Goings On | 12/23/2024

Contents for December 23th, 2024

CONTENTS (please click on the links or scroll down for complete information on each post):

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1. Papo Colo, Nicolás Dumit Estévez, Coco Fusco, Guillermo Gómez-Peña, Ana Mendieta, Raphael Montañez Ortiz, Yasmin Ramirez, Carmelita Tropicana, FF Alumns, in new publication

2. Bernard Tschumi, FF Alumn, receives Grand Prix d’Architecture from the Académie des Beaux-Arts, and more

3. Willie Cole, FF Alumn, now online at StartlandNews.com

4. Lynn Hershman Leeson, Adrian Piper, FF Alumns, now online at NYTimes.com

5. Jodie Lyn-Kee-Chow, FF Allumn, at Rufus King Manor Museum, Jamaica, Queens, thru March 4, 2025

6. Pamela Sneed, FF Alumn, now online at BrooklynRail.org

7. Carmelita Tropicana, FF Alumn, now in Interview Magazine

8. Paul Zaloom, FF Alumn, now online at https://youtu.be/3qRRmubHlgQ

9. Susan Mogul, FF Alumn, live online with University of Guelph, Ontario, Canada, Jan. 7, 2025

10. Susan Newmark, FF Alumn, at Carter Burden Gallery, Manhattan, opening Jan. 9, 2025

11. Chrysanne Stathacos, FF Alumn, at Cooper Cole Gallery, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, thru Jan. 18, 2025

12. Ann-Marie LeQuesne, now online at https://vimeo.com/1036471127

13. Colette Lumiere, FF Alumn, at Company Gallery, Manhattan, opening Jan. 16

14. Judith Bernstein, FF Alumn, at Kasmin Gallery, Manhattan, opening Jan. 9, 2025

15. Richard Foreman, FF Alumn, now online at NYTimes.com

16.  Joyce Kozloff, FF Member, now online at Hyperallergic.com

17. Galinsky, FF Alumn, at Scholastic Art and Writing Awards 2025

18. Kathy Brew, FF Alumn, selected for Tokyo International Cinema Award

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1. Papo Colo, Nicolás Dumit Estévez, Coco Fusco, Guillermo Gómez-Peña, Ana Mendieta, Raphael Montañez Ortiz, Yasmin Ramirez, Carmelita Tropicana, FF Alumns, in new publication

Several FF Alumns have essays in –

A Handbook of Latinx Art 

by Rocío Aranda-Alvarado (Editor), Deborah Cullen-Morales (Editor)

https://www.ucpress.edu/books/a-handbook-of-latinx-art/paper

A curated selection of key texts and artists’ voices exploring US Latinx art and art history from the 1960s to the present.

Is the first anthology to explore the rich, deep, and often overlooked contributions that Latinx artists have made to art in the United States. Drawn from wide-ranging sources, this volume includes texts by artists, critics, and scholars from the 1960s to the present that reflect the diversity of the Latinx experience across the nation, from the West Coast and the Mexican border to New York, Miami, and the Midwest.

The anthology features essential writings by Mexican American, Puerto Rican, Cuban American, Dominican American, and Central American artists to highlight how visionaries of diverse immigrant groups negotiate issues of participation and belonging, material, style, and community in their own voices. These intersectional essays cut across region, gender, race, and class to lay out a complex emerging field that reckons with different histories, geographies, and political engagements and, ultimately, underscores the importance of Latinx artists to the history of American art.

Table of Contents 

Introduction 

FRAMING LATINX ART

The Latino Presence in American Art

E. Carmen Ramos, 2012

Synopsis of the Symposium on the Hispanic American Aesthetic: Origins, Manifestations, 

and Significance

Jacinto Quirarte, 1983

Wonder Bread and Spanglish Art

Luis Camnitzer, 1990

Zero Identity: Third Fragments

Papo Colo, 1991

Border Culture: The Multicultural Paradigm

Guillermo Gómez-Peña, 1990

Between Two Waters: Image and Identity in Latino-American Art

Mari Carmen Ramírez, 1991

The Other History of Intercultural Performance

Coco Fusco, 1995

MEXICAN AMERICAN AND CHICANO/A/X PERSPECTIVES

“Portraying Ourselves”: Contemporary Chicana Artists

Shifra M. Goldman, 1988

Indigenismo: The Call to Unity

Amalia Mesa-Bains, 1989

Twentieth-Century Latin American and Latinx Art in the Midwestern United States: 

