Goings On | 03/21/2019

Goings On: posted week of March 21, 2019

CONTENTS:

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Barbara Hammer, FF Alumn, In Memoriam

1. Laura Bernstein, FF Fund Recipient 2019, at BRIC, Brooklyn, March 27
2. Martha Wilson, Holly Hughes, Carol Jacobsen, FF ALumns, at Denise Bibro Fine Arts, Manhattan, April 4
3. Alice Aycock, Jennifer Bartlett, Mierle Laderman Ukeles, FF Alumns, at the New Museum, Manhattan, April 1
4. Ann-Marie LeQuesne, FF Alumn, now online at https://vimeo.com/322631469
5. Mark Bloch, Rimma Gerlovina, Valeriy Gerlovin, FF Alumns, now online at whitehotmagazine.com
6. Iris Rose, FF Alumn, at Pangea, Manhattan, March 31
7. Franc Palaia, FF Alumn, at Adriaan Van Der Plas Gallery, Manhattan, opening Mar 20
8. Tim Miller, FF Alumn, 2019 events
9. Sydney Blum, FF Alumn, at 21 Fine Art, Halifax, NS, Canada, opening Mar. 29
10. Annie Lanzillotto, FF Alumn, at Hunter College, Manhattan, March 27
11. Micki Watanabe Spiller, FF Alumn, now online at underwaternewyork.com
12. Shaun Leonardo, FF Alumn, at Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, April 9
13. R. Sikoryak, FF Alumn, at Dixon Place, Manhattan, March 28
14. Dona Ann McAdams, FF Alumn, at Brattleboro Museum, Vermont, June 22-Sept. 23 and more
15. Beth B, FF Alumn, at Alamo Drafthouse, Brooklyn, April 3
16. Robbin Ami Silverberg, FF Alumn, at Wits Art Museum, Johannesburg, South Africa, March 26
17. Anton van Dalen, FF Alumn, at PPOW Gallery, Manhattan, thru April 20
18. Ann-Marie Lequesne, FF Alumn, now online at https://vimeo.com/31610655
19. Laurie Anderson, FF Alumn, in The New York Times, March 15
20. John Baldessari, Barbara Kruger, Andy Warhol, FF Alumns, in the New York Times, March 13
21. Franklin Furnace at The Oculus, Manhattan, May 1-4

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Barbara Hammer, FF Alumn, In Memoriam

The New York Times

Barbara Hammer, Filmmaker of Lesbian Sexuality, Dies at 79

By Richard Sandomir, March 20, 2019

[ Text only follows below – the complete illustrated obituary is at https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/20/obituaries/barbara-hammer-dead.html ]

Barbara Hammer, an experimental filmmaker who began celebrating lesbian sexuality and history in her work in the 1970s, and who in her last years turned her battle against cancer into cinematic art, died on Saturday in her partner’s home in Manhattan. She was 79.

Florrie Burke, her partner, said the cause was endometrioid ovarian cancer.

Ms. Hammer’s filmmaking took a radical turn in 1970 when she came out as a lesbian. She was 30 and divorced from her husband when her first female lover helped her rediscover herself.

“Her leg touched my own and I felt this incredible rush – erotic rush – just through our knees, and I thought, ‘Oh, my God, I’ve never felt this for a woman before,’ ” she said in an oral history interview for the Smithsonian Archives of American Art last year. “And I decided right then I can act on this or ignore it. I decided to act on it.”

Beside her lover at Ms. Hammer’s home in Santa Rosa, Calif., she recalled, “I became a lesbian.”

Her epiphany catapulted her into directing films that let her explore her life and those of other lesbians decades before the legalization of same-sex marriage and other L.G.B.T. civil rights milestones.

For her influential four-minute film “Dyketactics” (1974), she shot about a dozen nude women in sensual montages in an idyllic forest setting in Napa Valley and added scenes of herself making love to a girlfriend. She called it her “lesbian commercial.” Two years later, in “Multiple Orgasm,” she showed alternating close-ups of a woman masturbating and her ecstatic face.

“One of my goals was to put a lesbian on camera – on film – in the 20th century and now into the 21st century, because when I began there weren’t any that I could find,” she told Nomorepotlucks, an online art, culture and politics journal, in a 2009 interview.

Over the next 40 years she made dozens of films and videos. Working mostly with eight-millimeter, Super 8 and 16-millimeter film, Ms. Hammer produced and directed essaylike films and documentaries, often abstract and devoid of traditional narrative structure, ranging from a few minutes long to feature length.

“Hammer strives in her films for a new visual language, a new way of presenting images that disrobes the conventions of the straight realm and reimagines the garb of our queer world in all its underground pathos, sexuality, playfulness and positively perverse gaze,” the poet Janlori Goldman wrote on the website of the Leslie-Lohman Museum of Gay and Lesbian Art in Manhattan in 2017, when the museum held an exhibition of Ms. Hammer’s work.

Ms. Hammer delved into lesbian history and culture through the stories of artists like the photographer Alice Austen (in the documentary “The Female Closet”) and the poet Elizabeth Bishop (“Welcome to This House”). She explored menstruation (“Menses”), coverage of the AIDS epidemic (“Snow Job”) and how women view their sexuality compared with male images of women and sex (“No No Nooky T.V.”).

Not all her films were about lesbianism or sexuality. Her subjects also included women in the Korean Islands who dive for shellfish (“Diving Women of Jeju-do”); the artists Henri Matisse and Henri Bonnard’s work during World War II (“Resisting Paradise”); and the fragility of the human body as seen through X-rays (“Sanctus”).

But, she told the Smithsonian archive, “I have never separated my sexuality from my art, even if the film has nothing to do with lesbian representation.”

