29 June 2007

HELP SAVE LORRAINE HANSBERRY THEATRE:
Our 620 Sutter Street home is being threatened by new landlord Academy of Art University.

THREE THINGS YOU CAN DO RIGHT NOW:

1.) Send an email to Mayor Newsom

2.) Send an email to Board President Aaron Peskin
(who is also the Supervisor for District 3, where LHT is located)

3.) Send an email to your Supervisor:
District 1: Jake McGoldrick
District 2: Michela Alioto-Pier
District 4: Ed Jew
District 5: Ross Mirkarimi
District 6: Chris Daly
District 7: Sean Elsbernd
District 8: Bevan Dufty
District 9: Tom Ammiano
District 10: Sophie Maxwell
District 11: Gerardo Sandoval


Still want to do more?
Mail letters to:

Senator Carole Migden
455 Golden Gate Avenue, Suite 14800
San Francisco, CA 94102

Assemblyman Mark Leno
455 Golden Gate Avenue, Suite 14300
San Francisco, CA 94102

Senator Dianne Feinstein
One Post Street, Suite 2450
San Francisco, CA 94104

Speaker Nancy Pelosi
H-232, US Capitol
Washington, DC 20515


You may also address letters directly to the president of the Academy of Art University,
urging the school to work with Lorraine Hansberry Theatre
to reach an amicable agreement wherein the theatre will be able to remain
at 620 Sutter Street.

Dr. Elisa Stephens, President
Academy of Art University
79 New Montgomery Street
San Francisco, CA 94105

HOME

26 June 2007

hated it

I don't generally review things here, but we went to see this documentary, Black, White & Gray: A Portrait of Sam Wagstaff and Robert Mapplethorpe last week as part of Frameline, and I was moved to, um, speak on it.

We hemmed and hawed, as we always do at the prospect of actually leaving the house, but decided to go because it held some promise, given its fascinating subjects, and because I vaguely knew the director, James Crump, an impeccably-dressed fellow UNM grad who used to run Arena Editions, a small publishing house in Santa Fe that was just about to publish a book I really wanted (I don't remember the photographer but which included a portrait of Grace Jones) when it went under back around 2002. But I digress.

Now, imagine my delight when, almost immediately, two of my favorite talking-head blasts-from-my-past appeared onscreen: former curator Gordon Baldwin, with whom I used to work at the Getty; and Nia Parry, a brilliant historian with whom I studied at UNM. Rather like a child, I'm always excessively delighted when some place or someone familiar to me appears on screen, and this was no exception. But while Nia and Gordon were distinct highlights, because of my fondness for them but also because of the thoughtful perspectives they brought, I thought the documentary overall was so crammed full of random images and poorly edited that whatever they had to say got lost in the mix, to the degree that, during the Q & A, an audience member had to ask who Nia was and why her bitter-sounding tone differed so significantly from the other speakers in the film. Knowing Nia and knowing something about Mapplethorpe's history, I didn't hear her dissenting tone regarding Mapplethorpe as bitter but rather as justly critical of a complicated and by many accounts difficult figure within the history of photography. However, given the lack of context for her comments, I could also easily see how any viewer not familiar with her blunt and unapologetic style or her status within the field could read her as bitter and caustic, a fault which I'd entirely blame on the filmmaker.

The film focuses far more on Wagstaff than on Mapplethorpe, perhaps attempting to right the wrong of history canonizing Mapplethorpe while all but forgetting Wagstaff's contributions as curator and collector, but if Wagstaff were the real focus with Mapplethorpe (like Patti Smith, who appears in the film) as a supporting character, then it should have been billed as such (especially since most of the audience would be coming, I suspect, for Mapplethorpe). In order to give a sense of Wagstaff's collecting eye, Crump liberally used images from Wagstaff's collection (which in 1984 was famously sold to form the basis of the Getty's photography collection) throughout, although several people I spoke with afterward who weren't familiar with the images found them boring (ie., they fell asleep) without more contextualization. Early on when, during a sequence of images of the young Wagstaff over which the narrator is speaking about his mother using him as her escort, even teaching him to smoke, the filmmaker cuts to August Sander's photograph of a young man smoking (what--mother teaches him to smoke so he eventually collects a photo of another man smoking?), he completely lost me.

