| October, 2021

Groundbreaking: Center for Active Aging to get a new look

Posted on 07 October 2021 by JLusk

 
The Center for Active Aging in Deerfield (at 227 NW Eller St.) has been in talks with the city about obtaining a major renovation for quite some time. They finally broke ground on the project on October 6. Stay tuned for updates as the construction gets underway. Find out more about the center at www.deerfield-beach.com/1506/Center-for-Active-Aging.
 
Photo provided by Jane Rudorfer Shafrann

 

 
 

Comments Off on Groundbreaking: Center for Active Aging to get a new look

DB Fall Festival–Oct. 16

Posted on 06 October 2021 by JLusk

The 8th Annual Deerfield Beach Fall Festival will take place Saturday, October 16 at Pioneer Park from 4 to 9 p.m. Enjoy a day of fun with the entire family! This festival event includes several fun activities such as story telling, arts & crafts, archery, hay ride, picking up goodie bags from our local non-profits, picking out your perfect pumpkin from the pumpkin patch, enjoying our live entertainment, and much more! 

The City of Deerfield Beach Parks and Recreation Department is constantly monitoring the current COVID-19 situation and will be following the recommended CDC & Broward County guidelines. 

Comments Off on DB Fall Festival–Oct. 16

AVOID A SCARY HALLOWEEN WITH THESE SAFETY TIPS

Posted on 05 October 2021 by JLusk

BSO Sheriff Gregory Tony has some tips for parents whose children will be trick o’ treating this year:

Treats, ghouls and spine-chilling fun are just a few reasons why Halloween is one of the most anticipated times of year for kids. Unfortunately, Halloween can also be the most dangerous time of year for children. Nearly 4,000 Halloween-related injuries occur every year, including falling accidents, poisoning, burns and motor accidents. Although the festivities can be fun, we want to remind you of these important safety tips to help prevent real horrors from occurring.
 
Costume Safety:
•  Your child’s costume should allow them to walk easily. If the costume involves a mask, ensure they take it off when crossing the street so the mask does not obstruct their vision.
• Have something reflective, such as a glow stick or reflective tape, attached to their costume.
• Use a flashlight if you’re out during evening hours.
 
When Children Are Trick-Or-Treating:
• Accompany your children or make sure a trusted adult goes with them.
• Instruct older kids to go in one group.
• Trick-or-treat in your neighborhood.
• Always look both ways when crossing the street.
• Utilize the sidewalk. If there is no sidewalk, walk facing traffic.
• Be alert to parked cars. Double-check the vehicle is not about to be in motion.
• Bring hand sanitizer with you and use it after touching objects or other people.
• Wash hands and inspect all treats before allowing your children to consume them. Throw away any open treats.
 
If Giving Out Treats:
• Avoid direct contact with trick-or-treaters.
• Give out treats outdoors, if possible.
• Set up a station with individual bagged treats for kids to take.
 
Motor Safety:
• Enter and exit driveways carefully.
• Turn on your headlights immediately when you get into the car.
•  Avoid any distractions while driving.
•  Slow down, especially in residential areas.
•  Discourage new or inexperienced drivers from driving during Halloween.
•  Watch for children crossing the street, on medians, at intersections and on curbs.
 
Follow these cautionary steps to avoid a setback, and enjoy the fun of Halloween. If you are looking for a safe alternative to traditional trick-or-treating, attend an outdoor Halloween event in a controlled environment with your kids. As a reminder, don’t hesitate to report any suspicious activity. If you see something, say something.
 
Have a safe, enjoyable and happy Halloween!
 
Service Equals Reward
 
Sheriff Gregory Tony

Comments Off on AVOID A SCARY HALLOWEEN WITH THESE SAFETY TIPS

The Wick Theatre Launches Season 8 with Mamma Mia!

Posted on 04 October 2021 by JLusk


The Wick Theatre in Boca Raton opens their 8th season with the smash international hit Mamma Mia!  This sunny, funny mega-musical is infused with joy, nostalgia and the iconic hit songs of Swedish supergroup ABBA.  Broadway stars Jodie Langel and Sean McDermott lead an all-star cast including Meg Frost, Aaron Bower, Britte Steele and more. The show runs from October 7 to November 14, 2021. Tickets are $75-$95. The Tavern at The Wick is open for pre-show dining. Learn more at www.thewick.org or call the box office at 561-995-2333.

“After the past 18 months, I think we all deserve a dose of unbridled fun, and Mamma Mia! is that and more,” Marilynn A. Wick, managing executive producer. “This international phenomenon ran on Broadway for 14 years and has dazzled a global audience of over 65 million. It is the ultimate giddy guilty pleasure that will have you singing and dancing in the aisles.”

