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Living

Aromas Café returns to its beginnings

When Hassan Kaisoum moved Aromas Café from its original location in the Virginia Department of Forestry building to Barracks Road Shopping Center in 2007, he returned often to Fontaine Research Park to walk the nature trails he’d come to know well since first opening the restaurant in 1998.

On those walks, he thought about the loyal customers who’d followed him from one spot to the next, and he also thought about the Red Cross fundraiser for the families of 9/11 victims he hosted on the lawn in front of the building—how customers showed up to enjoy a meal, music and dancing while raising tens of thousands of dollars for the charity.

After leaving Barracks Road Shopping Center in October, Kaisoum will reopen Aromas Café in the Forestry Building at 900 Natural Resources Dr. this week.

Kaisoum is eager to wish customers a happy new year, and he’s especially excited to continue serving the same flavorful Moroccan and Mediterranean food he’s become known for—and at a lower price. Last Wednesday, two of Kaisoum’s longtime customers stopped by to see the new (well, new-old) space, and when Kaisoum handed them menus, they were shocked: The chicken shawarma sandwich, previously priced at $11.95, is now $7.95, and other menu items have dropped in price as well. (Lower rent means lower prices, Kaisoum implied.)

Before hugging Kaisoum goodbye, the men said they’d be among the first in line on reopening day.

In addition to the salads, sandwiches, entrées, appetizers and sides that have been Aromas’ menu mainstays for years, the café will now serve breakfast. Aromas Café will be open 7:30am to 4:30pm Monday through Friday, with extended hours in the spring.

Pausing for a moment in the dining room filled with orchids and brightly colored paintings of Moroccan doorways by local artist Eli Frenzen, Kaisoum reflects on what it feels like to be back in the place where it all began 20 years ago: “Here, where it is, is very sentimental to me.”

Another 2017 closing

After dinner service on New Year’s Eve, Threepenny Café permanently closed its doors at 420 W. Main St. The farm-to-table restaurant, which owners Merope Pavlides and Peter Emch opened in spring 2014, announced its closing in a Facebook post the morning of December 29. “While we are saddened to end the work we’ve done at Threepenny Café, we are excited to discover what comes next for us as we continue our commitment to changing our country’s food system. We urge you to follow the work of Chef Jeff Deloff as he continues to make his mark as part of the Real Food movement,” the note read.

To market we go

Beginning on Saturday, January 13, and running through March 24, IX Art Park will host an indoor/outdoor winter farmers market from 9am to 1pm every Saturday. Food vendors and a number of artisans such as Free Union Grass Farm, Natural Roots Farm, Halo Apothecary, Twenty Paces and Carpe Donut have signed up to hold us over until the City Market returns April 7. Plus, Market Central will be on-site to accept SNAP and EBT cards.

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News

Goals collide: Fair market value threatens IX Art Park

Ludwig Kuttner, owner of the IX complex, threatened last week to stop the community events held at the Art Park because its city land assessment went up 400 percent. And on August 7, the Board of Equalization said it was affirming the city’s valuation.

At an August 1 board hearing, Kuttner complained that the land value assessment on the 6.78-acre portion of IX, the scene of more than 100 cultural and civic events last year, skyrocketed from $1.13 million in 2016 to $4.54 million in 2017.

“That’s a huge amount for nonprofits,” says Kuttner. Taxing the property at its best and highest use—the mantra for commercial assessments—puts the Art Park, where events like the satellite Women’s March or various fundraisers are held, at the same rate as what a Marriott hotel would be assessed, he adds.

Located at the site of the former Frank Ix and Sons textile plant, the IX Art Park is part of 17 acres between Monticello and Elliott avenues that are in the city’s Strategic Investment Area, which stresses affordable housing.

Tenants include a sculptor and Tinkersmiths Makerspace, which offers workshops and space for fabrication. Kuttner says he has five tenants who get space at a low rate, and that he loses between $100,000 and $150,000 on those rents.

The upper level of the building that houses those tenants and the indoor stage will become the new home of Three Notch’d Brewing. When finished, the brewery will push the parcel’s assessment up even more, Kuttner’s attorney, Susan Krischel, says.

Land assessments also went up on the 10.75-acre portion of the property where Brazos Tacos and the Newsplex are located. Krischel says IX is challenging those as well, but she especially objects to the assessment on the parcel used for civic space. “The costs have to be passed onto tenants,” she says.

Downtown Business Association of Charlottesville President Joan Fenton believes assessments should be based on use and rents, not what the highest use for a property could be.

