Full Spectrum and Dance Theater Workshop present
A Panel Discussion with Six Stakeholders on the Front Lines of Fighting for the Arts
6:30 film screening of The Port Huron Project
7:00 panel discussion
8:00 audience Q&A
9:00 mingle
219
1/9 to
Full Spectrum and Dance Theater Workshop present
A Panel Discussion with Six Stakeholders on the Front Lines of Fighting for the Arts
6:30 film screening of The Port Huron Project
7:00 panel discussion
8:00 audience Q&A
9:00 mingle
219
1/9 to
Movement Research Fall Festival 2008: Sidewinder
December 1- December 13, 2008
We want to thank everyone for their outpouring of love and support. We’re so fortunate to have a loving and powerful community around us and we apologize for not being able to respond to everyone.
We will get back to folks individually in addition to this e-mail, but one of the saving graces of this technology it allows us to say the same thing in one fell swoop, especially when each time we talk about "what happened" it brings back a lot of our pain and loss.
We’re thankful for the many offers we’ve had to stay in spare rooms, crash on couches, stay at guest homes and other accommodations. There were so many that they would support a "Charles and Arthur" gypsy tour for the next year, at least.
From Cassandra offering her place to us while she crashes with a friend, to the youth of the Bronx Pride Center organizing a bake sale, to Eva Yaa Asantewaa posting the info on her blog (http://infinitebody.blogspot.com/2008/10/fire-at-home-of-arthur-aviles.html), to Bill Aguado from the Bronx Council on the Arts's generous offers, to Elizabeth, Jorge and my mom and family offering their cars for us to get around and to the cards with checks or donations that have appeared out of the blue, we are moved to tears with every offer and every act. Arthur and I share the phone messages from our respective cell phones and the e-mails with each other and each voice, each note is received like a much needed hug.
We’re strong guys but this has been very difficult. And we miss Canela immensely.
Here is a general update:
So for now, in response to all your offers for assistance, we are in a ‘holding pattern’ and will have a better idea of what to ask for in the coming week or weeks. But things that may come up are help cleaning our place to sort out what is trash and what is salvageable before the official cleaning company comes in to remove the debris. Then we can assess what we need to have replaced in terms of furniture, beds, coats, etc. Mrs. Ross’s property is covered to a certain extent with her insurance, but we, as her tenants, are not, and unfortunately we didn’t have renter’s insurance. (Which we discovered is not that high, but that’s relative.)
So for now, we will hold your good thoughts, prayers and offerings close to our heart. They have all been very healing. We hope to see you at BAAD! or around soon. And with all the love, support and resources Arthur and I will get through this.
With Love,
Charles and Arthur
Mrs. Ross's apartment was completely destroyed and our place wasn't directly damaged by the fire, but they had to break through walls, and the roof and break out all the windows in every room and trashed the house, there's water damage everything smells of smoke.
So, we have a lot to deal with today and over the next few days including going to the Red Cross. They will help us find a place to live.
We are feeling so many things at the moment and are working hard to think clearly.
We know that people will want to help, and we are not sure how to respond. We are moving very slowly.
The bright light in all this is that Mrs. Ross is fine and strong. And Arthur and I have each other (and the turtles).
And we have beautiful people in our lives.
Once again, itch invites you to contribute your words, images and ideas to our upcoming issue:
itch 9, Before/After: a small book of predictions, outcomes, and paradigm shifts.
Please find the call for submissions below. The deadline is December 1st. As always, feel free to contact us at submit@itchjournal.org if you have any questions.
(vote! vote! vote!)
yours truly,
team itch
Taisha Paggett, Sara Wolf, Meg Wolfe
CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS: itch 9
Before/After: a small book of predictions, outcomes, and paradigm shifts
Poised on the political razor's edge of the looming election, the soundtrack for change is running—but, for better or for worse? As we sit on the cusp of this, one of the most important—and symbolically loaded—U.S. presidential elections... and begin drafting yet another list of resolutions as yet another new year approaches... and witness a baby boom big enough to transform the demographics of our local dance population, we can't help but consider those moments in ours lives in which we hover on Big Decisions that, once made, have the capacity to radically change the compasses we use to locate ourselves—for better or for worse. This, in turn, reminds us of making art: the initial brilliance of an idea, the dread we encounter when we can't figure out what the hell we were thinking, artist's blocks, unforeseen circumstances, production nightmares, getting out of our own way... and what happens when the work is finished, when we are left with the reality of what we created / exposed / elected / capsized / deconstructed / demolished / uprooted?
We the people of this After Christ/After Common era, post-9/11, post-tsunami, post-Katrina, pre-apocalypse (you think?) live on a timeline of events. itch 9 is on everything having to do with Befores and Afters. For this issue, we're interested in hearing about those events, decisions, and moments in life and art-making that have constructed (or will construct) a 'before' and 'after' in your sense of how you live, move through, and have a voice in your world.