Most unsettling, though, was the way in which the film awkwardly cut from discussing Wagstaff's early curatorial career at the Wadsworth Atheneum to his alleged drug use and sexual appetites then back to a brief mention of the end of his tenure in Detroit (what else did he do in Detroit?) without anything tying these aspects of his life and career together. And Joan Juliet Buck, about whom I know little, was such a pretentious-sounding narrator that she was almost a parody of hauteur run amok. The only thing that made it even remotely worthwhile was briefly getting to see Gordon, who'd come up for the screening, as the theatre emptied.

Labels: , , , , ,

25 June 2007

overdue


Please see the above announcement for a symposium in October about Judith Wilson's scholarship. Papers will be presented by Renee Ater, Huey Copeland, Cheryl Finley, Jacqueline Francis, Juergen Heinrichs, and Charmaine Nelson.

Labels: , , ,

20 June 2007

last 3 days


San Francisco Arts Commission Gallery Announcement


Bayeté Ross Smith

Bayeté Ross Smith

The San Francisco Arts Commission Gallery
and PhotoAlliance present:
Lens on Life
April 12 – June 22, 2007

Please Join Us!
Artists' Reception: May 23, 5:30 – 7:30 pm
City Hall, Ground Floor

The San Francisco Arts Commission Gallery, in a programmatic partnership with PhotoAlliance, presents Lens on Life; an exhibition at San Francisco's City Hall featuring three artists involved in the exploration of place and identity from both African and African American perspectives. This special exhibition is supported by the Museum of the African Diaspora and the San Francisco International Arts Festival.


Ananias Léki Dago: Bamako en Croix
Ananias Léki Dago (Ivory Coast, Africa) presents two bodies of work depicting Bamako, Mali and Conakry, Guinea. Bamako en Croix is presented as part of the Museum of the African Diaspora's exhibition Lens on Life: From Bamako to San Francisco (May 18 – September 23, 2007).


• Bayeté Ross Smith: Our Kind of People
Bayeté Ross Smith (San Francisco) exhibits photographs that address stereotyping and preconceived notions in two recent portrait series; Our Kind of People and Passing.

Lewis Watts: Evidence
Lewis Watts, an artist, curator and Associate Professor of Photography at UC Santa Cruz, centers his work on African American cultural landscapes.




Ananias Léki Dago

Lewis Watts

Viewing Hours: 8 am—8 pm, M—F, Free Admission
Location: Ground Floor of San Francisco City Hall
1 Dr. Carlton B. Goodlet Place
(Between Polk and Van Ness / Grove and McAllister)


Art at City Hall is funded by the San Francisco Arts
Commission and the Grants for the Arts Program
of the San Francisco Hotel Tax Fund




401 Van Ness Ave, San Francisco, CA 94102 | P: 415.554.6080 F: 415.252.2595 | www.sfacgallery.org

Labels: , , , ,

news from Lorraine O'Grady

Dear Friends,

Greetings from San Antonio. It's the first day of my two-month residency at Artpace.

Just wanted to let you know that MOCA has put my audio for the WACK! cellphone tour online. It's in a group of four with those of Orlan, Marina Abramovic, and Yvonne Rainer. In the audio, I read a three-minute text placing
Mlle Bourgeoise Noire historically and giving my reasons for creating her. You can listen and download it at: http://www.moca.org/wack/?p=261#more-261

The audio rounds out the online presentation, with the 1980-81 performance online for the first time as well. A synopsis, including backstory and poems, plus the 13-image documentation of "Mlle Bourgeoise Noire Goes to the New Museum," is at:
http://www.moca.org/wack/?p=230

And my March 22 Gallery Talk remarks on "white middle-class feminism" and the "spatial vs chronological timelines of global feminism," with the inference for work like mine and Senga Nengudi's, were posted at:
http://www.moca.org/wack/?p=203

That's it for a while!

With warm regards,
Lorraine

Labels: ,

these sound really interesting

Two films by William Greaves to be showcased at The Afro-Punk Festival/BAMcinématek

Still a Brother:
Inside the Negro Middle Class (1968)
Sunday, July 1 at 4:30pm (85min)

In this work, producers William Greaves and William Branch focus on emerging black professionals, contrasting white suburban values with issues of identity and what it means to be black and middle class. The film reveals the mental revolution that economically successful blacks underwent during the turbulent race-conscious sixties.

