Thursday, April 29, 2010

On with the Show!


It’ official, last night the Harwich Cranberry Committee, the organization committee for the Harwich Cranberry Festival, has accepted and will support the Harwich Music Festival Committee to partner with WOMR  in Harwich "Kick Off" Celebration  set for Saturday, September 18th from 12- 8pm.    
The Harwich Music Festival Committee will integrate the arts, and crafts festival dates to now include music, as added value to growing list of events planned in town.

·         Sat July 10,  Sun  July 11 (At Brooks Park)
·         Sat Aug 14,  Sun Aug 15 (At Brooks Park)
·         Sat Sep 11,  Family Fun Day -, Music at Bond Fire & Crafts Show (Red River Beach)
·         Sat Sep 18, Arts, Crafts and Food  with children’s music, puppets, face painting, programming in gazebo (At Brooks Park)
·         Sat WOMR/ WFMR “Kick Off” Celebration and Music Festival in the (At Brooks Park & Harwich Hollow) 12-8pm
·         Sun Children’s program on the big stage,  if still available, or Gazebo  in AM before parade,
·         and Harwich Music Festival after parade ‘til 5pm (At Brooks Park & Harwich Hollow)


Friday, April 23, 2010

Harwich Poster, T- Shirt, Sports Hat, and Sweat Shirts -Fundraiser Ideas!




On Earth Day 2010, Rowland Scherman and I met for a beer in Harwich Center, then toured the Harwich Hollow. "Rowley" snapped his camera as soon as his eye caught hold of the community tree, a large symbolic spreading golden beach tree, growing in town for perhaps 200 years at Brooks Park. 


Does anyone know what specie or how old this tree is for sure? Let us know by emailing us at harwichfolksfestival@gmail.com!

We thought that this tree, with hundreds of carved initials from lover's past in  Harwich to today's young folk using magic marker initials written on, but not carved into the tree from the rite of Spring 2010. 

On this Earth-day 2010, what a symbol for our Harwich community. Harwich is a spreading, grassroots, community trying to come together after the economic fall to re-organize our communities and transform us into a  living,  loving with positive progress, migrating toward a "Beloved Community".


This  venerable
golden  beach  tree marks and guards the entrance to the "Harwich Hollow", where soon music and life will return to this sacred, natural vortex in our community, after many years neglected, but never forgotten. It's a sentry for music in the park. 

Rowland Scherman the  former Life Magazine photographer, from Orleans,  Paul Lagg local artist, and Sally Vince a local graphic designer,  have agreed and will work  collaborating with the Harwich Cranberry Festival to generate logos, illustrations and poster designs for our selected marketing products along with WOMR/ WFMR  and for our own Harwich Folk Festival fundraiser.




 


Here is one of Rowland Scherman's illustrations.
























Thursday, April 22, 2010

Meet Rowland Scherman Offical -Photpgrapher for Harwich Folk Festival!

ROWLAND SCHERMAN

BY JOHN GRENIER-FERRIS
RFKÕs campaign, 1968
RFKÕs campaign, 1968

It's one thing to know you're good at something, and quite another when the world agrees with you. Sometimes, recognition takes a while.

From Woodstock to the funerals of the Apollo the Beatles to Martin Luther King, Jr., photojournalist Rowland Scherman chronicled the times, places, and people that shaped today's world. He has garnered a Grammy Award for his iconic photography, but for more than 30 years afterward, he lived in obscurity. "Rowland is not a self-promoter," explains Bob Korn, an accomplished printmaker in Orleans, whose clients include well-known photographers Joel Meyerowitz and Jim Dow. 

When Scherman walked into Korn's business one day with a slide of Bob Dylan, Korn realized Scherman was a "somebody." But who? astronauts, from photography and journalism have long been familiar parts of Scherman's life. His father was promotions director for Sports Illustrated and Newsweek. His uncle, David E. Scherman, a Life photographer and editor, got his nephew a job as a summer intern in Life's darkroom when he was a student at Oberlin College. After graduating in the late 1950s, Scherman became the first photographer hired by the Peace Corps.  



With gigs as a photographer for the U.S. Information Agency and a freelancer for Life magazine, Scherman received a steady stream of assignments that made him an eyewitness to key moments in the 1960s. He snapped a shot of Bob Dylan arriving at the 1963 Newport Folk Festival with a bullwhip slung over his shoulder. 

Later that day, Scherman slipped onstage with his wide-angle lens for an intimate view of Dylan and Joan Baez singing side by side. He took classic pictures of the Beatles from a concert goer's perspective. He was mere inches from Dr. Martin Luther King when he delivered his "I Had a Dream" speech, and he spent time on Bobby Kennedy's campaign plane in 1968. 


Scherman's body of work reveals his identity. Far from a simple photographic record of history-makers from 40 years ago, Scherman's photography captured scenes from a pivotal era with emotion and intelligence. 

Whether it is an image of Bobby Kennedy in a sea of supporters or Sammy Davis, Jr., peering into the camera, viewers get a visceral experience of the precise moment Scherman chose to release the shutter.

Bob Dylan in concert, 1966
Click Image to enlarge
At another Dylan concert, this time at the Washington Coliseum, Scherman pushed past backstage security to fire off a few frames. The next day, he marched into Columbia Records and showed his images to one of the art directors. One of the images featured a near silhouette of Dylan, haloed in a spotlight. "That's the cover of Dylan's next album," the art director declared. The image became the cover of Bob Dylan's Greatest Hits, for which Scherman earned a Grammy Award for Best Album Cover Photography in 1967.

But by 1971, Scherman had disappeared from prominence. Divorced and disillusioned with his life and the path on which the United States was headed, he turned down offers to cover the Vietnam War and work for Playboy. Instead, he went to England, and he ended up herding sheep in Wales for years. He returned to the Life offices once in the early 1980s to solicit work, but the industry had changed. "They wanted to see my work," he says, "and I told them all my work was in their magazine. But that didn't matter." The master of taking images that others used for promotion hadn't promoted himself enough. "I thought I had left a bigger footprint," he says about the rejection. 

Scherman moved to Birmingham, Alabama, where he opened a bar, shot products for catalogs, and worked on two photo projects--one documented Highway 11 and the other featured a series of photographs documenting the pervasiveness of Elvis Presley throughout all aspects of American society. When a long-term relationship ended, memories of his parents' Cape Cod vacations brought him here in 2000.

The BeatlesÕ first U.S. concert, 1964
Click Image to enlarge

Scherman says he wants the recognition of his peers. With the help of Bob Korn, and Meri and Dave Hartford, the owners of Artworks! Gallery in Orleans, Scherman, now 71, may just get it. The three have established the Rowland Scherman Project to promote his work to galleries and museums. Korn says the curators of four Smithsonian-affiliated museums were blown away. "They were amazed that his work has gone unnoticed for all these years." 

These days, Scherman shoots portraits on the Cape. "In retrospect, portraits are what I've always done," he says. "It's what I can do. After a lifetime of doing it, it's become second nature to me." He laughs after saying that the work he used to do with one camera and natural light is now done with five assistants and a truckload of lights.

Lately, he's been talking to camera clubs and other groups about his work. Members of the generation who remember when Scherman's scenes were fresh are often overwhelmed. "People see my work and many of them start crying," he says. "They say, 'This is the story of my life.'"

To view Rowland Scherman's works and get information on purchasing prints, visit www.rowlandscherman.com.