Chronological Overview

Olga U. Herrera, 2008

The Con Safo Art Group (1968–76), San Antonio, Texas

Ruben C. Cordova, 2022

From Populist to Pop: The Graphic Arts of the Chicano and Puerto Rican Movements

Henry C. Estrada, 1999

Birth of a Movement: Thirty Years in the Making of a Site of Public Memory

Judith F. Baca, 2001

La Raza Cósmica: An Investigation into the Space of Chicana/o Muralism

Sandra de la Loza, 2011

¡Tenemos Asco! An Oral History of the Chicano Art Group

Sean Carrillo, Harry Gamboa Jr., Willie Herrón, Glugio “Gronk” Nicandro,

Humberto Sandoval, Joey Terrill, and Patssi Valdez, 2022

Axis Mundo: Constellations and Connections

C. Ondine Chavoya and David Evans Frantz, 2017

The Orphans of Modernism

Chon A. Noriega, 2008

PUERTO RICAN AND NUYORICAN HISTORIES

Puerto Rican Artists in the USA: Solidarity, Resistance, Identity

Susana Torruella Leval, 1998

Cayman and MoCHA: When the Formula Worked

Taína Caragol, 2022

Culture and the People

Ralph Ortiz (Raphael Montañez Ortiz), 1971

The Activist Legacy of Puerto Rican Artists in New York and The Art Heritage of Puerto Rico

Yasmin Ramirez, 2007

The Puerto Rican Equation: Art as Plebiscite for Survival, Struggle, and Sovereignty 

Juan Sánchez, 1998

The Possible Role for the Caribbean Artist in an Urban Setting

Jorge Soto, 1980

CUBAN AMERICAN VOICES

Dialectics of Isolation

Ana Mendieta, 1980

Milk of Amnesia/Leche de Amnesia

Carmelita Tropicana, 1995

Double Invisibility: Cuban Performance and the US Context 

Elvis Fuentes, 2008

Liminal Places

Teresita Fernández, 2023

DOMINICAN YORK VIEWPOINTS

The Island within the Island: Remapping Dominican York

Tatiana Reinoza, 2018

A Complicated Affair: Performing Life on the Margin between Art and Politics

Nicolás Dumit Estévez, 2011

NEW DIRECTIONS

“Does That Come with a Hyphen? A Space?” The Question of Central American–Americans in 

Latino Art and Pedagogy

Kency Cornejo, 2015

Afro-Latinx at NYU: How Multiple Facets of Black Latinidad Are Claiming Space. 

Yelaine Rodriguez, 2021

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2. Bernard Tschumi, FF Alumn, receives Grand Prix d’Architecture from the Académie des Beaux-Arts, and more

Bernard Tschumi receives honors and

opens exhibition Poétiques in Paris

On December 4th Tschumi received the Grand Prix d’Architecture from the Académie des Beaux-Arts in a special ceremony under the legendary cupola of the Institut de France. The prize was awarded by Dominique Perrault, president of the jury and Académie member. The award ceremony featured a conversation between Tschumi and architecture writer Francis Rambert, correspondent for the Académie and former director of the Institut Français d’Architecture in Paris.

The Grand Prix is an international award conferred biennially by the Académie des Beaux-Arts to recognize the lifetime achievement of an architect. The award is also known as the Charles Abella Prize. Previous recipients include Alvaro Siza Vieira, Henri Ciriani, and Christian de Portzamparc.

The opening of Bernard Tschumi: Poétiques accompanied the ceremony in the adjoining Pavillion Comtesse de Caen of the Institut de France. On view through January 26, 2025, the exhibition addresses five consistent themes in Tschumi’s architecture and emphasizes the unexpected “poetics” that result from encounters between abstract architectural concepts and the lived reality of cultural and climatic contexts.

“Poetics” is the subtitle of Event-Cities 5, the fifth and final volume of Tschumi’s “project discourse” published by MIT Press in November. The 640-page book is available through bookstores, Amazon, and MIT Press.

Also in Paris, on December 2nd at the UNESCO Headquarters Tschumi received one of three world titles for exterior architecture from Prix Versailles for the Henri Moissan Center at the Université de Paris-Saclay, designed by Bernard Tschumi urbanistes Architectes, with Groupe-6 Architectes for research and specialized labs. The project had already been designated one of the six “most beautiful campus buildings in the world” for 2024 by the Prix Versailles jury, which included architects David Adjaye, Sou Fujimoto, Daniel Libeskind, and Wang Shu. The Prix Versailles, announced each year at UNESCO, celebrates international innovation with ecological, social, and cultural impact.

