Fundraiser For Carving/Planting Trees

Fundraiser For Carving/Planting Trees

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With Tim Russert’s passing, his connection to Buffalo is being noted to the city by the citizens, special interest groups, and even city hall. Oddly enough, one special interest group recognized Russert’s Buffalo connection well before he was suddenly taken. Carvings For A Cause, which does a lot of work and fundraising with Re-Tree WNY, had a statue of the Meet The Press host carved out of a 125-year-old Silver Maple.

It was number 11 in their series and came before the likes of Thomas Edison and Ben Franklin. It sits in the Globe Market on Elmwood and will serve as a reminder of Russert’s importance to the area. With so many tributes to the journalism giant, it is nice to know that Buffalonians saw him as part of the city’s family long before his untimely death.

This Wednesday Carvings For A Cause is holding a fundraiser to benefit their organization as well as Re-Tree WNY. They will have food-tasting stations by Tempo, J.P. Bullfathers, Grille 620, Nektar, Ambrosia, and by Drew Cerza, Buffalo’s “Wing King.” While taking a sample from some of Buffalo’s finest, you can listen to the Heard of Buffalo and place a bid on any of the auction items, all of which center around nature and the environment.

Though not everyone appreciates Carvings For A Cause, as evident through some comments on previous stories, the work they do can be seen all over Buffalo. Supporting them can only help improve the work they do and the fundraiser will also benefit Re-Tree WNY, which does so much good all across the city. Tickets are $30 in advance and are available at J.P. Bullfeathers, Grille 620, the Town Ballroom box office, and tickets.com.

June 18, 2008
6 – 10 PM
Town Ballroom, 681 Main Street
Tickets: $30 advance, $40 at the door
More Info

digulios

What Others Have To Say

  1. sally

    6 ratings12345
    Jun 17th, 14:26

    Why are you talking about Russert yet showing the Jay Leno carving?

  2. sonyactivision

    3 ratings12345
    Jun 17th, 15:42

    Please don't do Tim Russert dirty with one of these vulgar carvings.

  3. Perry

    7 ratings12345
    Jun 17th, 15:59

    Ah, stupidy reigns again on Buffalo Rising....Sally, you know that's not Jay Leno...and Sony...you're just a loser. These carvings are great, are raising money, and no one is comparing them to masterpieces. Come on people, just play nice.

  4. onestarmartin

    5 ratings12345
    Jun 17th, 16:11

    took the words out of my mouth perry...

  5. sonyactivision

    5 ratings12345
    Jun 17th, 16:22

    @Perry, you can fundraise and make "cute" carvings without subjecting us to insipid representations of people we like. Mocking tributes we don't need.

  6. driz716

    2 ratings12345
    Jun 17th, 16:47

    far from vulgar, insipid or mocking

  7. sally

    2 ratings12345
    Jun 17th, 16:53

    Perry: If it's not Jay Leno than who the heck is it?

  8. MRodgers

    3 ratings12345
    Jun 17th, 17:11

    sally, it's russert..........................................................................................................................................................................duh.................................................................................................

  9. Tuco

    1 ratings12345
    Jun 17th, 18:09

    Looks like Bill's owner Ralph Wilson

  10. jattea

    0 ratings12345
    Jun 17th, 18:32

    "stupidy"

    ha...

  11. dagner

    1 ratings12345
    Jun 17th, 19:06

    I think you have the DAY wrong. The BRO story posted at 8:32 am, and the Carvings for a Cause site, say that the fundraiser is on WEDNESDAY June 18th, not Friday. Are they different events?

  12. benfranklin

    5 ratings12345
    Jun 17th, 19:30

    I know we've all heard a lot about Tim Russert over the last few days, but I'm of the mind we have not collectively grasped the significance of this loss to our city, and it's link to the rest of the world. Hundreds of posts about the falling Livery building (as if our city's future stands in the balance), and not that many posts on the Russert article, which truly does impact the marketing of our city across the country.

    I'm partial to old buildings, but in the end it's just bricks. To hear '...if it's Sunday....", a reasonable person would trade a hundlred old buildings. Given the vapid nature of some of the responses above, and the number of posts about the Livery building vs. some other topics, one might conclude the number of reasoned individuals that frequent this site decreases by the day.

  13. Prodigal-Son

    2 ratings12345
    Jun 17th, 20:08

    Amen, Ben. We lost our best advocate on the national stage. What other Buffalonian has been as well respected, widely admired, and so tirelessly pushed for his city? It'll be a long time before we have a person like him, in a postiion like that, again.

  14. ChocolateShake

    2 ratings12345
    Jun 17th, 20:45

    This sculpture is a representation of Tim Russert? I thought it looked more like Peter North - a big piece of wood.

  15. Matthewjohnp

    1 ratings12345
    Jun 17th, 21:29

    That's what happens when you do no neck sculptures.

  16. Colin

    0 ratings12345
    Jun 17th, 22:22

    Maybe the disparity has something to do with the fact that people can actually do something about the Livery? Ya think?

  17. Brownfield

    4 ratings12345
    Jun 18th, 01:03

    This is my first post on this this site. I look at this site regularly, but had never been compelled to get in on the conversation until now. I agree with the people who feel this carving is lacking. It is incredibly hacky in my opinion. It is a shame that this organization hired a hobbyist to carve this piece instead of a real artist...a real sculptor. In the process, both parties took a 125 year maple and an inspired subject (Tim Russert) and came up with something completely lacking in grace, technique, and imagination. This piece gives the impression that this city is full of hack sculptors that don't grasp the subtleties of human form, fabric draping, and compositional layout.

