Archive for the ‘Events’ Category

BODY TYPED: short films on perfection

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010

Paradigm Shift, the critically acclaimed and largest feminist event series/community group in the New York City metropolitan area, presents BODY TYPED: short films on perfection - a Screening & Discussion with Jesse Epstein, Sundance award-winning Filmmaker, on Wednesday, August 18th at 6:30 PM at The Tank- 354 West 45th Street (bet 8th & 9th Ave).  BODY TYPED uses humor to raise serious concerns about the marketplace of commercial illusion and unrealizable standards of physical perfection.To view the trailer, visit: http://bit.ly/c50Xgq. Tickets are $12 students/ pre-paid, $15 at door. Purchase tickets here:    http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/117245. For more information, contact Julia Weis, Community Outreach Coordinator: jweis@paradigmshiftnyc.com.  

The Illustrated Woman

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

Greetings,

Women’s Caucus for Art Pioneer Valley, MA Chapter  invites you to our premiere show, The Illustrated Woman.
Please see information below. The exhibit presents  the innovative and unique work of  selected WCA-PV members.
WCA-PV is the newest chapter of National WCA. Founded in January 2010. We hope to see you there.

WCA-PV Exhibition Committee
Rochleigh Z Wholfe WCA-PV President

MPV show

T-shirt Fundraising Party Saturday, July 31

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010


C’ood Goes to Grand Rapids for ArtPrize
how cool is that!!
We need Michigan T-shirts to make the project happen
like clean out your closets, then…

It’s Party Time!
at Downtown Home & Garden
210 S. Ashley St., Ann Arbor
Saturday, July 31
6 to 8p.m.

Entrance Fee: A Michigan T-shirt that says “Michigan” or the name of a city or town in Michigan somewhere on the shirt. Or $5. Or wine or beer!!

Volunteer to HELP at the party and get a FREE (brand new!) C’ood T-shirt. Email me to sign up by Thursday.

What is this “C’ood” you might ask. Here’s the scoop.

C’ood Fact Sheet

Who: Ann Arbor artist Margaret Parker has organized a community effort to make a participatory art project. Parker is a member of Arts Alliance, Art Walk, and is on the Ann Arbor Public Art Commission. Her work has been shown nationally and internationally over the last 30 years. She and her husband, Mark Hodesh, own Downtown Home & Garden; her studio is above the store. See her work at:www.margaretparkerstudio.com <http://www.margaretparkerstudio.com>  <http://www.margaretparkerstudio.com/> .

What: The art project, C’ood: a democracy experiment, is about searching for the common good. It’s a circular tunnel with an open central space that viewers walk through. The support structure is woven with T-shirts donated from around Michigan. The project invites the whole community to participate in making a piece that has been given major recognition. We need to raise $15,000 to build, weave, ship and install the piece in Grand Rapids.


Where: The piece has been selected for ArtPrize in Grand Rapids this September. ArtPrize fills the center of downtown Grand Rapids with art from all over the world and generates tremendous publicity by offering prizes of up to $250,000. Last year 400,000 people came to the event filling Grand Rapids for the 3 week show. C’ood will have a prime sight at Calder Plaza, right in the center of downtown. It was selected for this prestigious sight by Frederik Meijer Gardens. For more information visit: www.artprize.org <http://www.artprize.org>  <http://www.artprize.org/> .

Why: This piece is about searching for the common good and the process of building it is where the search begins. When you donate a T-shirt from Michigan, help build the structure,  cut the T-shirts and weave them, donate supplies or building space, OR GIVE FUNDS IN ANY AMOUNT, you participate in making the artwork and in working towards a common good.

When: Time is short. The installation date is September 14, the show will open September 22 and run through October 10. It will be built in Ann Arbor using local businesses and suppliers then shipped to Grand Rapids for installation. There it will generate lots of attention for Ann Arbor. See you all in Grand Rapids!

If you can’t make it to the party, you can still mail or drop off a Michigan T-shirt to:
Margaret Parker, 210 S. Ashley St., Ann Arbor, MI. 48104

Thanks and see you Saturday,
Margaret

Monday, July 26th, 2010

UNVEILED VIEWS


“Weaves a beautiful tapestry of the lives of [these] Muslim women…Their determination and lack of bitterness against the forces of opposition inspires hope in all of us.”
-Dr. Laila Al-Marayati, M.D., Spokesperson, Muslim Women’s League

