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Indoor programs and events return to Belleville Library and the Parrott Art Gallery

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LIBRARY LINE

Belleville Public Library and the Parrott Art Gallery are pleased to announce the return to full operations starting on March 1. We are no longer asking patrons to limit their stay in the building and computer use has been returned to 2-hours per day maximum. Study tables do not require bookings or time limits, and more lounge furniture and computers will be available. Indoor programs and events will return, including children’s storytimes, art workshops, and March Break programming. Room rentals are also available again for community and business groups needing a space to meet or run events. There are no proof-of-vaccine requirements for library access, indoor programs or room rentals. All patrons 3 years of age or older must wear a mask or face shield at all times while in the building. The library is also looking forward to opening on Sunday again from 1-5 pm, starting Sunday March 27. Please see bellevillelibrary.ca for details including hours of operation for the library and gallery.

We are excited to plan for indoor programs and events, including over March Break from March 14-19. The theme is “Unlock your own adventure” and we have some great adventures waiting for your kids. Some highlights are the City Building and Robot Rampage programs on March 16, Top o’ the Morning Crafts and Fun and Games programs for St. Patrick’s Day on March 17, and an exciting live performance by Mystic Drumz on Saturday March 19 at 1:30 p.m. Come join the adventure in world music as they blend multicultural themes and invite the audience to participate. Please see bellevillelibrary.ca/marchbreak to register for these and other programs. Don’t delay as several programs are already full, with wait lists available.

If you have any questions about the Library or Gallery, or would like help finding your next great read, please visit, call us at 613-968-6731 ext. 2035 or email infoserv@bellevillelibrary.ca

Trevor Pross is the CEO of Belleville Public Library and John M. Parrott Art Gallery.

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Billy Boughey Talks About Elevating the Art of Event Planning

Billy Boughey Talks About Elevating the Art of Event Planning

Billy Boughey, Founder and President of Elevate Experiences, was interviewed by Adam Torres on Mission Matters Marketing Podcast.

Billy Boughey was interviewed by Adam Torres on Mission Matters Marketing Podcast.

Billy Boughey, Founder and President of Elevate Experiences, was interviewed by Adam Torres on Mission Matters Marketing Podcast.

Billy Boughey, Founder and President of Elevate Experiences, was interviewed by Adam Torres on Mission Matters Marketing Podcast.

Beverly Hills , Feb. 25, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Business event planner Billy Boughey talks with Mission Matters about leading Elevate Experiences and shares his techniques to make virtual events more engaging. He also discusses his first book and the inspiration behind it.

Listen to the complete interview of Billy Boughey with Adam Torres on the Mission Matters Marketing Podcast.

What mission matters to you?

Boughey believes everybody is born with an innate desire to be great, and through Elevate Experiences, his team inspires people to elevate their own lives. “Our mission is to help people get that one percent better in what they do,” he says.

Driven to build a brand on a foundation of internal and external trust alike, he recalls the moment he realized his inclination toward the events industry, remembering the setup of a Janet Jackson concert. Since then, he says, he’s been on a mission to create experiences, both live and virtual, that elevate people.

Tell us more about your path to founding Elevate Experiences.

Boughey says his beginnings were humble, DJing at weddings and gradually learning the art of engaging with people, which eventually led to bigger projects. “Elevate has been built on this idea that there is creativity around every single corner, and that the storytelling that you can do at your event experiences inspires your team members to do better… and inspires customers to pay full price,” he laughs. Today, Elevate Experiences is an agency that plans and produces in-person, virtual, and hybrid events for businesses and nonprofits.

Losing a significant amount of revenue from planned in-person events when the pandemic hit, he says he was forced to see things from a new perspective. “Being a person of faith, it felt like God spoke to me and gave me this idea of CPR,” he says: C standing for ‘cancel,’ P standing for ‘postpone,’ and R standing for ‘reimagining,’ or innovating and driving out solutions to combat the challenge. That third component, he says, is where virtual events came vividly into the picture.

You were on TV with Jimmy Fallon. What was that experience like?

Recalling the day he was selected to participate in an audience interaction segment of The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, Boughey describes its legendary house band, The Roots, as being “entirely off the charts” and cheerfully recounts the moment he started freestyle-rapping with the band.

