“To Everything There Is A Season…”
By Tom Wachunas
File this one
under ‘Thank You.’ One thing I didn’t mention in my last post was that the
Doreen St. John show at Cyrus Custom Framing and Art Gallery (you still have
until Jan. 30 to see it) is the final exhibit we’ll see under the name
“Translations,” – originally a brick-and-mortar gallery in the heart of
Canton’s Arts District before it went mobile. TRANSLATIONS was Craig Joseph’s
remarkably vital contribution to the Canton cultural ethos of the past several
years (that’s him pictured above in a portrait by Heather Bullach).
I don’t think he’d
mind my sharing with you the following communication (which I’ve edited only
slightly) that he released on November 2, 2015:
“… It
has been a wonderful 6 years - both in the space downtown and in the last year
of pop-up exhibits all over Stark County. I have enjoyed what I've had the
opportunity to do, the people with whom I've been able to collaborate, and the
art we've produced…
BUT ... after 7 plays and 15 exhibits in
just a year's time, I need a break, and the easiest way to lessen the grind is
to remove the "one exhibit (or more) a month" tenet from my life.
That's what TRANSLATIONS has been about since January 2010, and so it’s time to
put TRANSLATIONS to bed.
Will I still direct theatre? Will I still
curate exhibits? Absolutely. But it'll just take a different form from here on
out. And it'll just happen without the TRANSLATIONS' name and tradition
attached to it. After I take some time
to lay on the couch, read, travel, refresh, have a social life, and come up
with some new visions. Which I hope you'll check out when they occur.
Until then,… my inarticulatable gratitude
for what all of you - artists and patrons alike - have given me the privilege
of doing over the last six years. I look forward to the next adventure
together.”
Craig’s breadth of vision and
curatorial acumen never ceased to astonish and inspire me, and I’ll truly miss
the uniquely engaging concepts and excellent content that TRANSLATIONS so
consistently gifted to us - provocative
and entertaining in the deepest sense of those words. My bittersweet sentiments
are those of a hooked reader, at once saddened by finishing an enthralling book,
wishing the adventure wouldn’t end, yet anxiously anticipating the next one.
So if I’m glum,
it’s only because I long for more “authors” like Craig Joseph to continue
nourishing the Canton arts milieu. No doubt he will in his way and his
time. In that, I offer both my thanks
for past adventures and ardent prayers for the success of his future journeys.
Meanwhile, maybe
this isn’t the end of a marvelous story after all. Hopefully, it’s simply the
closing of one chapter in a story still being written.
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