Orlando Sentinel

So much to ponder and enjoy at UCF Celebrates the Arts

- Matthew J. Palm

We’re halfway through UCF Celebrates the Arts, the annual festival of creativity at the Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, and I’ve already experience­d unforgetta­ble moments. Here’s a look at some highlights.

Sun-A Park and Ammon Perry Bratt gave a spirited salute to George Gershwin in the stylish surroundin­gs of Judson’s Live, the downtown Orlando arts center’s newest venue. It’s the 100th anniversar­y of Gershwin’s indelible “Rhapsody In Blue,” and Park and Bratt performed a four-handed piano arrangemen­t.

Just the opening notes brought a smile to the soul, and the shifting moods — from the definition of jaunty to downright grandiose — warmed the heart. “Rhapsody” was the finale to a concert that also showcased a bouncy Cuban Overture, with extra percussion, and a medley with a beautifull­y nostalgic “A Foggy Day (in London Town),” a lush “The Man I Love” and percolatin­g “I Got Rhythm.”

That event followed the Judson’s protocol of a ticket charge plus a mandatory food or drink purchase. But everything else I’ve experience­d has been free.

On view throughout the center are multiple art exhibits, which anyone can walk in and view. You can’t miss “The Steampunk Menagerie,” a sculptural installati­on that has taken over the center’s grand staircase like a city of curious fairy-tale high-rises. The structures, somehow industrial and whimsical at the same time, were created by teams of students from UCF’s 3D-Design Fundamenta­ls classes.

“Art & Autism: Pathways to Expression” is a fascinatin­g look at works by people on the autism spectrum who have unique ways of expressing themselves; often, their creativity fuels their strongest form of communicat­ion.

Also fascinatin­g: “#Faces of Russian Resistance,” which tells the story of 16 Russian citizens who have opposed their government’s actions. Their faces — behind jail-like wire — are paired with the details of their circumstan­ces. And it’s especially jarring to consider their plight, and bravery, surrounded by the beauty of the arts center, a place of free expression.

That exhibit is part of the National Endowment for the Arts’ “Big Read,” as was a weekend poetry reading and book signing by “Deaf Republic” author Ilya Kaminsky.

Because Kaminsky, born in Ukraine when it was part of the Soviet Union, lost his hearing at a young age, he described his first language as “the language of imagery.”

“Deaf Republic” tells of a tragedy that befalls a town occupied by soldiers and incorporat­es themes of protest and change while casting a critical eye on those who remain complacent and comfortabl­e in the face of injustice and suffering.

“It might be Eastern Europe, it might be World War II, it might be now,” Kaminsky said of his story’s setting.

In a separate e-mail conversati­on with the Orlando Sentinel, Kaminsky touched on a number of topics, including what it was like to grow up deaf — a feeling he illustrate­d poetically through his writing:

“Walking through the city, I watched the people; their ears were open all the time, they had no lids. I was interested in what sounds might be like. The whooshing. The hissing. The whistle. The sound of keys turning in the lock, or water moving through the pipes two floors above us. I could easily notice how the people around me spoke to one another with their eyes without realizing it.

“But what if the whole country was deaf like me? So that whenever a policeman’s commands were uttered, no one could hear? I liked to imagine that. Silence, that last neighborho­od, untouched, as ever, by the wisdom of the government.”

Kaminsky visited that idea in “Deaf Republic,” where the townspeopl­e become deaf to the occupying soldiers as a form of protest.

“So, the idea of Deaf Republic has more than one meaning for me, as you might imagine,” Kaminsky said.

He visits Ukraine every few months to check on relatives and friends who have been affected by the Russian invasion. He describes his hometown of Odessa with affection:

“There was an opera house before there was potable water. Odessa loves art, and it loves to party. In the summer, huge cages of watermelon­s sit on every corner. You break them on the sidewalk and eat them with friends. The city has an especial affinity for literature. There are more monuments to writers than in any other city I have ever visited. When they ran out of writers, they began putting up monuments for fictional characters.”

He also appreciate­s the spirit of Ukrainians.

“The most important holiday in Odessa isn’t Christmas; it is April 1, April Fool’s Day, which we call Humorina,” Kaminsky said. “Thousands of people come to the street and celebrate what they call ‘the day of kind humor.’ All of Ukraine has a sense of humor — think of the man who offered to tow a Russian tank which had run out of gas back to Russia. Humor is a part of resilience.”

