‘Protecting Our Nature and Our Sacred Land at Oak Flat’ at the Peace Table | 01/29

Protecting Our Nature and Our Sacred Land at Oak Flat
A Social Practice Queens Discussion at the Peace Table

Jan 29 2017
3:30pm–5:00pm

You are invited to participate in a pertinent conversation on land, protection and culture, that surround the case of Oak Flat, sacred to San Carlos Apache in Arizona.

Oak Flat Campground is located outside of Superior, Arizona in a part of Tonto National Forest and has been protected since 1955 by President Dwight D. Eisenhower. This area of land is sacred to the San Carlos Apache, and contains more than 2,400 acres of land, wildlife, petroglyphs, sacred spaces, water resources, and lying beneath the surface, a copper deposit thought to be the largest in the hemisphere. Through a controversial land-swap presented in an unrelated 2015 National Defense Bill by John McCain, this land-swap would allow Resolution Copper (a joint venture by Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton) to develop a block cave mine which as perceived would create a 2-mile wide crater.

Convening at Mierle Laderman Ukeles’ Peace Table, Social Practice Queens invites Mr. Wendlser Nosie Sr. (pictured above), former chairman of the San Carlos Apache Reservation, and Standing Fox, Apache Stronghold member, Bedonkohe Apache photographer and artist to lead a conversation about the current situation at Oak Flat including the repeal of the Defense Bill, the protection of sacred spaces, mining contamination in important riparian habitats, and the importance of environmental stewardship.

We are incredibly honored to have this conversation in Queens to support the San Carlos Apache tribe’s vision in “creating environments that ensure the greatest opportunity to succeed, and to become self-sufficient for Indigenous and all communities.”

This conversation will be accompanied by photography and video by Standing Fox, and current SPQ MFA candidates Floor Grootenhuis, and Erin Turner.

The event has been generously supported by Queens College CUNY, Queens Museum and the Shelley & Donald Rubin Foundation.

Further Resources:

Apache Stronghold Website

Petition to save Oak Flat

 

A Curator Talks Social Practice at Queens College

Located about an hour outside of the usual New York City art hubs, Queens College has long been renowned for its studio-based Social Practice MFA program with current and former professors including artist Chloë Bass, Vito Acconci, Maureen Connor, and Judith Bernstein.

After having been given the opportunity to curate an all-female show in the student gallery, I was stunned by the variety of available media at the facility, including a woodshop and a bronze-casting studio. Material Archive (April 2016) aims to present the viewer with diversity in materiality while also offering an investigation of the notion of the artwork as a vessel of personal, historical and cultural memory.

Read more on ArtReport.

Queens Residents Remind Trump Where He Comes From

Sunday November 20th, an oversized mailbox was installed in Jackson Heights’ Diversity Plaza, an invitation to Queens residents to send postcards to President-elect Donald Trump. The action, called Letters from Homewas organized by the Center for Artistic Activism as the culmination of its Arts Action Academy at the Queens Museum with SPQ alumni Sol Aramendi and current MFA Alix Camacho.

“We realized something about Queens, that it’s one of the most ethnically diverse places on Earth and it’s the [childhood] home of Donald Trump,” Stephen Duncombe, co-director of the Center for Artistic Activism, told Hyperallergic. “Here’s this person who’s talking about making America ‘great again,’ but of course the America that he came from is one of the most diverse places on Earth.”

Watch the video here!

Read the full article on Hyperallergic!

Launch event of the Jornaler@ App

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SPQ alumni Sol Aramendi invites you to the launch event of the Jornaler@ App this coming Monday. This long term project was possible by the collaboration of many people, organizations and agencies. Will be great to have you there.
Now, with the new administration fast approaching, workers across the country are wondering how they can defend themselves against the regressive labor policies to come. For jornaleros, attempts to devalue their labor have been constant. Every day they face the threat of going without pay, being paid less than the minimum wage, or being subjected to workplace dangers outside of their control. Fighting back has never been optional.

That’s why over two years ago day labor centers in New York started creating a new tool in the struggle to end worker exploitation.

