New Exhibit Opens at Art Omi – Tschabalala Self

Art Omi’s latest summer artist’s exhibition, Tschabala Self, is now open. 

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Tschabalala Self, Pieces of Me, 2015
Oil, acrylic on paper
Easton Capital / John Friedman Collection.

Art Omi’s latest summer artist’s exhibition, Tschabala Self, is now open.  Tschabalala Self builds a singular style from the syncretic use of both painting and printmaking to explore ideas about the black female body. The artist constructs exaggerated depictions of female bodies using a combination of sewn, printed, and painted materials, traversing different artistic and craft traditions. The exaggerated biological characteristics of her figures reflect Self’s own experiences and cultural attitudes toward race and gender. “The fantasies and attitudes surrounding the Black female body are both accepted and rejected within my practice, and through this disorientation, new possibilities arise,” Self has said. “I am attempting to provide alternative, and perhaps fictional, explanations for the voyeuristic tendencies towards the gendered and racialized body; a body which is both exalted and abject.”

Tschabalala Self (B.1990 Harlem, USA) lives and works in New York and New Haven. Current and recent exhibitions include: Bodega Run, Hammer Museum, Los Angeles (2019); Tschabalala Self, Frye Art Museum, Seattle (2019); Bodega Run, Yuz Museum, Shanghai (2018); The Beyond: Georgia O’Keeffe and Contemporary Art, Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville (2018); Bodega Run, Pilar Corrias Gallery, London (2017); Trigger: Gender as a Tool and a Weapon, New Museum, New York (2017); Tschabalala Self, Tramway, Glasgow (2017); Tschabalala Self, Parasol Unit Foundation for Contemporary Art, London (2017); Desire, Moore Building, Miami (2016); The Function, T293, Naples (2016); A Constellation, Studio Museum Harlem, Harlem (2015); Tropicana, The Cabin, Los Angeles (2015).

DATE/TIME:
July 27 – September 29, 2019

LOCATION:
Omi International Arts Center – Newmark Gallery
1405 County Route 22
Ghent, NY 12075

MORE:
ArtOmi.org.
FaceBook/Art-Omi
instagram.com/art_omi

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PS21’s Annual West African Dance and Drum Performance, Jul 26

PS21: Performance Spaces for the 21st Century, presents ‘Just for Fun – West African Dance and Drum Performance’, this Friday. 

 

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PS21: Performance Spaces for the 21st Century, presents ‘Just for Fun – West African Dance and Drum Performance’, this Friday.

Choreographer/dancer Jamal Jackson, with members of his company will join the kids from the dance and drum workshop to sweep us up in a high energy display of West African dance and drumming from Mali. This performance is an annual favorite and is not to be missed!

DATES/TIMES:
Friday, July 26, 2019 / 1pm – 2pm

COST:
Free

LOCATION:
PS21: Performance Spaces for the 21st Century
2980 Route 66
Chatham, NY 12037

MORE:
ps21chatham.org
facebook.com/PS21Chatham
instagram.com/ps21chatham

 

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In the Key of C: a Concert for Clermont Featuring Teddy Thompson, Jul 27

Cleremont State Historic Site presents ‘In the Key of C: a Concert for Clermont’, a benefit concert to fund Clermont’s low and zero cost educational and community programs for both children and adults. 

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Cleremont State Historic Site presents ‘In the Key of C: a Concert for Clermont’, a benefit concert to fund Clermont’s low and zero cost educational and community programs for both children and adults.

Renowned singer/songwriter Teddy Thompson will headline this inaugural event. Son of legendary musicians Richard and Linda Thompson, he has been called “one of the most gifted singer-songwriters of his generation,” by The New York Times. His musical influences include Elvis Presley, Chuck Berry, and the Everly Brothers. Teddy has released five albums to critical acclaim and has collaborated on projects with Rufus and Martha Wainwright, Jenni Muldaur, and others. He recorded two solo songs for the soundtrack to the Leonard Cohen tribute I’m Your Man: “Tonight Will be Fine” and “The Future.” Teddy also contributed two songs to the album The Songs of Nick Drake: Way to Blue, a retrospective on the late singer.

This is an outdoor concert; in case of rain, the concert will be held under a tent. This benefit concert will fund Clermont’s low and zero cost educational and community programs for both children and adults, including Harvesting History, History Comics Club, the Harmonies on the Hudson Concert Series, workshops, lectures, and more.