He and others have started a poetry studio to give children something uplifting on which to focus in the hours they spend hiding from bombings. (Find more informatio­n and ways to help at vo.od.ua/rubrics/temadnya/49409.php.)

“Now they are not quite alone in those bomb shelters,” he said. “They take poems with them.”

He also provides insight into what Ukrainians think of the West and the war.

“The West is watching us,” Kaminsky said, saying that a friend wrote him from Ukraine. “This is their ‘reality TV war,’ they are curious to see whether we will go on living or die.”

Another friend told him: “Putins come and go. If you want to help, send us some poems and essays. We are putting together a literary magazine.”

Kaminsky gets it. He knows the power of the written word — and why his “Deaf Republic” resonates at any time.

“We don’t read the poets to understand the moment. We read poets to understand ourselves,” he said. But he graciously humors a journalist by considerin­g “Deaf Republic” in light of the war:

“If I must put it in terms of this moment, the purpose of the state is to numb the senses. The purpose of a lyric poet is to wake them up,” he said.

As part of the Orlando festival, UCF theater students performed a staged version of “Deaf Republic” to Kaminsky’s approval.

“I feel very lucky, of course, that this is happening, and that it is happening especially in Florida, where there is a censorship of its own taking place right now,” he said. “So it feels interestin­g to have these texts in that space given a voice on stage.”

He doesn’t feel proprietar­y about the poems of “Deaf Republic” when they are adapted anew.

“These are not my poems anymore, they belong to those who give them a new life on stage,” he said. “So it has a life of its own, and that’s how it should be with books, I feel.”

So much to think about, and there’s so much more ahead at UCF Celebrates the Arts.

More music? Try the National High School Choral Festival (April 11) or the Hippocrene Saxophone Quartet, which has a history of that instrument’s music (April 12). More theater? A full-scale production of “Sweeney Todd” takes over the center’s Walt Disney Theater (April 11-14). More free stuff ? Talks on rebuilding Notre Dame in Paris (April 11) and the impact of artificial intelligen­ce on creativity (April 12), a program of award-winning animated film shorts (April 13) and the National Young Composers Challenge, which is building the future of music (April 14).

Get all the details at arts. ucf.edu/celebrates, and get celebratin­g.

 ?? MATTHEW J. PALM/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? The mirror over the bar in Judson’s Live at the Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts reflects Sun-A Park and Ammon Perry Bratt as they play the music of Gershwin on April 4 as part of UCF Celebrates the Arts.
MATTHEW J. PALM/ORLANDO SENTINEL The mirror over the bar in Judson’s Live at the Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts reflects Sun-A Park and Ammon Perry Bratt as they play the music of Gershwin on April 4 as part of UCF Celebrates the Arts.
 ?? JESSICA ABELS VIA UCF ?? Writer Ilya Kaminsky takes questions from the audience after reading from his acclaimed “Deaf Republic” at the Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts in Orlando.
JESSICA ABELS VIA UCF Writer Ilya Kaminsky takes questions from the audience after reading from his acclaimed “Deaf Republic” at the Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts in Orlando.
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Zarifa Sautieva’s story and image are part of the “#Faces of Russian Resistance” art exhibition at 2024’s UCF Celebrates the Arts at the Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts in Orlando. She was sentenced to more than seven years in prison for participat­ing in a political protest in Russia.
Zarifa Sautieva’s story and image are part of the “#Faces of Russian Resistance” art exhibition at 2024’s UCF Celebrates the Arts at the Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts in Orlando. She was sentenced to more than seven years in prison for participat­ing in a political protest in Russia.
 ?? MATTHEW J. PALM/ORLANDO SENTINEL PHOTOS ?? “The Steampunk Menagerie”fills the grand staircase of the Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts in Orlando. The installati­on was designed by students in UCF’s 3D-design fundamenta­ls classes.
MATTHEW J. PALM/ORLANDO SENTINEL PHOTOS “The Steampunk Menagerie”fills the grand staircase of the Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts in Orlando. The installati­on was designed by students in UCF’s 3D-design fundamenta­ls classes.
 ?? ?? Familiar faces fill this art installati­on by Max Sanford, a 21-year-old artist with Autism Spectrum Disorder, on view in the “Art & Autism: Pathways to Expression” exhibition.
Familiar faces fill this art installati­on by Max Sanford, a 21-year-old artist with Autism Spectrum Disorder, on view in the “Art & Autism: Pathways to Expression” exhibition.

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