Goings On | 02/28/2022

Contents for February 28, 2022

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Dan Graham, FF Alumn, In Memoriam

1. Naimah Hassan, FF Alumn, live online with The Creative Center, March 1-April 26

2. Guadalupe Maravilla, FF Alumn, live online at Henie Onstad Kunstsenter, Sandvika, Norway, March 17

3. Rashaad Newsome, FF Alumn, now online in The New York Times

4. Rafael Sánchez, FF Alumn, now online in The New York Times

5. Lady Pink, FF Alumn, at New-York Historical Society, Manhattan

6. Fred Wilson, FF Alumn, now online in The New York Times

7. Xandra Ibarra, FF Alumns, at Human Resources Los Angeles, CA, opening March 4

8. G.H. Hovagimyan, FF Alumn, book launch at Krause Recital Hall, Narrowsburg, NY, April 9

9. Marcia Resnick, FF Alumn, now online at NewYorker.com

10. Jerri Allyn, Nina Kuo, Virginia  Maksymowicz, FF Alumns, live online March 9

11. R. Sikoryak, FF Alumn, live online with Society of Illustrators, March 3

12. Michelle Stuart, FF Alumn, at Galerie Lelong & Co., Manhattan, thru Mar. 26

13. Annie Lanzillotto, FF Alumn, live online with Street Cry & City Lore, March 26

14. Crystal Z Campbell, FF Alumn, at MoMA, Manhattan, March 7, and more

15. Annie Lanzillotto, FF Alumn, now online at MetMuseum.org

16. Irina Danilova, LuLu LoLo, FF Alumns, in Bari, Italy, thru March 8

17. Judith Sloan, FF Alumn, live online, March 6

18. Penny Arcade, FF Alumn, live online, March 5

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Dan Graham, FF Alumn, In Memoriam

Please visit the following website:

https://news.artnet.com/art-world/dan-graham-obituary-2075863?utm_content=from_&utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=US%20%2B%20EU%20Feb%2021%20PM&utm_term=artnet%20News%20Daily%20Newsletter%20USE

Thank you.

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1. Naimah Hassan, FF Alumn, live online with The Creative Center, March 1-April 26

To register for Naimah’s class, please visit the following website:

https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZIqceugrzMvHtQKXQXBnpcjJn_8htDhGSmy

Thank you.

Radio Theater with Naimah Hassan (March/April – 9 sessions)

Tuesdays

March 1, 8, 15, 22, 29

April 5, 12, 19, 26

2:00 – 4:00PM EST

Meeting ID: 867 6281 8540

5..4..3..2..1….You’re on the air……….Got a story to tell? Love listening to radio? Why not

create your own short radio program? Radio theater is part storytelling, part playwriting,

and part sound design. During this 9-session workshop, participants will gain the essential

skills to make a captivating radio play using their life experiences and imitation. Students

will listen to old radio programs and expand their tool kit of writing techniques, and create

their own sound effects from objects around their homes. We’ll explore commercials,

interviews, theme songs and mystery series. This workshop is for everyone, regardless of

experience or knowledge of radio with the goal of presenting a “Creative Center Radio

Hour” on Zoom in April!

Materials:

Sound effects (objects around your home) 

script

Props (objects around your home)

Imagination 

Naimah Hassan is a licensed theater teacher, artist, director, improv and audition prep coach and has taught in the NYC school system. She is a trained mindfulness and meditation teacher who has facilitated workshops and retreats for teachers and students. Naimah and her husband Steve Epstein are performing together as a married comedy team Epstein and Hassan aka “theblackandthejew.” Through Franklin Furnace, Naimah provided the Theater Games workshops and Life Storytelling that explores movement, voice, text, and performance through acting, mimicry, pantomime, mindfulness, and theater. She was nominated through Franklin Furnace for a Tony Award for Teaching Artist this year.  