We encourage submissions in a range of forms and tones: narrative, poetical, ruminative, theoretical, and visual; pre- and post- charts, scores, and project photographs—on such possible tangents as: mental/emotional renewal; create your own adventure stories; "the transition"; presidential elections; private or public/natural (or not) disasters; unforeseen acts of god(desses) or foreseeable consequences; the fashionable and the not; flights of fancy vs. Important Work; break-ups, break-throughs, breakfasts, and break-outs; tectonic shifts in your artistic/political/social/spiritual/conceptual practice; "giving birth" to… ; resolutions, predictions, hopes and wishes; temporality: past, present, and future; and (make your own) timelines.
And, since we're looking ahead, humor us: send us your IN/OUT, HOT/NOT lists.
*For our rolling dialogue section, please submit your responses to issue 8: Pornocracy*
(As we ruminate on these ideas, here is a toast to the now, the unknown, and the unknowable...)
D E A D L I N E: DECEMBER 1, 2008
send submissions, questions, and provocations as attached, uncompressed word files to
submit@itchjournal.org
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itch is an evolving art project in the form of a journal that aspires to serve the community of dancers and other artists of the Los Angeles area and beyond. Practice participation in the developing LA dance culture: insert your thoughts, your body, your voice. help itch grow should you be enhanced by it...
Jacob's Pillow Dance has just announced a new technology initiative, funded by the Nonprofit Finance Fund and the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, which will benefit ten arts organizations:
Jacob’s Pillow Dance has been chosen to take part in Leading for the Future: Innovative Support for Artistic Excellence, a groundbreaking $15.125 million arts initiative created by the Nonprofit Finance Fund (NFF) and funded by the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation. Jacob’s
About Jacob’s Pillow
Founded by dance legend Ted Shawn in 1933, Jacob’s Pillow celebrated its 75th Anniversary Season in 2007. The Pillow is home to a world-renowned international dance Festival that presents dance annually on three performance stages for nearly three months. The Pillow also supports artists to create new work through commissions and Creative Development Residencies. The School at Jacob’s Pillow encompasses a professional training program in the disciplines of Ballet, Cultural Traditions, Contemporary Traditions, Jazz/Musical Theatre Dance, and a Choreographers Lab, as well as an Intern Program that trains young professionals in all areas of production and arts administration. Alumni of The School have gone on to perform with prestigious dance companies such as Merce Cunningham Dance Company, New York City Ballet, in film, television and on Broadway, and former interns have been employed at arts organizations including Mark Morris Dance Group, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre, and The British Council. The Pillow’s rare and extensive Archives, open year-round to the public free of charge, chronicles the art form of dance in film, video, photographs, oral histories, correspondence, books, costumes, posters, audiotapes, and scrapbooks.
The Pillow’s current 163-acre site was originally a family farm in the late 1700s. In the 1800s, the Pillow was known as a station on the Underground Railroad. In 2007, it was formally dedicated as a site on the Upper Housatonic Valley African American Heritage Trail. For additional in-depth
About Nonprofit Finance Fund
Nonprofit Finance Fund (NFF) is a national leader in nonprofit, philanthropic and social enterprise finance. Founded in 1980, NFF (http://www.nonprofitfinancefund.org ) provides loan financing, access to capital and direct advisory services that build the capacity and the financial health of nonprofits. A leading community development financial institution with over $80 million in assets, NFF has provided over $175 million in loans and access to additional financing via grants, tax credits and capital in support of over $1 billion in projects for thousands of nonprofit clients nationwide. NFF has a staff of more than 75 serving nonprofits nationally from offices in
On Tuesday, October 7, The Ailey Extension, partnering with yoga instructor Porschla Coleman, launches a new weekly Tapas Yoga program. Tapas is a Jivamukti-inspired technique, and its name means fire or burning. All classes will be taught by teachers of color whose training has been sponsored by Russell Simmons. Coleman’s clients have included Simmons, Jason Kidd, and many other celebrities.
The Ailey Extension features dance and fitness classes--including Lester Horton technique, West African dance, ballet, hip hop, jazz dance and more. These classes are open to the general public for beginners and students of all levels of movement experience.
Porschla Coleman is a certified Jivamukti yoga teacher, philanthropist and model who received her yoga teaching certification at the world renowned Omega Institute. She chose to get her certification in Jivamukti yoga because it is considered the most respected practice in the world. She attended an intense 30-day immersion in yoga philosophy and scripture, the history of yoga, an introduction to Sanskrit, introduction to anatomy, and all aspects of Jivamukti Yoga. Porschla has been mentored by such great yogis as Sharon Gannon, David Life and Gabriela Bozic and believes that yoga is a life attitude, through which one learns to accept responsibility for his or herself and all the actions of one's life. She firmly believes that Yogis can make the world a more beautiful and more sincere place. In addition to her yoga teachings, Porschla sits on the Board of Directors for the Marsha Barber Community Center which is a community center being built in one of the hardest hit areas of Mississippi after Hurricane Katrina. Being from Mississippi, this charity holds a special place in her heart. Porschla is also the newest correspondent for Talk Radio News Service which will soon take her around the world to raise awareness of global humanitarian issues.