We are launching Jornaler@ App with a press conference on Monday, November 21, from 11:00 am -12:00 PM.

Launch of Jornaler@ App
Press Conference
11:00am – 12:00am
69th Street and 37th Ave in Queens, NY

(3 blocks from the 69 street stop of the 7 train and 4 blocks from 74 Roosevelt E, R, M, F, 7)

Hosted by New Immigrant Community Empowerment (NICE), there will be a light breakfast, a brief walkthrough of Jornaler@ given by day laborers from NICE with artist Sol Aramendi that were closely involved with the design process, remarks by the Executive Director of NICE Manuel Castro, by Director of the National Day Laborer Organizing Network (NDLON) Pablo Alvarado, President Kenneth Rigmaiden of the Painters Union, President Richard Trumka of the AFL-CIO and other invited guests.

Public Art at Queens College

Check out the new web archive of Queens College public art collection, past and present—including figures like Vito Acconci as well as students and alumni of the university.

https://qcpublicart.wordpress.com/
Designed by Jocy Meneses, Queens College Graphic Design Student
as part of Sculpture Professor Tyronne Mitchell’s course in Public Art

‘Dining with Vultures’ On View Until May 28th

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2016 Queens College MFA exhibition:
Dining with Vultures
May 15–28, 2016
Gallery open Thu – Sun 12 – 6pm

OPENING: Friday, May 20, 6–9pm

Sideshow Gallery
319 Bedford Ave
Brooklyn, New York

qcmfa.com
socialpracticequeens.org
www.qc.cuny.edu

Curated by Sarah Fritchey

Queens College MFA in Studio Art, City University of New York (CUNY), is pleased to announce Dining with Vultures, an ecologically-minded exhibition that contemplates art school as an ecosystem of scavenged thinking, gregarious collaboration, intergenerational slaughter and material transformation. The show features recent work of 21 emerging artists from nine countries, currently enrolled in the MFA and Social Practice Queens programs.

This exhibition is fascinated with the eating habits of urban vultures who remove death and decay from city spaces as they feast. The show highlights five behaviors characteristic of the vulture that the exhibiting artists share, including an ever-present resourcefulness, an ability to transform death into new forms, an openness to working collaboratively, a propensity to look long and work slow, and an attraction to consuming marginalized material.

In addition to works created during their time at Queens College, the artists will present new works produced specifically for the show that scavenge material from the cutting blocks, trash bins, laptops, and floors of each other’s studios. This assignment was conceived by Curator Sarah Fritchey, who will present the results as a Food Web that charts lines of production, consumption, and material concern.

Featured artists: Ghazaleh Abbasnazari, Tabitha St Cyr, Scott Braun, Nancy Bruno, Alejandro Salgado Cendales, Alix Camacho, Amy Cheng, Arber Dabaj, Eliesha Grant, Floor Grootenhuis & Setare S. Arashloo, Effisleeps, Zaid Islam, Jeff Kasper, Maria K. Karlberg-Levin, Alan Lien, Jenna Makuh, Raina Marie Panagiotopoulos, Gina Minielli, Nicole Mouriño, Uno Nam, and Erin Turner

*Image above: Alan Lien (MFA Sculpture ’16), older than Caligula but not quite there, 2016. Found hardware, cement, aluminum pipe, aluminum chain, artificial grapes, dimensions variable. Photo: Gina Minielli. Courtesy of the artist.

Workers Art Coalition travels to Lima Peru for Worker Education Conference

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SPQ Alumni Barrie Cline (’14) and the Workers Art Coalition (WAC) traveled to the International Federation of Workers’ Education Associations 22nd General Conference: Solidarity or Precarity? The Role of Workers Education in building the 21st Century global labor movement.

They recieved a grant the Van Arsdale Center and presentated on WAC projects to date proposing collaboration workers public art project in concert with the International Labor Organizations centennial in 2019.  Plumbers built a preliminary pvc structure which Jaime Lopez customized and lit up for the purposes of framing a street theatre project that Namrata Bali of the Self Employed Women’s Association in India, collaboratively created with conference participants from all over the world. Stay tuned for updates on future collaborations.

more about Workers Art Coalition.