DATE/TIME:
Saturday, July 27, 2019 / 6:30pm

LOCATION:
Clermont State Historic Site
87 Clermont Ave,
Germantown, New York 12526

COST:
Tickets are $10 in advance; $15 at the door. Children 12 and under are free, but tickets need to be reserved. Tickets are available at www.eventbrite.com.

MORE:
www.friendsofclermont.org
facebook.com/friendsofclermont
facebook.com/events/2391438997754190/

 

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New Lebanon’s Summer Music in the Park Series Continues this Sunday, Jul 21

The town of New Lebanon’s third season of the “Music in the Park” series continues this Sunday, July 21.

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The town of New Lebanon’s third season of the “Music in the Park” series continues this Sunday, July 21.  The program consists of free concerts on four Sunday afternoons, with different performers playing a variety of music genres.

The day starts at 1pm with Wintergreen featuring Lawrence & Alice Spatz. 

The 2nd band goes on around 2:15 and will be Melissa Brinton & Fanny Pack.

At 3:30, Lindsay and the Four One Trio will wrap up the day. 

DATE/TIME:
Sunday, July 21, 2019 / 1pm – 4:30pm

ADMISSION:
Free.

LOCATION:
Shatford Park – Weisbuch pavilion
14755 NY 22
New Lebanon, NY 12125

MORE:
townofnewlebanon.com/music-in-the-park
facebook.com/NewLebMusic

 

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‘Basquiat x Warhol’, an Exhibition at Jack Shainman Gallery

Five years since the opening of The School, Jack Shainman Gallery is pleased to present Basquiat x Warhol, an extensive examination of the compelling, albeit complex relationship between two master artists during the final years of their lives.

 

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Five years since the opening of The SchoolJack Shainman Gallery is pleased to present Basquiat x Warhol, an extensive examination of the compelling, albeit complex relationship between two master artists during the final years of their lives.

The crux of this exhibition lies in the collaborative paintings and interconnected practices of Jean-Michel Basquiat and Andy Warhol. The two artists shared collective creative space in New York City, a city rife with possibility. The series of collaboration paintings, executed from 1984 – 85, sparked conversations between the two artists that are visible on each canvas – a visual language all their own that revitalized Warhol’s engagement with painting.

This body of work was harshly criticized, with The New York Times reviewing in 1985, “[T]he collaboration looks like one of Warhol’s manipulations… Basquiat, meanwhile, comes across as the all too willing accessory.”[1] While Basquiat, they claimed, was forced into the role of “art world mascot,” the final verdict was reflected in the exhibition’s promo posters: “Warhol, TKO in 16 rounds.” The poor reception marked the downfall of this pivotal relationship, which dissipated soon after with Warhol’s death in 1987, and Basquiat’s one year after. Thirty years later, Jack Shainman Gallery is proud to present these previously misunderstood works as an in-depth study to mine Basquiat and Warhol’s creative geniuses.

Upon entering the show, one encounters a self-portrait by Warhol paired with a sculpture by Basquiat: a football helmet adorned with the artist’s own hair. A testament to their ongoing relationship, Basquiat loaned Warhol this helmet with the instructions to wear it for twenty-four hours to understand how it felt to be observed as a black man in America. The exhibition goes on to feature major, iconic works by both artists, including Warhol’s The Last Supper (Camel/57) and large-scale oil and acrylic paintings by Basquiat.

In addition, lesser-known works are on view, such as Warhol’s torso line drawings, stitched photographs and polaroids, along with Basquiat’s marker drawings on porcelain plates. One plate in particular exemplifies the artists’ alliance, in which Basquiat portrays Warhol, designating him: “BOY GENIUS” – a descriptor generally reserved for wunderkind Basquiat, himself.

The innately ephemeral and immediate nature of polaroids seems a fitting medium to serve as a starting point for Warhol’s practice. A suite of successive torso polaroids, along with two bodily portraits of Basquiat, seemingly respond to Basquiat’s painted stomachs and skulls. Interestingly, both artists underwent massive surgeries (Basquiat from a childhood accident and Warhol from a 1968 assassination attempt) to remove ruptured spleens – the organ tasked with filtering toxins.

The exhibition is further punctuated with a room projecting three of Warhol’s films and through a continual screening of PBS American Masters’ “Basquiat: Rage to Riches.” This juxtaposition comes to a climax in the main exhibition space, where eight of the artists’ large-scale collaboration paintings are powerfully staged.

info from jackshainman.com

DATE/TIME:
Now through September 7, 2019 on Saturdays / 11am – 6pm

LOCATION:
25 Broad Street
Kinderhook, NY 12106

MORE:
jackshainman.com
facebook.com/jackshainmanNY

 

 

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