Barbara Jean Hammer was born on May 15, 1939, in Los Angeles and grew up in nearby Inglewood. Her father, John, owned a gas station, and her mother, Marian (Kusz) Hammer, was a secretary.

Barbara studied psychology at the University of California, Los Angeles, and married Clayton Ward a day after her graduation. They stayed married for nine years before she left him and came out.

She earned a master’s degree in English literature from San Francisco State College (now University) and began painting in acrylics. But by the time she earned honorable mention for an early film, “Schizy” (1968), at a Super 8 film festival in Sonoma County, she had turned her attention to moviemaking.

“The experience of watching it projected with an audience was incredible,” she said in 1990 in an interview for Art Papers magazine. “The film was larger than any canvas I’d painted, and the audience was captured by the darkness and direction of light to watch my work in a way no one had looked at my paintings.

“That was it. I was a filmmaker.”

But it would take a few more years, until she was studying film history at San Francisco State (where she earned her second master’s), that she recognized what she might contribute as a female moviemaker. She had watched “Meshes of the Afternoon” (1943), a short experimental film written and co-directed by Maya Deren.

“I knew there was room for a woman’s vision on the screen,” she said in the Art Papers interview. Her first 16-millimeter film, “I Was/I Am” – in which, she said, “I go through a transformation from a princess to a dyke” – was a homage to Ms. Deren.

Her films, often produced on a shoestring, did not reach a mainstream audience. But she received several honors, including a 2013 Guggenheim Fellowship, which helped finance “Welcome to This House” (2015), her film about Elizabeth Bishop, and three Teddy Awards, for short films about L.G.B.T. subjects, from the Berlin International Film Festival. She also had retrospectives of her work at the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Tate Modern in London.

In addition to Ms. Burke, a mental health clinician and human rights activist, Ms. Hammer is survived by her sister, Marcia Ebert.

In 2006, Ms. Hammer received a diagnosis of Stage 3 ovarian cancer, which prompted her to make “A Horse Is Not a Metaphor” (2008), an intensely personal film that follows her to chemotherapy sessions that culminate with her remission and then shows her happily riding horses in Wyoming and New Mexico. She unflinchingly shows herself nude, losing her hair and receiving chemotherapy through a port in her abdomen.

A retrospective of her work, “In This Body,” is scheduled to open on June 1 at the Wexner Center for the Arts at Ohio State University. It will feature a three-channel video installation of a new work, “Evidentiary Bodies,” an immersive synthesis of her career and her bouts with cancer. It includes images of her M.R.I. scans projected onto her body.

Jennifer Lange, curator of the film and video studio at the museum, said of Ms. Hammer in a telephone interview: “Her works says, ‘Here is what a female body is: It menstruates, it has various pleasures, it gets old and wrinkly, but it remains incredibly vital, even in illness, with unique sensory and biological systems.’ “

In recent years Ms. Hammer supported legislation in New York that would let physicians help their terminally ill patients die. (It did not pass.)

“What is it like to die?” she said in an interview with The New Yorker published last month. “Why don’t we know? I try to take notes on it. It is harder to write now. I don’t really feel like going into so many details when pain hits hard, though I kind of feel like I should.”

A version of this article appears in print on March 21, 2019, on Page B14 of the New York edition with the headline: Barbara Hammer, Whose Films Explored Lesbian Sexuality, Dies at 79.

(c) 2019 The New York Times Company

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1. Laura Bernstein, FF Fund Recipient 2019, at BRIC, Brooklyn, March 27

March 27th, 2019, 7:00 PM
Free w/RSVP
BRIC House Stoop, 647 Fulton Street (Enter on Rockwell Place), Brooklyn, NY 11217

A Speculative Performance Presented by The Institute of Super-Species Research and Experimentation

In this performance piece, a group of distinguished pseudoscientific specialists assemble to conduct and report their research on a series of strange and miraculous beasts reminiscent of those described and illustrated within Pliny the Elder’s Natural History written 77-79AD. Drawing from the fantastical worlds of medieval bestiaries while employing the methods of 20th century behavioralists and circus performers, the group of specialists work toward imagining alternatives for surviving in a climate that no longer supports our current human physiology.

The specialists, Nikki Calonge, Simone Kearney, Hanna Novak, Emily Reilly, Emily Taibleson and Paola Di Tolla are all performers and artists in their own right with distinct and authentic practices and were commissioned by artist and director Laura Bernstein to produce content under the auspices of their assigned characters.

This program is taking place in conjunction with the BRIC Biennial: Volume III, South Brooklyn Edition, On view through April 7th, 2019. Come a little early at 6pm to see the performance The Future is Bright, by Katya Grokhovsky!

Laura Bernstein’s work has been included in exhibitions at NURTUREart and the Long Island University Humanities Gallery, both Brooklyn; The Bronx Museum of the Arts, Bronx, NY; Vox Populi and Icebox Space, both Philadelphia, PA; ACRE Projects, Chicago, IL; and Franz Josefs Kai 3, Vienna, Austria. She has received fellowships and residencies including the Sharpe Walentas Studio Program, Brooklyn; The Bronx Museum of the Arts’ Artist in the Marketplace program; The Lighthouse Works Fellowship, Fishers Island, NY; the Vermont Studio Center Residency; and the Toby Devan Lewis Fellowship. Most recently, she is a 2018 grant recipient of The Franklin Furnace Fund. Bernstein holds a BFA from Rhode Island School of Design and an MFA from the University of Pennsylvania.

