In CO+nversation: WO+rd, writers, and pushing creative boundaries

Every O+ Festival brings together a genre-defying blend of artists, musicians, creatives, and wellness practitioners. Throughout the three-day festival, you might see a punk band, catch a modern dance performance, sit for a gong bath on your way to a hip-hop set, see public art created by legendary street artists as well as elementary school students, or participate in a group meditation led by a world-renowned poet (or all of the above). 

In that vein, our beloved Literary Salon – now called WO+rd – continues to test and expand the boundaries of the written and spoken word. Each year, facilitators Carolita Johnson and Cris Livecchi aim to create an eclectic gathering of established and emerging voices, playing with form and structure to deliver an intimate, one-of-a-kind experience. 

Carolita Johnson

Both Carolita and Cris got involved with O+  early in the festival’s history. Johnson, a writer, illustrator, and cartoonist for The New Yorker, first got connected with O+ when she moved to Kingston in 2015 and applied to be part of the festival. Livecchi, the creator of the serial Radio Wiltwyck and a co-owner of World’s End Comics in Uptown Kingston, first participated in the Literary SalO+n in 2014 and then returned the next year to emcee the event. 

Back then, Cris says that the Literary SalO+n operated almost like an open mic, with a few writers specifically invited to come up and perform at the former Outdated Cafe. “It was sort of like the Wild West,” Cris remembers. “That was really fun.” 

Carolita adds that after her first O+ experience, she was hooked. “It was so amazing that of course, I wanted to be part of it every year, even if I didn’t formally apply to the festival,” she says. “So even if I’m not officially in [the festival], I’m in it.”

At the writer’s showcase, you can never quite know what to expect (and that’s how Cris and Carolita like it.) You might stumble in during a session with a “rock n’ roll therapist,” who writes and performs on-the-spot ditties to respond to audience members’ relationship woes. Or hear spoken word backed by a live band. Or get a personalized haiku, typed up for you on the spot. Carolita recalls a festival favorite in 2017 when then-Dutchess County Poet Laureate Bettina “Poet Gold” Wilkerson performed, saying how she stood out as both a fabulous writer but also someone who showed up to support her fellow performers. For Cris, one of the most memorable readings happened during the 2021 festival, when most events were held outdoors due to Covid restrictions. 

Cristopher Livecchi

“We did the Literary SalO+n outside in the Old Dutch Church cemetery and we had a fantastic slate of writers, all of whom were just incredible,” he says. “But doing it in the cemetery, in the open air, just really stands out for me…after all these years, I still feel really lucky to be surrounded by people who are way more talented than me.”

As both Cris and Carolita got more involved in running the event, they started to reimagine how the Literary SalO+on might evolve. Where formerly, writers were invited to perform, Cris and Carolita shifted to the submission process that other festival alumni follow to cast a wider net and attract more writers from different backgrounds, as well as people working in different mediums. 

“In the beginning, it was hard to find a lot of folks who weren’t all the same people over and over again,” Carolita says. “We’ve really been making an effort to reach out to a lot of people and hear a lot of voices, and a range of forms as well.”

The latter part can be tricky when you’re curating a literary salon – the terminology itself can feel overly formal and exclusive, neither of which is an accurate representation of the ethos of the event. It was partially for this reason that the Literary SalO+n was rebranded as WO+rd in 2023. 

Last year also marked a bit of an inflection point for the beloved writer’s showcase: in addition to officially rebranding and renaming the event to reflect a more expansive interpretation of the medium, for the first time, the format included more multimedia elements and several spotlight events, including readings by local legend Richard Buckner and renowned poet Mahogany L. Browne.

“I think [2023] is the first year we came into ourselves,” Carolita says. 

When looking at submissions, Carolita says they’re open to a variety of interpretations on the festival theme, so long as they’re word-based and creative. “To me, ‘literary’ sounds highfalutin, but maybe ‘writerly’ is a better way to say it,” she says. “There are so many ways of being writerly that I like seeing how people find different ways to do it. So that’s I think what we seek a lot of.”

For writers interested in submitting to WO+rd, both Carolita and Cris offer a few key pieces of advice: fill out the form completely, be as detailed as possible, and think about the festival theme in your application. 

Still writing/revising/editing the piece you want to perform? No worries! You don’t need a finished piece to submit, but it’s helpful to be able to describe the piece and any other elements of your planned performance. 

