October 26, 2020 “What 'Greater New York' Got Right
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The Kitchen Center for Video, Music, Dance, Performance, Film, and Literature
The Kitchen Center for video, music, dance, performance, film, and literature Fall 2016 Season Upcoming Fall 2016 Upcoming Winter 2017 The Kitchen presents Sondra Perry: Resident Evil Philippe Quesne: La Mélancolie des November 2–December 10. dragons In 1971, Sun Ra said “Black people need a January 10–14, 8PM. $25. mythocracy, not a democracy because they’ll A band of longhaired metalheads decide that the never make it in history.…Truth is not snowy forest where their hatchback has stalled permissible for me to use because I’m not might be the perfect location to build a new righteous and holy, I’m evil, that’s because I’m heavy metal-themed amusement park. A help- black and I’m not subscribed to any types of ful stranger is invited into their world of classic righteousness.” Perry’s new video examines this rock, medieval recorders, and large inflatable active disinterest in the respectability that sculptures. An international audience favorite, blackness has been perpetually asked to earn by this three-dimensional poem is full of visual white culture. Using the lens of the Alien movie wonder, joy and melancholy, and sincere delight franchise—one which has been providing in human existence. Presented by The Kitchen allegories of colonialism and mutability for as part of The Public Theater’s Under the Radar Xaviera Simmons: CODED decades—Perry’s work asks: how do agents of Festival. power behave when their subjects become absolutely unpredictable, fluidly inhabiting Raúl De Nieves and Colin Self: The Fool societal norms in order to destroy them? Curated February 9–11, 8PM. -
Xaviera Simmons '05 Charles Flint Kellogg Award in Arts and Letters
Xaviera Simmons '05 Charles Flint Kellogg Award in Arts and Letters Xaviera Simmons’s sweeping body of work centers around photography and includes performance, choreography, video, sound, sculpture, and installation. Her interdisciplinary practice is rooted in shifting definitions of landscape; character development; art, political, and social histories; and the interconnectedness of formal processes. Simmons received her bachelor’s degree from Bard College after spending two years on a walking pilgrimage with Buddhist monks retracing the transatlantic slave trade. She completed the Whitney Museum’s Independent Study Program in Studio Art while simultaneously completing a two-year actor training with the Maggie Flanigan Studio. Simmons received Agnes Gund’s Art for Justice Award and Denniston Hills’ Distinguished Performance Artist Award, both in 2018. Her work is part of numerous upcoming exhibitions and projects including Sundown at David Castillo Gallery, Miami; The Restless Earth, curated by Massimiliano Gioni, at the Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C. (2019); and Miami-Dade County Art in Public Places Commission (2018–19), among many others. Recent solo exhibitions include Convene at Sculpture Center, New York; Overlay at Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University; and The Gold Miner’s Mission to Dwell on the Tide Line, at Modern Window, Museum of Modern Art, New York. Current and recent museum group exhibitions include The Weatherspoon Art Museum, Greensboro, North Carolina; MassArt, Boston; Renaissance Society, Chicago; Seattle Art Museum; Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; Prospect.4, New Orleans; Fondazione Nicola Trussardi, Milan; Studio Museum in Harlem; Museum of Modern Art, New York; Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston; Cincinnati Art Museum; and Museum of the African Diaspora, San Francisco. -
Xaviera Simmons at Weatherspoon Art Museum, Greensboro - Burnaway