Sol Aramendi (’14) is Collaborating with Day Laborers to Create a Wage Theft App!

Sol Aramendi, 2015 A Blade of Grass Fellow, and SPQ alumni, is developing a “Wage Theft app” as a result of a joint effort between artists, day laborers, community organizers and lawyers.

The Spanish-language platform for Android and iPhones came to be after five sessions in which day laborers gave ideas for a digital resource that would accommodate their needs. The app, which will cost $10,000 to design, will be developed by Cornell University and should be out in September.

Read more here.

SPQ Alum José Serrano-McClain Teaching Social Practice at Moore College & NYU

José Serrano-McClain (SPQ ’15) is now an Adjunct Professor at the New York University, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development in the Department of Art and Art Professions teaching a course titled ‘Contemporary Art and Community Partnerships’, one of 3 core courses for the new MA in Art, Education, and Community Practice. In addition Serrano-McClain is teaching in the new MFA in Community Practice at Moore College of Art & Design in Philadelphia.

Learn more about the artist and community organizer here.

Welcome Tanex López!

This November, SPQ welcomes visiting student Tanex López! López is a visual artist and founding member of “La Agencia”: a civil association interested in the connection between contemporary art, education and social practice. He is currently studying a Master Program at Universidad Autónoma de Aguascalientes, Mexico. His ongoing research examines art educators’ belief system in order to understand the pedagogical practices of art teaching both local and globally.

Tanex’s work with “La Agencia” includes pedagogical interventions such as workshops of contemporary art or deschooling courses for high school students. In 2012, he received a State award for a project called Historia reciente del Arte en Aguascalientes. The work consisted in the creation of an archive containing information about the recent history of the visual arts in the city.

Check out his work here:

http://agenciaorg.blogspot.mx/p/portafilio.html

http://archivocolectivo.blogspot.mx/

SPQ’s Greg Sholette at 2015 Creative Time Summit: “The Curriculum NYC”

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2015 Creative Time Summit: “The Curriculum NYC”

November 14–15, 2015 | Register here

Boys and Girls High School
1700 Fulton Street
Brooklyn, NY 11213
After two years, the Creative Time Summit—the world’s largest international conference on art and social change—is headed home to New York City! Creative Time Summit: “The Curriculum NYC” will take place at the Boys and Girls High School in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn on November 14 and 15, 2015.

Building on the Summit held at the Venice Biennale in August, the New York Summit is dedicated to education and other ways knowledge is disseminated and obtained. “The Curriculum NYC” will focus on the effects of specific education policies in the United States. From within Boys and Girls High School, which has come to symbolize both the democratic ambitions and the pervasive inequalities of public education today, we will explore the relationship between knowledge and geopolitics, pedagogical art practices, omissions in contemporary curricula, and political issues such as the re-segregation of public schools and student debt.

In addition to hosting presentations by a distinguished roster of over 50 participants, the Creative Time Summit: “The Curriculum NYC” invites attendees to join in our afternoon sessions, which will comprise break-out sessions held in the school’s classrooms. Taking the form of roundtables, open dialogs, or workshops, they will provide opportunities for more intimate exchanges among attendees, special guests, Summit presenters, and students or teachers from Boys and Girls High School. While diving deeper into urgent pedagogical issues, sessions will also address topics specific to the field of socially engaged art.

Keynote addresses will be given by investigative journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones and artist/community activist Boots Riley. Participants include Bill Ayers, Luis Camnitzer, Hope Ginsburg, Gugulective (Athi Mongezeleli Joja), Hans Haacke, Tia Powell Harris, Kemi Ilesanmi, Rolling Jubilee (Laura Hanna and Astra Taylor), Stanley Kinard, Pedro Lasch, Simone Leigh, MFA NO MFA (ex-USC students), Naeem Mohaiemen, Pepón Osorio, Jolene Rickard, Andrew Ross, and Jennifer Scott.