The experience positively impacted the trajectory of his business, and when asked what rearview advice he could give as a result, he says, “You all are gonna have your moment to do something that’s sort of (an) out-of-body experience, and you never know the fruit on the other side of that.”

Tell us about your book, Culture Reconstructed.

Boughey says he was inspired to write a book after people nudged him to put his experiences to paper. As a result, Culture Reconstructed highlights how to rebuild a successful workplace culture. A key takeaway: “I just put in place the freedom to let people be the best versions of them(selves), challenge them, and help them grow.”

Of the challenges of the past two years, he shares, “The first thing we did when the pandemic began is started taking all of the interactive games, called ‘moments of engagement,’ and creating a YouTube channel around it. It’s all about ice-breakers that you can do virtually and in-person.”

What’s next for Elevate Experiences?

Continuing to organize events through the holiday season and into 2022, Boughey says he looks forward to hosting more hybrid events with both virtual and in-person components. He also shares his plans for an NFT project called Elevator Labs and a creator currency called Elevate Coin.

“We’re just going to keep plugging (away) and loving people and keep making the best next decision that we can,” he says.

To learn more, visit Elevate Experiences.

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Inquiries: adamtorres@missionmatters.com

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Artist Stan Douglas unveils historical work inspired by political events

Artist Stan Douglas unveils historical work inspired by political events

Artist Stan Douglas on the Vancouver set for his photo series Penn Station’s Half Century in 2020.Handout

During a March snowstorm in 1914, a vaudeville troupe stranded in New York’s Penn Station spent the night entertaining itself. What might such a scene have looked like?

With dramatic lighting and vintage costumes, the Canadian artist Stan Douglas conjured up the acrobats and musicians for a photographic series devoted to key moments in the life of the famed Beaux Arts building before it was demolished in 1963. Penn Station’s Half Century features elaborate set pieces that were shot at Vancouver’s Agrodome early in the pandemic and then laid over computer-generated recreations of the lost station’s grandiose waiting room.

The images were commissioned as murals for the new Moynihan Train Hall, which opened at the current Penn Station in December 2020, but the whole series can now also been seen in Canada. Montreal’s PHI Foundation for Contemporary Art ordered exhibition prints of the giant photographs as part of a show devoted to Douglas’s work that includes Penn Station’s Half Century and the 2012 photo series Disco Angola. Consider it something of an appetizer for Douglas’s next big assignment: He will be unveiling new work, inspired by political events of 2011, at the Canada Pavilion at the Venice Biennale in April.

Douglas’s photography devoted to past events is usually displayed without any history lessons taped to the wall and often raises an immediate question about context. Does the viewer in Montreal or New York need to know about vaudevillian Bert Williams and his stranded performers or – to name two other scenes featuring folk celebrities arriving at Penn Station – the Black union organizer Angelo Herndon or the Brooklyn armed robber Celia Cooney?

Knowing all the historic detail may enrich the experience but it shouldn’t suggest to the viewer that these works are simply records of events.Handout

“That’s always a question with my work. People say: ‘You have all this backstory, how can we be expected to know that?’ I don’t expect it at all,” Douglas said in a recent interview. “People who do know that will have a different experience of the work, but there should be something in the pictorial experience that should give you a clue as to what’s going on. So, it’s not a requirement to know that stuff, but it does make it a more rich experience.”

Knowing all the historic detail may enrich the experience but it shouldn’t suggest to the viewer that these works are simply records of events, moments in the life of a train station or, in the case of Disco Angola, the unlikely juxtaposition of the Angolan civil war that erupted in 1975 with the simultaneous rise of disco in New York. Instead, the scenes play with storytelling, relying on the unconscious education in image-making that we have all received through media to conjure up scenes that are as much about their own creation as their content – hence the Montreal show’s title, Revealing Narratives.

The Penn Station scenes, for example, are visibly stagy, with chiaroscuro lighting and expressive postures. In the most meta moment of the series, Douglas recreates Hollywood recreating the station for the 1945 Judy Garland movie The Clock. The Disco Angola series, imagined as the work of a fictional photojournalist who intersperses his trips to the war zone with nights at dance clubs, might let the viewer consider the way both conflict and entertainment are presented for the camera.