6/14/2021 Don’t Forget: Xaviera Simmons at Weatherspoon Art Museum, Greensboro - Burnaway Don’t Forget: Xaviera Simmons at Weatherspoon Art Museum, Greensboro BY SUSAN LEE MACKEY MARCH 11, 2021 https://burnaway.org/daily/dont-forget-xaviera-simmons-at-weatherspoon-art-museum-greensboro/ 1/9 6/14/2021 Don’t Forget: Xaviera Simmons at Weatherspoon Art Museum, Greensboro - Burnaway Xaviera Simmons, Index Two, Composition Three, 2012; Chromogenic color print, 50 x 40 inches. Edition of 3. Courtesy of the artist and David Castillo, Miami. © Xaviera Simmons n view at the Weatherspoon Art Museum is a small exhibition of photographs by Xaviera Simmons, currently the Falk Visiting Artist at UNC Greensboro. https://burnawayO.org/daily/dont-forget-xaviera-simmons-at-weatherspoon-art-museum-greensboro/ 2/9 6/14/2021 Don’t Forget: Xaviera Simmons at Weatherspoon Art Museum, Greensboro - Burnaway Simmons’ artistic works spans multiple genres, and she sees herself as “archivist, image maker, producer, director and sometimes actor.” But her work is not delineated by genres, rather, each O project is part of an ongoing exploration of ideas: abolition, reparations, undoing whiteness, and, especially in this exhibition, archival research. The photographs in this exhibition were made over the course of ten years. Included are six images from her Index series, 2 from her Sundown series, and 1 landscape self-portrait. The Sundown series is named after “sundown towns,” areas in which Black folks and other people of color faced heightened violence after dark. In each Sundown image, Simmons photographs herself holding an archival image for her viewer to confront while she looks elsewhere. -
BAM 50 State Initiative Art Project—A Partnership with for Freedoms—Activates Civic Engagement Through Art Work Creation, Saturday, Oct 20
BAM 50 State Initiative Art Project—a partnership with For Freedoms—activates civic engagement through art work creation, Saturday, Oct 20 Free public event will be led by Brooklyn visual artist Katherine Toukhy Oct 5, 2018/Brooklyn, NY—The Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM) has partnered with For Freedoms in an afternoon of civic engagement on Saturday, Oct 20 from 1–3pm at the South Site Plaza (Lafayette Ave, corner of Flatbush Ave). Attendees will participate in an art-making project, led by Brooklyn visual artist Katherine Toukhy, to create and share social and political statements with the community. Images of finished artworks will be photographed and displayed on BAM’s outdoor digital signpost on the corner of Flatbush Ave and Lafayette Ave—running on a loop until the mid-term elections in November. BAM’s VP of Education and Community Engagement Coco Killingsworth said, “We’re excited to join with For Freedoms and Katherine Toukhy in gathering community members for this creative civic activation. We hope this event inspires all of us to use our voices to engage in the democratic process.” For Freedoms started in 2016 as a platform for civic engagement, discourse, and direct action for artists in the United States. Inspired by Norman Rockwell’s 1943 painting of the four universal freedoms articulated by Franklin Delano Roosevelt in 1941—freedom of speech, freedom of worship, freedom from want, and freedom from fear—For Freedoms seeks to use art to deepen public discussions of civic issues and core values, and to clarify that citizenship in American society is deepened by participation, not by ideology. -
Hank Willis Thomas
Goodman Gallery Hank Willis Thomas Biography Hank Willis Thomas (b. 1976, New Jersey, United States) is a conceptual artist working primarily with themes related to perspective, identity, commodity, media, and popular culture. Thomas has exhibited throughout the United States and abroad including the International Center of Photography, New York; Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, Spain; Musée du quai Branly, Paris; Hong Kong Arts Centre, Hong Kong, and the Witte de With Center for Contemporary Art, Netherlands. Thomas’ work is included in numerous public collections including the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Brooklyn Museum, New York; High Museum of Art, Atlanta, and National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C. His collaborative projects include Question Bridge: Black Males, In Search Of The Truth (The Truth Booth), Writing on the Wall, and the artist-run initiative for art and civic engagement For Freedoms, which in 2017 was awarded the ICP Infinity Award for New Media and Online Platform. Thomas is also the recipient of the Gordon Parks Foundation Fellowship (2019), the Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship (2018), Art for Justice Grant (2018), AIMIA | AGO Photography Prize (2017), Soros Equality Fellowship (2017), and is a member of the New York City Public Design Commission. Thomas holds a B.F.A. from New York University (1998) and an M.A./M.F.A. from the California College of the Arts (2004). In 2017, he received honorary doctorates from the Maryland Institute of Art and the Institute for Doctoral Studies in the Visual Arts. Artist Statement Hank Willis Thomas is an American visual photographer whose primary interested are in race, advertising and popular culture. -