“It’s useful to be very specific when you’re submitting. Even if you haven’t started writing the thing you’re going to perform yet, we can still gauge the quality of your work from your writing sample,” Cris says. “But if we don’t have a good idea of what you’re going to perform, then we don’t know how it fits into the [festival] theme…Someone can be a great writer, but if the work that they’re proposing doesn’t have anything to do with the theme of that year then we’re a lot less likely to move them forward.”

At the same time, they encourage people to get creative and think beyond the boundaries of a traditional spoken word format. 

“I often do stuff for O+ that’s different from what I do professionally because I see the festival as an opportunity to be more experimental,” Carolita says. 

“We can’t emphasize enough how much variety we have in terms of genre and style and subject matter,” Cris adds. “That’s something we’ve tried to do as a committee so that we don’t have the same type of writer or reader show up again and again.” 

Over the years, WO+rd has hosted many amazing established writers and authors from the Hudson Valley and beyond and has become a space to highlight emerging creatives.  

“There aren’t that many spaces for unpublished writers. I like that idea of giving access to people.”

“Another thing we’re trying to juggle is the balance of published writers with more up-and-coming, newer writers who are really talented,” Cris says. “We don’t want to create a space that’s elitist where we only have big name writers or super established folks, so we want to make sure we’re bringing in younger, less experienced but equally talented people.”

WO+rd has often been the first space for some writers to share their work publicly. For Carolita, that’s part of what makes it so special. “I’ve said to Cris, ‘I want this person in because they need a place to have their voice heard, and I want this to be the place’,” she says. “There aren’t that many spaces for unpublished writers. I like that idea of giving access to people.”

Like all other artists, musicians, performers, and volunteers who participate in the O+ Festival each year, the writers of WO+rd can access a variety of healthcare and wellness services in exchange for their contributions to the festival. 

“I love [the clinic],” says Carolita. Every year I take advantage of the dental. I don’t have insurance, but even if I did [dental] would still be the one thing insurance doesn’t cover.” But, she shares, convincing cohorts of WO+rd participants to visit the clinic can be a bit of a challenge. In reflecting on the conversations she’s had with past participants over the years, she describes butting up against ideas about scarcity, about participants not feeling like they had a right to use the services, or that maybe they didn’t need them enough. 

“I had to remind them, ‘Sure, but you wouldn’t go to the dentist this year if you didn’t have this, would you?’” she says. “We’re all broke, you know? Somehow they felt like it was asking too much…I was happy that I made a few people go to the dentist last year.”

“I think it’s because so many of them sort of feel like – especially when you’re writers and you’re on stage for 10 minutes – ‘did I really earn this?’” Cris adds. “And I think one thing that we want to instill in our participants is: you’re part of the festival. You earned this. You’re here – this is what all of this is for.”

The 2024 festival theme will be announced and submissions will open in March – stay tuned to opositivefestival.org or follow O+ for more information and updates.

Submissions Close June 30 for Chicago, Kingston O+ Festivals

The O+ Festival art and music curatorial teams in Chicago and Kingston, N.Y., are now accepting submissions for the 2015 festival weekends. Make history as part of the inaugural festival in the art-rich Pilsen neighborhood of Chicago, which takes place Thursday-Saturday, Sept. 3-5, or join the ranks of both high-profile and emerging musicians and artists who have gifted the Hudson River city of Kingston, N.Y. with concerts, murals and performance art Friday-Sunday, Oct. 9-11, 2015. This year’s festival theme is: “The Other”. Submissions will be accepted through June 30.

Selected 2015 O+ Festival artists and musicians will have access to complimentary health and wellness care from doctors, dentists, chiropractors, homeopaths, massage therapists, psychotherapists and many more outstanding providers during the September and October weekends.

Apply here for the first Chicago festival. Apply here for the sixth Kingston, N.Y. festival.

Submissions for our November festival in Petaluma, Calif., will be announced soon.

Interested in volunteering for one of this year’s three festivals, becoming a sponsor, and/or hosting an artist or musician in your home? Please e-mail: chicago@opositivefestival.org, kingston@opositivefestival.org or petaluma@opositivefestival.org.

​About the O+ Festival: The non-profit O+ Festival connects musicians, artists, and health & wellness providers for weekend-long celebrations featuring concerts and performances, art making, and wellness offerings for the entire community.