“[Kuttner’s] turned that into a public good,” says Fenton. “They’ve taken an empty lot and turned it into something special downtown.”

With the skyrocketing 2017 commercial assessments, she says it seems the city is saying, “Screw all your tenants, screw all the good you’re trying to do and get more money.”

Fenton owns a property that she leases to a nonprofit roots music school. “I could get more rent but I think it’s important to have [The] Front Porch on the mall,” she says.

Nonprofit usage, however, is not the mission of the city assessors or the Board of Equalization. “We’re charged to look at the fair market value,” says board member Paul Muhlberger.

The IX property is unique, he says, and “it’s hard to compare apples to apples,” but it’s still a “really valuable piece of property.”

He also notes that Kuttner has no deeded restrictions on the property limiting use to nonprofits, and a buyer could come in at any time and turn it into a high-end commercial use.

Muhlberger has attended events at the IX Art Park and says he’s sympathetic, “but this is not the Board of Equalization’s charge. It’s fair market value.”

Kuttner says vision “has to be supported and nurtured. I’m sad that bureaucracy won out and that the city couldn’t find a way to support what thousands of people in the community want and love.”

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Arts

ARTS Pick: Lovefest

Forty bands. Two stages. 23 hours of music. Lovefest is a response through art to the civil rights struggles shaking the community. From early-morning meditation to midday belly dancing to late-night gypsy punk, the festival offers a weekend of immersion in the love and passion of local artists. The lineup features well-known community musicians including Black Masala, Mighty Joshua and Eli Cook.

Saturday, June 24 & Sunday, June 25. $25-40. IX Art Park, 522 Second St. SE. 218-8686.

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Arts

Listen up: C-ville’s hip-hop scene is on the rise

It’s a gray Sunday evening, 50-something degrees and drizzling when The Beetnix step onto the outdoor stage at IX Art Park. It’s been raining all day, but a crowd of more than 100 has gathered on the graffiti-painted concrete ground in front of the stage. Many of them hold their phones and tablets in the air, precipitation be damned, ready to capture Charlottesville’s most legendary hip-hop duo on video.

“Come closer,” Damani “Glitch One” Harrison says to the crowd as he picks up a mic. With his arms stretched out wide, Louis “Waterloo” Hampton beckons for everyone to move in closer.

For Harrison, 39, hip-hop has been part of his life since he was a kid. A military brat who grew up in Germany and Philadelphia, he remembers exactly where he was when the music caught him.

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News

Bumper Buddha’s big move

Drive past St. Thomas Aquinas Church on Alderman Road and you’ll notice something different—a Charlottesville icon has disappeared. The UVA student-dubbed “Bumper Buddha,” a statue of the church’s namesake welded out of chrome car bumpers, was moved to IX Art Park on May 2.

“Without question, the sculpture became a landmark not only for our neighborhood, but also for Charlottesville,” says the Reverend Mario Calabrese, an assistant priest, adding that the parishioners he talked with were pleased it would be moving to a spot with a wider public audience. The church plans to add on to its current building and develop the limited land space around it,
so St. Thomas Aquinas won’t be sporting a new statue anytime soon, he says.

The Reverend William Stickle commissioned the statue from Indiana sculptor Hank Mascotte in 1967.

Local realtor Mark Mascotte, the sculptor’s nephew, says that a church representative called him about moving it and Mascotte thought the art park would be a “perfect fit.” He contacted IX owner Ludwig Kuttner, who graciously accepted.

“It’s nice to have this new element that someone’s watching over the park,” says IX’s executive director, Brian Wimer. “We feel like we’re being taken care of.”

“The interesting part is it happened right at the same time the city seems to be embroiled in relocating statues,” Mascotte says.

When asked if IX is going to become home to other homeless statues —an island of misfit toys—Wimer said, “I think it’s a strong possibility as people are shifting monuments around this town. We are happy recipients of all sorts of pieces of art. Please, let the donations begin.”

Like the General Robert E. Lee statue? Wimer laughs. “That would entail some very long discussions.”

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News

Charlottesville marches: Thousands take part in global demonstrations

More than a million people showed up at Women’s March demonstrations Saturday in all 50 states, according to the New York Times, and that’s not counting the rallies in London, Paris, Berlin—and even Antarctica—in what was the largest public rebuff of a newly elected president ever. More than 500,000 flooded into Washington, the AP reports, and Charlottesvillians joined in the post-inaugural protest both here and in the nation’s capital.