Nikki Calonge is a founding member of ANIMALS and has performed with artists and theater companies such as Jim Findlay, Nellie Tinder, Half Straddle, Katherine Brook/TELE-VIOLET, Eliza Bent + Dave Malloy, Spellbound Theater, William Burke, Normandy Sherwood/The Drunkard’s Wife, and The National Asian American Theater Company. With ANIMALS Calonge is the recipient of the 2012 Tom Murrin Award and has been presented at Fresh Ground Pepper, CATCH, Prelude, as part of Target Margin Theater’s Gertrude Stein Lab, and Under the Radar’s Incoming Series. Calonge has received training from The Patravadi Theatre and Theater Mitu in Thailand; Traditional Dance and Wayang Kulit in Bali, Indonesia, BFA NYU – Tisch.

Simone Kearney is a Brooklyn-based artist. She has performed at the Queens Museum, NADA, St. Anne’s Warehouse, SVA, the Poetry Project, Rachel Uffner Gallery, the Judd Foundation, This Red Door, P.S. 122, Stellar Projects, and Thierry Goldberg Gallery. Recent exhibitions include NURTUREart, Anytime Dept., Torn Page, Re: Art Show, La Mama Galleria, Annex Gallery, Omi International Art Center, and the West Cork Arts Center. Residencies include Paint School, Lighthouse Works, Josef and Anni Albers Foundation, Edward F. Albee Foundation. She is a NYFA grant recipient, and is author of “My Ida,” (Ugly Duckling Presse, 2017) and “In Threes,” (minuteBOOKS, 2013).

Hanna Novak is a playwright and director originally from Toronto, Canada, now living and working in New York City. Her writing has been presented at various venues in New York, including Molasses Books, muddguts gallery, The Frederick Loewe Theatre at Hunter College, and the New Ohio Theatre, and internationally as part of the Elevation 1049 Festival in Gstaad, Switzerland. She will be a visiting artist at the Performing Garage in April. Hanna holds an MFA in Playwrighting from Hunter College.

Emily Reilly is a British/Irish performance maker and dramaturg working across a number of different disciplines. She holds an M.F.A in Dramaturgy & Dramatic Criticism from The Yale School of Drama and a B.A. from Trinity College Dublin. She has presented work in the U.S. and internationally at a variety of venues and found spaces including (selected): The Project Arts Centre, Dublin; The Samuel Beckett Theatre, Dublin; The Tron Theatre, Glasgow; The Gilded Balloon, Edinburgh; The Volksbühne, Berlin; The Invisible Dog Art Center; The Baryshnikov Arts Center, and The Clemente Soto Vélez Cultural Center in NYC. In 2011 her production, Minute After Midday, was awarded a prestigious Fringe First Award at The Edinburgh Festival. She is an alumna of the Urban Bush Women’s Summer Leadership Institute. She is also co-founder and co-artistic director of HORSE, whose production Vaska premiered in Amsterdam in the fall of 2018.

Emily Charlotte Taibleson is a lifelong member of ISSRE since its inception over a decade ago. ET is an interdisciplinary PNW artist/painter based out of Seattle currently enrolled in an MFA program at the University of Washington. She makes pictures, objects and experiences. She is a PSOM Poseur yogi and one third of Daddy, Daddy & Daddy– a radical art collective/gallery based out of Seattle. Graduated from RISD painting & drawing in 2010.

Paola Di Tolla reads, writes and makes videos anchored in the processes of re-telling stories — primarily stories shared during interviews led by Paola — then telling them again, only not in the same way and arguably not the same story.

This work was made possible, in part, by the Franklin Furnace Fund supported by the Jerome Foundation and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the New York City Council.

Link to Event:
https://www.bricartsmedia.org/events-performances/pseudo-scientific-performance-laura-bernstein

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/2094404037313788/
Website: https://www.bricartsmedia.org/events-performances/pseudo-scientific-performance-laura-bernstein
Eventbrite: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/a-speculative-performance-presented-by-laura-bernstein-tickets-56933832626?_ga=2.69929106.38296670.1552401060-1229999669.1550762409
Laura Bernstein
www.rarabernstein.com

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2. Martha Wilson, Holly Hughes, Carol Jacobsen, FF ALumns, at Denise Bibro Fine Arts, Manhattan, April 4

PANEL & BOOK DISCUSSION

FEATURING EXHIBITING ARTISTS FROM
MSDEMEANORS AND LIFE ON TRIAL:

PAULA ALLEN, HOLLY HUGHES, CAROL
JACOBSEN, SUSAN MEISELAS, AND MARTHA WILSON

THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 6-8PM

MEET AND GREET & BOOK SIGNING

REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED

PLEASE RSVP info@denisebibrofineart.com

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3. Alice Aycock, Jennifer Bartlett, Mierle Laderman Ukeles, FF Alumns, at the New Museum, Manhattan, April 1

Art Omi proudly presents the Francis J. Greenburger Awards
Monday April 1, Cocktail reception and ceremony
6:00PM
@
THE NEW MUSEUM
235 BOWERY
FREE
RSVP: greenburgerawards@timeequities.com
DINNER IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING THE CEREMONY
WITH AWARD WINNERS AND PRESENTERS
LAFAYETTE GRAND CAFÉ
380 LAFAYETTE STREET
DINNER TICKETS: $195
artomi.org
RSVP IS ESSENTIAL BY MARCH 27TH

PRESENTERS
Alice Aycock
Charlotta Kotik
Lili Chopra
Marianne Boesky
Anders Schroeder

AWARD WINNERS
John Newman
Mierle Laderman Ukeles
Ralph Lemon
Jennifer Bartlett
Johannes Girardoni

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4. Ann-Marie LeQuesne, FF Alumn, now online at https://vimeo.com/322631469