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2. Guadalupe Maravilla, FF Alumn, live online at Henie Onstad Kunstsenter, Sandvika, Norway, March 17

It is with great joy that we invite you to the award ceremony of The Lise Wilhelmsen Art Award and the exhibition opening of

Sound Botánica

Thursday March 17th, 7 Pm,

At Henie Onstad Kunstsenter

Program

Welcome

Tone Hansen, Director at Henie Onstad Kunstsenter

Paulina Rider Wilhelmsen, Founder of The Lise Wilhelmsen Art Award

Award ceremony

Guadalupe Maravilla receives The Lise Wilhelmsen Art Award

Introduction to the exhibition

Caroline Ugelstad, Chief curator at Henie Onstad Kunstsenter

In the exhibition

Joik by Torgeir Vassvik

Guadalupe Maravilla and Sam Xu will perform in the exhibition

Refreshments

Welcome!

Sincerely The Lise Wilhelmsen Art Award og Henie Onstad Kunstsenter

To sign up, please visit the following website:

https://henieonstadkunstsenter.pameldingssystem.no/sound-botanica

Thank you.

At Henie Onstad, we facilitate a safe environment for our visitors. We have plenty of space in the galleries and public areas so that you can keep your distance as you please. We comply, at all times, with the current municipal and national guidelines for infection control. Furthermore, we encourage thorough hand hygiene and care when providing space and keeping distance.

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3. Rashaad Newsome, FF Alumn, now online in The New York Times

Please visit the following website:

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/24/arts/rashaad-newsome-assembly-exhibit.html?referringSource=articleShare

Thank you.

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4. Rafael Sánchez, FF Alumn, now online in The New York Times

Please visit the following website:

https://www.nytimes.com/article/new-york-art-galleries.html?smid=url-share

Thank you!

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5. Lady Pink, FF Alumn, at New-York Historical Society, Manhattan

Please visit the following website:

https://www.nyhistory.org/exhibitions/lady-pinks-vote-mural

Thank you.

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6. Fred Wilson, FF Alumn, now online in The New York Times

Please visit the following website:

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/22/arts/design/la-guardia-new-delta-terminal-artists.html?referringSource=articleShare

Thank you.

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7. Xandra Ibarra, FF Alumns, at Human Resources Los Angeles, CA, opening March 4

Human Resources Los Angeles presents Nothing lower than I, a solo exhibition by interdisciplinary artist Xandra Ibarra. The exhibition is anchored in an archival exploration and artistic study of Bob Flanagan and Sheree Rose’s canonical performances experimenting with sadism, masochism, pleasure, illness and disability in 1980s and 90s Los Angeles. Playing with sub mythologies and objects, Ibarra considers the relationship between care and pain, art and labor, sculpture and flesh. Her sculptures—steel pasties, bruised leather hammers, and wheelchairs—contend with the interplay of consent, race, and disability. Engaging historical and ongoing attachments, she invokes archival ghosts to think through ideas of bottomhood and dehumanization. The exhibition is curated by Jeanne Vaccaro in a collaboration between HRLA and the ONE Archives at the USC Libraries.

Please visit the following websites:

http://www.xandraibarra.com/about/

https://jeannevaccaro.net/

https://one.usc.edu/

Thank you.

Xandra Ibarra, who sometimes works under the alias of La Chica Boom, is an Oakland-based performance artist and community organizer from the U.S./Mexico border region of El Paso/Juárez. Ibarra works across performance, video, and sculpture to address abjection and joy and the borders between proper and improper racial, gender, and queer subjectivities. Her art has been featured at El Museo de Arte Contemporáneo (Bogotá), The Broad (Los Angeles), ExTeresa Arte Actual (Mexico City), the Leslie-Lohman Museum (New York City), and the Anderson Collection (Stanford). Ibarra’s work is located within feminist, immigrant, anti-rape, and prison abolitionist movements.

Gallery hours 

Wed-Sun, 12-6pm

from March 5-March 20

Exhibition Programs

Exhibition Opening: Friday, March 4, 7-9pm

Bottom Poetry presented by Deluge Books: Saturday, March 12, 7pm

(readers announced soon!)

Ron Athey, FF Alumn, walk through: Sunday, March 13, 2pm

Jennifer Doyle walk through: Saturday, March 19, 12pm

In conversation with José Muñoz’s “sense of brown”

Sheree Rose, FF Alumn walk through: Sunday, March 20, 2pm

Vaccination card is required for entry and attendants are required to wear a mask at all times inside the gallery.

