MUSIC BROADWAY BAYONNE -FRIDAY MARCH 3rd LIVE MUSIC ON BROADWAY RETURNS TO BAYONNE AREA VENUES, FEATURING TALENTED ENTERTAINERS AT EIGHT VENUES
Music Broadway Bayonne Friday, March 3rd , 2017 is sponsored by Bayonne Mayor Jimmy Davis and the Bayonne Urban Enterprise Zone a program for the city of Bayonne that is a wonderful way to get out, go for dinner and listen to young talented musicians play while you dine.
Live Music on Broadway now in its 10th week pairs local musicians with some of Bayonne’s excellent dinner venues.
Going out to dine Friday night March 3rd ? Visit one of these fine establishments and listen to some fantastic music.
Click on the restaurants and tavern names to find out more about these fine Bayonne establishments
New exhibition spotlights the universal connection between the artists showing throughout March, Women’s History Month;
the opening reception will be held this Friday.
Art work of Joanne LeahWork by Marguerite Day
March 1, 2017, Jersey City, NJ – Hudson County Community College (HCCC) Department of Cultural Affairs will celebrate Women’s History Month with an energy-charged exhibition titled, “Quantum Overdrive!†Opening festivities for the exhibition, which may be viewed through April 19, will take place on Friday, March 3 and will include:
Curator’s Talk from 12 p.m. to 2 p.m. with Fred Fleisher – who is also a Hudson County Community College professor – detailing the concept and inspiration for the exhibition;
#WomensHMC Social Media Challenge, from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m., led by HCCC student and founder of #BlackHMC movement Nevin Perkins, who will explain this new endeavor for Women’s History Month; and
Margaret Murphy: Live Painting, from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. The artist encourages the public to provide women’s black clothing that can be placed on a hanger (shirts, blouses, skirts, dresses). Ms. Murphy will paint the articles in protest of the global backlash against women.
The exhibition and events will take place in the College’s Benjamin J. Dineen III and Dennis C. Hull Gallery, which is located on the top floor of the HCCC Library at 71 Sip Avenue in Jersey City (just across from the PATH Transportation Center). All are open to the public, and there is no charge for admission.
Professor Fleisher equates the bonds of matter and energy at the quantum level to a universal connection that exists in all artistic work. For the exhibition, he chose works that embody the artists’ ability to “utilize maximum potential of the engine so as to get the most out of that fuel†in other words, their “Overdrive.†It is coincidental that the works are all by women, and those pieces featured represent a wide range of materials, energies and personal sensibilities.
The 11 artists featured are:
Jude Broughan, whose work juxtaposes materials such as vinyl and denim with photographs.
Marguerite Day, who utilizes “jazz crochet†in her HOME & BIOME series, which explores how everything is in constant formation and the importance of acknowledging our shared physical climate.
Ketta Ioannidou, who produced paintings and digital collages that combine her memories of the landscape and sea of her native country of Cyprus with imagined and synthetic forms.
Joanne Leah, the creator of photo-based images that portray a series of contorted nude body parts juxtaposed with ordinary yet highly stylized props.
Tricia McLaughlin’s military portraits and 3D printed apes are characters from her animation, good enough for the people, based on Emma Goldman’s speech, Patriotism: A Menace to Liberty, first published in 1917.
Helen O’Leary has made a table of wooden “paintings†– works that question their own structure, stability – and are paired with a large, fragmented work that flirts with, but ultimately resists, collapse.
Rachel Phillips presents a composition of animated objects that play off each other in a humorous yet disconcerting manner, with goofy smiles and distressed eyeballs creating different forms of expression.
Laurie Riccadonna, HCCC Professor of Fine Arts, conveys the magical experience of looking at intricate and complicated form in her paintings which utilize interwoven patterns and layered images.
Adie Russell explores representational versus abstract, direct perceptual experience versus the imaged, and authentic versus performed selves, with attention to the constructs of the “natural world.â€
Savannah Spirit, inspired by the call-out heard at protests for women’s rights, created My Body, My Choice to reflect the elegant yet strong female body.
woolpunk, who machine-knits fiber installations and embroiders on photos of urban sprawl, has been inspired by her immigrant seamstress grandmother, who sewed American flags.
