computer equipment developed by his brother, John Whitney, the pioneer of modern computer graphics, to create Lapis (1965), which consists of hundreds of constantly moving points of light. The works of Jordan Belson, another pioneer of visual music, include Allures (1961).

Stan VanDerBeek, who was fascinated with new languages, new structures of thought and new approaches to making art worked with computers and television. The work Symmetrics, 1972is a prime example of VanDerBeek’s lifelong interaction with computer and electronic imagery.

Bruce Nauman utilizes body performance as means toward abstraction. In Lip Sync (1968), a video camera turned upside down is positioned closely on the filmmaker’s face, which has been turned upside down, thereby transforming the sequence into abstraction. Nauman speaks the words of the work’s title as a continuous chant that is out of synchronization with the image. The repetition of the phrase transforms the words into abstract sound.

Nam June Paik, who pioneered cathode ray, video manipulation and analog distortion of television sets that play distorted analog images. On view in the exhibition are two of Paik’s works: Beatles Electroniques (1966-69) made in collaboration with Jud Yalkut features black-and-white bits from the movie A Hard Day’s Night to which Paik electromagnetically improvised distortions on the receiver. Also included is Paik’s sculpture Burn Calories Not Octane (1993), featuring thousands of clips of television broadcast that alternate with abstract patterns created by the artist.

Jeremy Blake’s Station to Station 1-5 (2001) is a series of five gridded time-based paintings (digital animations on DVD) that represents stations of an imaginary urban transportation system and travel between the stations. Cory Archangel’s Untitled (After Lucier), 2006, is a an image that degenerates over the course of the exhibition. The film displays the Beatles’ seminal US performance on the Ed Sullivan Show circa 1964. An exercise in impermanence, this endless silent loop of the performance continually degrades through a program that disrupts the clarity of the image until the entire work breaks down into a single monochrome color, falls apart and stops working.

By tapping directly into the structural aspects of computer programming as media C.E.B. Reas’s Process 16 (2006) explores the dialectical relationship between naturally evolved systems and those that are engineered and synthetic. Reas, who co-founded the Open Source software language ‘Processing’ with Ben Fry at MIT, derives his software from short text instructions explaining processes that define networks; the instructions are expressed in different media including natural language, machine code, computer simulations, and static images.

Constructed using old and new technologies, Kevin Medal’s As Pergill Us (2008), weaves thousands of hand-drawn images in a dazzling continuous morphology of luminous abstractions. In addition, Miami artist Jen Stark, whose work Streaming Gradient (2008), fuses time consuming work methods of the pioneers of experimental film with current digital technologies, creating an ever unfolding video of stunning beauty.

Jennifer Steinkamp’s computer generated installation, Smokescreen (1995-2004), creates the sensation that the viewer is walking between two layers of space. Jiae Hwang and Nicolas Raftis III’s new project, Metastability Mirror (2009), displays a mysterious work of atmospheric distortions and ghostly forms that constantly changes as the viewer approaches it.

http://mocanomi.org/

Spotlight showcase presented by Backstage Miami 3/22/09


Date: Sunday, March 22, 2009
Time: 12:00pm – 3:00pm
Location: Greynolds Park Village Shoppes
Street: 17800 West Dixie Hwy
City/Town: North Miami Beach, FL

“Spotlight” is a showcase that allows a group of talented young designers to display their fashion work to the public. The showcase allows the general public to meet these designers and preview their line exclusively in an intimate setting. “Spotlight” allows the aspiring designers to come together with individuals that appreciate and support raw creative talent. This is an event that BackStage Miami will host annually to introduce upcoming designers to the community and help build exposure for the next generation of fashion innovators

Arts for All this week at MOCA by Moonlight 2/18/09

Arts for All this week at MOCA BY MOONLIGHT, Wednesday, Feb 18, 7 pm

Contemporary Art Boot Camp offers 1 hour lectures on themes and issues in contemporary art presented by MOCA’s curator of Education, Dr. Adrienne von Lates. Miami-Dade County Art Educators will earn MPP points for attending. $10 per class for MOCA Members, North Miami Residents and city employees, $3 for college students with ID, $12 for all others. Student admission must be paid onday of lecture.