O+ Festival’s Year in Review: 2014 Characterized by Expansion

Festival earns non-profit status while adding mO+re cities, mO+re programming, mO+re care

Kingston, N.Y.-based artist Micah Blumenthal brought his "109 Lines of Communication" to the O+ Festival in Petaluma, Calif.
Kingston, N.Y.-based artist Micah Blumenthal brought his “109 Lines of Communication” to the O+ Festival in Petaluma, Calif.

It’s finally time to exhale. 2014 was an extraordinary year for the non-profit O+ Festival, which is dedicated to enhancing community well-being by connecting musicians, artists and health & wellness providers in weekend-long celebrations.

“O+ had a amazing year and so many compelling stories of wellness and connection have been told and will continue to be told,” says Executive Director Joe Concra. “We are all volunteers in this experiment in the gifting of art and music for wellness services.

In late spring, the IRS granted non-profit 501(c)(3) status to the organization, thanks to the work of Pro Bono Partnership. The designation means donations are now tax deductible and will provide the foundation for the Festival’s future growth and expansion. And 2014 was a year of tremendous growth for O+, which celebrated its fifth year in Kingston, N.Y., and second year in the Bay Area, this time in Petaluma, Calif.

“We have had thousands of clinic visits since we began 5 years ago, but beyond that we have made real human connections between artists, musicians, providers, neighbors and businesses, and we look forward to creating a space for that to happen across the country in 2015,” Concra says. “O+ is everyone’s festival and we are honored to help guide it and help it grO+w!”

Kingston during its Festival hosted a team of artists and musicians from Chicago, who will be launching an O+ Festival in their city (around 18th Street and Ashland) in September of 2015.

“I saw Joe’s TEDxTalk and was extremely inspired,” says O+ Chicago co-founder artist Amy Jo Arndt. To stay up-to-date and volunteer with the planning of O+ Chicago, please Like its Facebook page.

The 2014 Kingston O+ Festival hosted artists and musicians from Chicago, who launch a Festival there in 2015: Amy Jo Arndt, Cheryl Casden, Jody Casden & Josh Reisz.
The 2014 Kingston O+ Festival hosted Chicago-based artists Amy Jo Arndt, Cheryl Casden, Jody Casden & Josh Reisz, who will launch a Festival in the Windy City in 2015.

O+ volunteer Micah Blumenthal, a Kingston-based artist, graphic designer, percussionist and yoga instructor, participated in both Kingston and Petaluma festivals with his “109 Lines of Communication” public art.

“There were plenty of differences, but it’s the similarities that say more — both are strong communities committed to solving their problems,” Blumenthal says. “My work was about communication, about fun and exploration, and this seemed to matter to any who were willing to take the time. It was amazing to see so many interact so positively with my work, and the occasional destruction was cool to see too.”

Blumenthal last year received much-needed and long overdue dental care during O+.

“This year I saw a doctor and got a physical for the first time in 17 years and my first massage ever,” he says. “It (O+) not only provided me with care, but there is a presence surrounding the Festival and all of those who give, that made me take the opportunity and the care I have ignored for years.”

This year 20 artists and 55 musicians as well as 44 volunteers received health and wellness care at the O+ clinic in Kingston over the 3-day festival, which drew a crowd of about 2,200. Among the practitioners were nurses, primary care doctors, chiropractors, acupuncturists, massage therapists, energy workers, a psychiatrist, a naturopath as well as a team from the Institute for Family Health.

Visionary artist Xavi Panneton participated in the 2014 O+ Festival in Petaluma, Calif.
Visionary artist Xavi Panneton participated in the 2014 O+ Festival in Petaluma, Calif.

Eli Morales, ND, was among those who donated time and talent Oct. 10-13.

“This is a great opportunity to give back and to help artists be healthy,” Morales says. “It’s kind of my mission as a naturopathic doctor is to help people feel free and achieve a sense of wholeness again. Singers are often on the road; it’s hard for them to be healthy, and so I’m doing my best to support them on their journeys.”

Sarah Tae L.Ac., C.M.T., who provided acupuncture services to artists and musicians at the 2014 festival in Petaluma, came away from the weekend with a true feeling of kinship.

“It helps us to connect deeper with ourselves when we learn to connect with others,” Tae says. “Everybody is a mirror and we remind each other of our own humanity.”