“Quantum Overdrive!†will share space with the exhibition, “A World Where We Belong,†which honors the memory of LGBTQIA advocate Georgia Brooks, who worked in the College’s Information Technology Services Department as an Academic Lab Manager for 25 years, and was an active advisor for the College’s Gay-Straight Alliance. Information on that exhibition is forthcoming.
The HCCC Benjamin J. Dineen, III and Dennis C. Hull Gallery is open Monday through Saturday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., and on Tuesday from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. (The Gallery is closed Sundays.)
The Annual Jersey City St. Patrick’s Day Parade will be held on Sunday March 12, 2017 @ 12:30pm.
The Parade Route will begin at Lincoln Park to Journal Square via Kennedy Blvd. The parade is sponsored by The Jersey City St. Patrick’s Day Parade Committee.
The Annual Honoree Awards Dinner will be held on Friday March 10, 2017 @ 6pm Casino in the Park, Lincoln Park, Jersey City.
Special Honoree – Cardinal Joseph Tobin, Archbishop Archdiocese of Newark 2017 HONOREES
Grand Marshal – Dr. Glen Gabert, Hudson County Community College
Irishman of the Year – Robert Caulfield, Fields Development Group
Irishwoman of the Year – Nora O’Rourke, Liberty Realty
Irish Firefighter – Battalion Chief Richard Gorman, JCFD
Irish Police Officer – Lt. Patrick Sullivan, JCPD
Irish Paramedic – Michael Very, JC Medical Center RWJ/Barnabas Health
Irish Educator – Kathleen Carroll Kopacz, JC BOE
Honorary Irishwoman – Leah Blesoff-Woodcock, The Hutton Bar & Grill
Honorary Irishman of the Year – Brett Michael Bacek, Posthumously
Miss Colleen – Katherine Mary Boyle, Hudson Catholic High School
A Pothole Hotline has been established for Bayonne, Mayor Jimmy Davis announced that Bayonne residents and business owners are encouraged to report potholes to the City’s Department of Public Works (DPW). Residents can call the potholes in to the Department of Public Works at 201- 858- 6070. Potholes may also be reported via e-mail at publicworks@baynj.org. Messages should contain a specific location for each pothole reported. All potholes reported by the public will be addressed within forty-eight hours, weather permitting.
Mayor Davis has directed the DPW to dedicate crews to address the citywide problem of potholes. During 2016, Public Works employees filled 2,444 potholes around Bayonne. Potholes develop each year as a result of the stresses that changing weather causes in street surfaces.
“I would like to thank our residents and local business owners for their help in identifying the locations of potholes. By working together, we can improve the quality of our streets,†Mayor Davis concluded.
Mayor Jimmy Davis announced that the Bayonne Public Library is switching to open-source software, effective March 1. Open-source software is free. The server will be hosted free of charge by Jersey Connect, which is provided by the New Jersey State Library. Hardware maintenance and back-ups will also be the responsibility of the State Library. Mayor Davis said, “This is a major step forward for the library. I would like to thank Library Director Sneh Bains for preparing the library for the technology of the future.â€
The new software license means the Bayonne Public Library and other participating institutional users will have the freedom to run, copy, distribute, study, change, and improve the software.
ByWater Solutions has facilitated the library’s migration to the Integrated Library System, which is called “Koha.†That word means “gift†in Maori, the native language of New Zealand. Koha is used by libraries around the world. After five years, the library will not be paying any license fee to any company. Up till now, the library has been paying thousands of dollars each year in license fees. In the future, the library will own its data, and data will also be shared with other participating libraries.
Financial aid from the State of New Jersey has been covering the $15,000 cost of migrating the library’s data.
JERSEY CITY, N.J. – Liberty Savings FCU has announced the appointment of Maria Solorzano as their new President/CEO. She assumed responsibilities as of January 1, 2017, succeeding James J. Miller, Sr., who has resigned as President/CEO after many years of dedicated service as he embarks onward towards a well-deserved retirement.
Maria Solorzano
“I’ve been a part of the Liberty Savings team for what feels like a lifetimeâ€, says Solorzano, “beginning as a filing clerk, right out of the Cooperative Education Program at Dickinson High School in Jersey City before being promoted to various roles over the years.†During her years at Liberty Savings FCU, Solorzano excelled in and lent her expertise to multiple departments including the teller platform, back office functions, and accounting. Upon graduation from Saint Peter’s College in Jersey City, she was appointed as Chief Financial Officer/Vice President. During these years Maria was a vital part of the LSFCU Administrative team as well as, an active member and leader in the Hudson County Community and part of the support team to the Liberty Savings FCU Board of Directors. Without a doubt, she has contributed considerably to the growth of the credit union.