The *Answers Chorus is now online https://vimeo.com/322631469
Performed at the opening night of Visions in the Nunnery – Part 3 https://www.facebook.com/events/503161993518446/?active_tab=about participants were asked to speak their answers to a series of generic questions. We can hear the answers but meaning is camouflaged by simultaneity. We share rhythm but not message. Everyone is together and different. There is structure and there is density – like the sound of different objects dropped together from a height.
*A sound Appendix to DID YOU HAVE BREAKFAST THIS MORNING? http://www.theannualgroupphotograph.com/events/17-2/

www.vimeo.com/annmarielequesne
www.amlequesne.com
www.theannualgroupphotograph.com

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5. Mark Bloch, Rimma Gerlovina, Valeriy Gerlovin, FF Alumns, now online at whitehotmagazine.com

Rimma Gerlovina, Valeriy Gerlovin and Mark Bloch Premiere “Not Jean Brown” at Emily Harvey Foundation
from https://whitehotmagazine.com/articles/brown-at-emily-harvey-foundation/4180
by NOAH BECKER of WHITE HOT MAGAZINE , February 2019

“Not Jean Brown”
A film by Rimma Gerlovina,Valeriy Gerlovin and Mark Bloch
The Emily Harvey Foundation
February 22nd, 2019

Almost thirty five years after it was originally begun in 1985, the Emily Harvey Foundation on Broadway in Soho presented the world premiere of “Not Jean Brown”, a 16-minute portrait of a Massachusetts art collector, Jean Brown (1916-1994) whose vast archives now reside at the Getty Research Institute in Los Angeles.
Introduced by Mark Bloch, one of the film’s creators, the video project had never been screened for a New York audience despite it being a pet project of Brown, an eccentric art lover who was excited to document her collection. Jean Brown was “the den mother of Fluxus” according to Roberta Smith of The New York Times in her obituary of Brown that appeared May 4, 1994.

The subtitle of the film is “Surrealism, Dada, Fluxus, etc.” and that seemed be a draw for the packed house of appreciative downtown aficionados, archivists and anti-art rebels, many of whom seemed to have known either the filmmakers, Brown or John Cage, who provided the film’s soundtrack. The who’s who of avant garde artists whose work appeared in the film included Cage, Marcel Duchamp, Man Ray, Surrealist André Masson, Fluxus founder George Maciunas, Joe Jones, John Lennon and Yoko Ono, Robert Watts, Claes Oldenburg, Robert Filliou, Geoff Hendricks, Nam June Paik, Christo, George Brecht, Ay-O, visual poet John Furnival, artists bookmaker Dieter Roth, and others.

The “Not Jean Brown” feature was preceded by videos, “The Concepts” a short 2012 video by Rimma Gerlovina and Valeriy Gerlovin, who emigrated to the USA in 1980 after being part of an underground movement of artists in Soviet Russia, and “A Visit with Collage Artist John Evans and the Avenue B School of Art” by Bloch, which at 28 minutes was the longest piece on the programme and was shown immediately after Bloch’s introduction. The crowd watched attentively as late John Evans (1932-2012) revealed stories of how he created a collage every day until finally achieving some notoriety late in his career.

Bloch explained in his opening remarks that the original footage for “Not Jean Brown” was shot by the Gerlovins on home video equipment at Brown’s home in a former Shaker Seed House in Tyringham, a small town near Lee, Massachusetts. Brown enthusiastically encouraged the Russian couple to collaborate with artist, musician and video editor Bloch, who was a friend of both theirs and hers.

At Brown’s request, Bloch then contacted John Cage to help create a soundtrack for the work which became “Sink Sound (for Jean Brown)” a “music of contingency” that Bloch recorded at Cage’s loft on 6th Avenue in Manhattan one afternoon when Cage’s plumbing was acting up. Cage asked Bloch to “come right over” so that the sounds could be used for the Jean Brown project. Bloch conveyed a few amusing anecdotes about working with Cage.

“Not Jean Brown,” has the feeling of a quick, personal portrait of the art collector, a group effort cobbled together by a few dear friends. Fluxus founder George Maciunas, who once lived in the current Emily Harvey Foundation space where this screening occurred, moved to Western Massachusetts near Brown a few years before his death in 1978, where he custom-built Brown a beautiful room to display her unique works. Though she kept everything in the dozens of wooden drawers that Maciunas built for her, from collages by Max Ernst and other art superstars to tiny oblique works, sent to her by unknown practitioners of the mail art network, this film mostly features the work of Fluxus artists.

Bloch called Jean Brown, “a gracious hostess and generous supporter of avant garde artists.” The Gerlovins, who were unable to attend the screening due to illness, said about her: “Jean Brown’s treasures were collected with an exclusive aesthetic intelligence, and it seems to us, certain ethical perception. Every time we visited her, we found something new in her multitude of drawers and boxes full of unpredicted conceptual curiosities. As soon as she sensed that her effort to share her vision was sincerely appreciated she was very happy because she found the meaning of her life in this sharing.”

Jean Brown was the daughter of a rare-book dealer who went to museums with her father. In 1936, she married Leonard Brown, an insurance agent and they settled in Springfield, Mass., where Brown worked as a librarian until her husband’s death in 1971. At that point Robert Motherwell’s book, The Dada Painters and Poets, influenced her and she moved shortly thereafter to Tyringham in the Berkshires into a Shaker seed house. After collecting Abstract Expressionist paintings in the ’50s she began to acquire Dadaist and Surrealist art, manifestoes and periodicals before her attraction to Fluxus, a relatively new and irreverent art movement at the time. Her home became an important center for artists and scholars.