Tuesdays, 6:30-7:45pm
Click here for The Ailey Extension.
The Ailey Extension, The Joan Weill Center for Dance, 405 West 55th Street at Ninth Avenue --212-405-9000
Over the past decade there has been a moral panic about inappropriate body size. Anorexia nervosa and obesity have become touchstones for discussions of social and personal failure, of the supremacy of genetics over human choice, of the global expansion of normative ideas of the body—indeed, for virtually all discussions about what has gone wrong in our contemporary world. Meanwhile, artistic representations offer another vision of what it means to inhabit a body. This panel will examine the interlocked questions of the meanings attached today to bodily difference and representation, and the role that these debates play in our psychological and physical well-being.
Marina Abramovic has been a pioneer of performance as a visual art form since beginning her career in Belgrade in the early 1970s. The body has always been both her subject and medium. She has explored her physical and mental limits in works that ritualize the simple actions of everyday life. From 1975–88, Abramovic collaborated with the German artist Ulay, addressing the nature of duality. Since returning to solo performances in 1989, she has presented her work at major institutions in the US and Europe, including the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris and the Neue National Galerie in Berlin. She has also participated in many large-scale international exhibitions, including the Venice Biennale and Documenta VI, VII, and IX in Kassel, Germany. Recent performances include "House with Ocean View" at New York's Sean Kelly Gallery and "7 Easy Pieces" at the Guggenheim Museum. Among her upcoming projects are a retrospective at MoMA and a theatre piece directed by Robert Wilson that will premier in 2011.
Paul Campos is Professor of Law at the University of Colorado and a syndicated columnist for the Scripps Howard News Service. He has written widely about the legal, medical, and social consequences of narrow definitions of what constitutes a "normal body." He is the author of The Obesity Myth. His work on this subject has been featured in Scientific American, The New York Times, The New Republic, The Los Angeles Times, and many other publications.
Sander Gilman (moderator) is a Distinguished Professor of the Liberal Arts and Sciences and Professor of Psychiatry at Emory University, where he is the Director of the Program in Psychoanalysis and the Health Sciences Humanities Initiative. A cultural and literary historian, he is the author or editor of eighty books. His Oxford lectures, Multiculturalism and the Jews, appeared in 2006. His most recent edited volume, Diets and Dieting: A Cultural Encyclopedia, appeared in 2007. He has held professorships in humanities and medicine at Cornell University, the University of Chicago and the University of Illinois at Chicago. He has also served as the Visiting Historical Scholar at the National Library of Medicine in Bethesda; as a fellow at Stanford's Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences; as a Berlin prize fellow at the American Academy in Berlin; and as the Weidenfeld Visiting Professor of European Comparative Literature at Oxford University.
Marcel Kinsbourne is a behavioral neurologist and Professor of Psychology at the New School. Educated at Oxford University, he has held professorships at Duke University and the University of Toronto. His research interests center on problems in neuropsychology and child development. He has published in excess of 400 medical and scientific articles and authored or edited eight books, including The Asymmetrical Function of the Brain, The Unity and the Diversity of the Human Brain, and Consciousness: The Brain's Private Psychological Field.
Julie Atlas Muz, Miss Exotic World and Miss Coney Island 2006, is a choreographer, actor and artist based in New York City. Muz was included in the Whitney Biennial 2004 and has performed her work all over the world. Her alter ego, Mr. Pussy was a main attraction at a show she co-curated with Kembra Pfahler at Dietch Projects, entitled Womanizer. She recently co-created and performed a new erotic version of "Beauty and the Beast" with Mat Fraser, a UK based artist with Thalidomide, at Dadafest in Liverpool.
Sabine Wilhelm is Associate Professor of Psychology at the Harvard Medical School. She is Director of the Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder and Related Disorders Program and Director of the Cognitive-Behavior Therapy Program at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School. Dr. Wilhelm is internationally recognized as a leading researcher on Body Dysmorphic Disorder, a distressing preoccupation with an imagined defect in one’s appearance. She currently is the principal investigator of two studies investigating treatments for the disorder funded by the National Institute of Mental Health. She wrote the book, Feeling Good About the Way You Look: A Program for Overcoming Body Image Problems and has many other publications. Dr. Wilhelm serves on several editorial boards and regularly provides continuing education workshops nationally and internationally.
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