For photographs, information or review copies of Event-Cities 5: Poetics, please contact Greg Barton at press@tschumi.com

BERNARD TSCHUMI ARCHITECTS
13 East 16th St. | New York, NY 10003

188 Bd Saint-Germain | 75007 Paris

www.tschumi.com

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3. Willie Cole, FF Alumn, now online at StartlandNews.com

Please visit this link:

https://www.startlandnews.com/2024/12/willie-cole-ornithology-ornament/

Thank you.

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4. Lynn Hershman Leeson, Adrian Piper, FF Alumns, now online at NYTimes.com

Please visit this link:

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/19/arts/design/vital-signs-review-moma.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

Thank you.

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5. Jodie Lyn-Kee-Chow, FF Allumn, at Rufus King Manor Museum, Jamaica, Queens, thru March 4, 2025

And my last show of this year goes to a solo exhibition at @kingmanormuseum the home of Rufus King, an abolitionist. Come to see my newest ceramic work (and old) at the museum. “Valor & Revolt” is comprised of 17 handmade ceramic pieces that re-examine tools and weaponry of Gold Coast Africans that were confiscated by a European colonizers during the days of chattel slavery. On view 12.19.24 to 3.4.25. Museum hours are at https://www.kingmanor.org/  Stay tuned for events and closing reception details. Come and get a nice postcard for your keepsakes too. Chow for now!  

Jodie

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6. Pamela Sneed, FF Alumn, now online at BrooklynRail.org

Please visit this link: 

https://brooklynrail.org/2024/12/artseen/pamela-sneed-speaking-tongue

Thank you.

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7. Carmelita Tropicana, FF Alumn, now in Interview Magazine

“Give Me Carmelita Tropicana”

“Theater is fantasy, and few indulge in it better than the campy performance icon Alina Troyano, whose provocative alter ego Carmelita Tropicana ushered in an era of queer spectacle in the downtown scene of the ’80s. But in show after show, Troyano’s fantasy grounds itself in more sobering realities—“Carmelita is tropical and topical”. And this season, it’s about the value of art, both personal and transactional.

“Give Me Carmelita Tropicana!”, Troyano’s collaboration with Tony-winning Appropriate playwright Branden Jacobs-Jenkins (who’s also Troyano’s former student) follows Tropicana’s decision to kill off her persona as Jacobs-Jenkins makes her an offer for its purchase. 

It’s a story of the ultimate artistic burden, of New York nostalgia, and of endings—the production is also the final show to be presented at Soho Rep’s three-decade-long home at 46 Walker recently forced into flux.” —MEKALA RAJAGOPAL, Interview Magazine

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8. Paul Zaloom, FF Alumn, now online at https://youtu.be/3qRRmubHlgQ

Fruit of Zaloom

Timed to augment (or ruin) your holiday mood, Lynn Jeffries + Paul Zaloom present their latest spectacle, Santatropolis, a twisted take on Santa Claus-themed amusement parks that used to litter the American landscape before we wised up (or dumbed down.) Using Christmas kitsch as sets and vintage tchotchkes as puppets, they create a naughty-but-nice glance into shifty business practices by Mister Claus himself.

https://youtu.be/3qRRmubHlgQ

Please like, share, and subscribe to our YouTube channel: FruitofZaloom, Instagram: paulzaloom + realbeakman for more amusement.

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9. Susan Mogul, FF Alumn, live online with University of Guelph, Ontario, Canada, Jan. 7, 2025

Please visit this link: 

https://news.uoguelph.ca/event/in-conversation-with-susan-mogul/

Thank you.

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10. Susan Newmark, FF Alumn, at Carter Burden Gallery, Manhattan, opening Jan. 9, 2025

Hello to all, join me to see some recent woven collage work in a group exhibition, Sum of its Parts. 

Carter Burden Gallery

Exhibition Dates: January 9-February 5, 2025

Opening Reception: Thursday January 9, 6-8pm

Other artists in the exhibit are Ann Winston Brown, Liz Curtin, Gary DiPasquale, and Ann Kronenberg.

Carter Burden Gallery

548 West 28 Street

5th floor/534

New York, NY

Regular Gallery Hours:

Tuesday-Friday 11am-5pm

Saturday 11-6pm

I will be at the gallery on Saturday January 11 from 2-4pm and Saturday January 25 from 2-4pm. 

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11. Chrysanne Stathacos, FF Alumn, at Cooper Cole Gallery, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, thru Jan. 18, 2025

Please visit this link:

https://coopercolegallery.com/exhibition/2024-chrysanne-stathacos_chrysanne

Thank you.

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12. Ann-Marie LeQuesne, now online at https://vimeo.com/1036471127

Seasons Greetings

May you travel well for your holidays!     

