2021 Program: Lithuanian Performers Celebrate with Us

Performances of Dance, Opera, and Contemporary Song

Our 2021 program is enhanced by the inclusion of performances by  accomplished musicians and composers. We especially want to highlight samples of Lithuanian traditional culture and contemporary performance, of which Marija Gimbutas was justifiably proud. These performances are included during interludes between sessions, and are also available to view at any time in our “On Demand” page which is open to the public.

 Our dancers are from the renowned Lithuanian Folk Dance group “Suktinis.” The director of the group is Giedrė Knieža. The group is the most popular Lithuanian folk dance group in United States, having participated in Chicago’s Thanksgiving Day parade live stage performance twice. Suktinis dancers have been representing Lithuanian culture at Science and Industry Museum events (Chicago, IL) for the last 15 years, among many other performances. We offer you their performance of “Malūnas” (windmill). It was performed at Lithuanian Folk Dance Festival XV in Baltimore.

Giedrė says of this dance, “It is amazing how all the folk dance groups come to the festival and make such a beautiful event in only two days of practice. This time there were around eight hundred dancers performing this dance. “Malūnas” symbolizes change of seasons and never-ending work in the fields in order to get bread on your family’s table. Times were hard for Lithuanians, but they found ways to enjoy and celebrate life with the help of songs and dances.”

Nida Grigalaviciute

We are pleased to include songs from internationally known Lithuanian soloist Nida Grigalaviciute, who currently resides in Chicago. Nida has performed in opera houses across Europe, Israel, and the United States. The songs are from the musical “Šnekučiai.” The first song “Tūkstančiai darbelių” tells how women have lots of jobs around the house since early morning. Women in Lithuania have been singing while working in fields, cooking, working around the house, singing with kids and for kids, as well as wedding celebrations, and so forth. The second song is called “Jau seniai šviesele” – a mother wakes up her kids since the sun has been up for quite some while. Women in Lithuania used to get up with the sun, with the songs of the birds. And again, they would wake up really early since there was always lots of work around the house and in the fields. 

 

Agne G

Agne G is a nineteen-year-old award-winning classical artist who has won multiple international performance awards, performed across the United States and Europe, appeared on television, and graced the stage of Carnegie Hall. Agne has won multiple performance awards including “The Baltic Voice” – Lithuania, “Music for Kids” – Romania, as well as “American Protégé” international competition. She has recorded 3 albums to date. Her 2018 release of “A Merry Christmas from the Heart,” produced and arranged by Kc Daugirdas, earned her the Indie Music Channel’s Awards for “Best Teen Artist” and the “Best New Teen Artist of the Year.”

Our thanks to the Lithuanian Foundation for support and to their Director of Cultural Affairs, Giedrė Knieža, for sharing these performances with us for our Symposium.

Registration for this event is now closed. 

2021 Program: Jazz from Simona Smirnova

Jazz and Vocal Improvisation with the Lithuanian kanklės

Our 2021 program is enhanced by the inclusion of performances by  accomplished musicians and composers. These performances are included during interludes between sessions, and are also available to view at any time in our “On Demand” page.

Simona Smirnova

Simona Smirnova is a Lithuanian born jazz vocalist, composer and kanklės player based in New York City. She’s a fixture in the New York live scene with her quartet when she’s not touring the world, including Australia, New Zealand and Europe.

​Simona’s genre-bending style has a unique theatrical flavor and uncanny vocal improvisation techniques. She deftly implements chamber music, Lithuanian zither – kanklės – and folkloric chants into foundations of jazz and rock.

Simona’s latest album, Joan of Arc, for String Quartet, is an original composition written as a soundtrack for the classic Carl Dreyer silent film The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928). The album is a cinematic landscape of chamber pop, jazz and folklore.

​Classically trained on the kanklės, Simona earned her BA in jazz vocals at the Lithuanian Academy of Music and Theater. Shortly after receiving the European Touring Scholarship, she moved to the United States to study at Berklee College of Music where she earned a degree in Contemporary Composition and Production.