Workshops, roundtables and panels to be led by the Center for Artistic Activism, Flux Factory, Deborah Fisher, Noah Fischer, Not an Alternative, Silvia Juliana Mantilla Ortiz, Douglas Paulson, Laundromat Project, Marinella Senatore, Visible Project, Gregory Sholette, Daniel Tucker, Caroline Woolard and Sue Bell Yank. In addition, there will be a featured special project by Chto Delat.

Get your tickets for “The Curriculum NYC” today! Pay-what-you-wish tickets available here.
Special opening event by The Visible Project
On the High Line at West 16th Street
Friday, November 13, 6pm

Creative Time Summit: The Curriculum NYC kicks off with an opening event co-presented with High Line Art. Curated by Matteo Lucchetti and Judith Wielander of the Visible Project, the event will include site-specific performances by Marinella Senatore, Nástio Mosquito, and others to be announced. Performances are free and open to the public.

Call for proposals
Are you an artist, activist or cultural producer living and/or working in the neighborhoods of Bed-Stuy or Crown Heights? Interested in organizing and leading a roundtable discussion focused on important issues in your community? Click here for more information on how to get involved.

 

For more information and summit updates, visit us at creativetime.org/summit.

 

Gulf Labor, Precarious Workers Rights, and SPQ at The CUNY Graduate Center

Gulf Labor, Precarious Workers Rights, and SPQ at The CUNY Graduate Center
Join SPQ and QCMFA’s own Gregory Sholette, Setare Arashloo, and Barrie Cline (’14) for a conversation on Nov 19, 2015, 6:30 pm at the Skylight Room 9100, CUNY Graduate Center,365 Fifth Avenue, New York.
Precarious Workers Pageant, Venice Italy 8/7/2015

What does Bertolt Brecht have to do with workers’ rights in Abu Dhabi? Although politically engaged art and theater takes many forms, the recent Precarious Workers Pageant at the Venice Biennale took a Brechtian approach as it pointed out the solidification of global capital in architecture in Abu Dhabi and the precarious state of migrant workers who are building these future cultural sites. The pageant’s street performance offered a new public commons fabricated out of the deconstructed architecture of the avant-garde museum. Join artists, scholars, and activists in conversation for an evening of discussion, debate, and for an evening of discussion, debate, and propositions as part of the Social Choreography seminar at the Center for the Humanities and in tandem with the exhibition by Zoe Beloff at the James Gallery, “A World Redrawn: Eisenstein and Brecht in Hollywood.” Following the Precarious Workers Pageant video premier will be another New York premier: a presentation of The Gulf: High Culture/Hard Labor, edited by A. Ross and published by OR Books, with contributions by Sholette and other members of Gulf Labor.

Read more about the Precarious Workers Pageant on a-n Artists Information Company, Hyperallergic, tumblr, and Gregory Sholette’s blog.

The event is co-sponsored by the Social Choreography Mellon Seminar in Public Engagement and Collaborative Research in the Humanities, Center for Place, Culture and Politics, and Committee on Globalization and Social Change.

 

– See more at: http://www.centerforthehumanities.org/program/gulf-labor-and-precarious-workers-rights#sthash.IkYj7MPT.dpuf

Precarious Workers Pageant & Gulf Labor

Deconstructing Frank Gehry’s Guggenheim Abu Dhabi

The Gulf Labor Pageant & Procession: Aug. 7, Venice, Italy @ Sale Docs

Join members of Workers Art Coalition, Aaron Burr Society, Occupy Museums, Social Practice Queens, Sale Docs, G.U.L.F. and Gulf Labor Coalition in a collective performative experiment deconstructing Frank Gerhry’s proposed Guggenheim Museum on Saadiyat Island, Abu Dhabi, UAE. Right now we are fabricating portable, modular elements based on Gehry’s design and rehearsing a public procession whose tones will be partially somber and partially celebratory.

The Gulf Labor Pageant and Procession starts off at Sale Docs on the South side of the Dorsaduro August 7th at 6PM after which we will wind our way out and around the nearby Peggy Guggenheim Museum where various stations, enactments, testimonials, and performances will focus on the struggle for social justice amongst migrant workers in the Gulf region, as well as labor conditions and the plight of migrant workers in Europe and the USA.