In UNVEILED VIEWS <http://bit.ly/UnveiledViewsWMM> five extraordinary women talk about their occupations, aspirations, and the rights and status of women in their Muslim countries. Bosnian Alma Suljevic risks her life daily clearing the landmines near Sarajevo that are war’s deadly legacy, then sells minefield earth in European art galleries so that she can continue her work. Eren Keskin, a longtime human rights activist and lawyer with music conservatory training, fights to change Turkey’s legal practices that perpetuate violence against women. In UNVEILED VIEWS <http://bit.ly/UnveiledViewsWMM> veteran filmmaker, Rakshan Bani-Ehmad, true to her credo that art must “look, observe, and discover,” frequently pushes Iran’s censorship rules to the limit. Surrounded by conflict since childhood, young Afghani writer Moshagan Saadat creates brave, profoundly moving and memorable poems. And renowned Pakistani dancer Nahid Siddiqui, once forced to live outside her homeland when her work was banned, continues to perfect, renew, and teach her art form. Captured by Spanish filmmaker Alba Sotorra, who hitchhiked from Barcelona to Pakistan to shoot Unveiled Views, these self-portraits of hope, heroism, and pride challenge conventional Western stereotypes about women in the Islamic world.

To view a trailer of the film, click here <http://bit.ly/UnveiledViewsTrailer> .
For more information about the film, click here <http://bit.ly/UnveiledViewsWMM> .

FEMINIST ART HISTORY CONFERENCE AT AMERICAN UNIVERSITY

Monday, July 12th, 2010

Announcing the First Annual

FEMINIST ART HISTORY CONFERENCE
AT AMERICAN UNIVERSITY
in Washington D.C.

CONTINUING THE LEGACY: HONORING THE WORK OF
NORMA BROUDE AND MARY D. GARRARD

Friday and Saturday
November 5 and 6
2010

Keynote Speaker: Friday 6 PM

Dr. Anna Chave, Professor
Graduate School, City University of New York

Sponsored by the Art History Program, Department of Art,
College of Arts and Sciences at American University.

Conference is free and open to the Public; sessions and keynote
will be held at the Katzen Art Center on AU’s campus.

Call for Papers:

Please submit one-page proposals on any topic of feminist interest
in art history and/or visual studies with a current curriculum vita
by August 1, 2010.
Accepted proposals will be notified by August 31, 2010

Email proposals and CVs to all committee members: nbroude@american.edu,
mgarrar@american.edu,
hlanga@american.edu,  butler@american.edu

FEMINIST THREADS, OR, IT’S ALL ABOUT THE LADIES

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

FEMINIST THREADS, OR, IT’S ALL ABOUT THE LADIES

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A few reflections from CAA 2010

During my brief stay in Chicago last week for the College Art Association annual conference, it was impossible to miss the exciting presence of feminist concerns running throughout the sessions, exhibitions, and affiliated societies.

Anna Shteynshleyger, “Father and Son,” pigment print, 2004-2009. Shteynshleyger’s works were on display at the Renaissance Society through February 14, 2010. Image: courtesy of The University of Chicago

On an organizational level, there were meetings of the standing CAA Committee on Women in the Arts, the National Women’s Caucus for Art, and The Feminist Art Project. Do these societies overlap in their concerns? Yes. Are they worthy organizationshttp://www.nationalwca.org/wordpress/wp-admin/post-new.php? Certainly. Is it entirely clear how each group differs from the other? Not exactly. All seek to promote the interests of women and gender issues in art, some from the inside (CWA) and others from the outside (WCA for years has had a separate but concurrent conference, or Confab). The Feminist Art Project (TFAP) promotes itself as a national initiative that celebrates both the Feminist Art Movement and the political, cultural, and aesthetic impact of women in art and art history.

Full story at: http://ereview.org/2010/02/22/feminist-threads-or-its-all-about-the-ladies/

Rutgers Insititute for Women and Art

Friday, March 26th, 2010

Dear Friends of the Rutgers Insititute for Women and Art,

The bounty of women’s art history events continues throughout March here at Rutgers and nearby. We will continue to announce programs of interest planned for the remainder of the Spring.

This week, we are sending you announcements of two events– one in New Brunswick, NJ and the other in Brooklyn, NY. There are many other events in and beyond this geographical region also listed on The Feminist Art Project website calendar of events: http://feministartproject.rutgers.edu/home/ . Do take time to visit the site to find ones near your home.

LOOPED — Discount tickets for WCA members!- email the admin for more info

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010


VALERIE HARPER as TALLULAH BANKHEAD in

LOOPED

By MATTHEW LOMBARDO

Directed by ROB RUGGIERO

With BRIAN HUTCHISON

and MICHAEL MULHEREN

 

Based on a real event, LOOPED takes place in the summer of 1965, when an inebriated Tallulah Bankhead stumbles into a sound studio to rerecord (or ‘loop’) one line of dialogue for her last movie –Die, Die, My Darling. Ms. Bankhead was known for her wild partying and convention-defying exploits that surpassed even today’s celebrity bad girls. Given her intoxicated state and inability to loop the line properly, what ensues is an uproarious showdown between an uptight film editor, Danny Miller, and the outrageous legend. GET YOUR TICKETS NOW TO SEE FOUR-TIME EMMY AWARD- WINNER VALERIE HARPER AS TALLULAH BANKHEAD.