“If we are informed by our knowledge of the language of film and television we will understand these works,” said Cheryl Sim, the PHI curator who organized the show and compares Douglas and his photographs with the great history painters of old. “They have that grandiose and gravitas. There are so many narratives going on in the frame. … His ability to master composition is central to the work.”

Douglas is interested in history’s secondary plots and bit players – the now forgotten figures such as Cooney, the so-called Bobbed-Hair Bandit who robbed Brooklyn stores at gunpoint.

“One of my key habits or interests is to look at minor histories and to see how minor histories actually reflect a larger condition,” he said. He cites the situation of the vaudevillians trapped in the station – they had to travel to entertain – as a specific example of a more general cultural condition: Before film and TV, all entertainment was live.

Not coincidentally, the African diaspora features in many of these forgotten histories: Williams, a Bahamian-American, broke the colour barrier in vaudeville; Herndon was convicted for “insurrection” after his attempts to organize Black and white workers in Atlanta. And, in the faded spaces of midtown Manhattan’s abandoned hotels, disco emerged from Black and Latino communities as a counterculture dance movement before it ever hit Studio 54.

“I have always depicted Black people but with a very broad sense of what blackness actually is. What is Afro-German? Afro-Cuban, Afro-English, Afro-Canadian, Afro-American? All these kinds of blackness are manifested in different ways,” he said.

Douglas, born in Vancouver to Caribbean immigrants, has a long and subtle relationship with such content. He’s not that impressed with the current rage for Black art.

Douglas, born in Vancouver to Caribbean immigrants, is not that impressed with the current rage for Black art.Handout

“There’s a certain homogeneity to the way in which Black bodies are being represented these days. Unfortunately you can’t tell the artist is a person of colour unless it’s a representational image, and this has allowed a lot of regressive art to get a lot visibility. A lot of art that kind of verges on kitsch is being shown because it’s got a Black body or something, even though there are still many interesting Black artists who are doing nonrepresentational work, conceptual work.”

Educated at what was then the Emily Carr College of Art and Design (now University), Douglas has made his career in Vancouver and, despite ever-increasing international attention, still lives there when not teaching at the ArtCenter College of Design in Los Angeles. Part of the fertile school of West Coast photo artists that emerged in the 1980s, and which also includes Jeff Wall and Ken Lum, he finds Vancouver a useful place to work because its busy film-production industry means he can easily source lights, costumes and extras.

But it is not a large enough centre for any practitioner of the visual arts to be parochial or complacent: Douglas, who has shown around the world, will be representing Canada in Venice this spring. He is the first Black artist to be featured in the Canada Pavilion, but this is not his first Biennale; his work has been included in four previous group exhibitions there, most recently in 2019.

The Venice Biennale always encourages big and surprising unveilings, so Douglas is keeping details under his hat, but he does give a broad hint as to the historic events that will feature in the work. This Biennale, he reminds you, was supposed to take place in 2021, a decade after 2011, the year of the Occupy Wall Street and Arab Spring protests. Douglas will be showing a series of photographs in the light-filled Canada Pavilion at the Biennale’s main Giardini site and screening video work at an off-site location on Giudecca. More revealing narratives are sure to follow.

Educated at what was then the Emily Carr College of Art and Design (now University), Douglas has made his career in Vancouver.Handout

Stan Douglas: Revealing Narratives continues at the PHI Foundation in Montreal to May 22 and will then tour to the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia in Halifax in June through November. The Venice Biennale runs from April 23 to Nov. 27.

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Saratoga springs to life with art, gardening events

Saratoga springs to life with art, gardening events

The Saratoga Rotary Art Show will be back again April 30-May 1 after a COVID hiatus. It’s about celebrating “makers,” and fine art and handmade crafts will be up for sale.

One local maker of functional art is Christan Mercurio.

“I make sustainable luxury leather handbags that are cut, punched and sewn by hand with USA-sourced vegetable-tanned leather. I make my bags for people who prefer unique handcrafted bags over those mass-produced in a factory on an assembly line abroad.”

Mercurio adds that his handbags “are made for years of hard use, a lifetime if cared for, and every element can be repaired and replaced. Production is limited as everything is saddle stitched, no machines are used, and I have a day job in high tech in Silicon Valley.” www.christanmercurio.com

Spring seems to be springing earlier this year. A victim of the pandemic, the wildly popular Master Gardener’s Spring Garden Market will not be held. Santa Clara County Master Gardeners, organizers of the event, say they “hope to return with a full event in 2023.”