Following the procession stay for a book launch for The Gulf: High Culture/Hard Labor edited by Andrew Ross from OR Books. PLUS a party! (More details to follow soon, and note: a second performance is slated for this Fall in New York City, plus a panel at the CUNY Grad Center.) JOIN US! *

* This project is possible thanks to the generous support and labor of its participants, as well as the Mellon Seminar in Collaborative Research and Public Engagement in the Humanities at the Graduate Center, CUNY

Read more

Precarious Workers Pageant in Venice!

Precarious Workers Pageant in Venice

The Precarious Workers Pageant- a collaborative project with members of Workers Art Coalition, the Aaron Burr Society, Occupy Museums, G.U.L.F., and Social Practice Queens (CUNY) staged an pageant-intervention at the Venice Biennale this summer.

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(re-blogged from: http://gregsholette.tumblr.com)

Zigzagging across the fever-hot streets of Venice a line of men and women advance. As they march a series of “liberated” geometric shapes and hand-made banners are worn or carried aloft overhead. A man in a blue cape blows a baritone trumpet. Everyone shouts, chants and sings about solidarity with migrant laborers in the Gulf State of Abu Dhabi. In fact, solidarity with precarious labor everywhere is called for. (photos by Setare Arashloo)

The group reveals dual influences. First, the Russian Futurist avant-garde of the early 20th Century, and second, the 1913 Paterson Silk Strike and Pageant, in New Jersey. After weeks of rehearsals this band of NYC based construction workers, students and artists traveled to Italy, marched past the Peggy Guggenheim Collection in the Dorsoduro on August 7th, and then come to a stop at the nearby Gallerie dell’Accademia plaza. At which point the deconstructed architectural elements of Frank Gehry’s new Guggenheim Abu Dhabi they carried with them were reassembled into a circular barricade. And there, inside this temporary public “commons,” a series of speeches, songs, poems and “mike checks” captured the attention of surprised tourists and residents.

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As it turns out Guggenheim administrators were also caught off guard. The museum’s displeasure with the Pageant was compounded by other critiques made during the Venice Biennial that were similarly focused on the Guggenheim’s Abu Dhabi project. Bitterly their ire was conveyed  to members of Gulf Labor Coalition, and among other (now familiar) counter-accusations was the assertion that the museum has not exploited any workers in Abu Dhabi because no contract for building the Guggenheim there has been awarded. No exploited workers, no evil empire.

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The counterargument is of course a dodge. Not only has the Guggenheim dotted its own colossal boardroom office map with the anticipated Abu Dhabi location, but they also prominently herald the coming new museum on their custom shopping bags. However, if you are of the opinion that the conspicuous rolling-out of one’s imminent plan of action does not truly constitute a line that has already been crossed; then consider the future museum site itself. The Guggenheim Abu Dhabi is literally being constructed on desert sands. Unlike an urban setting where builders can rely on a pre-established support grid for power and water and so forth, everything on Saadiyat Island must be built from the bottom up. That includes roads for trucks to travel on and water lines and power cables for contractors to use. So take a close look at the areal images of the site where  the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi is to be raised. Not only do we see roads, ramps and concrete supports already in place, but also the entire museum footprint is a man-made peninsula jutting into the water. Needless to say, the infrastructure for the future Guggenheim Abu Dhabi did not arise spontaneously. Instead, it required labor by migrant workers whose conditions of exploitation are well documented. (In fact, Gulf Labor has already commented on this all too obvious evasion: CLICK )

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Still, one thing especially vexed the museum. A man with a black porkpie hat, blowing a large bass horn, and wearing a hand-lettered cloak that read: Guggenheim Abu Dhabi Evil-Empire of Art. The egregious phrase was hand-lettered onto a rectangle of canvas and hung like a thespian’s cape off the shoulders of performance artist Jim Costanzo, founder of the Aaron Burr Society. The paint-stiffened cloak declaimed its scalding indictment on a breezeless torrid day -although in Abu Dhabi the heat reached 41c, another five to six degrees hotter still than Venice- and it did not go unnoticed.

