Thursday, October 20, 2022

193 Gallery x AKAA 2022 Art Fun in Paris

193 Gallery x AKAA 2022

Hassan Hajjaj (Morocco), Thandiwe Muriu (Kenya), Derrick Ofosu Boateng (Ghana) , Marcel Tchopwe (Cameroon)

Booth C13

 
 

193 Gallery à AKAA 2022 - Stand C13

 

 
 
 

Upcoming events  

Prochains événements

 
 

Our 4th Anniversary Celebration 🎉

We invite you to celebrate this special week of art, and our 4th anniversary on Saturday, October 22nd, in our gallery in Paris, from 6:30pm to 9:30pm.

La célébration de notre 4ème anniversaire 🎉

Nous vous invitons à fêter cette semaine spéciale d'art, et notre 4ème anniversaire le samedi 22 octobre, dans notre galerie à Paris, de 18h30 à 21h30. 

 

Wednesday, October 19, 2022

Southamptons Art Center, Welcomes Fall!.

Fall is one of the most magical times to be outdoors on the East End. In honor of our current exhibition, A CELEBRATION OF TREES, we're appreciating the changing leaves and what nature has to offer with some special tree-centered art and eco programs at SAC. Join us this week for... 

Studio: Figure Drawing Workshop
Friday, October 21 @ 1 PM
Working from a live model, artist Linda Capello will guide students through the basics of figure drawing using a variety of mediums.


Eco: Native Plant and Tree Tour
Saturday, October 22 @ 12 PM
Join Shane Weeks on a nature hike at the Elizabeth Morton Wildlife Refuge as he speaks on native plants and their traditional uses for the Indigenous peoples of Long Island.


Studio: Tree Painting Workshop
Saturday, October 22 @ 3 PM
Exhibition artist Barbara Thomas will lead a workshop painting fall trees. You'll begin by observing the trees on our grounds, sketching your ideas, and then painting your final artistic interpretation.
LEARN MORE + REGISTER

"Art has become my platform to deliver this message of love and spreading that love in which I so strongly believe and uphold." - Mr. StarCity, A CELEBRATION OF TREES exhibition artist

A multidisciplinary artist whose work spans a diverse range of media, Mr. StarCity sources from both real and imagined histories to create work that is full of texture and infused with a deep sense of emotion and spirituality. He is known for his experimental storytelling that addresses personal healing, love, and the importance of supporting others through his playful paintings and lyrical poetry.

You can't help but smile when he says things like: "Feel blessed, be blessed, stay blessed... BIG BLESS."


Come check out his work and take home some joyful vibes, now through December 18.

DISCOVER THE EXHIBITION
MISSION 
#southamptonartscenter#fieartmagazine#fallfunfineart

DUKE ARCHIVES! CELEBRATE 50 YEARS OF NEW DAY FILMS OCT 19-22


NewYork Women in Film and Television 

DUKE ARCHIVE TO CELEBRATE 50 YEARS OF NEW DAY FILMS OCT 19-22

In celebration of 50 years of groundbreaking documentaries by New Day Films filmmakers, Duke University’s Archive of Documentary Arts, which holds the New Day Films collection, Screen/Society and the Power Plant Gallery will be hosting four days of screenings and discussions October 19-22. The Founders Virtual Conversation will be on October 19 at 7:00pm. The screenings October 20-22 are in person at the Rubenstein Arts Center, Duke University, Durham, NC.

New Day Films, founded in 1971 as a filmmaker-owned co-op, has documented the history of a wide range of social movements, from the nascent womens movement to anti-war activism, labor struggles, the fight for LGBTQ and disability rights, racial equality and other issues confronting society in the U.S. and abroad.

The Women’s Film Preservation Fund of New York Women in Film & Television is proud to have preserved these early works of Liane Brandon, Julia Reichert and Jim Kleinfeatured in this discussion and programming. NYWIFT member, Amalie R. Rothschild’s film, It Happens to Us, among others, have been restored by IndieCollect.