Roberta Smith also said in her obituary of Brown in The New York Times, “In 1985, as the Jean Brown Archive approached 6,000 items, it was bought by the J. Paul Getty Center for the History of Art and the Humanities in Santa Monica, Calif. This was among the first collections of 20th-century material acquired by the center.”
The Emily Harvey Foundation has developed an ambitious and comprehensive art and event program that draws on its rich history, art collection, and archive grounded in Fluxus, Concept Art, Mail Art, and Performance Art. Their art program concerns itself with supporting ideas resistant to frameworks of easy legibility. Emily Kreis Harvey (1941-2004) was a New York gallerist known for her support of the international avant-garde community. She divided her time between New York and Venice, Italy, where the foundation operates a residency program and the Archivio Emily Harvey.

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6. Iris Rose, FF Alumn, at Pangea, Manhattan, March 31

Film buff Iris Rose returns to Pangea for the final performance of The Siren Song of the Silver Screen, which combines her love of cinema with her ear for great songs. Genres represented range from cult films to kids’ classics, from Bond flicks to horror movies. Iris will be accompanied by Christopher Berg on piano, Daniel Gatlin on Celtic harp, and a special appearance by James Siena on ukelele. Part of TWEED’s Sundays at Seven.

Sunday, March 31st at 7pm
at Pangea
178 Second Avenue between 11th & 12th
212-995-0900
info@pangeanyc.com

Tickets are $15 online or $20 at the door (cash only)
Tickets: https://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/4095896?

There is a $20 per person food or beverage minimum at the tables.
DINNER SEATING BEGINS AT 6:00PM.
Seating at Pangea is communal. Other guests may be seated at the table.

Design by Chazz Petersen of Gatlin Dean

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7. Franc Palaia, FF Alumn, at Adriaan Van Der Plas Gallery, Manhattan, opening Mar 20

FRANC PALAIA, FF Alumn, is included a group show entitled,”4 Those of Us who Merely Tolerate Civilization.” at the Adriaan Van Der Plas gallery, 156 Orchard St NY NY 10002, 212-227-8983
March 11- April 7, Opening reception- March 20 from 6- 8 pm.

Artists included are showing works about street art and graffiti with mixed media works by Al Diaz, Richard Hambleton, Franc Palaia, Jason McLean, Alejandro Caiazza, Scot Borosfsky, Bob Dombrowski and FA-Q.

Gallery hours: Wed – Sunday 12-6pm, Mon & Tuesday by apointment.

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8. Tim Miller, FF Alumn, 2019 events

“For an entire generation of queer artists working in the experimental theater world-including me-Tim Miller led the way. His imagination, daring and vision continue to inspire us.”-Moisés Kaufman

from Tim Miller NEW BOOK! A Body in the O
I am very excited about my new book of performances and essay/stories from University of Wisconsin Press called A BODY IN THE O. I had climbed inside of the “O” in the Hollywood Sign in 1984! The title of this new collection is playing with the Shakespeare “Wooden O” notion from the Henry V prolog…all that we can make happen in that O of the theater space. I hope the collection will conjure some of my contributions to that wooden O!
I climbed up into the enormous letter “O” on the Hollywood sign high in the hills above Los Angeles. This was in 1984 when you could still scamper up the Hollywood Hills goat paths and get close to the huge, world-famous landmark. If you were brave enough to confront the scary precarity and climb up one of the several stories tall letters, you had a perfect moment in time and space that must be recorded. In the photograph by Dona Ann McAdams documenting the event, I seem to be wearing hot pants and a crop top, a young gay boy’s uniform of the time when returning home to hot L.A. from chilly NYC and risking his life climbing the decrepit Hollywood sign.
Why did I pick the “O” I wonder? Why not the H for homo? Or the H in tribute to actress Peg Entwhistle who famously committed suicide by jumping off that letter as her career tanked in 1932? Maybe it was O for orgasm. O for orifice. Or maybe it is just because O is the letter that has the most space in it and I could reach the first handhold! Maybe the “O” was in acknowledgement of the gasp of recognition I would feel when my husband Alistair and I would meet our dog Frida who had been abandoned at eight weeks old in 2002 to become coyote food in the canyon below the Hollywood Sign, but who was rescued and lived to find her two daddies.
Okay, now I have done it. If you bring up “O” when talking about performance, we can’t help but alight on the Shakespearean “Wooden O”, as he refers to the Globe Theatre at the beginning of Henry V. Shakespeare asks the audience’s help in imagining great events and wonders if the empty space within any theatre can be enlivened to make serious shit happen and confront our times:
….Can this cockpit hold
The vasty fields of France? Or may we cram
Within this wooden O the very casques
That did affright the air at Agincourt?
Well we better damn well try! For if we are not going to try to “cram within this wooden O” the Battle of Agincourt along with daring to take up the battle to confront racism, the resistance to Trump, the struggle against homophobia, the challenge to imagine a better future, then why bother making theater!

Books can now be ordered from the usual places!

INDIEBOUND
https://www.indiebound.org/book/9780299322601
BARNES & NOBLE
https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/a-body-in-the-o-tim-miller/1129999943?ean=9780299322601
AMAZON
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0299322602/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i0

You can see me doing book events and performing A BODY IN THE O all over the US in 2019-20. Here’s some upcoming dates in 2019.
March 22-25, 2019 Penn State University
State College, PA
March 26-29, 2019 Bucknell University
Lewisburg, PA
April 1-6, 2019 University of Nevada, Reno
Reno, NV
May 4, 2019 Highways Performance Space
Santa Monica, CA
May 6-8, 2019 Towson University
Baltimore, MD
September 26-27, 2019 University of Texas at Austin, Performance and Public Practice
Austin, TX
September 28-29, 2019 Southern Methodist University
Dallas, TX
September 30, 2019 Coe College
Cedar Rapids, IA
October 1-3, 2019 University of Northern Iowa
Cedar Falls, IA
October 4-6, 2019 Open Eye Theatre
Minneapolis, MN
October 6, 2019 University of Minnesota
Minneapolis, MN
October 7-13, 2019 Hamline College
St. Paul, MN

Seeya on the road!
Best,
Tim

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9. Sydney Blum, FF Alumn, at 21 Fine Art, Halifax, NS, Canada, opening Mar. 29

Please visit this link

http://studio21.ca/exhibitions/sydney-blum/

thank you.