MOCA by Moonlight Contemporary Art Boot Camp 1/28/09


Beginning January 7, MOCA will be open from 1 to 9 pm every Wednesday. Make MOCA your mid-week destination for exciting lectures, hands-on art classes and artists’ forums. Each week, MOCA docents and staff members will lead in-depth tours of special exhibitions. This is a great opportunity for college-level art classes, and groups wanting to gain more exposure to the many aspects of contemporary art. Reservations for programs are required. For more information contact Dr. Adrienne Von Lates, Education Curator or Lark Keeler, Assistant Education Curator.

Topics include: The Identity Issue; Entropy and Apocalypse; The Artist as Social Mediator; Anti-Consumerism; Primitivism; The Beautiful and the Sublime.

More Info & Tickets

Jazz at MOCA 1/30/09

Jazz at MOCA
Friday, January 30 at 7:30 p.m.

MOCA’s new Jazz Talk series continues with world-class musician Ira Sullivan who will speak about spirituality and jazz immediately before a performance of his Inter/Outer Continental Quartet. A five-time Grammy nominee, Sullivan is widely recorded and has appeared as a guest soloist with some of the best bands in recent decades. He expertly plays a multitude of musical instruments, including trumpet, flugelhorn, peck horn, tenor, sax, flute and drums. The Inter/Outer Continental Quintet consists of Brian Murphy on piano, Jamie Ousley on bass, John Yarling on drums and Dante Luciani on trombone. Sullivan will play the saxophone, trumpet and flute. Jazz at MOCA is free, held the last Friday of every month – rain or shine – in front of the museum. MOCA Galleries will be open from 7 pm to 10 pm with admission by donation. Currently on view is the exhibition “Anri Sala: Purchase Not By Moonlight.”

Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA)
770 N.E. 125th Street, North Miami
305-893-6211

Don’t miss the next Contemporary Art Boot Camp 1/21/09


Beginning January 7, MOCA will be open from 1 to 9 pm every Wednesday. Make MOCA your mid-week destination for exciting lectures, hands-on art classes and artists’ forums. Each week, MOCA docents and staff members will lead in-depth tours of special exhibitions. This is a great opportunity for college-level art classes, and groups wanting to gain more exposure to the many aspects of contemporary art. Reservations for programs are required. For more information contact Dr. Adrienne Von Lates, Education Curator or Lark Keeler, Assistant Education Curator.
Topics include: Creating Mythologies; Sex and Desire; Entertainment and the Media; Appropriation; The Transience of Life; Painting and Photography.
More Info

LOGO Projects presents: Gerardo Gonzalez-Quevedo, meet the artist 1/17/09

FROM: Kharis Kennedy
Join us for an evening wine reception on Saturday, January 17th to celebrate the opening of LOGO Projects with an exhibition of works by Miami-based artist Gerardo Gonzalez-Quevedo. The artist reception will be held from 6-9pm at Ocean Ophthalmology Group; come support the businesses that support the arts!

Opening Reception Dates: Saturday, January 17th, 2009: 6-9pm
Exhibition Dates: January 17th – March 14th, 2009

LOCATION
LOGO Projects at Ocean Ophthalmology Group
1400 NE Miami Gardens Dr, 203
N. Miami Beach, FL 33179
ph: 305.864.1500
www.oceanophthalmology.com

We look forward to seeing you!
Kharis Kennedy

MOCA by Moonlight new Wednesday night Art programs start 1/7/09


MOCA BY MOONLIGHT- New Wednesday Night Art Programs Start January 7th

1/7/09: Topics include:Modernist Forms-Political Content; Humor; The Pathetic Aesthetic; Small Scale, Big Ideas; Sewing, Knitting, Crafting; Childhood Revisited.

Contemporary Art Boot Camp offers 1 hour lectures on themes and issues in contemporary art presented by MOCA’s curator of Education, Dr. Adrienne von Lates. Miami-Dade County Art Educators will earn MPP points for attending. $10 per class for MOCA Members, North Miami Residents and city employees, $3 for college students with ID, $12 for all others. Student admission must be paid onday of lecture.

More Information

Miami Cyclo cross 1/4/09

Miami Cyclocross
North Miami, FL (Oleta River State Park)
January 4th

Click Flyers for larger image

www.goneriding.com

On Sunday, January 4th, the 2nd annual Miami Cyclocross race will take place at Oleta River State Park. Cyclo-cross (sometimes cyclocross, CX, CCX, cyclo-X or ‘cross’) is a form of bicycle racing. Races take place typically in the autumn and winter and consists of many laps of a short (2.5–3.5 km or 1.5–2 mile) course featuring pavement, wooded trails, grass, steep hills and obstacles requiring the rider to quickly dismount, carry the bike whilst navigating the obstruction and remount in one motion. It’s part road bike, part mountain bike and part steeplechase.
And it’s exploding in popularity.
It’s cyclocross, and it is becoming one of the fastest-growing sports in the bicycle world.