It is easy to forget that archives are living things,” says Caitlin Margaret Kelly, curator of the Duke archive. Too often we see them as containing objects of the past, but what an archive really includes is the ability to revisit that past, to offer new insight, understanding, and reckoning…”

Wednesday, October 19 at 7:00pm ET – Founders’ Virtual Conversation
The first of four days of events will be an online discussion with the founders of New Day. Amalie R. Rothschild, Jim Klein, Liane Brandon and Julia Reichert will be featured with a Q & A to follow.

Thursday, October 20 at 7:00 pm ET – Founders’ in-Person Film Screening
Growing up Female (51 mins, 1971) by Julie Reichert and Jim Klein produced in 1971 was a trail blazing examination of the forces that shape womens socialization as shown in vignettes of six women ages 4 to 35. Preserved by the Women’s Film Preservation Fund.

Anything You Want to Be (8 mins, 1971) by Liane Brandon is a series of comical vignettes where a bright high school girl finds that, despite her parents’ assurance that she can be “anything she wants to be,” she is repeatedly foiled by social expectations and media stereotypes. Preserved by the Women’s Film Preservation Fund.

Betty Tells Her Story (20 mins, 1972) by Liane Brandon is the poignant tale of beauty, identity and a dress that explores the ways in which clothing and appearance affect a womans identity. Preserved by the Women’s Film Preservation Fund.

It Happens to Us (32 mins, 1972) by Amalie R. Rothschild is particularly timely in light of the Supreme Court decision overturning Roe vs Wade, as we learn the personal stories of a wide range of women both rich and poor, young and old, black and white, married and unmarried, as to why ending a pregnancy must remain an available choice. Preserved by IndieCollect.

 

Inaugural Exhibition at Phillips Los Angeles to Open on 25 October features Jean-Michel Basquiat’

 

 





Inaugural Exhibition at Phillips Los Angeles to

Open on 25 October

 

Jean-Michel Basquiat’s To Repel Ghosts, Estimated at $7-10 Million, 

To Go on View Alongside Paintings by Ernie Barnes

from Actor Richard Roundtree’s Personal Collection

 

Opening Exhibition from 25-27 October in New West Coast Outpost

to Feature Works from the Upcoming Auctions of Watches, Design, and 20th Century & Contemporary Art

 

Highlights from The New York Watch Auction: SEVEN and December Design Auction to Also be On View

 


  – Phillips is pleased to announce details surrounding the opening of its new Los Angeles outpost, the launch of which underscores the company’s commitment to the West Coast amid its continued global expansion. Open to the public from 25-27 October, the exhibition will feature works from the upcoming auctions of 20th Century & Contemporary Art, Watches, and Design, including Jean-Michel Basquiat’s To Repel Ghosts, estimated at $7-10 million. Also on view will be two works by Ernie Barnes from the collection of Golden Globe-Nominated actor Richard Roundtree, in addition to paintings by Amy Sherald and Julie Mehretu. Timepieces on view in Los Angeles include watches by Rolex, Patek Philippe, and Audemars Piguet, and Claude Lalanne’s Pair of “crococurule” stools from the December Design auction will also be featured in the exhibition. The gallery will be open from 10am to 5pm at 9041 Nemo Street, in the heart of Los Angeles’ art and culture scene, with an opening reception to be held on Tuesday, 25 October (RSVP required). 

 

Jean-Michel Basquiat’s To Repel Ghosts is among the highlights of the exhibition and will be a star lot in the November Evening Sale of 20th Century & Contemporary Art. The monumental work, measuring seven feet tall, is a nearly double-life-sized portrait of Basquiat’s friend and fellow artist Jack Walls. Well known in 1980s downtown circles as Robert Mapplethorpe’s muse and romantic partner, Walls is rendered in Basquiat’s distinctive visual idiom—unmistakable by the gestural swathes of black, white, and yellow pigment—against a surface of affixed wooden boards. Basquiat’s penchant for incorporating doors and other found media into his practice first led him to experiment with timber slats for his 1984 masterwork Flexible, which employed the fencing that surrounded his Los Angeles studio. Exceedingly pleased with the resulting aesthetic effect, Basquiat soon returned to the idiosyncratic material, which he purchased from a Soho lumber yard to comprise the support of more than 17 paintings in the mid 1980s. Epitomizing his guiding principle to—quite literally—bring the urban environment into his studio, this major work from 1985 nods to Basquiat’s past as a street artist while anticipating the hallmarks of his mature style. The work belongs to a series of portraits Basquiat undertook in 1985 of Black subjects in the downtown art scene. The work’s title, To Repel Ghosts, is one of Basquiat’s most iconic phrases which has become synonymous with the artist’s declaration of his own identity.