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10. Annie Lanzillotto, FF Alumn, at Hunter College, Manhattan, March 27

I’ll sing my two original songs about the Triangle Fire, with Rose Imperato on flute — on this profound shared program:

Wed 3/27
6:30pm
Roosevelt House Public Policy Institute at Hunter College
47-49 East 65th Street (between Park and Madison Avenues)
New York City

212-650-3174 <rhrsvp@hunter.cuny.edu>

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11. Micki Watanabe Spiller, FF Alumn, now online at underwaternewyork.com

Micki Watanabe Spiller published a piece in the recent Governors Island Issue, in the online Magazine/Platform called Underwater New York:

Please visit this link:

http://underwaternewyork.com/archive?category=A%20Stack%20of%20Water%20MWS

thank you.

Micki

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12. Shaun Leonardo, FF Alumn, at Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, April 9

Please visit this link:

https://www.pratt.edu/events/event/14772/

thank you.

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13. R. Sikoryak, FF Alumn, at Dixon Place, Manhattan, March 28

Dixon Place presents
CAROUSEL
Comics Performances and Picture Shows, hosted by R. Sikoryak.
Live readings and projected presentations of graphic novels, cartoons, and other visual art, presented by writers, artists, and voice actors.

Featuring:
Brian Dewan
Abby Jame
Lisa Lim
Stephanie Mannheim
Laurie Rosenwald
and more!
Thursday, March 28, 2019 at 7:30 pm
Dixon Place, 161A Chrystie Street (btwn Rivington & Delancey), NYC
Tickets: $15 (advance),
$18 (at the door),
$12 (students/seniors/idNYC in advance, $15 at the door)
Advance tickets & info: (212) 219-0736
http://dixonplace.org/performances/carousel-03-28-2019/

(The Dixon Place Lounge is open before, during, and after the show. All proceeds directly support DP’s mission and artists.)

BIOS:

Brian Dewan is a visual artist and musician living in the town of Catskill, NY. The filmstrip What Will You Do With Your Freedom was first screened at the Tang Museum in Saratoga NY. He has also shown filmstrips at the Whitney Museum of American art, Modern Art Oxford and the Museum Of Jurassic Technology in Culver City, CA. briandewan.com

Abby Jame is a cartoonist and illustrator from Katonah, NY. She graduated from Parsons School of Design recently and just published her first book, Emotional Data, with Silver Sprocket in 2019. She did art for Adult Swim once. Follow her projects at www.abbyjame.com

Lisa Lim is both an artist and a writer. Her art and fiction have appeared in Guernica, PANK, Mutha, and Pen America. Find more of her funny-boned storytelling at lisalimcomics.com.

Stephanie Mannheim is a cartoonist living in Ridgewood, Queens. Her latest comic, Nate the Nonconformist Has a Rival, was published by Birdcage Bottom Books. www.stephaniemannheim.com

Laurie Rosenwald (@rosenworld) Principal of rosenworld.com and Iron Chef of Encaustic. Author of All the Wrong People Have Self Esteem. Speaks Swedish like a native New Yorker. Played “Woman” on “The Sopranos,” a role she was born to play. Or maybe she’s just an illustrator.

R. Sikoryak is the cartoonist responsible for Masterpiece Comics, Terms and Conditions, and The Unquotable Trump (published by Drawn & Quarterly). He’s drawn for The New Yorker, The Nation, MAD, and Spongebob Comics. He has hosted Carousel since 1997. rsikoryak.com

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14. Dona Ann McAdams, FF Alumn, at Brattleboro Museum, Vermont, June 22-Sept. 23 and more

Please visit this link:

https://www.brattleboromuseum.org/2019/03/08/dona-ann-mcadams-performative-acts/?fbclid=IwAR28j2J9uyf258BD83cZ93fmW74UAdQ6R6nMOhPVJNCswPHFdJ2VfyAPHqY

thank you.

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15. Beth B, FF Alumn, at Alamo Drafthouse, Brooklyn, April 3

Exene Cervenka & Stephen McHattie

SALVATION!
A film by Beth B
Wednesday April 3, 9:30pm
Alamo Drafthouse Cinema Brooklyn

SALVATION! starring Viggo Mortenson, Stephen McHattie & Exene Cervenka from the band X will be hosted by filmmaker Alex Ross Perry (HER SMELL) with director Beth B in person.

This parody of televangelism (released just after the real-life scandals of evangelists Jim Bakker and Jimmy Swaggart) is a fascinating time capsule of the 1980s with a wonderful soundtrack comprised of songs by New Order, Cabaret Voltaire, Arthur Baker, and others.
https://drafthouse.com/nyc/show/weird-wednesday-salvation-have-you-said-your-prayers-today

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16. Robbin Ami Silverberg, FF Alumn, at Wits Art Museum, Johannesburg, South Africa, March 26

FF Alumn Robbin Ami Silverberg will be giving the opening remarks for a new museum of artist books in Johannesburg, South Africa.