At least 25 buses carrying 1,500 locals left Charlottesville early January 21, estimated Cynthia Neff, who was shepherding eight buses. And many others drove their own cars or took Amtrak to Washington. [Read Elizabeth Derby’s report of the march here.]

For those who couldn’t journey to the nation’s capital, a rally at IX Art Park drew at least 2,000, according to IX manager Brian Wimer, who said it was the largest crowd he’d ever seen there.

Mobility is an issue for Charlottesville Gathers organizer Gail Hyder Wiley that made a march in Washington difficult, and she wanted to do something to help those participate who couldn’t manage the D.C. trip. She was put in touch with collaborator Jill Williams, who had an idea to reach out to middle and high school students.

The multi-faceted event at IX from 9am to 1pm “totally exceeded my expectations,” says Wiley. “I think it showed Charlottesville at its best.”

The biggest problem was having to turn away people from UVA Women’s Center’s Claire Kaplan’s talk about active bystander intervention. The 300 spaces indoors “filled up much sooner than we expected,” says Wiley.

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Jill York and Richmonder Woodie Sprinkel were many of the pussy hat wearers at the local rally in support of the Women’s March. Staff photo

Woodie Sprinkel traveled from Richmond to join her friend Jill York in Charlottesville because an issue with her leg made that easier than a trek to Washington. They joined the pink pussy power hat-wearing, sign-carrying crowd at IX.

“The future is nasty, the future is female,” said one sign. “This pussy grabs back,” read another, echoing a theme among the demonstrators stemming from Donald Trump’s boasts that he could grab female genitalia with impunity.

Left, Coco Sotelo and her daughter Ayesha.
Mother Cipo Copity Sotelo and daughter Ayesha Gaona-Sotelo stood up for immigrants. Photo Ryan Jones

Cipo Copity Sotelo carried a sign that said, “Immigrants make America great” and also touched on climate change and women’s rights. She’s a journalist from Mexico who immigrated here “because they’re killing journalists in Mexico,” she said. She was joined by her daughter, Ayesha Gaona-Sotelo, who said, “I want to grow up in a country where we’re all equal, free and have civil rights.”

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Juliet Trail and Laura Lee Gulledge decided to march in Charlottesville rather than Washington. Staff photo

Laura Lee Gulledge had thought about going to Washington. But she brought her “Girls just want to have fun-ding for Planned Parenthood” sign to IX instead with her friend Juliet Trail.

“We just needed to show up,” said Trail. “People are marching all over the country and we wanted to be a part of that.”

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Charlottesville’s march circled the Ix property. Photo Ryan Jones

“It was magical,” says Wiley. And she says it’s not the last we’ll hear from Charlottesville Gathers—at least once she recovers from Saturday’s event.

Categories
Living

Restaurant Week feeds into local community

As you scramble to make your Restaurant Week reservations, as you finally get to your table and lay a napkin over your lap and lift your fork to your lips, take a moment to reflect on how your dinner is more than a treat for your taste buds. It’s helping feed thousands of people right here in Virginia.

One dollar from each Restaurant Week meal served will go to the Blue Ridge Area Food Bank, this year’s charity partner beneficiary.

Charlottesville Restaurant Week has partnered with the BRAFB in years prior, and it’s been an enormous help, says Millie Winstead, director of development at the food bank. In winter 2015, Charlottesville Restaurant Week donated about $23,000 to the food bank.

BRAFB’s four branches—Charlottesville, Verona, Lynchburg and Winchester—serve more than 25,000 individuals via 200 partner agencies throughout 25 counties and eight cities. For every dollar the food bank receives, 96 cents goes toward programming, Winstead says. In previous years, the money went into the food bank’s general fund.

But this year, the money will go to the Agency Capacity Fund, a new initiative intended to help BRAFB partner agencies meet increasing demands. In March, the BRAFB will issue a request for proposals from its partner agencies, which can submit applications for money from the fund for things such as shelving, refrigerators or coolers.

“Hunger is something that unfortunately persists in our communities,” says Abena Foreman-Trice, director of communications for the BRAFB. “We’re still seeing more neighbors on average per month coming to our partner agencies than we were before the Great Recession.”

Most of the food bank’s agencies are small and run by volunteers; many of them are faith-based organizations supporting a pantry or kitchen that feeds maybe 50 families every other week, serving “a group of people that wouldn’t otherwise have [food],” Winstead says. While the agencies receive regular food donations, Winstead says that pantries often need help meeting physical and organizational needs.