Love Apple Farms, on the other hand, has terrific vegetables for sale. “Our spring tomato plant sale—now with lots of other veggies and herbs—will be held from March 27 to June 27. The farm, which serves as the kitchen garden for Manresa restaurant in Los Gatos, is located at 5311 Scotts Valley Drive in Scotts Valley. If you need gardening know-how, classes are offered. www.growbetterveggies.com

It is sad to see once fertile soil being paved over and our beloved orchards disappearing. One holdout is Novakovich Orchards. They sell fresh produce and their famous chocolate-dipped apricots, which George Novakovich says make for good noshing.

“The chocolate-dipped apricots can go fast, in one sitting,” Novakovich says. “The turtles slow you down a little.”

15241 Fruitvale, novakovichorchards.blogspot.com

Marianne Hamilton, a longtime contributor to the Saratoga News, has been named Ms. Senior Universe 2022. No bathing suit competition here; this pageant celebrates women over 60 who are actively giving back to their communities.

“I’ll be 70 this year, and after a bout with breast cancer in 2020, I’m delighted by the notion of hitting that milestone,” says Hamilton, who joins others in “a refusal to accept that age dictates boundaries.”

To learn more about Hamilton and the Ms. Senior Universe Pageant, visit msseniorusa.org/ms-senior-universe-pageant-1.

Local author Kathleen Canrinus’s book, “The Lady with the Crown” is now available on Amazon and a perfect Book Club read. When Canrinus was 15, her mother barely survived a car accident. “The Lady with the Crown” explores how, in the blink of an eye, trauma can transform a normal family into a uniquely wounded one. It’s a story of resilience and courage, but also the reinvention of joy.

Having trouble sleeping? Dr. Anil Rama, M.D. may be able to help. His mission is to help you be the best version of yourself by healing your mind, body and sleep patterns. Like a fingerprint, no two people have the same brain anatomy. Dr. Rama customizes treatment for each patient. 14567 Big Basin Way, 650-575-8286, www.sleepandbrain.com

​St. Patrick’s Day is coming up, and two Saratoga spots are the perfect way to celebrate the blarney in your life: The Bank and Many Friends Brewery, both on Big Basin Way www.manyfriendsbrewingcompany.com.

For a more elegant wearing of the green, try the only hotel bar in Saratoga: The Heid at the Inn at Saratoga. www.theheid.com

If you have news about events or businesses in Saratoga, I’d like to know: debby@debbyrice.com.

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Live art and music events planned as festival expands

Live art and music events planned as festival expands

Published:
7:00 PM February 19, 2022



A riverside community is to host part of a series of live art and music events being planned at the end of February and start of March. 

Woodbridge Festival is linking-up with partners including Noise of Art, The Riverside Cinema and Theatre, Beach Street, Aspire Black Suffolk, The Boathouse, Tide Mill, Suffolk Wildlife Trust and Ipswich Arts Centre, for the shows, which will include a performance by dance star Richard Norris, one half of electronic dance duo The Grid. 

The events include: 

February 28 – the festival brings its live music concerts back to the 107-year-old Riverside Theatre in Woodbridge, with Richard Norris, part of the duo The Grid (with Soft Cell’s David Ball), has topped the charts in 10 countries. 

  • March 11/12 – the festival joins events at Arlingtons, Ipswich’s glamorous pop-up music, arts and eco museum, as part of Ipswich Borough Council’s re-opening of the town centre event, including light art, music and eco exhibitions hosted by several different partners. 
  • March 12 – the festival joins events at Beach Street in Felixstowe, with light art projections lighting up the Crazy House and Ibiza legend Chris Coco and Noise of Art’s Ben Osborne bringing their Balearic beats to the beach. 
  • March 17 – the festival returns to Woodbridge to project onto the iconic Tide Mill for a special St Patrick’s night celebration.  

The event will feature Tide Mill Out, a show that creates club music and visuals from the internal working of the Tide Mill, and projects them onto the building’s exterior. The audio-visual piece was recently featured on the BBC. 

The popular Woodbridge Community Disco hits town on Saturday, March 19 with special guests to be announced.   