Directed by William Greaves
Co–produced by William Branch
Narrated by Ossie Davis

Symbiopsychotaxiplasm: Take One (1968)
Monday, July 2 at 6:50pm (75min)
Q&A with William Greaves

In this one-of-a-kind fiction/documentary hybrid, filmmaker William Greaves presides over a beleaguered film crew in New York's Central Park, leaving them to try to figure out what kind of movie he is making. This wildly innovative sixties counterculture landmark remains one of the most tightly focused and insightful movies ever made about making movies.

Directed by William Greaves


The Afro-Punk Festival (June 28-July 7) returns to BAM for the third year for six days of film, music, visual art, and more, all united under the banner of black activism.

General admission tickets to BAM Rose Cinemas are $11. Tickets are $7.50 for students 25 and under (with valid I.D. Monday–Thursday, except holidays), seniors, children under twelve, and $7 for BAM Cinema Club members. Tickets are available at the BAM Rose Cinemas box office, by phone at 718.777.FILM (order by “name of movie” option), or online at BAM.org.

For more information about the screenings, call the BAMcinématek hotline at 718.636.4100
or visit BAM.org. For more information about William Greaves, go to williamgreaves.com

Labels: , , ,

passing strange online & $25 tix!

Passing Strange
E X T E N D E D !
May 1st - July 1st, 2007
The Public Theater
425 Lafayette
New York City
TICKETS ON SALE NOW
Purchase tickets online
or call 212-967-7555
use this code for $25 tix: PSBB01

www.publictheater.org

Labels: , , ,

"Give the gift of Photography"


Sistagraphy
Fun-Raiser, July 22, 4-7pm @ The Urban Tea Party, Atlanta, Georgia.

View and download a copy of the flyer here : SISTAGRAPHY%20FUNFLYERcx1.pdf to pass around and share with friends, family, co-workers and anyone you would like to invite for this exciting event.

Labels: ,

Please accept this announcement of my participation in the 52nd Venice Biennale
being Directed by Robert Storr. I have a wall-painting installation in the exhibition
-

"Think with the Senses - Feel with the Mind. Art in the Present Tense"

which is curated by Robert Storr in the old Italian Pavilion at the Giardini and
the grand Arsenale from June 10th to November 21st, 2007. My work is located in
the old Italian Pavilion. An artist list is provided below for your information,
and further information on the 52nd Venice Biennale International Art Exhibition
can be found at the following websites:

http://www.labiennale.org/en/art/
http://www.labiennale.org/en/art/photogallery/

Thank you!

-Odili Donald Odita

Labels: , ,








Exposition
My Complement, My Enemy, My Oppressor, My Love de Kara Walker
L'exposition est présentée jusqu'au 9 septembre 2007.

Lieu
Musée d'art moderne de la Ville de Paris

Communiqué de presse
Rencontre : Kara Walker
Fabrice Hergott, Directeur du Musée d'art moderne de la Ville de Paris et Angeline Scherf, commissaire à Paris de l'exposition «Mon Ennemi, Mon Frère, Mon Bourreau, Mon Amour» vous convient à une rencontre avec l'artiste Kara Walker, Philippe Vergne, Commissaire général de l'exposition et Directeur adjoint du Walker Art Center de Minneapolis, et Arlette Farge, Historienne, Directrice de recherche au CNRS.

My Complement, My Enemy, My Oppressor, My Love de Kara Walker
Avec ironie et provocation, elle reprend la forme d'un divertissement aristocratique pratiqué au XVIIIe siècle, la silhouette découpée, ancêtre de la photographie. Elle met en scène la violence des rapports de classe, l'oppression raciale, les traumatismes collectifs où alternent désir et danger, culpabilité et transgression.

Construite comme un récit, l'exposition rassemble des oeuvres très diverses - silhouettes, projections lumineuses, vidéos, films d'animation, dessins de grand format réalisés entre 1993 et 2005. Elle met en perspective l'histoire d'une Amérique magnifiée par la littérature et le cinéma, avec les systèmes de pouvoir et de servitude contemporains : «La problématique noire actuelle est le réceptacle des pathologies du passé» (Kara Walker).