Our thanks to Giedrė Elekšytė-Knieža, Chair of Lithuanian American Community Cultural Affairs, for her help in connecting us with  Simona’s work.

Registration for symposium recordings is now available to the public! Register here.  

To give you plenty of time to view the program at leisure, all sessions will remain available, to those who register, until the end of July 2022.

Opening: Our International Art Exhibition

“Wisdom Across the Ages: An International Women’s Art Exhibition”

July 7 – December 31 2021

ASWM Online Art Gallery

Association for the Study of Women and Mythology

Artemisia Gentileschi Self Portrait as the Allegory of Painting

We are delighted to announce the opening of our inaugural juried exhibition in ASWM’s new online art gallery. This exhibition of works by 45 artists and filmmakers from around the world was created in concert with our 2021 online symposium, “Wisdom Across the Ages: A Celebration of the Life and Legacy of Archaeomythologist Marija Gimbutas.”

Our organization was founded by women who appreciated the essential role of the arts in developing, promoting, and inspiring scholarship and research.

Patricia Monaghan

Patricia Monaghan was not only the author and editor of many books about goddess scholarship; she was also an internationally recognized poet. Pat’s well-crafted words continue to find their way into performances, ceremonies and women’s life passages. Sid Reger is a visual artist with a happy background in feminist theatre. She has also created and promoted festivals and arts events on local, national, and international stages.

Sid says, “We understood from the beginning that all of the arts were essential sources of inspiration and collaboration for scholarship. Many artists are scholars, and vice versa, and we were always excited to see what happens when they meet in the same room. We were guided by one simple idea: Change the images (or words or dances), and you can change the world.”

Mary B Kelly, 2011 Keynote

We dedicate this exhibition and the gallery itself to our beloved artist-foremothers, Mary B. Kelly and Lydia Ruyle.

 

Lydia Ruyle, Aloha!

 

The exhibition runs from July 7 to December 31 in our gallery and is open to the general public.

Join us for the symposium:

Member Registration

Non-member Registration

To give you plenty of time to view the program at leisure, all sessions will remain available, to those who register, for twelve months following the event.

2021 Program: Music by Kalnas Ensemble

New Compositions Inspired by Lithuanian Folk Music

Our 2021 program is enhanced by the inclusion of performances by  accomplished musicians and composers. These performances are included during interludes between sessions, and are also available to view at any time in our “On Demand” page.

We are pleased to be able to present new works performed by the Kalnas Ensemble. The Ensemble, which began performing right before the pandemic shutdowns, has happily recovered from that hiatus to be able to record recent concerts. The Ensemble is a string quartet focusing on Lithuanian musical roots, exploring compositions of Stanley Chepaitis with improvisatory overtones, as well as performing standard quartet repertoire. The ensemble is a diverse group of multi-talented individuals with a commitment to engaging audiences with a dynamic approach to live performance. In addition their wide spectrum of knowledge and interests allows them offer workshops and other interactive presentations that enhance the meaning and experience of the music they perform.

The Kalnas Ensemble, 2021

Dr. Chepaitis has provided these original folksongs that inspired his compositions:

 

The Kalnas Ensemble is:

Dr. Stanley Chepaitis, founder, composer, and Violinist, holds a Doctor of Musical Arts Degree and a Master of Music, as well as a Performer’s Certificate from the Eastman School of Music. He is a versatile performing and recording artist who is at home in a classical string quartet, a jazz band, and anything in between.  His career spans fifty years in which time he has performed nationally and internationally, composed and premiered his own works, and recorded seven CD’s mostly of original music. Dr. Chepaitis has been at the forefront of the Alternative Styles Movement having had a leading role in ASTA Alternative Styles Conferences.