On March 20 Tide Mill Out makes an appearance as an audio-visual art installation in the Miller’s Barn, Suffolk Wildlife Trust, Foxborough Farm. 

Finally Sally Rogers, half of pioneering acid jazz, Balearic house and nu-disco outfit A Man Called Adam, joins in for March’s Live from the Riverside on March 28. 

Ben Osborne, festival founder and programmer, said: “It’s been great to keep the festival going throughout the pandemic.  

“We held monthly events in 2020 when we couldn’t do the annual event and then in 2021 held both regular events and the event in the park – with 1,000 people happy to be back together, safely, to enjoy music, creativity and community.  

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Art on the Line gala returns as an in-person event at UBCO

Art on the Line gala returns as an in-person event at UBCO

In its 20th year, the Art on the Line gala returns as an in-person event after a two-year hiatus due to COVID-19 restrictions.

UBCO’s annual fine arts fundraiser is a lively event that brings together the local arts community to celebrate the work of students, faculty, alumni, as well as artists practicing in town.

The black-tie gala evening on March 5th, raffles off original works of art donated by local artists, UBCO faculty and fine arts students all in the name of raising funds for student projects, activities and organizations.

This includes the Visual Arts Course Union, the 2022 BFA graduate exhibition and catalogue, the visiting artist program, fine arts student travel grants as well as local non-profit Cool Arts Society, which provides art opportunities for adults with developmental disabilities.

“We invite people to join us for an evening of fine art and face-to-face fun,” says Abby Bloome, event co-organizer and a fourth-year Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) student.

“This is our chance to come together as a community and support our local artists. Art on the Line is an amazing event that gives students a chance to grow. And community members can collect one-of-a-kind pieces for their homes.”

Only 100 tickets are sold for the chance to choose from 150 works available in this one-of-a-kind juried art exhibition.

</who>Photo credit: Contributed | Participants at a previous Art on Line in 2019 mingle and check out the artwork available at the ‘lottery-style’ art event.

Tickets cost $200 for two people to enter and will guarantee one piece of artwork. Tickets will also be available for people who would like to attend, but not bid on artwork; they will be at the door for $20 or $10 for students.

Each year, 10% of the proceeds go to a local organization. This year, the Sncewips Heritage Museum will be the recipient.

Faculty of Creative and Critical Studies (FCCS) Visual Arts Instructor David James Doody describes Art on the Line as a great opportunity to enjoy a beautiful selection of original art, fine food, refreshments and a touch of suspense.

“I have been taking part in this event for almost 20 years when I began my BFA in 2002,” he recalls “I still remember as a young artist the first time my art was chosen. It was absolutely the coolest feeling ever. Art on the line is one of the most important exciting events in our students’ calendars.”

Organizers are still collecting two-and three-dimensional artwork to be donated and raffled during the event.

Local artists who are interested in supporting this fundraiser can email aotl2022@ubcovacu.org for a submission form and submission guidelines. Donations should be of suitable quality and equivalent to the auction ticket price.

The event is planned to be in-person, but will also be live-streamed for those who cannot attend. If current public health measures change, this event will take place virtually.

To purchase tickets or find more information on the event, click here.

Support local journalism by clicking here to make a one-time contribution or by subscribing for a small monthly fee. We appreciate your consideration and any contribution you can provide.

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Editors’ Picks: 9 Events for Your Art Calendar This Week, From a Talk on Eric Adams’s Arts Priorities to a Show by an Artist-Turned-Dragon

Nollywood Portraits: A Radical Beauty by Iké Udé. Published by Skira.

Each week, we search for the most exciting and thought-provoking shows, screenings, and events, both digitally and in-person in the New York area. See our picks from around the world below. (Times are all EST unless otherwise noted.)

 

Tuesday, February 8

Vikky Alexander. Photo by Peter Bellamy, courtesy of the Audain Art Museum, Whistler, Canada.

Vikky Alexander. Photo by Peter Bellamy, courtesy of the Audain Art Museum, Whistler, Canada.

1. “Tuesday Night Talks: Vikky Alexander” at the Audain Art Museum, Whistler, Canada

The Audain Art Museum kicks off season three of its virtual Tuesday Night Talks programming with Canada’s Vikky Alexander, whose piece Orange Ceiling (2010) was recently acquired by the institution. The photographer, sculptor, and installation artist will speak with director and chief curator Curtis Collins about her career—including her ties to the Vancouver School of photo-conceptualism as well as New York’s Pictures Generation—as well as how she finds inspiration in landscape, architecture, and design.

