Tuesdays at Curley's

Welcome to PoemAlley, Stamford, Connecticut's eclectic venue for poets, poetry reading and discussion! Open to anyone living in Fairfield County and the surrounding area, we meet Tuesday nights at 7:30 pm at Curley's Diner on 62 Park Place (behind Target) . Come contribute, get something to eat, or simply listen!



Showing posts with label Loft Artists Association. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Loft Artists Association. Show all posts

Jun 20, 2014

Stern Looks With So Much Love Behind Them

As attested to by the numerous interspersed sentiments expressed below by past and present PA members since the May 19 passing of Hobart (Hoby) Rosen, the wit, inspiring productivity and generous life experience of this eighty-nine-year-old poet, photographer/artist has inspired a swell of treasured memories among friends and creative associates of arts organizations in the Stamford area and beyond.


"He was such a lovely man. A gentle man, an artist and a man who loved life."

--Bill Buschel 
A shaper of words as much as light, bronze and other media in his Canal Street studio space at the Loft Artists Association (see the interview below beginning at 3:49), Baltimore-born Hoby initially studied film at Johns Hopkins and the University of Southern California, fought in the Battle of the Bulge during World War II as a nineteen-year-old infantryman (which he recounted as part of his featured presentation at Curley’s in 2012) and went on to work in the animation field (see the personable puppet characterizations in the clip from a stop-motion animated version of Hansel & Gretel near the end of this post).



While convalescing in an English hospital following the war, his extensive romantic correspondence with Norma Lipman, his cousin’s university roommate, culminated in marriage during a Manhattan  blizzard in 1948.
                                  
Less than ten years later, his traumatic wartime experiences were ultimately addressed with a tranquil, life-affirming undertaking in the form of the Point O’Pines camp for girls, located in New York’s beautiful Adirondack Mountains. Founded by Norma and Hoby, the camp is now in its fifty-seventh season and is still going strong. The galactic, long view is likewise contrasted with miracles implicit in everyday life and small-scale observation in his reading of “Questions for You”, found here as part of his multi-disciplinary Youtube page.

"He was a complete man. I shall miss him. No doubt we all will." 
                                                                                                                              
   --John O'Keefe 

Upon learning of his death, one of the many reminiscences from campers (known as “Hoby’s Girls”) and staffers perfectly represents the quiet enthusiasm and muti-layered humor for which he was so well known in Stamford: “"I never knew anyone who could pull off such stern looks with so much love behind them." After retiring from the camp, he continued his support of youth through the Horizons Art Happening program in New Canaan, where he shared his love of sculpture with children.


Predeceased by Norma, and his daughter, Emily, Hoby is remembered by by his son, Andy Rosen (Paula), daughter, Julie Bowman (Tom), and companion, Sandy Semel, along with five grandchildren, five great-grandchildren, cousins, nieces, and nephews.


"… this is a moment to reflect on the moments we each have to use our lives to the fullest and creatively not put off anything we need to do.

I met Hoby at the Artists Studios down on Canal Street - he had a studio there and patiently showed me his work - so it was very wonderful to meet him again at Curleys.  He was so artful in turning a phrase that had stark simplicity and layers of meaning.  I miss him.

Peace to you and everyone in our Curley's family."

--Renee Neely

            
   "Hoby was an amazing man. I miss him all ready. This is so sad."

--Nicholas Miele


Jan 23, 2012

One War's One-Month Twilight: WWII Veteran Hoby Rosen To Speak At Curley's This Tuesday

This week's featured poet and artist, Hoby Rosen, will be sharing his recollections of his military service during the grueling closing winter months of World War II in Western Europe. Launched on December 16, 1944 in a rash attempt to break up the American/British/French alliance by crippling Allied supply channels, Hitler's surprise Ardennes Offensive became more widely known as the Battle of the Bulge for the bulge it created in the Allies' front line.
Me-262 "Swallow" jet fighter-bomber

From the misery of trench foot and the historic, if ineffectual, introduction of the first jet-propelled fighter, to the melancholy of wartime holidays and the atrocity of the Malmédy Massacre, the conflict, involving the biggest engagement of the war by U.S. forces, (600,000 soldiers) and costing more than 190,000 lives all around, encapsulated the pyrrhic confusion of horror, hope, suffering, ingenuity and cruelty that characterizes all wars. 
POW massacre, Malmedy, Belgium, 1945

Hoby went on to study at Johns Hopkins and the University of Southern California, where he concentrated on writing, drama and film production.

Soldiers exchanging Christmas gifts, 1944
PoemAlley member and sculptor--with studio space at Stamford's Loft Artists Association (one of numerous art organizations with which he is affiliated), Hoby enjoys working in wax for bronze casting, though he also dabbles in treated paper, glass casting and wood. Click here to see some of his work. He can be reached at hobyart@aol.com.

Nov 4, 2011

PA Poet & Sculptor Hoby Rosen Shares His Work With Public At LAA Fall Event

Bronze Stoneworks II (1986)
PoemAlley participant Hoby Rosen is one of 40+ photographers, ceramicists, line artists and other creative professionals of the Loft Artists Association, opening their studios to the public this weekend. Since its inception over 30 years ago, the LAA is a non-profit cooperative, presently located in a former printing plant in the South End, committed to supporting the visual arts in Fairfield County and to educational outreach to the general public.

A graduate of Johns Hopkins and the University of Southern California, Hoby studied writing, drama and film production. He works primarily in wax for bronze casting and has work represented in galleries and shows in the CT/Westchester area, as well as in private collections.

Rebound (1993)
Tipping It In (1988)
Among his current projects are a new series of nudes in treated paper and wood, glass castings, sculptures made from electronic components, as well as dynamic figurative pieces drawing from his former background in puppet animation which replicate the elan found in today's athletes.

In addition to the LAA, Hoby is a member of the Stamford Art Association, the Greenwich Art Society, the New Canaan Society for the Arts and is also on the UCONN Stamford Arts Committee. Contact Hoby at hobyart@aol.com

Open Studio Hours:
Friday, November 4, 6-9pm
Saturday, November 5, Noon-6pm
Sunday, November 6, Noon-6pm

Location:
Loft Artists Association
845 Canal Street, Stamford, CT 06902

Phone/E-mail:
203-323-4153/http://www.loftartists.com/

The Open Studio is sponsored in part by: The City Arts Partnership Program Grant; Michael A. Pavia, Mayor; Harbor Point; Kim Harris; The Louis J. Kuriansky Fund; Alex & Ricki Miller; Wagner Instruments; WSTC 1400 & WNLK 1350.