Tae was among the providers who donated their time and expertise to the 22 artists, 106 musicians and 78 volunteers at the Petaluma festival. Nearly 400 clinic visits took place during the Nov. 7-9 weekend, which drew about 600 visitors and participants. Services offered included massage, energy work, primary care, acupuncture, podiatry, chiropractic care, dental, optometry, mental health, audiology, light therapy and nutrition. An additional 16 vouchers for dental care were distributed to artists based in nearby San Francisco and Oakland.

Dental hygienist Katie Schiller treated O+ Festival volunteer Elissa Jane Mastel during the 2014 Festival in Kingston, N.Y.
Dental hygienist Katie Schiller treated O+ Festival volunteer Elissa Jane Mastel during the 2014 Festival in Kingston, N.Y.

Petaluma headliner musician and performer Morgan Sorne received wellness care at this year’s Bay Area Festival.

“To have these practitioners appreciate what I do and offer their services, it makes you feel like what you’re doing has value,” he says.

Petaluma is the home of national sponsor Lagunitas Brewing Company, which continues to increase its financial and marketing support for the Festival’s mission. During the fall, O+ Festival went CouchTrippin’ with Lagunitas to New Orleans.

“There was O+ presence everywhere,” says David Green, who heads up national marketing and events for the Festival. “I think we created some awesome connections along the way.”

O+ Festival in 2014 received excellent national media coverage, including a Details piece and a Hartford Courant profile of Richard Buckner. Leonard Nevarez, in his review of this year’s Kingston festival, said the “concept is, in a word, genius.” And the Christian Science Monitor named the non-profit one of “7 Groups Making Communities More Compassionate.”

To make a financial contribution to the mission and work of the non-profit O+ Festival, please visit our DO+nation page.

O+ Festival Video Highlights Wellness, Spirit of Caring for Each Other

KINGSTON, N.Y.–A new video produced during the fifth annual O+ Festival in Kingston focuses on the health and wellness care that is donated by art-loving providers.

“I can’t think of any better way to trade services than to play music for medical care,” says musician Burnell Pines, whose concert at Keegan Ales is featured throughout the video. “Massages, Reiki, acupuncture, dental work … it’s a real pleasure.”

Videographer Liz Paradise of Topricin, which donated “care packages” of Topricin Pain Relief and Healing Cream to 2014 festival participants, interviewed a number of wellness clinic volunteers as well as artists and musicians. Click here to watch the video.

Eli Morales, ND, was among those who donated time and talent Oct. 10-13.

“This is a great opportunity to give back and to help artists be healthy,” Morales says. “It’s kind of my mission as a naturopathic doctor is to help people feel free and achieve a sense of wholeness again. Singers are often on the road; it’s hard for them to be healthy, and so I’m doing my best to support them on their journeys.”

It’s the spirit of community caring for itself that makes the festival stand out, says Billy Murphy, MD, who describes his participation as “one of the coolest things I do all year.”

“You have people there when you need them, and that’s really what O+ is all about,” he says.

Brittany Gavin, RN, who has volunteered for three festivals, says the weekend gives her an opportunity to work with patients she doesn’t often get to see — the uninsured or underinsured.

“A lot of artists and musicians are working so much and they’re so rough on their bodies, but then there’s nobody there to take care of them,” she says.

Artist Geddes Jones, who made a mural during the festival, sums up the spirit of the festival in this way: “I think it’s great for artists – people giving to people and helping out.”

Want to see more of O+ Festival in action? Subscribe to the festival’s YouTube channel.

Freeman, Matt Pond, Young Magic Among 40 Bands to Play Fifth O+ Festival Oct. 10-12 in Kingston, N.Y.

3-Day Celebration of Art, Music, Wellness Includes Mural by Renowned Street Artist Nils Westergard, Plus Classes in Yoga, Gong Sound Healing, Meditation, Dance, QiGong

New in 2014: ChronO+gram Dance Party; Reading/Drawing Correspondence SalO+n; RecO+very Ride

KINGSTON, N.Y.—The non-profit O+ Festival, which enhances community well-being by connecting musicians, artists, volunteers, local businesses and health providers in a 3-day celebration of art and wellness, returns for a fifth year in Kingston Oct. 10-12. This year’s “Correspondence”-themed festival features more than 40 bands and 20 visual artists, kickoff parade on Friday night, wellness ExpO+, children’s programming, and ExplO+re — classes in Yoga, Gong Sound Healing, Meditation, Dance and QiGong. New events for 2014 include the community reading of published correspondence while sketching tableau culled from Outdated Cafe’s collection, Tin Roof Sessions, a dance party in collaboration with Chronogram magazine, a mural-to-mural bike ride for all ages, an 18- and 28-mile rail trail ride, and a 50-mile road ride for cycling enthusiasts.