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8. G.H. Hovagimyan, FF Alumn, book launch at Krause Recital Hall, Narrowsburg, NY, April 9

G.H. Hovagimyan and Stephen Zacks will have a book launch event for the publication on a Catalogue Raisoneé of Hovagimyan’s work titled Situationist Funhouse.

Please visit the following website:

https://delawarevalleyartsalliance.org/event/situationist-funhouse/

Thank you.

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9. Marcia Resnick, FF Alumn, now online at NewYorker.com

In this week’s New Yorker, Nick Paumgarten’s contribution to “Talk of the Town” reads like a stream-of-consciousness run-on sentence about my life and my work and my upcoming photography retrospective.

Check it out!

Please visit the following website:

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2022/02/28/marcia-resnick-photography-retrospective-johnny-thunders-gil-scott-heron?fbclid=IwAR0d4q3G3KpZt_9PVZ2IyXvHybZ7lS9EmAkwiF5HjHtDKtwBsjdTetn13MA

Thank you.

Marcia xo

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10. Jerri Allyn, Nina Kuo, Virginia  Maksymowicz, FF Alumns, live online March 9

The Women’s Caucus for Art, City Lore Gallery and the Artists Alliance Inc. present

How an Almost-Forgotten Federal Program Kickstarted the Feminist Art Movement  

A Panel Discussion on Zoom

March 9, 2022 from 7:00 – 8:30 pm

Please register at the following website: 

Thank you.

From 1974 to 1981, more than 10,000 artists, actors, writers, and musicians were employed under the federal Comprehensive Employment and Training Act (CETA), which also funded an additional 10,000 administrative art positions (museum curators, program directors, docents and guards; theatre technicians, lighting and costume designers; arts administrators and office staff). CETA especially benefited women and artists of color.

In conjunction with the exhibition ART/WORK in New York City, the Women’s Caucus for Art, City Lore Gallery, the Artists Alliance will be hosting a panel discussion that looks at how this little-known government program and its support of women artists helped give rise to the feminist art movement.

Panelists:

Virginia Maksymowicz (Chair)    Professor Emerita, Franklin & Marshall College, former CETA Artist, and WCA member since 1978.

Jerri Allyn    Former CETA artist from Los Angeles will talk about her work with the Women’s Video Center, which came under CETA funding through the Woman’s Building, and CETA artists Maria Karras and Harriet Zeitlin.

Arlene Rakoncay    President of the Chicago WCA and former Director of the Chicago Artists’ Coalition will address CETA’s impact on both the CAC and individual artists.

Senga Nengudi and Maren Hassinger    Former CETA artists, will look back upon their work through Brockman Gallery in Los Angeles and talk about how their experiences gave rise to their careers.

Ann Kalmbach    Executive Director of the Women’s Studio Workshop in Rosendale, NY, will document the history of their CETA funding, how it enabled expansion of their program, and its legacy today.

Nina Kuo    Former CETA photographer for the Cultural Council Foundation in NYC, will give her perspective on what was the last and the largest of the CETA artist projects nationwide.

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11. R. Sikoryak, FF Alumn, live online with Society of Illustrators, March 3

Making Graphic Adaptations: From Text to Comics 

Online event: Society of Illustrators, Thursday, March 3, 7 pm (Eastern Time)

A panel of graphic novelists discuss the challenges and rewards of taking literary prose and transforming it into comics. This slideshow presentation and discussion features an eclectic group of cartoonists who’ve written and/or illustrated new versions of Little Women, Kindred, A Wrinkle in Time, Slaughterhouse-Five, and more.  This event is part of Will Eisner Week, and Eisner’s many literary adaptations are the inspiration for this panel.  

With Bre Indigo, John Jennings, Hope Larson, and Ryan North

Moderated by R. Sikoryak.

For free registration, please visit the following website:

https://societyillustrators.org/event/textcomics/

Thank you.

Bre Indigo is a lover of astronomy, salmon sashimi, and open minds. Bre tells stories of gentle boys, tough girls, and those in between with a focus on tolerance and the many faces of love. Meg, Jo, Beth, and Amy is Bre’s debut graphic novel.