Swana Chepaitis, Violinist,  received a diploma in Violin Performance and Pedagogy from the Hochschule für Künste in Bremen Germany. She studied with Maria Grevesmühl and Baroque violin specialist Christoph Heidemann. She has been a member of L’arco (a professional Baroque orchestra based in Hanover, Germany), the Litton String Quartet. Mrs. Chepaitis currently performs with the Johnstown Symphony Orchestra, does freelance performance as a baroque violinist in the Pittsburgh area, and maintains a studio of 20+ violin students in Indiana, PA.

Simon Maurer, Violin, Baroque Violin, Viola ,studied violin at the Conservatory in Biel, and continued his studies in the U.S. with Geoffrey Michaels, Joyce Robbins and Claire Hodkins. He is the founder and artistic director of Sunday Sinfonia, a String Orchestra of enthusiastic amateur string players, based in Lancaster, Pa. Mr. Maurer is the artistic director of the Gabriel Chamber Ensemble, a group that takes pride in bringing classical music to underserved areas. In 2010 the Gabriel Chamber Ensemble took over the leadership of the Schuyllkill Youth Orchestra, newly renamed Gabriel Youth Orchestra. Mr. Maurer also ventures in the practice of jazz and freestyle improvisation. He has been a featured soloist in Philadelphia area jazz clubs, has performed at  “Jazzfest” in Schuylkill County and Reading Pa.

Nancy Baun, Cellist,  has performed over 1,000 events throughout the United States, including three appearances at Carnegie’s Weil Hall, as well as in Switzerland, France, Italy, Iceland, and Canada. She appears on nine piano trio recordings, including a series on the Naxos International label “Home for the Holidays”, a favorite of Public Radio audiences. Her favorite highlights also include judging the semifinals of the renowned Koussevitzky Competition in New York City, and performing in a World Music Institute event at Merkin Concert Hall.  She has been an elementary music teacher for over 10 years in urban Buffalo, where she designed curriculum for her passion, “collaborative connections with music”. She has received a national Young Audiences grant for her education workshops integrating music with drawing. She currently presents S. T. E. A. M. training to elementary teachers, as well as using music to teach life skills to formerly incarcerated.

Registration for symposium recordings is now available to the public! Register here.  

To give you plenty of time to view the program at leisure, all sessions will remain available, to those who register, until the end of July 2022.

2021 Program: Goddesses and Poets Meet

Goddesses and Poets Meet in “An Exaltation of Goddesses”

“An Exaltation of Goddesses” is a poetic performance of goddess mythology developed by Annie Finch and Poetry Witch Press. Inspired by the centennial of archaeomythologist Marija Gimbutas, this international celebration includes the work of thirteen women from many lands and traditions. Annie and the other poets listed below created “An Exaltation of Goddesses” as a featured performance for ASWM’s 2021 online symposium about Gimbutas. These poems are also collected in a companion book by the same name, published by Poetry Witch Press.

Meet these goddesses and the poets whose work brings them forth:

Aruru

Aruru is the Sumerian goddess also known as Ninhursag, sometimes called the “true and great lady of heaven.”

Judy Grahn

Judy Grahn is a poet, author, and cultural theorist whose books deepen goddess studies, take racism personally, and engage psychically with creatures. commonalityinstitute.com

Atabeyra

Atabeyra, Taino great goddess of fresh water, birthing, and the moon. is called “Mujer de Caguana,” Mother of Creation.

Marianela Medrano

Marianela Medrano is a Dominican poet and writer living in Connecticut since 1990. She writes in Spanish and English. Her poetry has been translated into Italian and French.  manianelamed.wordpress.com

Brigid

Brigid is the Irish deity who “Brings the New Green Life of Spring, the Energy of Transformative Fire and the Quickening Power of the Warming Sun, and is  Sacred Guardian of the Deep Well, Life Source.”

Ann Filemyr

Ann Filemyr, PhD, is President of Southwestern College and Director of the Ecotherapy Certificate. Her books of poetry include The Healer’s Diary and The Vowels.   

Cybele

Cybele, the Phygian Great Mother Goddess and “Mountain Mother” of Anatolia, bridged the gap between male and female, and was attended by devoted eunuchs (the first transgender priestesses).

