Last Dance, Original Encaustic Painting, Ballet Shoes, Fine Art, Wall Art, Ready To Hang, Dance, Satin, Ribbon - Sales

Last Dance, Encaustic Painting6x12 inches, This piece was painted on a Cradle Board and comes ready to hang with hardware attached.Original encaustic mixed media painting on cradle board, has hardware, and ready to hang. Encaustic is a painting medium of pigment suspended in bees wax and used in a molten hot state. All the materials are in their natural form. It makes a very soft, warm, and textured painting you won't find in any other medium.To create these pieces I use pastels, colored pencils, pigment sticks and encaustic paints.

Scary Spice (aka, Melanie Brown) reportedly originally told James Corden in September that the Spice Girls would be reuniting – but probably not with Posh. “We’re going to be going on tour,” Brown told Corden, according to Rolling Stone. “Us four for sure. We’ll see about [Posh], but us four are definitely going to be on tour. She might join us for a few [shows]. She better.”. And now we know that the U.K. is getting its Spice back. But what about North America?. You know what fans on this side of the pond want — what they really, really want? Well, I’ll tell you what we want — what we really, really want.

Beginning with a rare appearance by the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra, there are four large-scale symphonic concerts and two promising chamber music events highlighting this week’s classical music calendar, PLAYING FOR PEACE: Nearly 20 years ago, the Argentine-Israeli conductor Daniel Barenboim and the late Palestinian literary scholar Edward Said conceived of a rare ensemble – an orchestra made up of Israeli, Palestinian, and multinational Arab musicians.The West-Eastern Divan Orchestra was born last dance, original encaustic painting, ballet shoes, fine art, wall art, ready to hang, dance, satin, ribbon in 1999, and under Barenboim’s direction, it serves as a musical model of cooperation, education, knowledge and understanding, Its goals: to humanize the “other” and to imagine a more hopeful future for all.Clearly, the world needs this orchestra now more than ever..

This weekend in Berkeley, Barenboim and his players make a special appearance at Zellerbach Hall. Saturday’s event, part of a five-city tour, marks the orchestra’s West Coast debut, and the program, conducted by Barenboim, features Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 5 in E minor, and Richard Strauss’ “Don Quixote.” Cellist Kian Soltani and violist Miriam Manasherov – both members of the West-Eastern Divan ensemble – are the soloists.Barenboim’s Bay Area appearances have been few and far between: He last performed here in 2004, conducting the Staatskapelle Berlin at Davies Symphony Hall in San Francisco.

Presented as part of Cal Performances’ Berkeley RADICAL Citizenship program, Saturday’s concert includes a post-performance talk with Barenboim joining former Cal Performances director Matias Tarnopolsky, who left Berkeley earlier this year and currently serves as CEO and president of the Philadelphia Orchestra, Details: 3 p.m, Nov, 10, Zellerbach Hall, UC Berkeley; $50-$275; 510-642-9988; last dance, original encaustic painting, ballet shoes, fine art, wall art, ready to hang, dance, satin, ribbon www.calperformances.org, BANNED AND BOYCOTTED: Who said music isn’t political? This week at Davies Symphony Hall, two works by great 20th-century composers suggest otherwise, Dmitri Shostakovich, who had endured years of repression under the Stalin regime, composed his Violin Concerto No, 1 during 1947-48 but kept it hidden for years, It finally premiered in 1955, two years after Stalin’s death, And Bela Bartok encountered censorship for his ballet, “The Miraculous Mandarin.” With its shocking allusions to prostitution and murder, the score was composed in 1919 but wasn’t premiered until 1926, Czech conductor Jakub Hrůša returns to conduct Bartok’s Suite from “The Miraculous Mandarin,” along with Shostakovich’s concerto, with Karen Gomyo as soloist, Borodin’s Symphony No, 2 completes the program, Hrůša and Gomyo will discuss these works in a post-concert talk at each performance..

Details: 8 p.m. Nov. 8-10, Davies Hall, S.F.; $20-$75; 415-864-6000; www.sfsymphony.org. DOUBLING DOWN ON DVORAK: The stars have aligned for Dvorak this weekend at Davies Hall. Following Hrůša’s program, Sunday brings two concerts featuring Dvorak works. On Sunday afternoon under its dynamic conductor, Christian Reif, the San Francisco Symphony Youth Orchestra performs Dvorak’s Symphony No. 7. Reif also leads John Adams’ “The Chairman Dances” and Emmanuel Séjourné’s Concerto for Marimba and Strings, with Jonas Koh as soloist. There’s more Czech music in store that evening, when the mighty Czech Philharmonic makes a return visit to Davies Hall on Sunday night. Under conductor Semyon Bychkov, the orchestra plays an all-Dvorak program featuring the composer’s sublime Cello Concerto, with Alisa Weilerstein as soloist, followed by – wait for it – Dvorak’s Symphony No. 7.

Details: San Francisco Symphony Youth Orchestra concert, 2 p.m, Nov, 11, Davies Hall; tickets $20-$55; Czech Philharmonic concert, 7:30 p.m, Nov, 11, Davies Hall, S.F.; $35-$99; tickets for both concerts at 415-864-6000; www.sfsymphony.org, LANDING A ‘TROUT’ last dance, original encaustic painting, ballet shoes, fine art, wall art, ready to hang, dance, satin, ribbon IN SAN JOSE: Artists from the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center will make a special appearance this weekend at the Trianon in San Jose, Presented by the San Jose Chamber Music Society, pianist Orion Weiss joins Paul Huang (violin), Paul Neubauer (viola), Keith Robinson (cello) and Xavier Foley (bass) in Schubert’s delightful “Trout” Quintet, Weiss and Neubauer, familiar to Bay Area audiences from their summertime appearances at Music@Menlo, will also team up for Schubert’s “Arpeggione” Sonata; rounding out the program are works by Beethoven and Bottesini..

Details: 8 p.m. Nov. 10, Trianon Theatre, San Jose; $37-$52, discounts for students and seniors; 408-286-5111; www.sjchambermusic.org. FIRST SERVING OF ‘SUNDAES’: Chamber Music Sundaes opens its 38th season Sunday Nov. 11 with the Navarro Trio – violinist Victor Romasevich, cellist Jill Brindell and pianist Marilyn Thompson – playing the world premiere of Matthew Arnerich’s Trio for Violin, Cello and Piano. Arnerich’s Sonata for Cello and Piano is also on the program, and violist Wayne Roden joins the trio for Sergei Taneyev’s Piano Quartet in E Major.

CLICK HERE if you are having a problem viewing the photos on a mobile device, By last dance, original encaustic painting, ballet shoes, fine art, wall art, ready to hang, dance, satin, ribbon Emily Yahr | The Washington Post, Season 27 of ABC’s “Dancing With the Stars” has been airing for six weeks, And so far, only female contestants have been sent home, First, comedian Nikki Glaser, Then Paralympic skier Danelle Umstead, Then actress Nancy McKeon, Then R&B singer Tinashe, Last week, Olympic gymnast Mary Lou Retton said goodbye, The only women left are model Alexis Ren and actress Evanna Lynch, Plus, there’s the six men: former NFL star DeMarcus Ware, country radio host Bobby Bones, “The Bachelorette” alum Joe Amabile and actors Milo Manheim, Juan Pablo Di Pace and John Schneider..



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