John Jennings is a Professor of Media and Cultural Studies at the University of California at Riverside. He is an award-winning, New York Times Best Selling author, illustrator and scholar who studies graphic novels, black speculative fiction and race.  His books include the graphic novel adaptations of Octavia E. Butler’s Kindred and Parable of the Sower (both with Damian Duffy) and Nnedi Okorafor’s After the Rain (with David Brame).

Hope Larson is the New York Times-bestselling and Eisner award-winning author of multiple books for young readers, including All Summer Long, Salt Magic and A Wrinkle in Time: The Graphic Novel.

Ryan North is the New York Times-bestselling and Eisner-winning writer whose recent work includes the non-fiction books How To Take Over The World and How To Invent Everything, the semi-fictional graphic novel adaptation of Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse-Five, and the so-far-fictional Unbeatable Squirrel Girl series for Marvel. He lives in Toronto, where he’s twice collaborated with William Shakespeare on choose-your-own-path versions of his plays. 

R. Sikoryak is a cartoonist and the author of Constitution Illustrated, Masterpiece Comics, Terms and Conditions, and The Unquotable Trump (Drawn & Quarterly). He’s the host of the live comics performance series Carousel.

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12. Michelle Stuart, FF Alumn, at Galerie Lelong & Co., Manhattan, thru Mar. 26

Michelle Stuart, The Imprints of Time: 1969-2021

February 24 – March 26, 2022

Galerie Lelong & Co., New York 

528 West 26th Street 

New York, NY 10001

(212) 315-0470

Please visit the following website:

https://www.galerielelong.com/

Thank you.

Galerie Lelong & Co., New York is pleased to announce the opening of The Imprints of Time: 1969-2021. Since the 1960s, Michelle Stuart (b. 1933, Los Angeles, CA) has created pioneering works that synthesize Land Art, drawing, photography, painting, and sculpture. As one of the few female land artists of her generation, Stuart’s relation to the earth and mark-making also diverges from male contemporaries in capturing “the handwriting of nature.” The exhibition will present a survey from the late 1960s to the present, including works on paper, sculpture, and photography that highlight the site-specificity of her practice as well as the indexical nature of her works.

Photography is an impression made by the light surrounding a specific place. Stuart’s work, pointing to sites as far reaching as Machu Picchu, Mesa Verde, and the South Pacific, manifests that by physically engaging in mark-making that brings the material aspects of the site into the work. Often combining drawings and organic material into one work, these impressions through Stuart’s hand coexist on the same picture plane. In Islas Encantadas: Seymour Island Cycle (1981-82), a monumental grid of earth-imbued units coexist in dialogue with photographs of flora and fauna, caught in time.

Four works from Stuart’s series Area-Sayreville, New Jersey (1976) are comprised of paper rubbed with earth from the quarry and framed with a row of photographs from the site. The artist’s incorporation of photography, beginning in the 1960s, is one of the earliest demonstrations of photography in Land Art.

The grid is a recurring formal structure of Stuart’s work, synonymous with the cool detachment of Conceptual Art of the 1960s. However, the rationality imposed by the grid is exceeded by the natural elements contained within. Stuart arranges the components in the same way one would work with line, shape, and form, creating a unified composition but with depth that moves the viewers’ eyes back and forth, as demonstrated in the early work El Florido Chart (1980) and a recent photographic work Creation Myth (2020).

Collapsing time, memory, and place, Stuart’s work addresses the metaphysical while remaining profoundly rooted in its own materiality and the artist’s interest in archeology, botany and history. Armed with the curiosity of an Enlightenment explorer, she approaches materials from the earth and nature as a collector and archivist, aiming to contain their energetic potential as well as to underscore their fragility as beacons of the dire environmental crisis we currently face.

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13. Annie Lanzillotto, FF Alumn, live online with Street Cry & City Lore, March 26

City Lore and Street Cry present an ongoing series

Tell Me A Story – with Annie Lanzillotto

March 26, 2 pm est 

Free on Zoom

To register, please visit the following website: 

TellMeAStory11.eventbrite.com

Thank you.

True stories from the brand new book “Talking to the Girls: Intimate and Political Essays on the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire,” edited by Edvige Giunta and Mary Anne Transciatti. 