Richelle Lee Slota

Richelle Lee Slota writes poetry, novels, non-fiction and plays. She lives in San Francisco and performs a one-transwoman show called Kind of a Drag. See her kindle book Small Trouble.

Dalia

Dalia, the Lithuanian goddess of “happy fate” that sometimes appears as a dog or lamb, gives everyone their proper share of luck and goods.

Anna Halberstadt

Anna Halberstadt is a poet who writes in English and Russian and translates from English, Russian and Lithuanian. She has published six books of poetry.  alephi.org/four poems-anna-halberstadt

*Frija

*Frija is the (hypothetical) primordial Nordic deity who combines traits of the later figures, Freya and Frigg, into one magical and all-powerful goddess.

Annie Finch

Annie Finch is an award-winning poet and an editor, critic, playwright, and performer.  Her books include Among the Goddesses and Spells: New and Selected Poems. anniefinch.com

Kali

Kali, the Hindu “Divine Mother,” governs life and death and is the protector of humanity and destroyer of evil forces.

Purvi Shah

Purvi Shah’s favorite art practices are sparkly eyeshadow, raucous laughter, and seeking justice. Her new book, Miracle Marks, explores women, the sacred, and gender & racial equity. purvipoets.net

Linga Bhairavi and Neeli Mariamman

Linga Bhairavi, a Hindu goddess, is “the most exuberant expression of the Divine Feminine” manifest in a sacred stone. Neeli Mariamman is the South Indian Mother Goddess who brings rain and cures disease.

Arundhathi Subramaniam

Arundhathi Subramaniam is a leading Indian poet and author of twelve books of poetry and prose, most recently Love Without a Story (Bloodaxe Books, 2020).  Arundhathi Subramaniam.webs.com

Nana Buruku

Nana Buruku mother supreme creator of West Africa and the Caribbean, is the “energy of creation” who gives birth to the sun, the moon, and the universe.

Yona Harvey

Yona Harvey is the author of two poetry collections, Hemming the Water and You Don’t Have to Go to Mars for Loveyonaharvey.com

Nyx

Nyx, the primordial Greek goddess of Night, was born of Chaos, present at the creation, and the fierce mother of many other deities.

Raina J. Leon

Raina J. León, PhD is Afro-Boricua, from Philadelphia, the author of three collections of poetry, Canticle of Idols, Boogeyman Dawn, and sombra: dis(locate), and a founding editor of The Acentos Review

https://rainaleon.com/

Sarasvati

Sarasvati is the Hindu goddess of learning, music, and all arts, who first appeared as the “mighty and uncontrollable” sacred river, and is identified with Vac, the goddess of speech.

Monica Mody

Monica Mody, PhD, is a poet and writer born in Ranchi, India. Her books include Kala Pani (1913 Press) and Bright Parallel (Copper Coin, forthcoming). http://www.drmonicamody.com/

Xori

Xori, an aspect of the Bird Goddess of Old Europe, is the Owl Goddess of Brittany, whose people raised large stone menhirs carved in her likeness.

Mary Mackey

Mary Mackey, PhD, is New York Times best-selling author of eight collections of poetry and fourteen novels including The Year The Horses Came.

https://marymackey.com/

Zemyna

Zemyna is the Lithuanian great goddess who personifies fertile earth, nourishes all life, and also guides and protects the dead.

Jurgita Jasponytė

Jurgita Jasponytė is a Lithuanian poet, author of Šaltupė and The Sharp Gates of Dawn.  She was awarded the Vilnius Mayor Prize  in 2019.

https://www.versopolis-poetry.com/poet/121/jurgita-jasponyte?fbclid=IwAR0GeFdBRQU-

Join us for the symposium to hear the performance of these poems.

Registration for symposium recordings is now available to the public! Register here.  

To give you plenty of time to view the program at leisure, all sessions will remain available, to those who register, until the end of July 2022.