For example, food cannot be stored on the floor; it must be kept on shelves. A $100 shelving unit may not seem like much, Winstead says, but it’s an awful lot for a kitchen with a $1,500 operating budget.

“Food banking is changing,” Winstead says. “Back in the day, when it was starting, it was a lot of canned food items. Now, about one quarter of the food we distribute is fresh produce, so the ability to have a cooler, a refrigerator or a cooler blanket to drape over produce” in the pantry or during distribution to families is key.

Restaurant Week is the chance for the community to “understand how their support can make an impact for someone who is trying to make ends meet,” Foreman-Trice says. “When someone falls short, we’re here to try and make sure they have one less worry, to make sure that they know there’s at least somewhere where they can get food to eat to get them and their families through.”

Winstead says she’s “blown away constantly by the giving nature of the restaurant community here,” noting that they receive donations from restaurants throughout the year.

This time, a record-high 44 restaurants are participating in Restaurant Week, and instead of the usual seven days, the event will run for nine, from Friday, January 20, through Sunday, January 29.

First-time participants include Blue Ridge Café, Los Jarochos, Maharaja, Mono Loco and Petit Pois all at the $19 price point; Aroma’s Café, Heirloom at The Graduate Charlottesville and Timberwood Taphouse at the $29 price point; and Water Street at the $39 price point.

Changes at IX

Last week, Shark Mountain Coffee Co. announced the sudden closing of its location at the Studio IX in an emotional Facebook post written by Shark Mountain owner Jonny Nuckols. Nuckols chalks up the dissolution of the café, which closed January 11 after a year and a half in operation, to “irreconcilable differences between Shark and management of Studio IX.” Shark Mountain will continue to operate its café in the iLab at UVA’s Darden School of Business and will look for a potential new café location.

And Sweethaus has moved out of its West Main Street location and into a space at IX, next door to Brazo’s Tacos. A post on the bakery’s Instagram account states it hopes to open in its new spot by this weekend.

Taste of what’s to come

Junction, Melissa Close-Hart and Adam Frazier’s long-anticipated TexMex restaurant, will open Thursday, January 26, on Hinton Avenue in Belmont. Look for more details on the restaurant in next week’s Small Bites column.

Eat up!

We have three Restaurant Week gift certificates to give away. For a chance to win, leave a comment about which restaurant’s menu you’re most excited about and why.

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Arts

Gorilla Theater puts a final twist on the holidays

Last year was exhausting, right? No wonder people pushed themselves to have the merriest holiday of their lives in 2016. Online sales hit the highest mark ever during Black Friday weekend. Consumers wanted, more than ever, to escape real life and celebrate in tinsel wonderlands. Now that you’ve digested plenty of fa-la-las and other family favorites, you might be ready for a palate cleanser.

Gorilla Theater Productions has just the thing: An Xmas Carol, the new play that twists the Dickens’ classic into something subversive and sinister.

“We’re doing this as an anti-Christmas Carol,” says writer and director Nathan Anderith. “If you’ve got that last little bit of holiday stress, this [show] can get rid of it.”

Though 85 percent of Anderith’s script reads straight from the book, his adaptation upends the story entirely. Here, Xmas is a cult that demands and controls both charity and love. The miser, Esmerelda Scrooge, is the last holdout—until three high-level members of the cult use harrowing supernatural indoctrination to break her will.

“We ended up with something that was explicitly fighting against the text,” Anderith says. “We keep the same characters, the same flow lines, the same arcs [as Dickens]. Our subversive take comes in by adding levels of complexity to the characters.”

Scrooge’s nephew, for example, is now a menacing, high-level cult member with two wives. Bob Cratchit struggles between elevating his low ranking in the cult and conforming to a boss who explicitly resists it.

A Christmas Carol is, at its core, the seduction of Scrooge,” he says. “We couldn’t show too many things [from the dark underbelly of the cult] because that would repel the character of Scrooge.”

What they can show, however, is plenty creepy. Tiny Tim has a “cult voice and face” that echoes Children of the Corn. The Spirit of Xmas Future reveals that Scrooge’s supposed friends don’t just steal her possessions, they remove her organs by careful autopsy.

Featuring a cast of 20 people, including six kids, as well as a large production crew, An Xmas Carol is a dark exploration of a familiar story—but not an attack on Christianity, or even Christmas.