Infos pratiques
> Lieu

Musée d'art moderne de la Ville de Paris - ARC
11, av. du Président Wilson. 75016 Paris
M° Alma-Marceau ou Iéna. RER C, arrêt Pont de l'Alma
> Horaire
19h
> Contact
Réservation recommandée au 01 53 67 40 95
www.mam.paris.fr
> Entrée libre

Labels: , , ,

19 June 2007

another interesting artist!


















The first installment of my current and ongoing work, THE GOOGLE
PROJECT, is on display at the Headlands Center for the Arts thru
monday the 4th. If in the neighborhood, please come by Sun 10-5pm, and
Mon 10-5pm. Otherwise, I've attached an image of the installation with
a link to a short video clip.

Regards to All,

Jesus
www.jesusaguilar.net

View Video: www.jesusaguilar.us/home.htm

Labels: , ,




Dear Friends and Colleagues:

I'm just writing to say a basic hello and to invite you to check out some material I've put together to compliment my installation "
New York is Now" in this year's Venice Biennial.

My artwork is in the Africa Pavilion along with some of my favorite artists like Olu Oguibe, Ghada Amer, and Alfredo Jaar. Many of you know I started out as an artist, and I've always made it a point to have my material in galleries, museums, and all sorts of conceptual events because, hey... it's what I get a kick out of. I guess if you can have "art rock" you can have "art hip-hop" - right? I just wanted to highlight the point: Digital Africa is here, and has been here for a while. This isn't "retro" - it's about the future.

For the Venice Biennial 2007 I decided to go through alot of my files of music from around the African Continent to make a mix CD called "Ghost World" to accompany my installation for the Africa Pavilion. I looked through my record collection for non cliche kinds of stuff like the Baka People who make drums out the way they play in water or the "Car Horn Orchestra" of Ghana which has a gathering of many taxi drivers who converge in downtown Accra to make a large symphony of honks from their taxis at the end of the work day or for funerals of drivers, to other styles like Masai hip-hop, Konono No 1's "Congotronics" - there's lots of different material.

The CD will be given away at select events for the rest of the year.

in peace,
Paul aka DJ Spooky that Subliminal Kid



>>FOR MORE INFO AND
TO LISTEN TO THE MIX




Electric Africa: Ghost World -
A Story in Sound


Dj Spooky Presents a Project for the Dokolo Foundation at the Venice Biennial 2007

"In
Africa, when an old man dies, it is like a library burning to the ground"
a quote attributed to Leopold Senghor