  18. benfranklin

    1 ratings12345
    Jun 18th, 05:44

    The livery is past the point where money will be wisely invested. The only way it remains is some combination of donations, and political maneuvering. That's what so many here seem to rely on. The mantra seems to be, how do we get government involved to provide some relief, some hope.

    The Russert story is one of no whining, taking personal responsibility, and lifting yourself up. Those aren't lessons most here will find much value in. But again, as I said, and you only reinforced, most here are missing the big picture.

  19. sally

    0 ratings12345
    Jun 18th, 08:49

    I agree with Tuco - it must be Ralph Wilson or maybe it's Norm from Cheers. Perhaps that could raise more money by having a contest to see who can guess the identity of this mystery man.

  20. Perry

    0 ratings12345
    Jun 18th, 10:26

    Sally...you are actually right on...they did have a "guess this carving" contest last year specifically for this carving.

  21. sally

    0 ratings12345
    Jun 18th, 11:16

    What was the winning guess?

  22. Matthewjohnp

    2 ratings12345
    Jun 18th, 13:29

    A block of wood.

  23. Perry

    0 ratings12345
    Jun 18th, 15:07

    I don't know how many people guessed Tim Russert (the carving use to sit out in front of Globe Market)...I do agree that it could pass as Ralph Wilson. I like the fact that these carvings are not spot-on replicas of the subjects. It sort of adds to the funkiness of the sculptures.

  24. sally

    4 ratings12345
    Jun 18th, 15:23

    In other words you like crap!

  25. Perry

    2 ratings12345
    Jun 18th, 17:02

    Oh Sally...how miserable are you? One more thing...I am a board member of one of Buffalo's most acclaimed & celebrated arts organizations...but unlike you, I can rise (and see) above certain situations.

  26. davvid

    0 ratings12345
    Jun 18th, 17:40

    looks a bit like Louie Anderson

  27. csc77

    2 ratings12345
    Jun 18th, 18:19

    Ya see, this is exactly the reason that I don't support school bake sales...if they can't make a cupcake so fine as Pierre Herme's, then why should anyone be expected to pay for it! Jesus Christ, people; it's a far better representation than I could create, and I think that we should be thankful for anyone who actually does something...other than sip coffee and bitch to the world on BRO.

  28. sonyactivision

    1 ratings12345
    Jun 18th, 19:07

    @Perry, you say you are a"board member of one of Buffalo's most acclaimed and celebrated arts organizations..but unlike [you], I can rise above certain situations." So that is why you called Sally "miserable" and myself "a loser"? How do your fellow boardmembers feel about the way you represent that "acclaimed organization" with personal insults? How well did you "rise above" this situation? Isn't criticism a large part of the arts experience? Why do you become so defensive when challenged just a tiny bit? I can tell you that I've yet to encounter these popular chainsaw art creations and come away feeling in any way elevated or even satisfied. As a kind of folk art, this stuff has appeal, but it's yet to appeal to me and I wish someone out there would change that. But it didn't happen here.

  29. Colin

    2 ratings12345
    Jun 19th, 14:08

    Insisting that the city do its job isn't whining. Neither is demanding that a property owner maintain his building. Your mention of personal responsibility seems out of place, since Livery protesters are asking for the owner to be held accountable for failing to live up to his. And yes, we are looking to the government to provide some relief -- would you prefer vigilante action?

    Your faux-libertarian, anti-government philosophy died in New Orleans. You didn't get the memo?

  30. benfranklin

    1 ratings12345
    Jun 19th, 20:49

    Vigilante action would require a level of effort that would be atypical of your ilk. I'm not sure how you tolerate the level of frustration that must be the result of feeling you have so little control over outcomes that truly seem to matter to you. How do reasonable property tax rates play in your world of 'government-will-make-it-all-better'?

  31. Colin

    1 ratings12345
    Jun 19th, 23:14

    1. on level of effort -- how do you think this story has gained this kind of traction? Why is the building still standing, despite the fact that the city tried to knock it down a week ago? Effort! Press releases don't write themselves, media turnout calls don't make themselves, etc. It's the result of real work done by real people.

    2. I never suggested that government should make it all better. But government should do what it promises to do, and chief among those promises is enforcing the law. They failed to do it here, and let this building rot despite ongoing protest. I pay taxes and vote -- I hold up my end of the bargain. Why shouldn't I expect them to hold up theirs? Demanding that they do doesn't make me a "whiner" or a baby in search of a nanny, or any of the other clever terms your ilk uses to disparage citizenship.

  32. benfranklin

    0 ratings12345
    Jun 20th, 01:27

    The worse than usual wind this winter removed some siding from a number of posts in front of a property that I own. Much to my surprise, these posts had been consumed by carpenter ants (the siding had made this damage hidden). The posts had turned to dust. I walked by these posts on a daily basis, but had no idea they had reached such a state.

    Is it your point that the government should have inspected my property, and found that my posts had rotted? Should I have been jailed? Assets of all kinds deteriorate over time, some more quickly due to inattention or poor upkeep. The penalty would seem to be that I need to pay for the repair, which I'm doing. There are thousands of properties in Buffalo that the owners can't afford the upkeep, is it your plan to jail them all?

  33. Colin

    2 ratings12345
    Jun 20th, 13:39

    There's a bit of a difference between the long term decay of an entire massive building, and a short term smaller problem like you mention. Right? And for whatever reason, the city seems like it gives more leeway to the wealthy owners of large properties that are in real disrepair, than to the average homeowner with relatively minor maintainence problems. That seems backwards to me.

    The city can't (and shouldn't) track every little failing by every little property owner. But if you own a property that dominates an entire block, and it rots over the course of 20 years, at some point the city should take some action. This doesn't seem like a radical request.

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