Based on the songs of the pop group ABBA, Benny Andersson & Björn Ulvaeus’ Mamma Mia! is a jukebox musical written by British playwright Catherine Johnson. The musical unfolds on a Greek island paradise where Sophie, a soon-to-be-bride, longs to discover the identity of her father. Bringing three men from her mother’s past back to the island on the eve of her wedding leads to non-stop laughs and explosive song and dance numbers to ABBA hits including “Super Trouper,” “Dancing Queen,” “Knowing Me, Knowing You,” “Take a Chance on Me,” “Thank You for the Music,” “Money, Money, Money,” “The Winner Takes It All” and “SOS.”

The Wick is delighted to welcome back Broadway and National touring stars Jodie Langel (Donna) and Sean McDermott (Sam).  The rest of the all-star cast includes Britte Steele as Rosie, Aaron Bower as Tanya, Robert Koutras as Bill, Doug Chitel as Harry, and Meg Frost as Sophie. The show is directed by Larry Raben, with musical direction by Eden Marte and choreography by Stephen Casey.

Matinee performances are Wednesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays, and Sundays at 2 pm. Evening performances are Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 pm.

Masks will be required for all guests and temperature checks will be done at the door.

The Wick Theatre is located at 7901 N. Federal Highway, Boca Raton, FL 33487. For more info. and tickets, visit https://thewick.org/events/mamma-mia.

Comments Off on The Wick Theatre Launches Season 8 with Mamma Mia!

AAUW Membership Meeting & Presentation–Nov. 1

Posted on 04 October 2021 by JLusk

 
 
AAUW Membership Meeting & Presentation in person and via zoom
November 1 (Monday) at 12:30 p.m.
 
Join the American Association of University Women (AAUW) Pompano Beach Branch for their monthly membership meeting and educational presentation.  After a brief membership meeting, Monica Elliott, president of League of Women Voters Broward County, will discuss Separating Fact from Fiction in Politics.
 
Location:   Emma Lou Olson Civic Center, 1801 NE 6 Street, Pompano Beach.   
 
New members and guests welcome.   No charge. Social time 12:30 p.m. (bring a lunch, dessert and beverages provided).  Meeting at 1:00 p.m., presentation at 1:45 p.m.  Email to get Zoom link.
 
RSVP312-316-6229 or email: pompanoscholar@yahoo.com
 

Comments Off on AAUW Membership Meeting & Presentation–Nov. 1

Skyrocketing Statue Lands in Boca Raton

Posted on 01 October 2021 by JLusk

Artist Hubert Phipps at the unveiling of his “Rocket” sculpture at the Boca Raton Innovation Campus (BRiC) on September 20.

By Rachel Galvin

A seeming conduit to the divine, a 30-foot stainless steel towering form juts toward the heavens, with its feet firmly planted on terra firma, among the green grass at the Boca Raton Innovation Campus (BRiC). What began as abstract art took form as a rocket and that is its name – “Rocket.” It is the creation of artist Hubert Phipps, who arrived for its “unveiling” on September 20.

The project began four years ago and only as a sketch, said Philpps, whose process is not one of building something in the normal way, nor eliminating everything that is not what he is trying to create, but of sensory deprivation. He is known to put himself into darkness, limiting outside sound and sight and letting his hand as he sketches reveal what lies beneath. His 2-D work is revelatory. His paint pigment on paper shows movement, life, light among the darkness. His sculptures are just as organic, as he creates natural forms that look like they will animate and slink away any moment. His “Rocket” has the same dynamism. Although it looks firmly planted, it appears as if it could blast off at any time, careening into the atmosphere to explore regions beyond, to see what cannot be seen.

Exploration is really all about curiosity and wondering, “What if?” Speculation such as this has led to some of the greatest breakthroughs in our history, including the computer. It is apropos that a sculpture that symbolizes, in part, that quest for knowledge be planted at BriC, where the IBM personal computer was first invented.

What is perhaps more interesting is that when the art was first created, first by a sketch back in 2018 and then in 3D as smaller sculptures, Phipps had no idea that one day a larger version would be placed here. Its placement came about after he met Irvin Lippman, the executive director of the Boca Raton Museum of Art, who saw Phipps’ show including maquettes of the “Rocket” at the Coral Springs Museum of Art. At that time, he told Phipps about a new Art in Public Places initiative, part of a cultural partnership between the Boca Raton Museum of Art and CP group, who owns BRiC and is a premier developer and operator of commercial real estate. This was the beginning of Rocket coming to this space. What is amazing is that the statue’s form almost perfectly mimics the building behind it, which was created by architect Marcel Breuer in the 1960s. They both employ the Brutalist style. Lippman said, “The museum is happy to be a matchmaker here,” as he explained how he first met Phipps and told him about the program. “It is a match made in heaven.”