Price: Free with registration
Time: 11 p.m.

—Tanner West

 

 

Thursday, February 10

New York City Mayor Eric Adams in front of the Brooklyn Museum on Juneteenth Holiday, June 19, 2021, during his campang. Photo by John Lamparski/Getty Images.

New York City Mayor Eric Adams in front of the Brooklyn Museum on Juneteenth Holiday, June 19, 2021. Photo by John Lamparski/Getty Images.

2. “More or Less: Notes to Our Next Mayor, Culminating Panel” at More Art, New  York

Ahead of last year’s mayoral election, social justice-minded public art nonprofit More Art hosted a three-part conversation series about what New York City residents need most—namely, food, shelter, and healthcare. Those discussions have been condensed into an open letter of demands from artists, activists, and community members to new Mayor Eric Adams’s administration. The moderators of the three discussions, artists Candace Thompson, Betty Yu, and Jeff Kasper, will return to talk about the intersection of art and activism, the contents of the letter, how it hopes to ensure all New Yorkers have guaranteed access to food, healthcare, and housing.

Price: Free with registration
Time: 7 p.m.–8:30 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Thursday, February 10–Saturday, March 12

Suchitra Mattai, Fitting In, 2022 Courtesy of Hollis Taggart

3. “Suchitra Mattai: Herself as Another” at Hollis Taggart

Suchitra Mattai is a Guyanese artist who uses imagery from her Indian heritage to comment on colonialism and patriarchy. In her solo show at Hollis Taggart, Mattai presents mixed-media paintings, sculptures, and installations to explore the theme of “othering.” The artist used The Ashgate Research Companion to Monsters and the Monstrous as the main source for her research into folklore monsters, tales that reflect the taboos and stereotypes often applied to those denied power. Through the works in this show, Mattai creates “a space to confront these misunderstandings… and to reflect on the experience and perspective of the ‘other’ as a means of fostering empathy and connection,” the gallery states.

Location: Hollis Taggart, 521 West 26th Street, 1st Floor, New York
Price: Free
Time: Opening reception, Thursday, 6 p.m.–8 p.m.; Tuesday–Saturday, 11 a.m.–5 p.m.

—Neha Jambhekar

 

Thursday, February 10–Saturday, March 19

Asif Hoque, Music of the sun Courtesy of Yossi Milo Gallery

4. “Asif Hoque: Before Sunrise” at Yossi Milo Gallery, New York

“Before Sunrise” is the first solo exhibition of New York-based Bangladeshi artist Asif Hoque. Born in Rome, Hoque moved to Florida at a young age with his family. The title of the exhibition alludes to early morning beach visits he took with his brother during his trips home, where the changing light greatly inspired the works shown here. Hoque’s new work builds on previous imagery of deified brown male and female figures, lions, and vases with the addition of a dynamic new form, the Bengal tiger, and a softening of the surface inspired by Rubens’ sfumato technique.

Location: Yossi Milo Gallery, 245 Tenth Avenue, New York
Price: Free
Time: Opening reception, Thursday, 6 p.m.–8 p.m.; Tuesday–Saturday, 10 a.m.–6 p.m.

—Neha Jambhekar

 

Friday, February 11

Iké Udé, Nollywood in Focus, still image.

Iké Udé, Nollywood in Focus, still image.

5. “African Is Beautiful” at the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art, Washington, D.C.

Following a virtual screening of portrait photographer and artist Iké Udé’s new film, Nollywood in Focus, about the Nigerian film scene, Touria El Glaoui, founding director of 1:54 Contemporary Art Fair, will moderate a discussion with Udé and industry insiders Eku Edewor, Alexx Ekubo, Enyinna Nwigwe, and Joke Silva. They’ll consider such topics as beauty, self-love, and the power of art.

Price: Free with registration
Time: 12 p.m.–6 p.m.

—Nan Stewert

Friday, February 11–Sunday, April 10

Carlos Motta and Tiamat Legion Medusa, <em>When I Leave This World</em> (2022), still. Courtesy of the artist, P.P.O.W. Gallery, and OCDChinatown.

