STORIES Speaker Series: Portsmouth Stories Then & Now | Genevieve Aichele
Date and Time
Wednesday Nov 6, 2024
5:00 PM - 6:30 PM EST
Wednesday, November 6, 2024
Location
The Parlor at Hotel Thaxter 15 Middle Street Portsmouth, NH, 03801
Description
Tangible Histories of the Puddle Dock Neighborhood
Genevieve Aichele
Genevieve has deep artistic roots in the seacoast community. She will read excerpts from her play Neighborhoods, which features stories about life in Portsmouth over the past 100 years and includes some of the stories depicted in the current art exhibit, as well as her essay featured in Laura Pope's anthology Becoming Portsmouth: Voices from a Half Century of Change.
Genevieve Aichele will speak about her experience living, working and creating in Portsmouth over half a decade. As the founder of New Hampshire Theatre Project, former Board member of the historic Music Hall, and current member of the Portsmouth Arts & Cultural Commission as well as NH's Artist Laureate,
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Stories of Portsmouth's Past make our favorite little city come alive - We can imagine the hometown heroes as they step up - performing acts of community generosity and we can imagine the regular folks who no one remembers going about their days caught up in what being human means…family, friends, hard work, loss and love.
Four artist friends have come together to present an exhibition of their paintings that explore these stories.
Barbara Adams, a current Portsmouth resident, has delved into the lives of Portsmouth women who stepped forward to help their family and their neighbors during difficult times. Tom Glover paints images of our working waterfront, the yellow clad dock workers unloading the seas harvest as they have been doing since Portsmouth was founded. Peter Cady takes a close look at the folks who built Portsmouth - literally. His series of workers' hands each come with a story. Dustan Knight’s mixed media pieces recreate an imagined Puddledock, her painted figures interacting with imaginary stories of love and hope.
The intention of this exhibition is that it encourages residents and visitors alike to think about Portsmouth’s past and imagine what it would be like for those folks who called it home.
Part of this exhibition is a program of speakers who will read from their own published stories of Portsmouth, the stories of our early Black fellow citizens, of the bad boys causing trouble in Market Square and lost loves gone to sea.