Creating the 9.8-ton sculpture composed of 2,200 square feet of stainless steel was not so simple. It was made in three pieces over in China and then shipped to the U.S. What baffles Phipps is that it was not sent directly to Florida, but actually went to multiple locations on ship and then by truck before finally arriving here. Then, he said, engineering came into play to put it all together.

Phipps did not begin his journey into art in the abstract realm. His father was a publisher and Phipps fell in love with illustrating political cartoons, the exquisite detail of it. So he has seen what it is to create more realistic forms and what it is to delve into abstract art, and he can say that both are equally challenging. With realism, he said, there is an endpoint, a goal, you know what it will become. With abstract, in contrast, the artwork leads you and knowing when to stop is not always so easy.

Sometimes, he says he often does not see a piece of artwork’s importance until later. “I don’t give it any credence or appreciation until later,” he said. “I don’t have a pre-conceived notion [of art I create.] I didn’t sit down to create a rocket.”

At the event celebrating Rocket, he thanked those who helped make it possible, saying, he was honored his sculpture was part of the Art in Public Places initiative,” adding, “Art has been hugely important in my life. I applaud everybody who worked together to bring this to Boca Raton.”

He also talked about his love for aerospace and remembered an experience when he was only 10 years old living with his uncle near Indiantown here in Florida. One night, he heard a rumbling sound outside, a roar, and asked his uncle the next day what it was. His uncle joked that maybe it was cattle stampeding (as the area was filled with mostly cattle and orange groves back then, said Phipps). But, it turned out it was nearby Pratt & Whitney testing rocket engines. He also recalled seeing Neil Armstrong set foot on the moon. That was 1969, the same year the building behind where Rocket now is placed was built.

“I love the forms of rockets, things to do with aerospace,” he said, “I have a lifelong passion with aviation. I’m a pilot. I’m fortunate enough to have been flying for almost 50 years. I still fly.” His family was comprised of early Palm Beach pioneers with a history in aviation. One of his ancestors, Amy Phipps Guest, was one of the first women aviators. She had hopes of being the first woman to fly across the Atlantic Ocean, but her family was too protective and asked that Amelia Earhart be chosen instead, and Earhart did make that first flight in 1928. Guest continued to be a champion for Earhart and aviation. Her love of flight seems to have been passed on to Phipps.

He added, in reference to his Rocket, “I created this … The inspiration comes from all the amazing things we do as a human race as far as pushing the envelope, as far as reaching the stars, if you will. How timely now with all this going on in the aerospace world today, so this could not have worked out better. Of course, all the synergies that have been mentioned about this form and how it works with the architecture…”

Ribbon Cutting on “Rocket:” Councilman & CRA Vice Chair Andy Thomson, Vice Mayor Andrea Levine O’Rourke, Boca Raton Museum of Art Board Chair Jody Harrison Grass, Boca Raton Museum of Art Executive Director Irvin Lippman, artist Hubert Phipps, President & CEO of the Greater Boca Raton Chamber of Commerce Troy M. McLellan, Marketing Director for CP Group Giana Pacinelli, councilwomen Monica Mayotte & Yvette Drucker.

Boca Raton Deputy Mayor Andrea Levine O’Rourke, who was in attendance with other councilmembers, said, “This could not be a better representation of art in public places. You can see yourself in it … It can reflect the past or be a symbol of where we came from and where we are going”

Phipps, who currently lives in Virginia, is planning on being in Palm Beach for a solo exhibition at the TW Fine Art Gallery. The show, which will feature maquettes of his Rocket, opens November 27 and runs for six weeks.

Besides creating art and flying, he also was a professional race car driver, so he has had varied experience, and some of it in what some might consider high-risk situations. But he does not see it that way. He is not a daredevil. To him, being able to make those turns at high speed, fly up in the sky and give birth to a beautiful piece of art that will inspire others is more calculating. It appears to require intense focus, dedication and passion. With everything he does, it seems he really is reaching for the stars … to infinity and beyond.

To find out more about Hubert Phipps, visit www.hubertphipps.com. “Rocket” is located at BRiC, at 5000 T-Rex Ave, Boca Raton.

Comments Off on Skyrocketing Statue Lands in Boca Raton

Advertise Here
Advertise Here