Wits Art Museum exhibition

Jack Ginsberg Centre for Book Arts Opening Exhibition

Exhibition opening: Tuesday 26 March 2019, 18h30
Address: Wits Art Museum, corner of Bertha (ext. of Jan Smuts Ave) and Jorissen streets, Braamfontein, Johannesburg
Exhibition runs until 6 July, Tuesday to Saturday, 10h00 to 16h00

A triangular book; a movable book; a round book; a glass book; a metre wide pop-up book; a 10 metre long folding book. These are a few of the collector’s favourite things, which will be on display in two exhibitions at Wits Art Museum to celebrate the opening of the new Jack Ginsberg Centre for Book Arts. One exhibition will be on view in the WAM Basement Gallery during usual operating hours. The second exhibition is in the Centre itself. This is within the museum’s administrative space and will be accessible on an appointment basis.

Artists’ books are artworks in the form of books, rather than books about art. Art collector and philanthropist Jack Ginsberg began collecting in this field in the early 1970s, almost from the inception of this contemporary art form. He has recently donated his world-renowned collection to Wits Art Museum, to make it accessible to future generations of students and researchers.

The collection is unrivalled in Africa and in the Southern Hemisphere and includes more than 3 000 artworks, plus a unique archive of an additional 3 000 items on the history and development of the book art genre. A dedicated centre has been established at WAM to accommodate the collection. This celebratory opening exhibition will include a selection from this magnificent addition to WAM’s archive.

One of Jack Ginsberg’s many legacies has been the encouragement and support for South African book arts, and these account for almost 400 examples in the collection. Also present are precursors to and landmarks in the founding of the book arts form. There are movable books, pop-up books, fold out books and different forms of scrolls. Shaped books and non-paper books, zines and broadsides are also included. Works by well-known international artists better known for other genres of artmaking include Joseph Beuys, Louise Bourgeois, Barbara Kruger, Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso, Ed Ruscha and Kara Walker. A large proportion of books in the collection are by women artists. Popular culture is also well represented through graphic novels and comics.

The collection will offer insight and inspiration to typographers, graphic and book designers, paper makers, bookbinders etc., but perhaps, most breath taking, the collection speaks to the human capacity for limitless creativity and innovation. The exhibitions promise an unmissable visual and intellectual feast.

About the curators

Jack Ginsberg
Jack Ginsberg is a passionate and long-standing supporter of contemporary South African art. He is the founding patron of The Ampersand Foundation (TAF), long-term supporter of Wits Art Museum and Artist’s Proof Studio (APS) and affiliated artists, and collector of contemporary South African art and artists’ books. Through these activities, he has made a huge impact on the visual arts and community of artists in South Africa.

Through The Ampersand Foundation (TAF), established in 1997, Ginsberg has enabled over 200 South African artists and those working in the visual arts and drama sectors, to spend time on a residency in New York. The programme has been running for 21 years. Recipients cite this opportunity as a unique interval in their careers that has afforded them incomparable experiences and exposure to new perspectives.

Ginsberg is also a serious and long-term collector of art including historical and contemporary South African art. His vision and foresight in recognising the emergent art form of artists’ books in the early 1960s and his subsequent collecting activities in this area have brought him acknowledgement as one of the most important private collectors of the book arts internationally.

Jack Ginsberg is a Wits graduate and an accountant by profession. He is the recipient of the BASA Art Champion Award (2013), a Wits Gold Medal (2014), and the Inyathelo Philanthropic Award (2014).

David Paton
David Paton is a Senior Lecturer in Visual Art at the University of Johannesburg. His dissertation for his Master’s Degree in Fine Arts at Wits University was on the subject of South African Artists’ Books and Book-objects. His subsequent extensive research into South African artist’s book practice and production is contained on the websitewww.theartistsbook.org.za. Paton has worked extensively with Jack Ginsberg since the 1990s, curated exhibitions, authored catalogues and published articles on the book arts. He is currently completing a PhD at the University of Sunderland.

Ros Cleaver
Ros Cleaver has a Fine Arts Degree from the University of Johannesburg, where she also teaches drawing, conceptual studies and printmaking. She has assisted Jack Ginsberg with his collections over many years.

Notes to the editor:

For additional information and images please contact:
Lesley Cohen via email Lesley.Cohen@wits.ac.za or call 011 717 1357.

Wits Art Museum
Address: Corner Bertha (extension of Jan Smuts Ave) and Jorissen Streets, Braamfontein, Johannesburg.

Opening hours: Tuesday to Saturday 10h00 – 16h00.
Tel (Mon – Fri): 011 717 1365 (Sat): 011 717 1358.
Public Holidays: Closed.

Robbin Ami Silverberg
Dobbin Mill / Dobbin Books
robbin@robbinamisilverberg.com
www.robbinamisilverberg.com

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17. Anton van Dalen, FF Alumn, at PPOW Gallery, Manhattan, thru April 20

Dear family, friends and neighbors,

Next week my next one person exhibition will open at the PPOW Gallery.

The opening will be Thursday evening, March 21, from 6-8 PM.

Exhibition will be on public view until Saturday, April 20.

Everyone is welcome to enjoy the event with me at a gathering of my extended community.

The PPOW Gallery has done an amazing job of bringing together the entire spectrum of the work.

The exhibit will include new and older works that have not previously been exhibited.

As this is the year of my 80th birthday I feel very honored by the entire PPOW family.

Anton, respectfully yours.

