New England Center for Circus Arts

A carnival’s ‘childlike carefreeness’

“Traveling Circus’’ (oil on canvas), by Alexandra Rozenman, in Brickbottom Artists Association, Somerville, Mass., June 17-29

The gallery says:

‘‘There is a certain special kind of joy that takes place when the carnival comes to town. Nostalgia, excitement, and a childlike carefreeness that can be unshakeable for guests of all ages. The carnival can seem like a very intricate web of logistics but with the proper event planning team, you can put together a five-start carnival just about anywhere. Even your very own backyard.’’

See The New England Center for Circus Arts.

This 1945 Rodgers & Hammerstein Broadway musical is set on the Maine Coast. Rodgers said later it was his favorite of all his shows.

Teaching two quirky arts in New England

Vermont Public Radio (vpr.org)  ran a charming story. ‘’Despite Ringling Bros. Shutdown, The Circus Arts Remain Alive And Well In Vermont “ the other day about the New England Center for Circus Arts, in Brattleboro, Vt. The folks there see circuses as still having a bright future, even with the imminent demise of the most famous one, Ringling Bros and Barnum & Bailey Circus.

The Brattleboro school concentrates on trapeze and other gymnastics. They don’t do stuff with animals. Growing opposition from animal-rights people helped force Ringling out of business; much of the attraction had been animal acts with such “charismatic’’ animals as elephants.

But there’s a modest continuing interest in seeing circus acts with only people (and maybe a dog or two) – trapeze artists, tumblers, clowns and so on. A handful of circuses have followed this model. {A famous one, The Big Apple Circus, has  folded, but the much bigger, Montreal-based Cirque du Soleil continues.)

Let’s hope that this ancient art  (and athletic) craft survives in some way to bring joy to people in communities large and, especially, very small.

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That reminded me of another small organization training people to succeed in a niche art:  The Center for Cartoon Studies, in White River Junction, Vt.  It trains people to do “sequential art’’ – mostly cartoons, comics and graphic novels. (As you see when visiting most bookstores, graphic novels have been booming.)

This quirky institution offers a master of fine arts degree, one and two-year certificate programs, as well as summer programs. It’s the only such college-level training program of its kind in the United States."   Given the probable craziness of social and political events and celebrities now and for at leastthe next few years, the students and graduates of this school will have more material than ever. It’s a new golden age.

 

 

Despite Ringling's closing, Brattleboro, Vt., circus school staff is very upbeat

Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus is closing after  146 years but as a Vermont Public Radio story reports, at the New England Center for Circus Arts, in Brattleboro, Vt., "aspiring circus performers continue to train. And in many ways, the staff there say the future of circus arts has never been brighter.''

To hear and read the story, please hit this link.