More details at nyupress.org 

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14. Crystal Z Campbell, FF Alumn, at MoMA, Manhattan, March 7, and more

Please visit the following websites:

Block Museum, March 3rd, 7pm

https://www.blockmuseum.northwestern.edu/cinema/2022/environments-of-struggle-crystal-z.-campbell-and-christopher-harris.html

MoMA, March 7, 7pm

https://www.moma.org/calendar/events/7655

Thank you.

Crystal Z Campbell          

www.crystalzcampbell.com

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15. Annie Lanzillotto, FF Alumn, now online at MetMuseum.org

Please visit the following website:

https://www.metmuseum.org/perspectives/videos/2022/2/frame-of-mind-trailer

Thank you.

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16. Irina Danilova, LuLu LoLo, FF Alumns, in Bari, Italy, thru March 8

Irina Danilova & LuLu LoLo in exhibition Feb. 14-March 8, 2022-International Women’s Day, Italy

“Universo Donna” Artistic Event Dedicated to the Victims of Femicide, Perotti Civic Art Gallery Cassano Delle Murge, (BA), Italy

February 14-March 8,2022

Curated By: Dr. Elena Saponaro Director Of The National Archaeological Museum Of Altamura Art Direction: Michele Di Leo

Press Office by: Mariangela Fusca – Communication And Marketing – Telephone 3939722068

Preparation by: Architect Rocco Mazziotta

Maria Pia Di Medio · Valentina Scarinzi · Raffaella Losapio · Rosaria Alba Cifarelli · Eleonora Del Brocco · Rossella Laterza · Manuela Bedeschi · Raffaella Cardinale · Manuela Maroli · Irina Danilova · Elena Radovix · Lulia Nasrelli Havedi Flolo Lidia Pentasuglia · Misha Dare · Viviana Quattrini · Mahbob Safari · Anna Colmayer · Eva Rachele Grassi · Rossella Toscano · Mariangela Agliata · Bahar Heidarzade · Lijun Zhang · Leva Liaugaudaite ‘- Mahbob Safari · Multi-Burgundy Views Rosanna Minervini – Isabella Morelli – Rosanna Quatera

Ethics Committee: Dr. Savino Gallo · Dr. Maria Pia Di Medio · Dr. Francesco Di Mauro · Dr Antonella Lacriola · Prof. Paolo Livrea · Dr. Savino Raimo · Dr. Ivano Biancardi

Scientific Committee: Dr. Savino Gallo · Dr. Maria Pia Di Medio · Dr. Francesco Notaro · Prof. Sabino Lerario · Prof. Rosa Rutigliano · Caterina Basile

Organizational Committee: Dr. Savino Gallo · Dr. Maria Pia Di Medio · Dr. Cifarelli Rosaria Alba ·

Rosamaria Baiamonte · Prof. Rossella Laterza · Michele Di Leo

02 To 03/08/2022

Vernissage: 02/14/2022 At 17.30

Opening Hours: 9: 00-13: 00/16: 00-19: 00 (Closed On Sundays)

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17. Judith Sloan, FF Alumn, live online, March 6

Join us for a Virtual Performance

of a new work-in-progress

supported by the Network of Ensemble Theaters Virtual Exploration Grant

Sunday March 6, 4pm Eastern, 3pm Central

MAKE A RESERVATION HERE https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScUuTnmFBDEM6Dj0F67Ujcs5FwYlVpLGws8brZI_3kudzS3aA/viewform

We will send you the zoom link.

admission is free

LANGUAGE MAINTENANCE (Working Title)

a solo show performed and written by San Antonio actor

Georgette Lockwood

Script development and direction

Judith Sloan

A story about a secret artist, immigration, bilingual education, and the ripple effects of trauma between mothers and daughters.

A note from Georgette: “This story began as an exhibition of haunting, striking art made by my mother, Rocio Alvarado Lockwood. Some of the images were familiar to me, and some I had never seen before. My family discovered memoirs scribbled in between her lecture notes on Bilingual Education. As I walked around the exhibition, I had a feeling that something was missing. Her diaries shed light on her strange images including dancing skeletons and dolls whose mouths are rubbed out. The pictures portray the pain and discrimination of an immigrant child, a pain that echoes in me when I remember my mom. A voice told me to keep searching for the light, as if Rocio was telling me, “If I went through all this, it is good we all know it so as not to repeat.” I consider this play the “other” exhibition, where we see the strength of love that transforms pain, so that we may transform it ourselves.”

