Credit: Courtesy of Paradise Garden Foundation
Credit: Courtesy of Paradise Garden Foundation
Finster began creating Paradise Garden behind his house in the early 1960s, according to the Smithsonian American Art Museum. Much of the building material he used was accumulated from his many trades, including his television and bicycle repair businesses.
Beacon will research and develop the new work on-site in early August and perform it on Saturday, Sept. 21, the first day of this year’s two-day Finster Fest.
For the 2023 Atlanta Patron Party, Beacon Dance performed a blend of social dance and modern and contemporary dance forms, set to music by the Talking Heads.
It was their way of paying tribute to Finster’s long history of collaboration with musicians: His artwork for the Talking Heads album “Little Creatures” was named Rolling Stone magazine’s album cover of the year in 1985.
The dancers’ costumes at the patron event evoked the photo of the band’s musicians on the album’s back cover.
Credit: Photo courtesy of Paradise Garden Foundation
Credit: Photo courtesy of Paradise Garden Foundation
Finster, who saw his art as a religious calling, said of the Talking Heads album: “I think there’s 26 religious verses on that first cover I done for them. They sold a million records in the first two-and-a-half months after it come out, so that’s 26 million verses I got out into the world in two-and-a-half months!”
Tina Cox, Paradise Garden’s executive director, says Beacon did their homework on Finster and Paradise Garden. “They research their creative subjects and really get it,” she says.
She invited them back for the 2024 fundraiser, when they performed to original live music and donned makeup inspired by many of Finster’s paintings. “He painted very overt eyelashes on his faces, so we did the same thing with our makeup,” White recalls.
Credit: Photo courtesy of Paradise Garden Foundation
Credit: Photo courtesy of Paradise Garden Foundation
He says the costumes for the Finster Fest performance in September will be “pedestrian clothing with a twist” and the music will comprise two or three tracks by the Australian band Dead Can Dance.
At least one of the selections will have a contemplative, ritualistic feel to it. “Much of Finster’s work has that same ethereal feel. He often used angel imagery and was inspired by the sacred and transformational.”
At Finster Fest, however, visitors will be focused on the environment itself and all the activities — booths overflowing with art, lots of food and, of course, music and other entertainment. The Beacon dancers will amplify the essence of Finster’s art right there, in the garden he built.
In the process of creation, White says, he and the dancers will consider what it means to be a visionary and how Finster became the artist he became. It’s about diving into and giving yourself over to the creation of art, he adds.
IF YOU GO
Finster Fest 2024
Sept. 21-22 at Paradise Garden. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. $10; children 12 and under, free. 200 N. Lewis St., Summerville. 706-808-0800, paradisegardenfoundation.org
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Gillian Anne Renault is ArtsATL’s senior editor for music and dance and has been an ArtsATL contributor since 2012. She has covered dance for the Los Angeles Daily News, Herald Examiner and Ballet News and on radio stations such as KCRW, the NPR affiliate in Santa Monica, California. Many years ago, she was awarded an NEA fellowship to attend American Dance Festival’s Dance Criticism program.
Credit: ArtsATL
Credit: ArtsATL
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