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SUMMARY:Bit Depth\, Episode 2 | Songs and Justice
DESCRIPTION:Friday\, November 7\, 2025\nDoor: 6:30 pm | Event start: 7 pm\nTickets below. $15 General / Free for Squeaky Wheel members.\nSqueaky Wheel invites you to the second episode of Bit Depth\, a new critical Squeaky variety show and event series! In Episode 2\, Songs and Justice\, we’ll be focusing on revolutionary figures\, from Buffalo and beyond\, whose impact has been felt in our community and across the world. The event will feature a screening of Frame-up! The Imprisonment of Martin Sostre (1974); a conversation with Geraldine Robinson\, James Coughlin\, and Brandon Schlia from the Justice for Geraldine and Martin Campaign; and a screening of John Akomfrah’s Seven Songs for Malcolm X (1995)\, introduced by Donte McFadden. All of this will be accompanied by a delicious spread (including vegan and gluten free options) by celebrated chef Kevin Thurston. Join us! \nBit Depth is Squeaky’s take on the Buffalo arts variety show. Each “episode” will feature a mix of films\, artists\, hackers\, magicians\, scientists\, performances\, mini-workshops\, scholars and more\, accompanied by a special spread of food by local celebrity chefs. Inspired in equal part by events such as Just Buffalo’s Big Night\, Hallwalls’ Art+Science Cabaret\, and Arika’s Episodes\, Bit Depth are one-of-a-kind evenings featuring luminaries and rarities from around the world in critical and joyous engagement with media art in all that it can entail. \nThis event is supported by Teiger Foundation. Frame-up! The Imprisonment of Martin Sostre is courtesy of Cinema Guild. Seven Songs for Malcolm X is courtesy of Icarus Films. Special thank you to Pooja Rangan and Jesse Trussel. \nAttendees: Please note that you cannot enter Tri-Main Center after 7:30 pm. Squeaky Wheel is located in Suite 310 of Tri-Main Center. Take the elevator to the third floor\, and head left.  Click here to see parking\, transportation\, and accessibility information. Food will feature vegetarian and gluten free options. The program will be in three parts\, with short breaks in between. Members can email office@squeaky.org with the subject “Bit Depth” and we’ll reserve their spot within 24 hours. Not a member? Annual rates start at just $30 – sign up here. \nProgram\n \nSteven Fischler Joel Sucher Howard Blatt\, Frame-up! The Imprisonment of Martin Sostre\n30 minutes\, 16mm on digital video\, 1974 \nExamining the case of Martin Sostre\, a black Puerto Rican bookstore owner in Buffalo\, New York who was framed on drug possession charges in 1967 and sentenced to prison\, this film shows how the American justice system can be abused for purposes of political repression.\n \n \nTalk | Justice for Geraldine and Martin Campaign\, with Geraldine Robinson\, James Coughlin\, and Brandon Schlia \nThe Justice for Geraldine and Martin Campaign has been working intensively for years to clear the names of both Martin Sostre\, and Geraldine Robinson who was arrested with Martin Sostre in 1967. We’ll be joined by Geraldine (Pointer) Robinson\, who will be accompanied by James Coughlin and artist Brandon Schlia who will present a brief documentary on the work of the campaign. Donations for the campain will be accepted during the event\, and books our friends at from Burning Books will be available. \n“On the night of July 14\, 1967\, Geraldine Pointer (then Robinson) was helping Martin Sostre close the Afro-Asian Bookshop on Jefferson Avenue. The two met and started dating the previous year\, soon after he opened the city’s first Black revolutionary bookstore. Sostre eventually opened two more stores\, including the East-West Bookshop which Pointer managed. In the early morning of July 15th\, plainclothes police and FBI agents raided the store on Jefferson and arrested the two\, scapegoating Sostre as the cause of the city’s recent uprising. \n​Geraldine Robinson became one of the first Black women political prisoners of the Black Power era\, yet her struggle remains virtually unknown today. Any dedication to the excavation and dissemination of Martin Sostre’s legacy must also acknowledge the importance of Geraldine’s struggle and the enduring impact of state repression on her and her family.” – Read more at the Martin Sostre Insititute and sign the campaign here. \n \nJohn Akomfrah\, Seven Songs for Malcolm X\n52 minutes\, 16mm on digital video\, 1993\n \nAn homage to the inspirational African-American civil rights leader\, Seven Songs for Malcolm X collects testimonies\, eyewitness accounts and dramatic reenactments to tell the life\, legacy\, loves\, and losses of Malcolm X. Featuring interviews with Malcolm’s widow Betty Shabazz\, Spike Lee\, and many other\, Seven Songs looks for the meaning behind the resurgence of interest in the man whose X always stood for the unknown. The film will be introduced by Donte McFadden. \n“What makes Seven Songs so provocative is that Akomfrah shows respect for many different interpretations of Malcolm\, suggesting that this revolutionary figure belongs to everybody.”