Ward C Address Focuses on Revitalizing Journal Square and Moving the Neighborhood Toward Becoming the Most Important Arts Community in New Jersey
Jersey City Mayor Steven Fulop at Jersey City’s State of the City Address
JERSEY CITY – Mayor Steven M. Fulop will continue the series of 2017 State of the City Addresses today in Ward C, taking the message directly to the residents to emphasize the important role each community and individual plays in the progress Jersey City is making. A total of six speeches, one in each ward, will be delivered over the course of the next several weeks.
Monday’s speech will highlight the development occurring in the Journal Square neighborhood with the focus on arts and culture, including:
◠Announcing new RFP with the Friends of Loew’s for the Loew’s Theater management and renovations to be released this Spring
â— New museum in Journal Square to open in the Pathside Building; Purchase of land from County underway
â— Revisiting zoning changes for both Journal Square 2060 and the Journal Square Arts District
â— Finalize plans for the Apple Tree House re-opening
While the speech will address results citywide, new development and social service outreach to the homeless community in Journal Square will also be major focuses for Ward C in the upcoming year.
“We have seen incredible growth begin to occur within this neighborhood, and our hope is that Journal Square will once again become the economic heart of our city,†said Mayor Fulop. “Through investing in arts and culture, improving neighborhood infrastructure, and collaborating with community groups, we are making incredible progress in building a dynamic and inclusive Journal Square.â€
The State of the City Addresses will take place at 6:30 p.m. on each of the following dates:
â— Ward C, Monday, February 27th, Franklin L. Williams M.S. 7, 222 Laidlaw Avenue
â— Ward D, Thursday, March 2, Christa McAuliffe School P.S. 28, 167 Hancock Avenue
â— Ward E, Tuesday, March 7th, Grace Church Van Vorst, 39 Erie Street
â— Ward B, Tuesday, March 14th, Hank Gallo Community Center, Lincoln Park
â— Ward A, Monday, March 20th, CityLine Church, 1510 John F. Kennedy Boulevard
Bridges Art Gallery in Bayonne, New Jersey recently held an Art Exhibition at the Bayonne Museum entitled Expressive Creative Soul. The event was held over a 3-day period and featured many black artists from the Bayonne and Jersey City area.
See the video of the event here
March Project Greenville welcomes you INside the 1895 Greenville house we call home and share with the community at 128 Winfield Avenue (between Ocean Avenue and Old Bergen Road). Join us in the parlor Friday, Saturday & Sunday March 3rd, 4th and 5th from 4pm-7pm each day for art, photography, live music and light refreshments. Sofia Oro performs Friday at 5:30pm & Saturday at 5pm…Followed by the Sensational Country Blues Wonders at 5:40pm on Saturday! Featuring work by: Chris Capaci
Cat Catherine
Eric Christopher & Lucy Rovetto
Joe Zappa Costa
Jerry Garriga
Amanda Khan
Jim Legge
Jo Ann Neal
Rich Roberts
Athena Toledo
and Zoraida Velez
Call, text or email 646-361-1858 or projectgreenville@gmail.com for more information, directions etc. or check out the Project Greenville Facebook page for further details..
Unofficial after-party meet up spot, Park Tavern for live music organized by the good folks of a Westside Story, bringing more art & music to Westside Avenue 🙂
Art in the Park is a 6 week creative arts program for toddlers ages 4 and under. Join us for songs, story time, sensory play, and an art project, all in the shade of your local park.
There are eight 6 week sessions which take place on different days, in different parks, at different times. Choose either early morning (9am to 10:30am) or mid-morning (11am to 12:30pm) sessions:
Elysian Park on Mondays: June 19, 26, July 10, 17, 24, 31 Elysian Park on Tuesdays: June 20, 27, July 11, 18, 25, Aug 1 Pier A on Wednesdays: June 21, 28; July 12, 19, 26, Aug 2 Elysian Park on Thursdays: June 22, 29, July 13, 20, 27, Aug 3
Cost per 6 week session is $25.
Each session will accept 60 children.
Child must be accompanied by parent or guardian.
Dress child in messy clothes as clay or paints may stain clothes.
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