TKBPlive
Neo-soul sensation TK Wonder will perform with drummer Ben Perowsky at the 2014 O+ Festival in Kingston, N.Y.

“The idea of enhancing and strengthening community through the collected donated efforts of its members is the driving force behind the O+ Festival,” said Theresa Widmann, director of operations. “Artists gift the city of Kingston with murals and installations. Musicians donate their performances. Teachers gift classes in yoga and other modalities. Business owners and donors provide in-kind and financial support. And providers donate the health & wellness services that the artists, musicians and festival volunteers might not otherwise afford.”

That care may include traditional (medical, dental, ophthalmology) as well as complementary (chiropractic, Reiki and other energy work, massage, acupuncture and psychotherapy).

Festival attendees are easy to spot. Their monetary donations, which help cover the cost of putting on the festival, entitle them to all-access red wristbands that cover entry to Friday, Saturday and Sunday concerts, Saturday’s ExplO+re classes, Tin Roof Sessions on Saturday and Sunday afternoon, Saturday night dance party, Correspondence SalO+n, and Sunday bike rides. Early birds can take advantage of a special rate and be added to the donor guestlist by purchasing here.

Newly confirmed acts are Freeman (aka Aaron Freeman aka Gene Ween of Ween), Tony Levin’s Stick Men, Matt Pond, Amy Helm & The Handsome Strangers, Flaws, The Bones of JR Jones, The Paul Green Rock Academy, kindie band Ratboy Jr., Festival favorite Monogold and “Shiva Arms,” a one-man play written and performed by Doug Motel.

Kevin Devine (Photo by Ninelle Efremova)
Singer/songwriter Kevin Devine will play the 2014 O+ Festival in Kingston, N.Y. (Photo by Ninelle Efremova)

As in years past, many incredibly talented and renowned musicians have submitted to play the Festival. Some highlights include: Folk-singer Kevin Devine (New York); Xylouris White (Greece, Australia), which features frequent PJ Harvey/Nick Cave collaborator Jim White and Greek lutenist George Xylouris; electro-pop act Young Magic (Brooklyn, N.Y.); a special collaboration between drummer Ben Perowsky and neo-soul/rap sensation TK Wonder (Brooklyn, N.Y.), who has opened for everyone from Sting to Die Antwoord; SXSW ’14 standouts Landlady (Brooklyn, N.Y.); and Arc Iris, the acclaimed anti-folk collective from Providence, R.I. (See the full list below.)

The public art-making that takes place during the O+ Festival is earning the city of Kingston a reputation as a must-see destination for murals. Last year, internationally renowned street artist Gaia created “Artemis Emerging from the Quarry,” Brooklyn-based Lmnopi made “Pretty Nose and the Dakota Unity Riders” and local painter Kimberly Kae gifted “Bilancia.”

Street artist Nils Westergard, who makes murals all over the world, will paint in Kingston during the 2014 O+ Festival. (Photo by David Roots)
Street artist Nils Westergard, who makes murals all over the world, will paint in Kingston during the 2014 O+ Festival. (Photo by David Roots)

This year’s artists make their own mark on the community as they visually explore the theme of “Correspondence”. Kingston-based artist Keith Carollo (formerly of Fred Flare) will seal the city with a kiss (SWAK); Jack Dishel (former lead guitarist of the Moldy Peaches) returns to his graffiti roots in collaboration with Vor 138; Richmond, Va.-based street artist Nils Westergard, known for celebrating everyday people’s contributions to community, will be back in the U.S. for O+ after a number of mural commissions in Europe; and an installation that examines the needs of the Kingston community will be mounted by the artist Complete of Mass Mosaic.

For up-to-date information about the Festival lineup, profiles of this year’s participants and sponsors, and donation protocol for the wristbands, please sign up for the O+ Festival mailing list and follow the Festival on social media.