Georgette Lockwood is a Latina actor, writer, and teacher from San Antonio, Texas. She earned her B.F.A. in theater arts/acting from Boston University. Additionally, she has trained with the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art with a focus on the LeCoq theory of clown and miming. She has appeared on stage and on screen in TV in both creative and commercial projects. As with many bi-racial children, she is exploring what it means to be “Latina” even when you were raised away from those cultural ties for much of your life. She only recently learned her mother’s full story of coming to the U.S. as a child immigrant from Chihuahua, Mexico and is committed to understanding and sharing her mother’s story. Georgette has performed in published and new/original work with Huntington Theatre Co., Classic Theatre, Guadalupe Theatre, and Tobin Center. Her casting credits include the title role in Euripides’ Medea. She recently played the role of suspect Brian McDevitt in The Art Heist Experience at the Jones Hall for the Performing Arts. She combines her background in youth coaching, teaching, performance and storytelling, to help others understand and heal from generational and childhood trauma. She began working with Judith Sloan in the winter of 2019 when Sloan was a guest artist with Jump-Start Theater in San Antonio, TX. The two have been conversing about this new work ever since.

Judith Sloan is an actor, audio artist, writer, radio producer, human rights activist, educator and poet whose work combines humor, pathos and a love of the absurd. For over twenty years, Sloan has been producing and presenting interdisciplinary works in audio and theater, portraying voices often ignored by the mass media. Her solo performances and plays include: Denial of the Fittest (nominated for best comedy performance at the Edinburgh International Fringe Festival), A Tattle Tale: eyewitness in Mississippi, and Crossing the BLVD: strangers, neighbors, aliens in a new America, YO MISS! and IT CAN HAPPEN HERE. Her commentaries, plays, poetry and documentaries have aired on National Public Radio, New York Public Radio, WBEZ Chicago, PRI, BBC, and listener sponsored stations throughout the U.S. She has received awards for her audio mixes, radio documentaries and work with various musicians integrating storytelling, acting, sampling and multiple languages into symphonic pieces, live performance with actors and musicians, and radio. Sloan was commissioned to write the libretto for 1001 Voices: A Symphony for a New America, which was performed by the Queens Choral Society in December 2017 with a 90 voice choir and full orchestra. Sloan received a 2022 individual artist theatre commissioning grant from the New York State Council on the Arts for a collaboration with composer Andrew Griffin addressing the climate crisis. A member of the adjunct faculty at New York University’s Gallatin School of Individualized Study, and a frequent guest performer and lecturer in universities and schools throughout the country, Sloan is co-founder of EarSay.

This program is made possible with a grant from the Network of Ensemble Theaters Virtual Exploration Grant. This is a continuation of EarSay’s sister-city-projects between San Antonio, TX, and Queens, NY

Thanks to our supporters and partners! Please Consider Donating on Giving Tuesday.

EarSay is a non-profit 501 c 3 organization dedicated to documenting and portraying the lives of uncelebrated individuals. Our projects bridge the divide between documentary and expressive forms in books, exhibitions, on stage, in sound & electronic media.. We bring our work to theaters, museums, schools, festivals, and universities new York City Department of Cultural Affairs with support from the City Council, New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo and the New York State Legislature, Queens Council on the Arts, AE Ventures Foundations, Elias Foundation, Purchase College Foundation, City Lore, LaGuardia Liberty Partnership, International High School at LaGuardia Community College, LaGuardia Performing Arts Center, Council Member Jimmy Van Bramer, The Network of Ensemble Theaters, The Elias Foundation, and the generous donations of many individuals.

EarSay | PO Box 4338, Sunnyside, NY 11104

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18. Penny Arcade, FF Alumn, live online with La MaMa, March 5

Penny Arcade’s Coffee House Chronicle at LaMama March 5th, 3-5 pm

Is sold out but will be live-streamed. Check on Penny Arcade’s 

FaceBook page for link

Penny arcade superstar

https://www.lamama.org/shows/coffeehouse-chronicles-penny-arcade

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Goings On is compiled weekly by Danelly Reyes, Franklin Furnace University Intern, Winter 2022