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18. Ann-Marie Lequesne, FF Alumn, now online at https://vimeo.com/31610655

Fanfare for Crossing the Road/Dublin https://vimeo.com/31610655
Fanfare is an international project that adds ceremony to a common event. In each city I ask musicians – dressed in uniforms and positioned beside the traffic lights – to mimic the digital acoustic sounds that signal the time to cross for the blind – different in every city. The work began in the spring of 2011 in front of the Albert Memorial in London. Since then it has been performed in Helsinki, Lisbon, Cardiff, New York, Philadelphia and, now, Dublin. In Dublin we crossed from Grafton St. to St. Stephen’s Green.
Link (complete) https://vimeo.com/31610655
Link (excerpt) https://vimeo.com/244185714
Fanfare has been shown at: Photographic Gallery Hippolyte, Helsinki – 2012; the 4th Wall Film Festival, Pedwaredd Wal, Cardiff – 2012; Plataforma Revólver, Lisbon – 2013; AC Institute, New York – 2014; Icebox Project Space, Philadelphia – 2015; and studio1.1, London -2018.
www.vimeo.com/annmarielequesne

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19. Laurie Anderson, FF Alumn, in The New York Times, March 15

Please visit this link:

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/15/arts/music/lou-reed-archive-new-york-public-library.html

thank you.

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20. John Baldessari, Barbara Kruger, Andy Warhol, FF Alumns, in the New York Times, March 13

Please visit this link:

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/13/arts/design/keith-rivers-show-us-your-wall.html

thank you.

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21. Franklin Furnace at The Oculus, Manhattan, May 1-4

MvVO ART & Westfield World Trade Center
Announce 2019 Partnership
For an Art Program at the World Trade Center

MvVO ART, creator of AD ART SHOW, is partnering with Westfield World Trade Center to create an extraordinary art experience for New Yorkers and those visiting the Oculus at Westfield World Trade Center. The Oculus, designed by world-renowned Architect, Santiago Calatrava, is one of the newest and most unusual civic spaces in New York City. A curated selection of artworks from AD ART SHOW 2019 will be displayed on the monumental screens from April 29 through the end of May-during both Frieze Week and NYCxDESIGN. This will be a contemporary art exhibit on a spectacular scale. Commuters, visitors, shoppers and New York’s art loving public will enjoy this remarkable sensory experience daily.
“The Oculus at Westfield World Trade Center is at the heart of New York’s commitment to the revitalization of Lower Manhattan, serving as both a major retail destination and an extraordinary space for art & culture. Our unique collaboration with MvVO ART celebrates creativity in one of the most important and vibrant business sectors in the City-advertising-and invites the art world to experience art in a surprising setting.” Shari C. Hyman, Vice President, Westfield World Trade Center

AD ART SHOW debuted in 2018 at Sotheby’s New York and MvVO ART has made it an annual addition to New York’s already exciting art fair calendar. AD ART SHOW 2019 will run on LinkNYC digital displays in key New York neighborhoods during Frieze Week (May 1-4, 5pm to 7pm). Art lovers, collectors and art world professionals will see art “on the go” created by the 100 AD ART SHOW artists chosen by a jury of contemporary art experts. A curated selection of artworks drawn from AD ART SHOW 2019 will be exhibited at the Oculus.

“Great artists have always worked in advertising and AD ART SHOW gives the next generation following in the footsteps of Andy Warhol, Rene Magritte, Keith Haring and other memorable art figures a spectacular opportunity to gain exposure. Last year it was the elegant Sotheby’s and this year LinkNYC displays and the huge scale of the Oculus at the World Trade Center will create a unique art show in keeping with the talented and innovative artists in AD ART SHOW 2019.” Maria van Vlodrop, Founder and CEO of MvVO ART.

All the art shown at AD ART SHOW 2019 is for sale at MvVO ART’s e-gallery on Artsy –https://www.artsy.net/mvvo

NBCUniversal is the AD ART SHOW Presenting Partner and the growing roster of partners and supporters includes WPP, GroupM, SYSTECH, Artnet, SVA (the School for Visual Art), NYCxDESIGN, 100 Coconuts, The One Club for Creativity and Franklin Furnace.

About MvVO ART:
MvVO ART is a New York based innovative art venture comprised of a team of advertising, art & technology professionals, dedicated to creating new opportunities for artists, art lovers & brands to discover each other and form powerful partnerships. MvVO ART Founder & CEO, Maria van Vlodrop, is a global business development executive with an impressive track record establishing new ventures. MvVO ART is poised to reimagine & redefine the relationship between Art & Commerce.

Website: http://mvvoart.com
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mvvoart/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mvvoart
https://www.linkedin.com/in/maria-van-vlodrop-4010392

About Westfield World Trade Center
Situated at the portal of Lower Manhattan where 13 subway / PATH trains, multiple ferry lines, and millions of global travelers all converge – Westfield World Trade Center has become an instantly identifiable landmark like no other. This architectural marvel and the most complete retail destination in New York City showcases 80+ fashion, health, beauty, lifestyle, and technology brands under the magnificent roof of the iconic, Santiago Calatrava designed Oculus and throughout the galleries seamlessly connecting the entire WTC campus. The Oculus at Westfield World Trade Center and adjacent outdoor Oculus Plaza have become Lower Manhattan’s newest meeting places and home to a multitude of community events, headline entertainment, art and cultural programming, social activities, as well as a weekly Farmers Market.
For more information, visit www.westfield.com/westfieldworldtradecenter

PRESS CONTACT:
Norah Lawlor | Lawlor Media Group | www.lawlormediagroup.com
norah@lawlormediagroup.com | Tel: (212) 967-6900 | @lawlormedia

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Goings On is compiled weekly by Harley Spiller

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Franklin Furnace Archive, Inc.
80 Arts – The James E. Davis Arts Building
80 Hanson Place #301
Brooklyn NY 11217-1506 U.S.A.
Tel: 718-398-7255
Fax: 718-398-7256
mail@franklinfurnace.org

Martha Wilson, Founding Director
Michael Katchen, Senior Archivist
Harley Spiller, Administrator
Dolores Zorreguieta, Program Coordinator