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Along with the Precarious Workers Pageant, Costanzo’s theatrics belong to a long tradition of political satire whose practitioners include Honoré Daumier, Bertolt Brecht, Kurt Weil, Hanns Eisler, Lotte Leyna, Dario Fo, the San Francisco Mime Troupe, Carnival Knowledge (the 1980s feminist group), Reverend Billy and the Church of Stop Shopping, Occupy Museums and Pussy Riot. Against the extensive communicational power of mainstream media and established cultural institutions a certain DIY vernacular aesthetic has often been the preferred artistic weapon of the weak, the marginal, and the precarious.

Costanzo’s videos, performances and agitprop projects have often channeled this bottom-up energy, sometimes projecting into the public sphere a state of anger so raw it makes one flinch as in his 2003 piece “The Scream: 21st Century Edition.” Created in the lead-up to the illegal invasion of Iraq and made all the more unfathomable by the unprecedented global demonstrations against such aggression by the United States you can see his video here: CLICK

Years later, he founded  the “Aaron Burr Society,” a “mockstitution” whose nom de guerre honors the former US Vice President who railed against the establishment of a centralized banking system. This time Costanzo donned an archaic looking cape and topcoat, trained it down to Wall Street carrying a large, almost obscene sounding baritone trumpet with him (an instrument that he is still struggling to play “properly”) all in an effort to register his personal outrage over the 2008 financial meltdown and the subsequent welfare bailout for the world’s top bankers. CLICK

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And so, through the steamy streets of Venice Costanzo blew his horn, clearing the way for members of Workers Art Coalition including Barrie Cline, Stephanie Lawal, Eliza Gagnon, Marquis Jenkins, Mirana Zuger and fellow participants from Gulf Labor, G.U.L.F., S.a.L.E. Docs and Social Practice Queens, as the Precarious Workers ostentatious and communal act of institutional critique called upon the planners of the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi to reconsider branding a regime whose abuse of migrant labor is as egregious as it is flagrant. Costanzo’s accusatory cloak was rhetorically embellished, for a reason. Against the extensive reach of mainstream cultural, political and media institutions the surplus army of precarious artists gleefully turns to the carnivalesque, spitting out an often vulgar aesthetics of the street, the circus, or fiesta in order to have their voices heard above the patronizing tones of proper cultural decorousness. Such ribald insurgency has its own dark strengths, even in an age of top-down, empire culture.

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‘Sacred Space – Triangle’ debuts as part of Queens Museum exhibition

 

Here are a few images of the collaborative work of SPQ students and alumns Seth Aylmer, Gina Minielli, and Scott Braun, from the March 21, 2015 opening reception for the Queens Museum’s studio program.

The trio have collaborated to create a non-denominational, communally-occupied sacred space in the “triangle area” of the Queens Museum. With Aylmer a video artist, painter, and sculptor; Braun a sculptural furniture-maker; and Minielli an established photographer, each participant has a separate practice which contributes to the larger work.

The Sacred Spaces design/build crew consists of Jeff Gagnon, Ben Berton, Larry Healy, Alejandro Velazquez, and Claudio Stalling.

Photos: Steven P.Harris 2015
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SPQ MFA THESIS SHOW: MONEY TIME by Seth Aylmer

Money Time

The thesis exhibition commenced with a dinner party for the MFA class in the gallery. Then there was some time to discuss the work (topics included money symbology, community forms, the nature of social practice, etc.) Photographs by Steven Harris.

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OPENING: PROJECT LUZ: the classroom, Art for all.

 

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PROJECT LUZ: the classroom, Art for all.

by Sol Aramendi

 

October 7th – 18th 10am-7pm

 

Opening; October 15th 5-8 pm

Klapper Hall Gallery, Queen College

(see directions below)

 

Sol Aramendi presents for her MFA Social Practice Thesis show, Project Luz: The Classroom Art for All. A series of classes and workshops for the College’s members of the cleaning and custodian teams. All classes are free and open for the whole duration of the exhibition and have been designed to fit Queens College’s staff members’ schedules, their breaks, and changing shifts.