The O+ Festival, which has plans to open a year-round multi-use facility in Kingston to provide artists and musicians with complementary care services, wellness education, and other preventative care options, was recently granted 501(c)(3) non-profit organization by the IRS. It was also recognized at the 2014 Ulster County Executive’s Arts Awards for Art in Public Places.

Last November, the Festival expanded to the West Coast with a 3-day celebration in San Francisco. This year, it heads to Petaluma, Calif., Nov. 7-9.

“O+ is the finest example of mutually beneficial symbiosis I’ve ever experienced. I had been on the road nearly full time for five years, without insurance. One of my teeth had gotten to the point that I could not eat solid food without pain. I had about given up on designs of a long life. Dr. Tom Cingel fixed me up in exchange for playing music. It honestly gave me a new lease on life, and made me feel as if what I did had a real value. It’s the best thing ever, and I hope the heart and soul of it becomes the central message of all good people.” — Jeff Bailey, member of Phosphorescent, 2007 -2013

CONFIRMED BANDS FOR THE 2014 O+ FESTIVAL IN KINGSTON, N.Y.:

Among the bands/acts that will play this year’s Festival are: Amy Helm & The Handsome Strangers (Woodstock, N.Y.), Arc Iris (Providence, R.I.), Battle Ave. (Woodstock, N.Y.), Bella’s Bartok (Amherst, Mass.), Bobby Bird (Hopewell Junction, N.Y.), Burnell Pines (Chichester, N.Y.), Cassandra Jenkins (New York), Celestial Shore (Brooklyn, N.Y.), C. Lavender (Hudson, N.Y.), Cosmonaut (New York), Dead Unicorn (Kingston, N.Y.), Diet Kong (New Paltz, N.Y.), Flaws (Brooklyn, N.Y.), Freeman (Woodstock, N.Y.), Galanos (Kingston, N.Y.), Gustafer Yellowgold’s Show (Kingston, N.Y.), Hadeda (Brooklyn, N.Y.), Hand Habits (Albany, N.Y.), itsnotyouitsme (New York), Karlie Bruce (Brooklyn, N.Y.), Kat Wright and the Indomitable Soul Band (Burlington, Vt.), Kevin Devine (New York), Landlady (Brooklyn, N.Y.), Matt Pond (New York), Monogold (Brooklyn, N.Y.), Pitchfork Militia (Palenville/Saugerties, N.Y.), Ratboy Jr., Rice Cultivation Society (East Meadow, N.Y.), Sam Kogon (New York), Secret Fangs (Poughkeepsie, N.Y.), Semi Femme (Brooklyn, N.Y.), Setting Sun (Brooklyn, N.Y.), Shilpa Ray (Brooklyn, N.Y.), Sisters of Your Sunshine Vapor (Detroit), Stick Men (Kingston, N.Y.), SWF (Brooklyn, N.Y.), The Bones of JR Jones, The Gold Hope Duo (Kingston, N.Y.), The Paul Green Rock Academy, The Warp/The Weft (Poughkeepsie, N.Y.), TK Wonder/ Ben Perowsky (Brooklyn, N.Y.), Whitegold (Chicago), Xaddax (Kingston, N.Y.), Xylouris White (Greece, Australia), and Young Magic (Brooklyn, N.Y.)

CONFIRMED VISUAL ARTISTS FOR THE 2014 O+ FESTIVAL IN KINGSTON, N.Y:

Murals: Nils Westergard, Geddes Jones, Genie Canvas, Scott Michael Ackerman, Kevin Freligh, Matthew Pleva, Julia Santos Solomon, Jack Dishel & Vor 138, Keith Carollo
Performances: Jim Toia and YEAAAH!!!, Anna Rexia, Wayfinding Series, Susie Tarnowicz
Movement: Sarah Jacob
Installation: Complete, Micah Blumenthal, Claire Eder

For more information, contact Kathleen Murray, Director of Communications: kathleen@opositivefestival.org

Freeman, Matt Pond, Young Magic Among 40 Bands to Play Fifth O+ Festival Oct. 10-12 in Kingston, N.Y.