—The Chicago Reader \n“Seven Songs for Malcolm X combines riveting footage of the man himself\, extracts from his writing\, recollections of his family\, friends and fellow activists\, with [brief] staged tableaux. It’s all here: Malcolm X’s charisma\, the struggle to clarify his beliefs\, and the context in which they evolved… an engrossing portrait.”—Geoff Ellis\, Time Out (London) \nMenu\n \nThe menu prepared and selected by artist and chef Kevin Thurston will include glutenfree and vegan options\, including: \n\nTurkey meatballs\, cinnamon scented tomato sauce (gf)\nRoasted vegetable platter (v/gf)\nMuhamara and pita (v)\nDolmades (v/gf)\nBarrel+Brine pickles (gf)\nSelected treats from Arabic Sweets\n\n            </p>\n<h4>Biographies of the artists\, filmmakers\, and chef</h4>\n<p>                        \nDonte McFadden\, PhD\, is a leader\, educator and mentor. Donte previously served as the Director of the Distinguished Visiting Scholars from 2021-2024. Prior to joining UB\, he served as the Senior Associate Director for Undergraduate Research and High Impact Practices for the Educational Opportunity Program at Marquette University. In this role\, he served as the Director of the Ronald E. McNair Post Baccalaureate Achievement Program. He has held other leadership roles with the Educational Opportunity Program at Marquette\, including serving as its Interim Director and Associate Director of Administration\, Curriculum and Evaluation. Donte received his PhD in English with an emphasis in Film Studies from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. He earned a master’s degree in English and a BFA/BA in Film/Film Studies also from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Donte is co-founder of Black Lens\, a showcase for African American filmmakers as part of the Milwaukee Film Festival. \nBorn in Accra\, Ghana\, in 1957\, to radical political activist parents\, John Akomfrah was widely recognized as one of the most influential figures of black British culture in the 1980s. An artist\, lecturer\, and writer as well as a filmmaker\, his twenty-year body of work is among the most distinctive in the contemporary British art world\, and his cultural influence continues today. As a teen\, Akomfrah was a Super 8 filmmaker and enthusiast. With several underground cine clubs in London\, he helped bring Asian and European arthouse cinema\, militant cinema from Africa and Latin America\, and American independent and avant-garde cinema to minority audiences. In 1982\, Akomfrah helped found the seminal\, cine-cultural workshop the Black Audio Film Collective. He directed a broad range of work for the group\, including fiction films\, tape slides\, single-screen gallery pieces\, experimental videos\, music videos\, and documentaries. Since 1987\, Akomfrah’s work has been shown in galleries including Documenta (Germany)\, the De Balie (Holland)\, Centre George Pompidou (France)\, the Serpentine and Whitechapel Galleries (UK); and The Museum of Modern Art (USA). A major new retrospective of Akomfrah’s gallery-based work with the Black Audio Film Collective premiered at the FACT and Arnolfini galleries (UK) and is now making a tour of galleries and museums throughout Europe. In 2000\, Akomfrah was awarded the Gold Digital Award at the Cheonju International Film Festival\, South Korea\, for his innovative use of digital technology. He has been an artist-in-residence at universities including\, most recently\, New York University\, and a jury member at festivals including\, most recently the BFI London Film Festival\, UK\, and the Tarifa International Film Festival\, Spain. He has lectured at institutions including CalArts\, the Art Institute of Chicago\, and the London Institute. He was a member of the Arts Council Film Committee\, and Governor of the British Film Institute from 2001 through 2007. John Akomfrah is currently a Governor of Film London\, a visiting professor of film at the University of Westminster (United Kingdom)\, and an officer of the Order of the British Empire. \nThe Justice for Geraldine and Martin campaign is an ongoing\, volunteer-led effort to exonerate Geraldine Pointer and Martin Sostre\, for their frame up and wrongful arrests at Buffalo\, New York’s Afro-Asian Book Shop July 15th\, 1967. Along with teaching the history of Geraldine and Martin’s struggle and sacrifice\, the campaign is raising funds to steward the site of the former Afro-Asian Book Shop at 1412 Jefferson Avenue\, a mural dedicated to Geraldine and Martin\, and forthcoming events. \nKevin Thurston is the Chef and General Manager of Tipico Coffee. Prior to that\, he co-owned Cafe Godot. In addition to his culinary work\, he wrote Color Me White (BlazeVox) which was illustrated by Mickey Harmon and has numerous publication credits. He has performed with the ensemble BuffFluxus for over 20 years. He lives with his wife and daughter in a Polish workman’s cottage on the outskirts of Buffalo. \n             \n  \nBanner image: A black and white still from Seven Songs for Malcolm X by John Akomfrah.