Carlos Motta and Tiamat Legion Medusa, When I Leave This World (2022), still. Courtesy of the artist, P.P.O.W. Gallery, and OCDChinatown.

6. “Carlos Motta and Tiamat Legion Medusa: When I Leave This World” at OCD Chinatown, New York

Performance and body-modification artist Tiamat Legion Medusa has collaborated with artist Carlos Motta on a new two-channel video installation documenting Medusa’s transition from male to female to reptile. (The end goal of the artist, who goes by it pronouns, is to become a dragon.) Medusa, who explains in one of the videos how childhood abandonment and assault inspired it to reject its own humanity, bills itself as “interspecies and the most body-modified transexual in the world.”

Location: OCD Chinatown, 75 East Broadway NYC
Price: Free
Time: Opening reception,  6 p.m.–8 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday, 12 p.m.–6 p.m. or by appointment

Sarah Cascone

 

 

Saturday, February 12–Sunday, January 8, 2023

Chris Schanck, <em>Banglatown</em> (2018). Photo by Michelle and Chris Gerard, courtesy the artist and Friedman Benda, New York.

Chris Schanck, Banglatown (2018). Photo by Michelle and Chris Gerard, courtesy the artist and Friedman Benda, New York.

7. “Chris Schanck: Off-World” at the Museum of Arts and Design, New York

Chris Schanck’s work exists at the boundary between sculpture and furniture, straddling the line between art and design with chairs, lighting, and other functional objects produced in his Detroit studio with the assistance of local Bangladeshi craftspeople. Schanck’s forms recall objects from nature, like coral reefs, but also suggest an otherworldly, extraterrestrial origin, at times futuristic, other times reminiscent of ancient civilizations.

Location: Museum of Arts and Design, 2 Columbus Circle, New York
Price: Free
Time: Tuesday–Sunday, 10 a.m.–6 p.m..

—Sarah Cascone

 

Sunday, February 13

Alex Strada and Tali Keren, <em>Proposal for a 28th Amendment? Is it Possible to Amend an Unequal System?</em> in "Year of Uncertainty (YoU) — Phase I: Participate & Build." Photo by Zynab Cewalam, courtesy of the Queens Museum.

Alex Strada and Tali Keren, Proposal for a 28th Amendment? Is it Possible to Amend an Unequal System? in “Year of Uncertainty (YoU) — Phase I: Participate & Build.” Photo by Zynab Cewalam, courtesy of the Queens Museum.

8. “Defending Our Bodily Autonomy in a Broken System” at the Queens Museum

Artists Alex Strada and Tali Keren’s participatory installation, Proposal for a 28th Amendment? Is it Possible to Amend an Unequal System?, on view in “Year of Uncertainty (YoU) — Phase III: Synthesize and Reflect” (through February 13) will serve as the stage for programming addressing the ways in which many Black, Indigenous, and other people of color face reproductive and gender-based oppression. A presentation by CUNY Law professor Cynthia Soohoo will discuss the inadequacies of legal protection for reproductive rights, the likely overturn of Roe v. Wade, and how we can ensure reproductive justice for all. A hands-on self-defense workshop, led by Deena Hadhoud of Malikah, will follow.

Location: Queens Museum, Flushing Meadows Corona Park, Meridian Road, Queens
Price: Free with registration
Time: 1 p.m.–3:30 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Through March 19

Lucia Love, <I>BDW</I>, 2021

Lucia Love, BDW, 2021. Courtesy JDJ and the artist.

9. “Lucia Love: Angel At The Wheel” at JDJ Tribeca

The new show of paintings by Lucia Love at JDJ World’s recently opened location in Tribeca see the artist taking a darker, more cynical turn. Love’s surrealist and often figurative paintings are inspired by fraught political situations, and she does not seem to think things have gotten much better since her last show with the gallery in 2020. As fellow artist Emily Mae Smith wrote in the press release for the show, “The figures in Love’s paintings are amalgamated bodies, often balancing on impossible podiums or floating in broken geometries that defy perspectival logic. Love captures the instability of moral ground in our time of global peril.”

Location: JDJ Tribeca, 373 Broadway B11
Price: Free
Time: Tuesday–Saturday, 12 p.m.–6 p.m.

—Annie Armstrong

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