In Transit: A short journey filmed in passing with brief encounters from many points of view. 

https://vimeo.com/1036471127

www.amlequesne.com

www.theannualgroupphotograph.com

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13. Colette Lumiere, FF Alumn, at Company Gallery, Manhattan, opening Jan. 16

Everything She Touches Turns to Gold

JANUARY 16th- OPENING  OF SOLO EXHIBITION 

COMPANY GALLERY NYC 

145 ELIZABETH ST.

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14. Judith Bernstein, FF Alumn, at Kasmin Gallery, Manhattan, opening Jan. 9, 2025

JUDITH BERNSTEIN: PUBLIC FEARS

KASMIN GALLERY, NEW YORK

January 6–February 15, 2025

Opening Reception: Thursday, January 9, 2025, 6–8pm

509 West 27th Street, New York

Public Fears, 1993, Charcoal on paper, 63 x 47.5 inches

Judith Bernstein’s third solo exhibition at the gallery, Public Fears, will survey nearly 60 years of work—from 1966 to the present—underscoring the enduring urgency of Bernstein’s trailblazing artistry. Including new paintings, works on paper, and a restaging of her iconic Signature Piece (1986), this will be Bernstein’s first New York solo exhibition since the acquisition of her major charcoal screw drawing Horizontal (1973) by The Metropolitan Museum of Art in 2023. The exhibition anticipates the artist’s major museum retrospective at Kunsthaus Zurich in 2026.

Judith Bernstein: Public Fears creates a spectacle that transforms the current atmosphere of aggression and turns it into a weapon of critique. The exhibition serves as a testament to the raw resilience and unapologetic drive of an artist who has overcome censorship. In her words: “for me provocation is agitation and unveiling of serious issues with a sledgehammer. Memorable visual impact is my main priority… I confront issues head-on.”

LEARN MORE

January 6–February 15, 2025

Opening Reception: Thursday, January 9, 2025, 6–8pm

509 West 27th Street, New York

+1 212 563 4474

info@kasmingallery.com

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15. Richard Foreman, FF Alumn, now online at NYTimes.com

Please visit this link:

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/17/theater/richard-foreman-suppose-beautiful-madeline-harvey.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

Thank you.

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16. Joyce Kozloff, FF Member, now online at Hyperallergic.com

During the summer of 2021, toward the end of the pandemic,  Hrag Vartanian conducted a 4 1/2 hour interview with me. It was recently edited down to 80 minutes (still long for most people!) by Isabella Segalovich and last night, posted. Thank you, Hrag, for your sympathetic questions and responses, Isabella for your careful editing of my ramblings, and Maya Pontone, for your serious contribution about my public art!

Here’s the link to the post on Hyperallergic: https://hyperallergic.com/975959/joyce-kozloffs-patterns-of-resistance/

On the podcast page: https://podcast.hyperallergic.com/episodes/joyce-kozloff-s-patterns-of-protest

And on YouTube! https://youtu.be/5pIkklSzQu0

Thank you.

Joyce Kozloff

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17. Galinsky, FF Alumn, at Scholastic Art and Writing Awards 2025

It is with gratitude and a sense of purpose that I share that I have been selected to be a writing juror for the 2025 National Scholastic Art & Writing Awards. 

https://www.artandwriting.org/awards

Writing Juror for the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards, a program that has celebrated and nurtured the voices of creative teens since 1923. This distinguished platform stands as an inspiration for young minds, as the awards don’t just evaluate skill; they illuminate originality and personal vision. It is a privilege to join this century-long legacy, where young dreamers step fearlessly into their creative futures.

My commitment to this role as a juror is rooted in my belief that storytelling is both a mirror and a map. In my years of teaching and coaching—from Juilliard classrooms to the stages of TEDx Talks and prisons—I have witnessed the transformative power of creativity. For me, reviewing these submissions of young expression is an act of hope. Hope for a generation that will shape us, challenge us, and remind us of our shared humanity and the connections we so deeply need. I embrace this responsibility with the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards, knowing that I have the privilege of witnessing and supporting the next wave of storytellers.

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18. Kathy Brew, FF Alumn, selected for Tokyo International Cinema Award

Just learned that FOLLOWING THE THREAD has been selected for the Tokyo International Cinema Awards.   Again, gratified that the work of these Peruvian weavers from the Sacred Valley is being seen by others around the globe.   If interested to see the film, it’s available for streaming through my educational distributor, Documentary Educational Resources.   https://vimeo.com/ondemand/followingthethread

Thank you. 

Kathy Brew

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Goings On for Artists is compiled weekly by Rohan Subramaniam, FF Intern, Summer/Fall 2024

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