#phillipslosangeles#fineartmagazine#fienartbasquiat

 


Tuesday, October 18, 2022

2nd Annual Amsterdam Eco-Arts Festival on the Open Boulevards at Amsterdam Avenue between 109-110th Streets. 11-4pm

2nd Annual Amsterdam Eco-Arts Festival
Saturday, October 22 from 11-4pm
Amsterdam Avenue between West 109-110th Streets

























Jody Sperling/Time Lapse Dance, The Columbus-Amsterdam BID, and Love Your Street Tree Day join forces to present the 2nd Annual Amsterdam Eco-Arts Festival on the Open Boulevards at Amsterdam Avenue between 109-110th Streets.

This festival continues the organizers’ aim of activating Open Streets with joyful gatherings of people on land that is usually occupied by cars. This free public program features a community planting, Native American storytelling, multidisciplinary performances, and a movement workshop for all ages.

The festival begins with a community bulb planting to beautify a stretch of the Minerva Bernadino Greenstreet led by Peter Arndtsen and Michael Gonzalez of The Columbus-Amsterdam BID and Melissa Elstein of Love Your Street Tree Day.

Following, Irma Laguerre and Vida Landron of Children’s Cultural Center of Native America offer a Native American storytelling session on the tale of Rainbow Crow for children and grownups of all ages.

The workshop leads into Plant/Silvery Blue multidisciplinary experiential performance that celebrates kinship with nature. The work continues choreographer Jody Sperling’s collaboration with visual artist Amy-Claire Huestis and composer Omar Zubair and features the Time Lapse Dance ensemble (Anika Hunter, Nicole Lemelin, Maki Kitahara, Sarah Tracy, and Rathi Varma.) This work is a transplanted iteration of a work the artists enacted with sponsorship from the Richmond Art Gallery at Hwlhits'um (Brunswick Point) in BC, Canada. The NYC performance involves a ritual processional including the audience that pays homage to migratory birds.

At 2pm, Shayna Golub of Bridge for Dance offers an accessible dance class for people of all ages. No prior experience necessary. Following, jill sigman/thinkdance performs Ancestral Archaeology, a solo with ceramic body parts that is a reflection on land and lineage.
From 2-4pm, All Street Journal will provide participatory socially-conscious muralling and art projects for children and families.

The events of the eco-arts festival seeks to uplift indigenous knowledge/life ways that help restore harmony between people and the natural world.


SCHEDULE*
11am-12noon - Community Bulb Planting
12-12:45pm - Native American Storytelling
12:45-2pm - Time Lapse Dance - Participatory performance experience
2-2:30pm - Bridge for Dance - family dance class
2:30-3pm - jill sigman/thinkdance
2-4pm - All Street Journal - socially-conscious muralling

*subject to change

Biographies
Choreographer-dancer Jody Sperling is the Founder/Artistic Director of Time Lapse Dance. She has created 45+ works and is the world’s leading exponent of the style of early modern dancer and performance technologist Loïe Fuller (1862-1928). Sperling has expanded Fuller’s genre into the 21st century, deploying it in the context of contemporary and environmental performance forms. In 2014 she participated in a polar science mission, as choreographer-in-residence aboard an icebreaker; a film of her dancing on sea ice won a Creative Climate Award. Following, Sperling has since developed a practice called ecokinetics that cultivates the relationship between the moving body and ecological systems while providing strategies for climate-engaged artmaking. Sperling earned a World Choreography Award nomination for her work on the Cesar-award winning Fuller biopic “The Dancer” (2016 Cannes Film Festival). She created new work and is a subject of a forthcoming Fuller documentary. She is currently a resident artist at the New York Society for Ethical Culture.