Leading up to the 2020 Presidential Election, for Freedoms to Present
PRESS CONTACT Molly Krause [email protected] Press kit and images: www.molly.nyc/ffcon Leading up to the 2020 presidential election, For Freedoms to present the inaugural For Freedoms Congress (FFCon): a nonpartisan, arts and culture-driven forum for civic engagement strategy slated to be largest-ever convening of its kind FFCon will take place February 28, February 29, and March 1 in Los Angeles. Host venues—donated by FFCon cultural partners—include the Hammer Museum, the Japanese American National Museum, and the Geffen Contemporary at MOCA Glenn Kaino, Hank Willis Thomas, and Black Lives Matter cofounder Patrisse Cullors among creatives confirmed to lead planning sessions and public talks Los Angeles, CA — January 2020 – For Freedoms, the nonpartisan collective for creative civic engagement cofounded by artists Hank Willis Thomas and Eric Gottesman, will this February present the inaugural For Freedoms Congress (FFCon). The three-day event is a first-of-its-kind convening of artists, academic and cultural institutions, and social justice organizations. Its objective—through a tightly curated series of artist-led planning sessions, creative workshops, and public events—is to build a collective strategy to supercharge civic engagement back in attendees’ local communities leading up to the 2020 presidential election. “The people who make up our country’s creative fabric have the collective influence to effect change,” said For Freedoms cofounder Hank Willis Thomas. “Right now, we have a lot of non-creative people shaping public policy, and a lot of creative individuals who haven't or don’t know how to step up. For Freedoms exists as an access point to magnify, strengthen, and perpetuate the civic influence of creatives and institutions nationwide. -
ICA at VCU Presents Major New Exhibition Exploring Representations of Race in Contemporary Art
ICA at VCU Presents Major New Exhibition Exploring Representations of Race in Contemporary Art Great Force Features Works and Performances by 24 Artists Including New Commissions by Tomashi Jackson, Charlotte Lagarde, and Xaviera Simmons Richmond, VA – October 5, 2019 - The Institute for Contemporary Art (ICA) at Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) presents Great Force, an exhibition that uses painting, sculpture, photography, video, and performance to explore how art can be used to envision new forms of race and representation freed from the bounds of historic racial constructs. The exhibition features new commissions and recent work by an intergenerational group of 24 established and emerging artists, including Pope.L, Sable Elyse Smith, Xaviera Simmons, Charlotte Lagarde, and Tomashi Jackson. Borrowing its title from a quote by novelist and social critic James Baldwin, “The great force of history comes from the fact that we carry it within us, are unconsciously controlled by it in many ways, and history is literally present in all that we do,” Great Force explores how contemporary artists contend with persistent black-white racial bias and inequality in the U.S. The exhibition is curated by ICA Associate Curator Amber Esseiva, an alumna of VCUarts. Great Force is on view at the ICA at VCU from October 5, 2019, through January 5, 2020. For the duration of Great Force, the ICA will convene community discussions about race, representations of the oppressed and the empowered, and how art can become a tool in pursuit of visibility. The exhibition will extend out of the ICA’s galleries to include films, performances, and public discussions which will all serve as catalysts for discussions about race and culture today. -
Four Freedoms Park Conservancy 2017 & 2018