Ms. Aramendi will lead photography classes for all levels and her fellow MFA classmates will teach Studio Art to collaborate with the project during the show. The exhibition consists of a series of spaces that present the processes, actions, together with their results, at the free temporary art school for the custodians of the College. Also on display is an installation including a selection of Ms. Aramendi’s recent works developed outside (but intrinsic to) Project Luz.

Project Luz started at the artist’s studio as a response to the need for change in her most immediate community. As Ms. Aramendi realized the lack of opportunities that both immigrant men and women (and even their families) had to access culture and the urban system, she organized workshops and classes for them. These events took place mostly in the evenings and weekends. Project Luz then started offering these classes at several cultural institutions, hospitals, and public libraries, among other places.

Ms. Aramendi is in constant search for opportunities to create an open space in which to discuss the role of the artist not only as an educator but also as a catalyst for social cooperation and change for the disempowered. The key is how artists and educators can provide anyone and everyone with access to information, culture and training in different disciplines, and make a difference. Based in Long Island City, Queens, Ms. Aramendi is the first Masters graduate of Fine Arts in Social Practice exclusively developed as a collaboration between the Queens Museum and Queens College.

Special Events:

Decolonization at Birth

Fridays, October 11 and 18 : In collaboration with Yaocihuatzin, who holds a PhD in Education focused in the opportunity of freedom and independency from the moment of birth. Both Fridays will include a session of free portraits for pregnant and breastfeeding women and women circles talking about education.

Students and teachers are invited to participate in every way and be part of or hold classes in the gallery and make collaborative projects.

 

Worker Memorial Day Publication – Barrie Cline and Sol Aramendi

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SPQ graduate students Barrie Cline and Sol Aramendi, founder of Project Luz, and their collaborators, are observing Workers Memorial Day this coming Sunday by launching a publication at Corona Plaza as part of a larger community health fair coordinated by the Queens Museum.  

The publication was the result of a series of dialogues that brought together union construction workers (enrolled in the Harry Van Arsdale Center for Labor Studies at SUNY) and day laborers (who are members of Corona-based immigrant advocacy organization New Immigrant Community Empowerment-NICE). In these encounters members from both groups shared with each other their feelings about safety and the conditions of their labor. The publication reflects the images and texts of what they hope is the beginning of a conversation towards safer conditions for all workers as well as different ways to look at their labor.

This project was initiated in association with The Harry Van Arsdale Jr. Center for Labor Studies, New Immigrant Community Empowerment, and assistance from the Social Practice Queens (SPQ) component of  Queens College and The Queens Museum of Art.

This project is funded in part by the Student Activity Fee of the State University of New York and the Spirit of Boz, founded by Julien Friedler, Belgium.

Shared Spaces: CUNY Queens College MFA Exhibition 2013

Shared Spaces

CUNY Queens College

MFA Exhibition 2013

Opening Saturday March 23, 6–9pm

March 23 – April 3, 2012

Hours: Tue – Sat, 11:30am – 6pm, or by appointment

 

 

Pablo Alvarez

Sol Aramendi

Seth Aylmer

Barrie Cline

Annemarie Coffey

Chris Esposito

Christie Farriella

Kristie Hirten

Marthe Keller

Henry Kielmanowicz

Thea Lanzisero

Lauren Nickou

Liz Pasqualo

Jose Serrano-McClain

Amanda Shea

Kara Szemelynec

Joanna Sztencel

 

Curated by Liz Park

 

Exhibition catalogue available for free at the gallery

 

ONE ART SPACE, TRIBECA

23 Warren Street – Street Level

TriBeCa New York, NY 10007

646.559.0535

www.oneartspace.com

Panel: Art and Labor

Barrie Cline, SPQ MFA student, organized this panel discussion on a topic that has recently captured the attention of the artists and art institutions: Art and Labor.

When: 7-8:30pm Thursday, January 31

Where: No Longer Empty /  Long Island City Clocktower

29-27 41st Avenue, Queens

Subway:  Queens Plaza M, E, and R.  Queensboro Plaza N, Q, and 7

Website / Facebook  

The question “How Much Do I Owe You?” implies an equal exchange of money for services or labor.  In an unsteady job market and an economy that arguably favors a small percentage of workers, this common question takes on new weight and needs re-evaluation.