Time Lapse Dance (TLD), is an all-women 501(c)3 dance company founded by Sperling in 2000. TLD envisions dance as a powerful force that can help move us toward a more embodied, sustainable and equitable future. The work aims to investigate the relationship of the moving body to the ecologies we inhabit through performance, media, education, and activism.

TLD is a 2022 NEFA National Dance Project Finalist, and has received funding from New York City’s Department of Cultural Affairs (2011-2022), Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, (2008-2022), DanceNYC Covid Relief Fund (2020-2022), American Music Center, and Harkness Dance Foundation.

The Columbus Amsterdam Business Improvement District (BID) was created to increase commercial activity and create a more vital and active business center along Columbus and Amsterdam Avenues from W. 96 Street to W. 110 Street by providing services and initiating capital improvements to make the neighborhood cleaner, safer, and more prosperous.

Spearheaded by Melissa Elstein, Founding Board Member of The West 80s Neighborhood Association, Love Your Street Tree Day is a coalition of NYC volunteers, elected officials, community leaders, local businesses, government agencies, neighbors, schools, academia, and non-profits who have joined to bring awareness to the importance and benefits of our NYC street trees, teach best best practices for caring for them, removing litter and reducing single-use throwaway items (such as plastic bags and plastic straws), and educating about the health and environmental hazards of dog waste. Originally founded in the West 80s of the Upper West Side of Manhattan, its events now attract urban tree lovers throughout the city. For more information, visit loveyourstreettreeday.com or melissa-mati.com.

Amy-Claire Huestis (Artist) lives in the Pacific Northwest, on the stɑl̓əw̓ (Fraser) river estuary at Hwlhits'um (Canoe Pass), in the sacred and unceded water world of the Coast Salish Peoples. In her experiential practice she suspends a state of wonder in relation to nature and its mysteries. Thinking through how we might develop kinship to other species, she makes work through ritual and deep attention to the land over time. Her interdisciplinary work is made in collaboration with artists, scientists, and conservationists. Her community partnerships have included North Pacific Cannery Museum, The Aadmsteti: Stinging Nettle Net, Time Lapse Dance, Henry Andersen Elementary School, Birds Canada, UCLA Art/Science Center, and many beloved artists and individuals. Amy-Claire is full-time faculty at Kwantlen Polytechnic University in British Columbia.

Irma Laguerre (Actor Storyteller) is Aztec, Tarasco and Taino. Ms. Laguerre is an accomplished actress with many TV, Film and lead roles on Broadway, such as ‘The King and I’ and ‘Juan Darien’. She recently did a role in the upcoming ‘Black Panther 2’. She can presently be seen in ‘The Undoing’ on HBO and as the Shaman/Medicine Woman, in Ray Donovan.Plus the upcoming season 4 of ‘Manifest”. Ms. Laguerre is Acting Director for The ‘Children’s Cultural Center of Native America’, a program of Nitchen Inc. She has been involved in Community work for over 30 years. Ms. Laguerre recently did the 2022 Storyteller festival at SugarHill Children’s Museum and the Native American Playwright festival.

Vida Landron (Program Manager/Facilitator/Puppeteer) CCCONA and Nitchen Inc.
Fiorello H. LaGuardia Graduate. Earned her B.A. Degree in History of Lehman College. Vida has dedicated her career to teaching children of all communities their Indigenous heritage, with a focus upon Native African cultures. She is a videographer and currently being featured in the African American Children’s Museum in Philadelphia. She has received several awards for her childrens entertainment series entitled Miss Indigenous Poppins.” Currently is in development with a children's youtube channel in collaboration with Gumbo Lab.