URL:https://squeaky.org/event/bit-depth-episode-2-songs-and-justice/
LOCATION:Squeaky Wheel\, 2495 Main Street\, Suite 310\, Buffalo\, NY\, 14214\, United States
CATEGORIES:BitDepth,Special Event
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251024T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251024T210000
DTSTAMP:20260422T100404
CREATED:20250930T202257Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T212243Z
UID:10001252-1761332400-1761339600@squeaky.org
SUMMARY:Bit Depth\, Episode 1: Nuclear Set
DESCRIPTION:Friday\, October 24\, 7 pm\n$15 General / Free for Squeaky Wheel members\nSqueaky Wheel invites you to the first episode of Bit Depth\, a new critical Squeaky variety show and event series! In Episode 1\, Nuclear Set\, we will be featuring artist talks\, films\, and music focusing on nuclear harm and anxieties\, tying in to our current exhibition Radiation Borders. The event will feature exhibition artist Elizabeth Tannie Lewin in conversation with former resident Dana Murray Tyrrell (both former Workspace Residents in 2017)\, a performance by the luminous cellist Katie Weissmann\, a screening of Arwa Aburawa and Turab Shah’s And still\, it remains (2023 Best Experimental Film\, Blackstar Film Festival)\, the short film sound of a million insects\, light of a thousand stars in memory of the recently deceased filmmaker Tomonari Nishikawa\, and the 1953 3D “documentary” Doom Town. All of this accompanied by a delicious Mediterranean spread (including vegan and gluten free options) by celebrated chef Kevin Thurston. Join us! \nBit Depth is Squeaky’s take on the Buffalo arts variety show. Each “episode” will feature a mix of films\, artists\, hackers\, magicians\, scientists\, performances\, mini-workshops\, scholars and more\, accompanied by a special spread of food by local celebrity chefs. Inspired in equal part by events such as Just Buffalo’s Big Night\, Hallwalls’ Art+Science Cabaret\, and Arika’s Episodes\, Bit Depth are one-of-a-kind evenings featuring luminaries and rarities from Buffalo and beyond in critical and joyous engagement with media art in all that it can entail. \nThis event is supported by Teiger Foundation. Arwa Aburawa and Turab Shah’s And still\, it remains is courtesy of LUX (London\, UK). Tomonari Nishikawa’s sound of a million insects\, light of a thousand stars is courtesy of Canyon Cinema (San Francisco\, CA). Doom Town is courtesy of the 3D Film Archive. Special thank you to Flicker Alley. \nAttendees: Please note that you cannot enter Tri-Main Center after 7:30 pm. Squeaky Wheel is located in Suite 310 of Tri-Main Center. Take the elevator to the third floor\, and head left.  Click here to see parking\, transportation\, and accessibility information. Food will feature vegetarian and gluten free options. The program will be in three parts\, with short breaks in between. Members can email office@squeaky.org with the subject “Bit Depth” and we’ll reserve their spot within 24 hours. Not a member? Annual rates start at just $30 – sign up here. \nFilms\n \nTomonari Nishikawa\, sound of a million insects\, light of a thousand stars\n2 minutes\, 35 mm on digital video\, Japan/USA\, 2014 \nI buried a 100-foot 35mm negative film under fallen leaves alongside a country road\, which was about 25 km away from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station\, from the sunset of June 24\, 2014\, to the sunrise of the following day. The night was beautiful with a starry sky\, and numerous summer insects were singing loud. The area was once an evacuation zone\, but now people live there after the removal of the contaminated soil. – Tomonari Nishikawa \nThis project is made possible with funds from the Media Arts Assistance Fund\, a regrant program of the New York State Council on the Arts\, Electronic Media and Film\, with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature; administered by Wave Farm. \n \nArwa Aburawa and Turab Shah\, And still\, it remains\n28 mins\, 4K Video\, Algeria/UK\, 2023 \nAnd still\, it remains is a new film by Arwa Aburawa and Turab Shah which carries forward their long-term dedication to exploring race and environmental legacies of colonialism. In this work\, they examine the ongoing impact of French toxic colonialism in Mertoutek\, a village nestled in the Hoggar Mountains of Algeria’s Southern Sahara and a home to the Escamaran community of Black Algerians. Used as a testing ground for nuclear bombs by the French between 1961 and 1966\, the area continues to suffer the consequences of radioactive fallout