Arts & Culture

Coverage of visual arts, performing arts, cultural events, and artistic entrepreneurs.

U-M proposes adding 50,000 square feet to Chrisler Arena

Expanding the University of Michigan's Crisler Arena never seemed to make much sense since the words Ed Martin entered into university vocabulary. Things have changed now that Wolverine fans have their first basketball team to get excited about in a long time.Coincidence or not, U-M officials are making plans to add a "player development center" to the home of Cazzie Russell, the Fab Five and the 1989 National Champions. That 50,000-square-foot addition to the back of the arena comes with a $23.2 million price tag. The idea, which is going before the U-M Board of Regents tomorrow, is to give both the men's and women's basketball teams a place to practice. Both teams use Crisler as their home court.The new proposed facility will have locker rooms, strength and conditioning space and coaching offices. The addition will replace about 60 surface parking spots behind the arena. The university's Athletic Department plans to pay for the project with its own funds and gifts. The Athletic Department wants to start design of the new facility immediately and wants to hire Jickling Lyman Powell Associates to do it.Source: University of MichiganWriter: Jon Zemke

Latest in Arts & Culture
Real Kidz In Ypsilanti

Kids come in all shapes and sizes. Kids clothes? Not so much. Ypsilanti's Merrill Guerra started RealKidz Clothing Company to put cool clothes on every body. And, no pun intended, her company has really taken off.

Vampires in Ypsilanti

Vampires are all the rage right now, especially in Ypsilanti where a locally produced movie about them is being filmed.Excerpt:An evil blood-sucking vampire named Michael will be prowling the streets of Ypsilanti Saturday night.Evil Genius Entertainment is filming a portion of its movie “The 6th Extinction” at 4 p.m. Saturday on Park Street.The movie is about a blind date gone bad when main characters Michael and Shelly go out for dinner. Michael is bit by a vampire while Shelly is in the restroom and he spends the rest of the movie hunting her, leaving a trail of blood in his wake. Read the rest of the story here.

Ann Arbor, Music Town

The Internet mantra has long been you can work from anywhere. And A-list talent agency Fleming Artists is proof positive that even Ann Arbor can compete with the likes of L.A. and New York. Representing everyone from Ani DiFranco and Tom Paxton to Jeff Daniels and My Dear Disco, Fleming has been looking after world-class musicians for almost 30 years.

MASTERMINDS: Jon Carlson and Greg Lobdell

The Blue Tractor. Café Habana. Grizzly Peak. Jon Carlson and Greg Lobdell have become defacto planners of Ann Arbor's downtown. Friends since childhood, the two are building a local food and drink empire by turning historic spaces into must-visit destinations.

Music Therapy at EMU: Changing Lives One Note at a Time

There is a place on EMU's campus, where the power of music is used to light the spark in an audience of just one. It is not proud Please Auditorium or intimate Alexander Recital Hall, but is nevertheless a place where music touches lives. This place is EMU's Music Therapy Center, which is quickly establishing itself as one of the University's points of pride.

CSI:Miami uses Ann Arbor firm’s real life technology to solve fictional murder case

Ann Arbor is fast becoming the new darling of show business. Not only is CSI giving a local tech firm props, but a new Hollywood production starring Hillary Swank moves into town.Excerpt:It can look through walls or peek through a wallet's contents. It can even see underneath a person's clothing.And now, an Ann Arbor company's real-life technology that uses special wavelengths to see below the surface of nearly any object will help forensic investigators in the TV crime drama CSI:Miami solve its latest fictional murder mystery on Monday night.Read the rest of the story here and how the new Hillary Swank movie is set to be filmed in Ann Arbor here.

Hook adds two employees, triples space and hopes to hire four more

The last time we checked in with Hook earlier this year, the commercial-art start-up was made up of its two co-founders, a couple of part-time employees and a stable of freelancers crammed into a small office in downtown Ann Arbor. Today it employs six people (meeting its goal for the year) and has tripled its office space."We just kept working, taking on projects," says Aaron Schwartz, who co-founded the company last year with Michael Watts, both former University of Michigan students. "It got to the point that we had to turn down jobs because we didn't have the manpower."Manpower looks like it will be an important word for the 2.5-year-old firm. Schwartz expects to hire another 2-4 people in 2009 as it adds new clients.Hook incorporates 3-D imagery into commercial art, such as animation and illustrations. The firm's clients include Toyota and its work appeared in this year's North American International Auto Show in Detroit."We'd like to have more national television work," Schwartz says.Source: Aaron Schwartz, co-founder of HookWriter: Jon Zemke

Concentrate Takes A Holiday!

As we ring out the New Year, Concentrate offers a few audio stocking stuffers to you, our faithful readers ...before crawling under the covers for a two week rest. But fear not, we'll be back January 7th with more tales of creative innovation and new economy developments.

Ann Arbor’s Architectural Resource takes home design awards, looking to hire

Architectural Resource walked away with some hardware from the Remodeling Show's 2008 Qualified Remodeler Master Design Awards.The Ann Arbor-based firm was the most recognized company at the 30-year-old competition, taking home two first-places awards, four runner-up trophies, and one third-place finish. The awards were in categories like "Room Additions - Less Than $100,000" and "Room Remodel", which were both first-place finishes. Architectural Resource focuses on new home designs, additions and renovations. It handles projects both locally and in places as far away as Portland, Oregon and South Carolina. The boutique firm now employs five people and is looking for two more people. Those jobs are for an architectural designer and business manager.Source: Architectural ResourceWriter: Jon Zemke

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