 

Limited Time Offer

$66.50

Regular price $111.50- Save over 40%!

Balcony Seats $25

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

WOMEN AND WATER RIGHTS: RIVERS OF REGENERATION
Exhibition and Related Programming

February 23 to March 25, 2010
Katherine E. Nash Gallery
Regis Center for Art, University of Minnesota
Minneapolis, MN 55455


Art has the responsibility to help society deal with its hidden conflicts and contradictions…to imagine what could exist and give it shape…open up a space for critical thinking.
- Herbert Marcuse
The Women and Water Rights: Rivers of Regeneration (WWR) project addresses the precarious state of the world’s fresh water supply and the global need for gender mainstreaming in water management. Through an art exhibition and related programs, WWR underscores the message that water access is a universal human right.

Motivation
We are facing a global water crisis:* 18% of the world’s population lack access to safe drinking water, and 42% lack access to basic sanitation. More than 2.2 million people die each year from diseases associated with these conditions. As water scarcity grows, so will these numbers. By 2025, it is estimated that two thirds of the world’s population will live in areas facing moderate to severe water stress.

See http://www.un.org/waterforlifedecade/factsheet.html <http://www.un.org/waterforlifedecade/factsheet.html>

WWR calls attention to the United Nation’s International Decade for Action, the Water for Life!  agenda, and the UN Millennium Development Goals, the achievement of which hinge on integrated management of water resources. A target of the MDG’s is to halve by 2015 those peoples without sustainable access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation.

See: http://www.un.org/waterforlifedecade/pdf/pb_water_gender_upd.pdf <http://www.un.org/waterforlifedecade/pdf/pb_water_gender_upd.pdf>

As women play a central role in water provision and management, women must be central in planning for the future. A focus of WWR is to examine how the inclusion of women in the management of local, regional, and global water resources would improve the social, economic and environmental results. WWR will emphasize how the arts both reflect and alter societal attitudes leading to cultural and economic change.

Components
The WWR exhibition at the Nash
includes work by national and international artists who are investigating water rights as subject and material in their work, using new technologies as well as traditional media.  It features an invitational and juried exhibition of artwork from artists residing in the five states that form the basin of the Upper Mississippi and an international call for video work. In addition, an international mail art exhibition of adult and student locally and globally resulting from a worldwide call in the adjacent Quarter Gallery in the Department of Art.

Symposium: Global Policy – Local Action, March 4 and 5, 2010 will bring together experts to discuss their perceptions of accountable guardianship that will ensure water as a fundamental human right. Locally and globally, what is the connection between women and water? How might viable change to present practice be initiated? Invited participants represent various arenas, including native, social, and historical practice, legislative mandates, agricultural practice, and industrial restrictions.

Water Dance: A celebration of water through poetry, visual art, music and dance
, March 3, 2010 is for Twin Cities school audiences.  Students are invited participate in an open mic poetry reading/poetry slam, experience an international art exhibit, and enjoy student performances.  Festivities include performance of choral compositions written by students in collaboration with composers at the Perpich Center for Arts Education. High school and college choral and choreography students will perform the works at the Ted Mann Concert Hall.

A WWR online catalog is
planned to document the exhibit and provide a study guide. In addition to a public screening, the goal includes development of a distribution list of art institutions and schools.

A Traveling Exhibition 2010-2012
will extend the life of the project by moving to venues nationally and internationally that have pledged their interest.

Partner Exhibition Venues:
        The Women’s Center, Appleby Hall, University of Minnesota
Boynton Health Center, University of Minnesota
The Woman’s Club of Minneapolis
Mill District Arts Gallery, Minneapolis
Bohlander Gallery on 36th, Minneapolis
Minneapolis Downtown Library
MCAD Gallery, Minneapolis
Traffic Zone Center for Visual Art

Co-Sponsors
The University of Minnesota Department of Art
The Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) and the Jane Addams Peace Association, Minnesota Metro Branch Arts Committee
Women’s Caucus for Art (WCA) Minnesota Chapter

The Office of International Programs, University of Minnesota
The Consortium for the Study of the Asias, University of Minnesota
The Women’s Center, University of Minnesota
The Puffin Foundation
The Institute on the Environment, University of Minnesota/ River Life Program

Apron Show at the YWC

Friday, February 5th, 2010

Check out pictures of the
Young Women’s Caucus Apron Show Photo Album

http://youngwc.blogspot.com/

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