Panelists Mike Merrill, Valeria Treves and Barrie Cline discuss how art, public action, and other community initiatives can play a role in advocating for workers rights, and in shaping more fair systems of compensation and exchange. Former community organizer at the Queens Museum, Alexandra García, will moderate.

Panelists:

Mike Merrill, the Dean from The Harry Van Arsdale Jr. Center for Labor Studies will speak about the effects of the neoliberal economy on workers and what he feels is necessary in rebuilding a strong labor movement, including the role art might play.

Valeria Treves from New Immigrant Community Empowerment in Queens will present the struggles of the immigrant workers she represents and her organizations efforts to achieve fair labor practices for them. Among their initiatives, NICE is using the medium of  the graphic novel, full scale theater production and shorter educational theater pieces produced out in the community to aid in organizing and to encourage dialogue.

Barrie Cline shall give an overview of the social justice themed public arts class she teaches to union electricians and plumbers and present student work that seeks to recreate the images of their labor and themselves and further build on the mutualism among workers—both within and outside their respective unions. Cline will introduce the multifaceted work of the OWS Arts and Labor group in their critical attention and action concerning artistic production and labor-and the structures and institutions that frame it.

Alexandra García will moderate the panel. García is an organizer and cultural programmer with experience in community development and coalition building focusing on social justice and cultural empowerment. She’s currently the programs coordinator at Corona Plaza with the Queens Museum of Art. She also worked as a community organizer at the Queens Museum of Art with the public programs department and the Heart of Corona coalition that creates programs for the betterment of the neighborhood.

 

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Corona Plaza: Diagram and Research Action

Over the weekend of January 12 and 13, DSGN AGNC (led by Quillian Riano) took to Corona Plaza to carry out their ‘Diagram and Research Action’, which looks to identify issues and hidden urban conflicts affecting the community of Corona, and by extension, Corona Plaza.

Here are some lovely photos by Quillian of the action at Corona Plaza:

As the DSGN AGNC site puts it:

“Each of the signs has:

  • A specific issue that acts as a boundary, keeping Corona Plaza from being used fully by the community;
  • A diagram that looks at how permeable that boundary is;
  • A description of the boundary, the agents that may help change the boundary, and a key question for each boundary;
  • Finally, each sign has a translucent architectural diagram that looks at the boundary’s affect in the spatial experience of the plaza.

All the boundaries and questions arise from research conducted in Corona. The questions are meant to give us a deeper understanding of the community. Some of the questions, like number 3, are polemical in nature and meant only to challenge assumptions some make about the neighborhood of Corona — i.e. this New York Times article: Roosevelt Avenue, a Corridor of Vice. Our goal is to advocate for and design an open plaza that caters to the entire community.”

 Here is the link to the rest of the post.

Making A New Model of Corona Plaza

Over the last few weeks, students have been developing an interactive model of Corona Plaza alongside Aurash and Quillian that we will be using to engage the community in workshops at Immigrant Movement International, and at the plaza itself.

Bronze Foundry at Queens College Gets Re-ignited

Last week we had a visit from the head of the Bedi-Makky Art Foundry in Brooklyn, to give us a consultation on the dormant kiln at Queens College.   The Bedi-Makky Art Foundry is famous for making the Charging Bull on Wall Street and the Iwo Jima memorial in DC.  They are heavyweights who know a thing or two about casting in bronze.

Seth Aylmer, SPQ MFA student, organized the visit by visiting the foundry several times and pleading with the Mr. Makky to come and help us re-ignite this amazing tool at QC .  Seth is a sculptor who is interested in re-integrating the notion of the hard object and the into this work we call ‘social practice’.  He has been working on an idea for a temporary bronze sculpture for Corona Plaza.

Here is a video of the re-ignition:

And here is some of the bronze work that this man has made that you might recognize:

                     

Aurash and Quillian Make Summer Plans with SPQ Students