The Miami race is one of a eight race state wide series and will feature a course that includes asphalt, grass, sand, clay and concrete that will require the racers to dismount a few times per lap in a unique Miami setting. In addition to the serious cyclist categories (Cat 1-5 mens and womens according to USA Cycling rules) there will be races from children 6 years old to grand masters 55+. Although the serious cyclists may have a bicycle specifically for Cyclocross, just about any hybrid, mountain or average road bike will suffice. Racers will be treated to an enthusiastic crowd, lots of ringing cowbells, free Belgian waffles and a fun time overall. Double points in the Florida Cyclocross series.

photos from last year’s event

John Voss
jvoss@jvossman.com
Vice President of ORAA (www.oraa.info)
Charity Chair, Everglades Bicycle Club (www.evergladesbc.org)
305.491.7159 Miami Cyclocross II Jan 4, 2009 Oleta River State Park
Click here to download registration flyer
A portion of the proceeds will support, ORAA, the official non profit Citizen’s Support Organization for Oleta River State Park in Miami FL

Audi Party with Romero Britto and Anthony Shriver at Prestige Imports 12/17/08

Audi RS 4 Friendship Car created for Tom Brady By Romero Britto
Please join Brett David, Romero Britto and Alina and Anthony Kennedy Shriver for an exclusive event to celebrate friendships and to showcase the Audi RS 4 Friendship Car that combines art, high performance and luxury. The Audi RS 4 Friendship Car by Romero Britto was created for New England Patriots’ Quaterback Tom Brady to benefit Best Buddies International.

Cocktails – Hors d’oeuvres – Entertainment – Raffle and Britto artwork for sale*

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2008
7-10pm Prestige Audi
14780 Biscayne Boulevard
North Miami Beach
To RSVP and for more information:
Prestige Audi: Felicia Vaccaro 305-947-1000; fvaccaro@prestigeimports.com
Best Buddies: Nicola Edman 305-374-2233 x 211; nicolaedman@bestbuddies.org
*A percentage of proceeds from the sale of the Britto artwork and 100% of proceeds from the sale of the Audi RS 4 Friendship Car will be donate to Best Buddies.
Mailing Address:
Best Buddies International
100 SE 2nd Street
Suite 2200
Miami, FL 33131
US
www.bestbuddies.org
Contact Name: Nicola Edman
Telephone Number: (305) 374-2233

MOCA and North Miami Galleries during Art Basel 2008

Special opening night at MOCA, North Miami (NoMi) galleries, and alternative spaces during Art|Basel Miami Beach.

Date: December 2, 2008
Location: 125 Street between 7th and 8th avenues
Time: 6 pm-9 pm.
Special opening night at MOCA, NoMi galleries and alternative spaces during Art|Basel Miami Beach

On the occasion of Art|Basel Miami Beach, MOCA, NoMi galleries, and alternative spaces will celebrate their opening night on Tuesday, December 2, 2008, from 6 pm to 9 pm.

NoMi galleries and alternative spaces are located across MOCA.

The Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) is presenting the first major museum exhibition of Anri Sala’s videos and photographs in the United States, featuring works from the late 1990s to the present along with photographs and sculptures that explore a dialogue about the interplay of the works with space and time. During the 7 – 9 pm opening, which will take place on December 2nd, members of The Cleveland Orchestra will perform Anri Sala’s original score, A Spurious Emission at 8 pm. For more information visit: www.mocanomi.org.

Two new alternative spaces with special projects by contemporary artists Diango Hernandez and Ronald Moran will be featured during Art|Basel Miami Beach, in North Miami.

Diango Hernandez, Diamonds and Stones: My Education. Diango Hernandez is a Cuban artist living and working in Dusseldorf, Germany. This project is presented by Federico Luger Gallery, Milano, Italy, in collaboration with Alexander & Bonin (New York), Pepe Cobo (Madrid), and Michael Wieshofer (Cologne). The exhibition includes a series of photographic works and an installation. Images used by Cuba’s Ministry of Education distributed to schools under Castro’s regime to promote Cummunist Revolutionary ideals are inserted by Hernandez into diamond cuts and precious stones, thus giving multivalent meanings. Diamonds are hard and almost indestructible stones, just like the ideal of the Communist Revolution. As symbols of luxury diamonds and precious stones provide antithetic images with regards to Communism. The exhibition also includes “Years,” an installation built up of numbers that go from 1959 to 2008, the years Fidel Castro was in power. The numbers are made of rusty bars as a symbol of forgotten promises.