Four Freedoms Park Conservancy 2017 & 2018 Four Freedoms Park Conservancy Board of Directors William J. vanden Heuvel, Founder & Chair Emeritus • Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., Honorary Chair Barbara Shattuck Kohn, Chair • Sally Minard, Vice Chair • Alison M. von Klemperer, Secretary William R. Griffith, Treasurer • Clark Copelin • John S. Dyson • Barbara Georgescu • David Handler Donald B. Hilliker • Warren Hoge • Eduardo Jany • Jessica S. Lappin • Richard Lorenti • David A. Paterson James S. Polshek, Emeritus • Katrina vanden Heuvel • Chris Ward • William Whitaker, Ex Officio Four Freedoms Park Conservancy operates, maintains, and programs Franklin D. Roosevelt Four Freedoms State Park to the highest standard. As steward of this extraordinary civic space designed by Louis I. Kahn, the Conservancy advances President Roosevelt’s legacy and inspires, educates, and engages the public in the ideals of the Four Freedoms: freedom of speech and expression, freedom of worship, freedom from want, and freedom from fear. The Conservancy does this by: • safeguarding the memorial as a space for inspired use • fostering community and understanding • igniting conversation about human rights and freedoms today Connect with us and join the conversation: facebook.com/fdrfourfreedomspark | @4freedomspark | fdrfourfreedomspark.org New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation, Rose Harvey, Commissioner Table of Contents A Message from Four Freedoms Park Conservancy Leadership 2 A Message from NY State Parks Commissioner Rose Harvey 3 Board Spotlight: Eduardo Jany 4 Park Visitorship 2013-2018: 1,000,000 & Counting 5 Planning for the Future: Preserving an Architectural 6 Masterpiece in the East River Inspiring the Next Generation Through FDR's Four Freedoms 8 Public Programs & Events at FDR Four Freedoms State Park 12 Four Freedoms Exemplars Lifetime Achievement Awards: 14 Honoring Tom Brokaw & William J. -
PR Art Academy of Cincinnati-Ohio Artists for Freedoms-2018
PRESS RELEASE CONTACT FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Matt Coors June 18, 2018 Exhibitions Coordinator 513-479-3639 [email protected] The Art Academy of Cincinnati Presents Ohio Artists for Freedoms A 50 State Initiative group exhibition curated by Emily Hanako Momohara August 31—September 21, 2018 CINCINNATI, OH – The Art Academy of Cincinnati is pleased to present the group exhibition Ohio Artists for Freedoms. Curated by Associate Professor of Studio Arts Emily Hanako Momohara, this exhibition is part of the For Freedoms 50 State Initiative—a non-partisan, nationwide campaign to use art as a means of inspiring broad civic participation. The 50 State Initiative aims to build a network of artists, arts institutions and civic leaders, and to map and connect the cultural and artistic infrastructure in the United States. For Freedoms was founded by Hank Willis Thomas and Eric Gottesman in 2016 as a platform for civic engagement, discourse, and direct action for artists in the United States. Inspired by Norman Rockwell’s 1943 paintings of the four universal freedoms articulated by Franklin Delano Roosevelt in 1941—freedom of speech, freedom of worship, freedom from want, and freedom from fear—we seek to use art to deepen public discussions of civic issues and core values, and to clarify that citizenship in American society is defined by participation, not by ideology. In the For Freedoms 50 State Initiative in Fall 2018, concurrent decentralized art exhibitions and public events across the country will encourage broad participation in civic discourse and, through lifting up a multiplicity of voices, will spark a national dialogue about art, education, advertising and politics. -
The Creators Project the First-Ever Artist-Run
FORT GANSEVOORT The First-Ever Artist-Run Super PAC Wants Your Vote For Freedoms Political Action Committee is trying to redefine the 2016 Presidential Election. By Antwaun Sargent Jul 21 2016 Zoë Buckman | Champ, 2016 | Neon, glass and leather | 30 x 18 x 10 inches Flying above Jack Shainman’s gallery in NYC is a flag by the artist Dread Scott that reads: A MAN WAS LYNCHED BY THE POLICE YESTERDAY. Scott’s flag, welcomes visitors to the politically charged, For Freedoms exhibition hosted by the For Freedoms Political Action Committee, the first of its kind run by artists. The concept was co-founded by artists Eric Gottesman and Hank 5 Ninth Avenue, NYC, 10014 | [email