3-Day Celebration of Art, Music, Wellness Includes Mural by Renowned Street Artist Nils Westergard, Plus Classes in Yoga, Gong Sound Healing, Meditation, Dance, QiGong

New in 2014: ChronO+gram Dance Party; Reading/Drawing Correspondence SalO+n; RecO+very Ride

KINGSTON, N.Y.—The non-profit O+ Festival, which enhances community well-being by connecting musicians, artists, volunteers, local businesses and health providers in a 3-day celebration of art and wellness, returns for a fifth year in Kingston Oct. 10-12. This year’s “Correspondence”-themed festival features more than 40 bands and 20 visual artists, kickoff parade on Friday night, wellness ExpO+, children’s programming, and ExplO+re — classes in Yoga, Gong Sound Healing, Meditation, Dance and QiGong. New events for 2014 include the community reading of published correspondence while sketching tableau culled from Outdated Cafe’s collection, Tin Roof Sessions, a dance party in collaboration with Chronogram magazine, a mural-to-mural bike ride for all ages, an 18- and 28-mile rail trail ride, and a 50-mile road ride for cycling enthusiasts.

TKBPlive
Neo-soul sensation TK Wonder will perform with drummer Ben Perowsky at the 2014 O+ Festival in Kingston, N.Y.

“The idea of enhancing and strengthening community through the collected donated efforts of its members is the driving force behind the O+ Festival,” said Theresa Widmann, director of operations. “Artists gift the city of Kingston with murals and installations. Musicians donate their performances. Teachers gift classes in yoga and other modalities. Business owners and donors provide in-kind and financial support. And providers donate the health & wellness services that the artists, musicians and festival volunteers might not otherwise afford.”

That care may include traditional (medical, dental, ophthalmology) as well as complementary (chiropractic, Reiki and other energy work, massage, acupuncture and psychotherapy).

Festival attendees are easy to spot. Their monetary donations, which help cover the cost of putting on the festival, entitle them to all-access red wristbands that cover entry to Friday, Saturday and Sunday concerts, Saturday’s ExplO+re classes, Tin Roof Sessions on Saturday and Sunday afternoon, Saturday night dance party, Correspondence SalO+n, and Sunday bike rides. Early birds can take advantage of a special rate and be added to the donor guestlist by purchasing here.

Newly confirmed acts are Freeman (aka Aaron Freeman aka Gene Ween of Ween), Tony Levin’s Stick Men, Matt Pond, Amy Helm & The Handsome Strangers, Flaws, The Bones of JR Jones, The Paul Green Rock Academy, kindie band Ratboy Jr., Festival favorite Monogold and “Shiva Arms,” a one-man play written and performed by Doug Motel.

Kevin Devine (Photo by Ninelle Efremova)
Singer/songwriter Kevin Devine will play the 2014 O+ Festival in Kingston, N.Y. (Photo by Ninelle Efremova)

As in years past, many incredibly talented and renowned musicians have submitted to play the Festival. Some highlights include: Folk-singer Kevin Devine (New York); Xylouris White (Greece, Australia), which features frequent PJ Harvey/Nick Cave collaborator Jim White and Greek lutenist George Xylouris; electro-pop act Young Magic (Brooklyn, N.Y.); a special collaboration between drummer Ben Perowsky and neo-soul/rap sensation TK Wonder (Brooklyn, N.Y.), who has opened for everyone from Sting to Die Antwoord; SXSW ’14 standouts Landlady (Brooklyn, N.Y.); and Arc Iris, the acclaimed anti-folk collective from Providence, R.I. (See the full list below.)

The public art-making that takes place during the O+ Festival is earning the city of Kingston a reputation as a must-see destination for murals. Last year, internationally renowned street artist Gaia created “Artemis Emerging from the Quarry,” Brooklyn-based Lmnopi made “Pretty Nose and the Dakota Unity Riders” and local painter Kimberly Kae gifted “Bilancia.”

Street artist Nils Westergard, who makes murals all over the world, will paint in Kingston during the 2014 O+ Festival. (Photo by David Roots)
Street artist Nils Westergard, who makes murals all over the world, will paint in Kingston during the 2014 O+ Festival. (Photo by David Roots)

This year’s artists make their own mark on the community as they visually explore the theme of “Correspondence”. Kingston-based artist Keith Carollo (formerly of Fred Flare) will seal the city with a kiss (SWAK); Jack Dishel (former lead guitarist of the Moldy Peaches) returns to his graffiti roots in collaboration with Vor 138; Richmond, Va.-based street artist Nils Westergard, known for celebrating everyday people’s contributions to community, will be back in the U.S. for O+ after a number of mural commissions in Europe; and an installation that examines the needs of the Kingston community will be mounted by the artist Complete of Mass Mosaic.