Contact information Federico Luger Tel. 39 02 67391341, email address info@federicolugergallery.com

Ronald Moran, Learning the Lesson. Artist Ronald Moran, from el Salvador in collaboration with Pan American Art Projects (Miami) and Klaus Steinmetz Contemporary (San Jose, Costa Rica), presents a site specific installation featuring objects of everyday life which become instruments of domestic violence in the piece’s setting. His works are domestic or familiar spaces covered with white industrial cotton. His goal is to neutralize his subject matter, and to represent the impact of contemporary society’s lack of sensibility towards violence and domestic roles.

Contact information Janda Wetherington, tel. 305 573 2400 miami@panamericanart.com or Klaus Steinmetz artcontemporaneo@racsa.co.cr

NoMi Galleries

Stripe Vintage Modern
Specializing in furniture and decorative arts, including important art 20th century works and designers such as Harvy Probber, Vladimir Kagan, Karel Appel, and Harry Bertoia

Mario Flores Gallery
Exhibits by Jay Lonewolf, a native North American who sees everything in black and white, however, his works are full of color; Jesus Rojas’s Peruvian artist living in Miami, and Mario Flores’ photographs.

Caridi Gallery
Hester Ezquenazi’s photographs. The artist presents a study of orchids with an intimate view of the life of these sensible plants and flowers.

XINQO Art Studio
Group exhibit of artists interested in abstraction
The gallery presents a broad range of works through diverse disciplines and media.

CS Gallery
787=6 Group show. Mid career and emerging artists explore different topics and the use of media related to age, culture, and education..

MOCA
Museum of Contemporary Art
Purchase not by Moonlight
Anri Sala
770 NE 125 Street
North Miami, Fl 33161
December 3, 2008 through March, 2009
Tues.-Sat. 11 a.m. – 5 p.m.
Tel: 305. 893. 6211
www.mocanomi.org

Diamonds and Stones: My Education
Diango Hernández
799 NE 125 St.
North Miami, Fl 33161
December 3-7, 11 a.m. – 5 p.m.
December 7, 2008 through January 20, 2009, by previous appointment from Monday to Friday
Tel: 305 899 7788/ 39 3494138318
info@federicolugergallery.com
www.federicolugergallery.com

Learning the Lesson
Ronald Moran
12504 N.E 8th Ave.
North Miami, Fl 33161
December 3-7, 11 a.m. – 5 p.m.
December 7, 2008 through January 20, 2009, by appointment from Monday to Friday
Tel. 305 899 7788/
www.panamericanart.com
www.artnexus.com/klaussteinmetzcontemporary.html

Stripe Vintage Modern
799 NE 125th St.
North Miami, Fl 33161
Mon.-Sat, 12 m – 5 p.m.
Tel. 305. 893-8085,
www.stripe.1stdibs.com

Mario Flores Gallery
Jay Lonewolf, Jesús Rojas and Mario Flores
12502 NE 8th Ave,
North Miami, FL 33161
December 2- 26, 2008
Moday to Saturday 10 a.m. – 7 p.m.
Tel: 561.201.2053
www.mariofloresgallery.com

Caridi Gallery
Orchidaceae
Hester Esquenazi Photographs
785 NE 125st.
North Miami, Fl. 33161
December 3 – January 2, 2009
Tel. 305.510.6410
Monday through Saturday, 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.

Xinco Art Studio
The Revenge of the Abstraction
Pedro Wilson, Adriano Nicot, Fredy Osorio, Susan Fink and Dario Calleros
783 NE 125 st.
North Miami, Fl. 33161
November 28, 2008 -January 29, 2009
Mon.-Fri., 7 p.m.- 10 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday 11 a.m. – 8.p.m.
Tel. 786.262.1334

CS Gallery
787= 6
Yovani Bauta, Roger Carmona, Jorge Chirinos, Sergio Garcia, Joaquin Gonzalez and Andres Martinez
787 NE 125 ST
North Miami, Fl. 33161
Mon-Thurs., by previous appointment only
Fri.: 8 p.m. a 11 p.m.
Tel. 305.308. 6561
website: www.ChirinosSanchez.com.