protected] | (917) 639 - 3113 FORT GANSEVOORT Willis Thomas, and the Shainman gallery acts as both an exhibition space and campaign headquarters for the project. “My mission is to get people to realize that art can be both good and political,” explains Thomas to The Creators Project. “And to get people who don’t necessarily see themselves interested in art to wrestle and interpret the ideas in it and to give artists who are often seen as passive members of civic society to be able to be involved in the political system.” He adds, “The mission of this PAC is to try and affect the outcome of an election. We want to activate fine artists and fine artists’ work to affect the discourse around this election. We want the work to spark and elevate the conversations away from good-bad, right-left, black and white in thinking about the complicated issues that affect us all.” The exhibition, features work by more than 40 artists including Mickalene Thomas, Alec Soth, Aida Muluneh, and Nari Ward. -
The Innovators Issue Table of Contents
In partnership with 51 Trailblazers, Dreamers, and Pioneers Transforming the Art Industry The Swift, Cruel, Incredible Rise of Amoako Boafo How COVID-19 Forced Auction Houses to Reinvent Themselves The Innovators Issue Table of Contents 4 57 81 Marketplace What Does a Post- Data Dive COVID Auction by Julia Halperin • What sold at the height of the House Look Like? COVID-19 shutdown? by Eileen Kinsella • Which country’s art • 3 top collectors on what they market was hardest hit? buy (and why) The global shutdown threw • What price points proved the live auction business into • The top 10 lots of 2020 (so far) most resilient? disarray, depleting traditional in every major category houses of expected revenue. • Who are today’s most Here’s how they’re evolving to bankable artists? 25 survive. The Innovators List 65 91 At a time of unprecedented How Amoako Art Is an Asset. change, we scoured the globe Boafo Became the Here’s How to to bring you 51 people who are Breakout Star of Make Sure It changing the way the art market Works for You functions—and will play a big a Pandemic Year role in shaping its future. In partnership with the by Nate Freeman ART Resources Team at Morgan Stanley The Ghanaian painter has become the art industry’s • A guide to how the art market newest obsession. Now, he’s relates to financial markets committed to seizing control of his own market. • Morgan Stanley’s ART Resources Team on how to integrate art into your portfolio 2 Editors’ Letter The COVID-19 pandemic has forced the art world to reckon with quite a few -
Portraits from the Icp Collection
Hank Willis Thomas and Emily Shur. Freedom of Sheng Qi, Memories (Me), 2000. Worship, 2018. Image courtesy of Hank Willis International Center of Photography, Thomas, Emily Shur, and For Freedoms. Purchase, with funds provided by Anne and Joel Ehrenkranz, 2004 (7.2004) MEDIA RELEASE © Sheng Qi ICP MUSEUM PRESENTS FOR FREEDOMS: WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE? AND YOUR MIRROR: PORTRAITS FROM THE ICP COLLECTION ON VIEW MEDIA PREVIEW LOCATION February 8–April 28, 2019 February 5, 2019 11 AM–1 PM ICP Museum 250 Bowery, New York, NY NEW YORK, NY (FEBRUARY 2019) — The International Center of Photography (ICP) proudly presents its Winter/Spring 2019 exhibitions: For Freedoms: Where Do We Go From Here? and Your Mirror: Portraits from the ICP Collection. Both open February 8 and will be on view through April 28, 2019. In the wake of the 2018 midterm elections, ICP’s new exhibition For Freedoms: Where Do We Go From Here? explores the role of art and visual representation in American civic life through the work of the For Freedoms collective. The exhibition features work from their 50 State Initiative—composed of a network of over 300 artists and 200 institutional partners—which featured concurrent exhibitions, art installations, and public programs as well as a nationwide artist-designed billboard campaign in all 50 states including DC and Puerto Rico, in the lead up to the midterm elections. Also central to the 50 State Initiative is the collective’s series of photographs that re-envision American artist Norman Rockwell’s Four Freedoms paintings—depicting freedom of speech, freedom of worship, freedom from want, and freedom from fear, as articulated by Franklin D.