Mega Mix!
Por Por Akwaaba Welcome! Car Horn Orchestra of
Ghana
Intro: Lafayette Afro Rock Band "Darkest Light" mixed w/Max Roach and Abdullah Ibrahim "Streams of Consciousness" (NY and
South Africa)
Intro collage
African Anarchist Radio
Malcolm X "The Roots of Savagery" mixed w/
Max Roach/Abdullah Ibrahim "Streams of Consciousness" (NY/South
Africa)
Tony Allen "Crazy Afro Beat" w/scratches by Rob Swift Vs Dj Spooky (NY and
Nigeria)
X Plastaz "Msimu kwa msimu" (
Tanzania)
Alif "Douta Mbaye"(
Senegal)
K'naan "Soobax" (
Somalia)
Kelis "Trick Me" (dancehall mix) (
USA)
Fela "Kalakuta Show" (Mix Master Mike, Lateef and The Gift of Gab Remix) (
Nigeria)
Lotfi Doubla Kanon "Bled Miki" (
Tunisia)
MC Solaar featuring Ron Carter "Un Ange En Danger" (France/Senegal)
Akon "Locked Up" mixed w/ Nelson Mandela "Moments in Black History (Brad Sanders)" (NY/Senegal/South Africa)
Angola National Anthem - "Angola, avante!" Author: Manuel Rui Alves Monteiro (b.1941); Composer: Rui Alberto Vieira Dias Mingao
Mixed w/Malcolm X "The Root of Civilization"
Dj Spooky featuring Tapper Zukie "Revolution Dub" (NY/Jamaica)
Yves La Rock featuring Roland Richards "Zookey" (France)
Stewart Copeland "The Rhythmatist: Samburu Sunset" (
Kenya)
Frederic Galliano featuring Pancha
Angola
Frederic Galliano featuring Pinta Tirru "Entra No Roda" (Angola/France)
Bunny Lee Meets King Tubby "African Roots and Reggae" - (
Jamaica)
Cesoria Evora -
Angola (original + Carl Craig remix) -Dj Spooky remix (Cape Verde Islands/Detroit/NY)
David Byrne and Brian Eno "My Life in The Bush of Ghosts: Vocal Outtakes" (New York/London)
Fela "Zombie" (
Nigeria) (remix)
King Britt "Obafunke Theme" (
Philadelphia) mixed w/
Interlude Idi Amin speaks (
Uganda)
Orson Welles "Citizen Kane" (
L.A.)
President Obasanjo "Move" by J Dilla (
Detroit)
Ryuichi Sakamoto "Riot in
Lagos" mixed w/ Nigerian National Anthem (Japan/Nigeria)
Baka Forest People of South East Cameroon - Water Drums (Cameroon) mixed w/
Foday Musa Suso "World Wide Funk" (DJ Spooky remix) (
Gambia)
Master Musicians of Jajouka featuring Talvin Singh "You Can Find the Feeling" mixed w/ Abdul Nasser "Independence Forever" (Morocco/Egypt/India)
Duke Ellington "Afro-Eurasian Eclipse" (NY)
Oum Kalthoum "Hob Eih" (
Egypt) - Dj Spooky remix
Mixed w/Tectonic "Heat Sensor"
Charlie Dark "Afro Dreaming"(UK-Ghana)
The Monks of Keur Moussa "Nous Te Louons, Pere Invisible" (
Senegal)
Ginger Baker/Tony Allen (UK/Nigeria) - drum solo mixed w/
Drexciya "Polymono Plexusgel" (
Detroit)
Zimbabwe Legit "Shadows Legit Mix" Dj Shadow remix (Zimbabwe/San Francisco)
Soweto Gospel Choir "Rivers of Babylon" (South Africa)
Konono No1 "Kule Kule" (
Congo)
Abdullah Ibrahim "Mindif" (Dj Spooky remix) (South Africa/NY)

Venice Bienniale
Dokolo Foundation









www.djspooky.com
www.rhythmscience.com




UPCOMING EVENTS

6.23

Luxembourg: Philharmonie Luxembourg – End of Season Show
http://www.philharmonie.lu

7.19

Austin, TX: The Parish DJ show http://www.theparishroom.com/default.aspx

7.20

Dallas, TX: The Société Anonyme: Modernism for America Exhibition
Dallas Museum of Art
http://dallasmuseumofart.org/

7.28

Watermill, NY: Benefit for Robert Wilson's Watermill Center http://www.watermillcenter.org

9.08

San Francisco, CA: Power to the Peaceful Festival
Golden Gate Park
http://www.powertothepeaceful.org







ALSO: CHECK OUT THE MYSPACE PAGE
http://www.myspace.com/djspooky

FORWARD THIS EMAIL TO A FRIEND


Click here to be removed from Dj Spooky's list

Labels: , ,

a name I haven't seen in a while

Shaman Series: 2005, Archival pigment print and acrylic paint, 21 x 16 inches


I always really liked Todd Gray's work, but I never really thought he received as much attention as his work merited. Maybe because he's L.A.-based; I'm not sure, really, or maybe it's because only a handful of black artists who emerged in the 80s really ascended to their deserved ranks while the rest didn't; or maybe I just haven't followed his career closely enough.

So I was thrilled to hear that he'd be interviewing me for an upcoming exhibition, "Blacks in and Out of the Box," by guest curator Lisa Henry at the California Afro American Museum in Los Angeles, and even more so to receive his E-mail with a link to his page featuring new work.