Jill Sigman is an interdisciplinary artist and agent of change who choreographs with bodies and materials. She founded jill sigman/thinkdance in 1998 to think about pressing social issues through the body, and in 2016, she founded “Body Politic”, a program of workshops and performance laboratories to ask salient political questions somatically. Working with things we throw away such as “garbage” and “weeds”, Sigman helps us to understand the connections between social justice, racial justice, and environmental justice and to envision a world in which we re-connect with the natural world and each other in meaningful and empathic ways. Sigman was the first Gibney Community Action Artist in Residence; has been in residence at Movement Research, Guapamacátaro Interdisciplinary Residency in Art and Ecology (Mexico), The Rauschenberg Residency, MANCC, and the Tisch Initiative for Creative Research at NYU; and is a Creative Campus Fellow at Wesleyan University. She was born and raised in Brooklyn. In response to the pandemic, jill sigman/thinkdance has been evolving into a fluid vehicle for movement, dialogue, connection, and healing with a constellation of dancers committed to social justice and community care. Sigman has recently launched a new website presenting videos and resources about the environmental justice project Renewable Rikers: www.renewabledance.com

After writing his first book Disorientation Therapy in 2007, Omar Zubair (Composer) found that the closer to the core of being he looked, the more blurry it became; so, he began to listen to it, instead. And ever since, listening has become his primary compositional technique—whether creating a theatrical score with The Wooster Group or building a sound installation for a national historic landmark, whether sound designing for a blind choreographer so that she can continually orient toward the audience or improvising with a dance class at Juilliard to coax authentic movement out of each student, whether making music to help people grieve at a funeral or celebrate at a wedding. He lets the ear hear twice before acting once. He has helped found composer collectives across multiple countries in order to promote radical empathy and empower active listening. Some places his work has been presented are Le Grand Palais & Le Centre Pompidou in Paris, The Guggenheim and Lincoln Center in New York, The Disney Concert Hall and Young Projects in Los Angeles, SESC Pompeia in Brazil, and DeSingel Art City in Belgium.


The Amsterdam Eco-Arts Festival is made possible in part with public funds from Creative Engagement, a regrant program supported by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature and administered by Lower Manhattan Cultural Council.
#amsterdameco-artsfestival#fineartmagazine#ecofineartfun

Education Coordinator, Joyce Raimondo THIS WEEK ZOOM-FREE!

Education Coordinator, Joyce Raimondo

THIS WEEK ZOOM-FREE

VIRTUAL ART CAFE

MAKE, SHOW, SELL!

Tuesday, October 18

4-5 pm


Artists of all disciplines are invited to participate in our monthly Zoom Art Café. Each session begins with a presentation exploring practices that foster a creative life.

Don’t hide your creativity! Inspired by Pollock and Krasner, we will explore the many ways artists can create positive visibility and financial prosperity by exhibiting and selling their art. Participants will be encouraged to brainstorm ideas together and set specific goals.


Click link to register on Zoom

https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZItfuiopzIjG9RKnLoyjRZ9QBme80F_zf0q


DRAWING FOR ADULTS AND TEENS

Before Jackson Pollock and Lee Krasner created abstract art, they drew from observation. Joyce Raimondo, Education Coordinator, presents early drawings by Pollock and Krasner, followed by hands-on activities designed to improve skills of observation. .

FACE IT!

Wednesday, October 19

7-8pm

Learn the basic of drawing the human head, face, and facial features. Understand universal proportions that will improve you ability to draw a portrait in one session.


Click link to Register on Zoom

https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZcpdO-hqzgtGdKzmR4N77a123knqXOVxDC4


ANYONE CAN DRAW! 

Thursday, October 20, 4-5pm

Have you ever said, "I can't draw a straight line?" This workshop will show you simple techniques to improve your observational drawing skills. In this relaxed session, we will learn contour drawing skills guaranteed to improve your drawing in one hour! 

Supplies; mirror, three sheets of paper, pencil, sharpener, eraser. 


Offered by Cutchogue New Suffolk Library


register on library website






Image

Dollar Sign, Andy Warhol

Untitled (Girl with Pigtails),1938-39, Colored pencils, graphite pencil with ink on paper , Jackson Pollock



Contact: Joyce Raimondo, Education Coordinator at Pollock-Krasner House and Study Center.

Call 917 502 0790 or email us for more information.

#pollackkrasnerhouse#fineartmagazine#fineartfun