For up-to-date information about the Festival lineup, profiles of this year’s participants and sponsors, and donation protocol for the wristbands, please sign up for the O+ Festival mailing list and follow the Festival on social media.

The O+ Festival, which has plans to open a year-round multi-use facility in Kingston to provide artists and musicians with complementary care services, wellness education, and other preventative care options, was recently granted 501(c)(3) non-profit organization by the IRS. It was also recognized at the 2014 Ulster County Executive’s Arts Awards for Art in Public Places.

Last November, the Festival expanded to the West Coast with a 3-day celebration in San Francisco. This year, it heads to Petaluma, Calif., Nov. 7-9.

“O+ is the finest example of mutually beneficial symbiosis I’ve ever experienced. I had been on the road nearly full time for five years, without insurance. One of my teeth had gotten to the point that I could not eat solid food without pain. I had about given up on designs of a long life. Dr. Tom Cingel fixed me up in exchange for playing music. It honestly gave me a new lease on life, and made me feel as if what I did had a real value. It’s the best thing ever, and I hope the heart and soul of it becomes the central message of all good people.” — Jeff Bailey, member of Phosphorescent, 2007 -2013

CONFIRMED BANDS FOR THE 2014 O+ FESTIVAL IN KINGSTON, N.Y.:

Among the bands/acts that will play this year’s Festival are: Amy Helm & The Handsome Strangers (Woodstock, N.Y.), Arc Iris (Providence, R.I.), Battle Ave. (Woodstock, N.Y.), Bella’s Bartok (Amherst, Mass.), Bobby Bird (Hopewell Junction, N.Y.), Burnell Pines (Chichester, N.Y.), Cassandra Jenkins (New York), Celestial Shore (Brooklyn, N.Y.), C. Lavender (Hudson, N.Y.), Cosmonaut (New York), Dead Unicorn (Kingston, N.Y.), Diet Kong (New Paltz, N.Y.), Flaws (Brooklyn, N.Y.), Freeman (Woodstock, N.Y.), Galanos (Kingston, N.Y.), Gustafer Yellowgold’s Show (Kingston, N.Y.), Hadeda (Brooklyn, N.Y.), Hand Habits (Albany, N.Y.), itsnotyouitsme (New York), Karlie Bruce (Brooklyn, N.Y.), Kat Wright and the Indomitable Soul Band (Burlington, Vt.), Kevin Devine (New York), Landlady (Brooklyn, N.Y.), Matt Pond (New York), Monogold (Brooklyn, N.Y.), Pitchfork Militia (Palenville/Saugerties, N.Y.), Ratboy Jr., Rice Cultivation Society (East Meadow, N.Y.), Sam Kogon (New York), Secret Fangs (Poughkeepsie, N.Y.), Semi Femme (Brooklyn, N.Y.), Setting Sun (Brooklyn, N.Y.), Shilpa Ray (Brooklyn, N.Y.), Sisters of Your Sunshine Vapor (Detroit), Stick Men (Kingston, N.Y.), SWF (Brooklyn, N.Y.), The Bones of JR Jones, The Gold Hope Duo (Kingston, N.Y.), The Paul Green Rock Academy, The Warp/The Weft (Poughkeepsie, N.Y.), TK Wonder/ Ben Perowsky (Brooklyn, N.Y.), Whitegold (Chicago), Xaddax (Kingston, N.Y.), Xylouris White (Greece, Australia), and Young Magic (Brooklyn, N.Y.)

CONFIRMED VISUAL ARTISTS FOR THE 2014 O+ FESTIVAL IN KINGSTON, N.Y:

Murals: Nils Westergard, Geddes Jones, Genie Canvas, Scott Michael Ackerman, Kevin Freligh, Matthew Pleva, Julia Santos Solomon, Jack Dishel & Vor 138, Keith Carollo
Performances: Jim Toia and YEAAAH!!!, Anna Rexia, Wayfinding Series, Susie Tarnowicz
Movement: Sarah Jacob
Installation: Complete, Micah Blumenthal, Claire Eder

For more information, contact Kathleen Murray, Director of Communications: kathleen@opositivefestival.org