Labels: , , ,

SAVE THE DATE

Here and Now: The Second African American Art Conference

November 15-18, 2007

New York University

AAAC-3.pdf (download a PDF flyer; please note that not all speakers are listed here, as I am one)

Conference organizers:

Dean Mary Schmidt Campbell, Professor Deborah Willis, and Professor Manthia Diawara


For more information contact:

The Department of Photography & Imaging
Tisch School of the Arts, New York University
721 Broadway, 8th Floor, New York, NY 10003
212.998.1930
secondaaac@gmail.com

Co-sponsored by

Department of Photo & Imaging, Tisch School of the Arts, New York University
Department of Art and Public Policy, Tisch School of the Arts, New York University
Department of Art and Art Professions, Steinhardt School of Education, New York University
Kanbar Institute of Film & Television, Tisch School of the Arts, New York University
Institute for African American Affairs, New York University
W. E. B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research, Harvard University
The Studio Museum in Harlem


Labels: ,

exhibition opportunity

Excavating Motherhood
An Exhibition
Co-Curated by Desiree Mwalimu & Ola Akinmowo

Calling all Women of Color to submit visual art exploring motherhood.
Works submitted should address the concept of motherhood as it relates to an
individual and/or the collective experience.

The works should explore the following questions:

How do we reconcile ourselves with the images of motherhood that we have
inherited?
What does it mean to mother someone or something outside of the self?
Who and what sanctions the term, "mother"?

We are interested in works that address the spectrum of pure and raw
emotions that accompany the experience of becoming or being a mother.

We are accepting, two and three dimensional works, installation pieces and
short films. Dance pieces and other performance art are welcome for the
opening night reception. The deadline for submission is July 31st by
6:00pm. Works to be considered should be submitted online in JPEG format.
Artists submitting short films must fill out the attached submission form
and send a DVD copy of the film, along with a self-addressed envelope to:

EXCAVATING MOTHERHOOD TEAM
177 Lincoln Road Apt. 2
Brooklyn, NY 11225

For additional questions and information, please contact Rain at:
blackspiderarts@gmail.com
____________________________________
ENCLOSURE

EXCAVATING MOTHERHOOD
An Exhibition
Co-Curated by Desiree Mwalimu & Ola Akinmowo

Please return a copy of this fully completed form telling us more about
you and your work!

Title of Art Work:____________________________
Artist Name:________________________________
Date:___________
Address:_______________________________________
_______________________________________________
City:____________
State:______
Zip:_____________
E-Mail:_________________________
Daytime Telephone:___________________________________
Artist
Statement:__________________________________________________________.

THIS FORM MUST ACCOMPANY ALL SUBMISSIONS
DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION: JULY 31st, 2007

If you are submitting a short-film for consideration, please send this
form along with a copy of your CD/DVD and self-addressed/pre-paid postage
envelope to:

EXCAVATING MOTHERHOOD TEAM
177 Lincoln Road Apt.2
Brooklyn, NY 11225

For additional questions contact Rain:
blackspiderarts@gmail.com

Labels:

The StoryCorps Griot Initiative

StoryCorps Griot is a one-year initiative, funded by the Corporation for
Public Broadcasting <http://www.cpb.org/>, to collect interviews from at
least 1,750 African Americans. From February 15, 2007, through February
28, 2008, the StoryCorps Griot Initiative will make stops of up to six weeks
in nine locations across the nation, partnering with radio stations,
historically black colleges and universities, and other cultural
institutions and membership organizations, to record and distribute the
stories of 1,750 African Americans. The StoryCorps Griot Initiative will
place a special emphasis on the stories of World War II veterans and men
and women involved in the Civil Rights struggle.

The StoryCorps Griot Initiative will help ensure that the voices,
experiences, and life stories of African Americans will be preserved and
presented with dignity. It will also build bonds between citizens and
broadcast media by celebrating our shared humanity and collective
identity.

Where will StoryCorps Griot visit?

Atlanta, GA Feb 15-Mar 24, 2007
Newark, NJ Mar 29-May 5, 2007
Detroit, MI May 10-Jun 16, 2007
Chicago, IL Jun 21-Jul 27, 2007
Oakland, CA Aug 2-Sep 7, 2007


We will be announcing more cities on the StoryCorps Griot tour soon. Be
sure to check back on this page to see when we're coming to a city near you!

Labels:

18 June 2007

news from Simone Leigh

Penelope Green wrote a piece about my kitchen in the Times today (photo by Chester Higgins, Jr.).


Also,
our show called DEFENSIVE MECHANISMS within a show called INTERSECTIONS [recently opened] at henry street settlement. It is a collaborative installation with Heather Hart, Roberto Visani and myself with inoperative hand made guns, dsyfunctionalized and protected black nationalism and slave ship iconography.




Labels: , , ,