“There’s a reason that we called the play An Xmas Carol and not A Christmas Carol,” Anderith says. “We actually explicitly, and multiple times in the play, draw distinctions between Xmas and Christmas. There’s a scene where a boy is seen reading a Bible, and there’s a lot of fear that he’ll be found out. Using any kind of religious iconography, even saying the word ‘Christmas,’ puts you in danger.

“It’s not trying to say that the religion itself is a cult,” he says. “It is simply about the ways in which a desire for these things [like] love, family, connection, joy and all of that, can be used as tools to create a compelling exterior with a hollow and corrupt core.”

The concept came to Andersen after Anna Lien, “the founder/dictatrix/mastermind of Gorilla Theater Productions,” asked him if he’d like to direct A Christmas Carol. Rather than reproduce a show that’s been done so many times, he brainstormed ways to flip it.

“If Scrooge was no longer the bad guy, how would that be possible?,” Anderith says. “You could either make him a nicer person, or you could make other people meaner, or you could take the ideas he was resisting—the love and family and all that—and make them dark and sinister. That I got excited about.”

The staged version of An Xmas Carol varies greatly from Anderith’s original adaptation, which he drafted in just a few days. Dramaturg Carol Pederson helped streamline, focus and straighten out the storyline, and actor feedback brought the script to life.

At first, Anderith struggled to keep the play from being gimmicky. Broocks Willich, who plays Esmerelda Scrooge, helped change that.

“We never intended to cast a woman,” he says. “I felt that would be pushing it a bit too far. But [Willich] gave such an amazing audition. She’s a professional actress, and her style, and the schools that she trained in, is all about realism and humanity. Everything needs to be true. I come from a more conceptual background, where I try to do cool ideas and visuals. We certainly butted heads a few times, but what we ended up with was something that felt like a real story.”

At some point, Anderith says, he also recognized the appropriateness of certain political allegories. “The idea of a woman who is very successful but is told her entire life that she’s not friendly enough, and not nice enough, and that she ought to be kinder and gentler and not so ambitious,” he says. “…how a certain group of people force this change and then break her.”

The edginess of An Xmas Carol is something of a hallmark for Gorilla Theater Productions, which has its own dedicated space and plenty of freedom for a director like Anderith.

“We can really take projects and run with them,” he says. “What’s fun is we also work with kids. At least half of our shows are teenage or children productions.”

During production a few months ago, he says, the theater faced an “existential crisis” when it ran out of money.

An Xmas Carol, and the theater company itself, shut down—until a few people, unwilling to let down the kids, created a board and became fiduciaries.

“Whenever we can’t cover payments with ticket sales, we cover it out of our own pockets,” Anderith says. “We’re not rich people, so it wasn’t the easiest decision to come to, but it was important enough to us to do it.”

Then IX Art Park stepped in, offering An Xmas Carol its stage space for no more than a cut of ticket sales. “I’m very, very, grateful to them,” he says.

He’s also outspoken about the kindness of the local theater network, from Live Arts to Four County Players and back. “People were just incredibly giving with their time, and their energy, and their resources,” Anderith says.

Xmas may be a cult, and Christmas may be over, but the love and kindness that thrives during the holidays? Turns out that spirit remains alive and well in Charlottesville.

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Arts

ARTS Pick: Water or Glass

In 1943, Charlotte Salomon died in a gas chamber at Auschwitz. Leading up to her capture and unimaginable death, the artist produced 769 expressionist paintings while in hiding from the Nazis. The works came together as an autobiographical play through images called Life? or Theater?. Local playwright Bridget Mitchell opens a new era for the material in Water or Glass, a multimedia show intended to “bring the intense generational weave of Charlotte’s extraordinary life and art to the stage using three generations of actors in my own family,” Mitchell says. She, her mother and daughter appear in the play.

Friday 11/18 & Saturday 11/19. $15-18, 8pm. IX Art Park, 522 Second St. SE. igg.me/at/waterorglass.

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Arts

ARTS Pick: Bumper Jacksons

Swinging from New Orleans big band to Appalachian folk is all in an evening’s set list for the Bumper Jacksons. With frontwoman Jess Eliot Myhre jamming on clarinet and her homemade washboard, the group nails traditional numbers from jazz greats such as Billie Holiday, Duke Ellington and Sister Rosetta Tharpe. Toss in the clever originals infused with upright bass, pedal steel guitar and trombone for a rip-roarin’ dance adventure.

Friday, October 28. Free, 5pm. IX Art Park, 522 Second St. SE. ixartpark.com.