Free concert at Greynolds park 11/28/09

Its that time of year again for our annual Lumpy Sue Acoustic Musicfest in
Greynolds Park the day after Thanksgiving. We will be raffling off thousands
of dollars of great prizes and 100% of all proceeds go to benefit Habitat
for Humanity of Greater Miami.

So come on by from 11 am to sunset, bring a blankey and a picnic lunch and
get ready to hear ³the Mother of all Mellow Festivals².

For additional information, or to donate prizes : 786-999-5567 or
www.lumpysue.org.

See you at the park!

MOCA Battle of the Bands 8/28/08

South Florida’s Pots ‘n’ Pans, Sinister Smith, Airship Rocketship, The Electric Bunnies and TV Club duel San Dimas High’s Socrates, Napoleon, Bill S. Preston and Ted Theodore Logan in this inevitable battle royale for the MOCA title.
Complimentary Grolsch and Dogma hot dogs, $5 cover / 7:00pm-11:00pm
moca
MOCA (Museum of Contemporary Art)
770 NE 125 Street,
North Miami
305-893-6211

Open house party at wherehouse 2016 – 8/30/08

Sat-aug 30 2008 9:30pm party party party invite for you

Shocked and apalled by the lack of parties the summer of 2008 wherehouse 2016 has taken the bull by the horns and is throwing an all out slam dunk great party that is bound to have every south floridian chomping at the bit to get an invitation to “the big one”. But of course only the chosen ones and their closest and dearest friends will have an opportunity to attend this monumental party.

There will be live music as well as house dj danny pouring on the most foot stomping, finger popping, upbeat, dance magnet musical hits to the high energy fun-seeking eclectic crowd attending the ultimate gathering of the decade bar none.
There will be food and drink for all to enjoy.
We are often asked “what can we bring” and is it requred, of course not you are our guests, but such a gesture is very much appreciated. If you have any doubts about what’s good vodka is always a sure winner.
You are welcome to ask friends and busness associates to join our party, particularly those who you think might enjoy and utilize the most unique party venue on the planet (use good judgement don’t invite those who are a threat to socety and escaped mental patients for example). Do not miss this one its gonna be huge.
And now the details: Party at wherehouse 2016 Location:2016 ne 155 st. NMB, FL
Theme: please wear 70’s style attire, vintage diversity – co-host is where to find such clothing and is
Located in oakland park (ft. Laud) Address-directions-info www.vintagediversity.com
Special celebration:carol and bruce’s 39th anniversary
Rsvp, your name and # of guests in your party
wherehouse2016@mindspring.com or call diane 786 489 2478
Directions and info www.wherehouse2016.com
Best 70’s ensemble contest first prize: hand panted furniture

Celebrate Happy Ending Hour for Make-A-Wish 8/23/08

Happy Ending Hour
Kitchen 305 and Miami-Dade Wishmaker®s cordially invite you to Happy Ending Hour.
With $20 donation members receive unlimited decadent cocktail and desserts.
Members who join us for dinner this evening will have 20% of their check donated to
the Make-A-Wish Foundation of Southern Florida
Saturday, August 23 2008
Time: 10pm-12am
Location: Kitchen 305, Newport Beachside Hotel & Resort,
16701 Collins Ave, Sunny Isles Beach, Florida 33160
Please RSVP to dtrevett@sflawish.org
For dinner reservations call 305-749-2110
For more information, call 954.967.9474 ext 308 or click here

Premier Jazz Night, Open Jam Session and Networking Event 8/14/08

Event Name: Sultry Jazz Night

You’re invited to a premier event. A night of Jazz, open jam session – all musicians welcome – and networking mixer! It’s easy…no cover charge, complimentary valet parking, fabulous menu available, great people and music. Sponsored gift basket raffle and industry giveaways. Please pass the word along, bring some friends and join us. Hope to see you there!

Date(s) and Time: August 14, 2008. 8:00PM – 9:30PM Jazz during dinner. 10:00PM – until Live band, open jam session and networking mixer
Pricing Information: No Cover, Complimentary Valet Parking. 2 Drink Min.
Email liz@redcarpetmediagroup.com or call Kitchen 305 @ 305-749-2110
Target Audience: All lovers of live music and networking!
http://www.myspace.com/redcarpetmediagroup
Presenter & Sponsor(s): Red Carpet Media Group & WDNA 88.9FM
Kitchen 305 at Newport Beachside Resort, 16701 Collins Avenue, N. Miami, FL 33160, (Collins & 167th, Sunny Isles Beach)
jazz