circulating in the water and soil. \nThe film examines Mertoutek’s encounter with French nuclear colonialism without restricting the region’s history to a narrow colonial temporality. Juxtaposed with slow meditative shots of the mountains\, Escamaran ways of life and ancient rock art\, experiences of French nuclear experiments\, faith and spirituality are narrated by the voices of multiple residents. Summoning the landscape as a witness and protagonist\, And still\, it remains reflects on the deep inscription of colonial violence into the landscape’s body and ecology. It also pushes against forms of visual capture that reproduce a colonial gaze while challenging visibility as the currency for political redress. Winds migrating across the Sahara have recently carried sand containing nuclear remains from the Algerian Sahara back to France\, serving as a reminder that the environmental afterlives of colonialism cannot be contained or forgotten. \nBy focussing on the experiences of Mertoutek residents\, Aburawa and Shah throw into sharp relief the racial oversight in the ‘end of the world’ discourse by asking what worlds have already ended and what does a life after the end of the world look like? What does intimacy with toxic colonialism afford its survivors and how does it shape their ideas around justice? How does one recover from ongoing violence and how\, ultimately\, do you carry on? \n \nDoom Town\n18 min\, Dunning 3D process presented on anaglyphic 3D\, USA\, 1953\nDirected by Allan Milner. Screenplay by Gerald Schnitzer. Produced by Lee Savin. 2003 recreation by Peter Kuran and Greg Kintz. \nThe first 3-D documentary\, Doom Town was made by independent producer Lee Savin\, who was intrigued by the atomic-bomb tests at Yucca Flats in Nevada. Filming began March 17\, 1953. Photographed with the Dunning Three-Dimensional Process\, it captured the devastating effects of an atomic blast. \nDoom Town was written by screenwriter-director-author Gerald Schnitzer\, whose credits included scripts for Bela Lugosi (The Corpse Vanishes\, Bowery at Midnight) and The Bowery Boys. Schnitzer also created several acclaimed TV commercials for Kodak (“Kodak Moment”)\, Chevrolet\, and Clairol. \nDoom Town was sneak-previewed on April 30 at the Paramount Theaterin Hollywood and opened ni Los Angeles on July 2 with The Maze and Lippert’s 3-D short\, College Capers. The next day it opened at the Telenews theaters ni San Francisco and Oakland. After these bookings\, it was mysteriously pulled from circulation. Although the project was approved by proper channels\, the anti-atomic testing stance was hardly a message the government wanted to promote. Was Doom Town suppressed? Nobody seems to know but the movie disappeared without a trace in July 1953. \nIt was lost for decades until the negatives\, slated to be junked\, were discovered and salvaged by the 3-D Film Archive in 1985. The separate reel with the color atomic bomb shots was missing; a recreation was done in 2003 by Peter Kuran\, using actual 3D- atomic bomb footage. The original “multi-sound” has been recreated by Greg Kintz. \nYears ahead of its time\, Doom Town is a prescient social statement and an excellent example of 3-D filmmaking. – Ted Okuda\, 3-D Rarities\, Blu-Ray published by Flicker Alley\, 2015 \nArtist talk with Elizabeth Tannie Lewin with Dana Murray Tyrrell\n \nVisiting artist Elizabeth Tannie Lewin will be speaking with Dana Murray Tyrrell about her work in our exhibition Radiation Borders\, and which names the first episode of Bit Depth: Nuclear Set. Nuclear Set interweaves Jorge Luis Borges’s Library of Babel\, poetry by Maquis\, Rene Char\, the journals of Italian Futurist\, Filippo Tommaso Marinetti\, historical footage of the United States’ nuclear testing in the Marshall Islands\, and a 3D video game landscape of Bikini Atoll to speculate a future that will survive our extinction. This artist talk reunites the two artists who were both part of Squeaky Wheel’s Workspace Residency program in 2018\, and both of whom have significantly investigated the legacies of nuclear toxicity and harm in their work. \nPerformance by Katie Weissman\n \nKatie Weissman began playing the cello at the age of three at Buffalo Suzuki Strings after seeing Yo-Yo Ma appear on Sesame Street and holds a Bachelor of Music in Cello Performance from Boston University. When at home in Buffalo\, Katie is a cellist and vocalist in the contemporary music ensemble Wooden Cities and is a substitute for the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra and Shea’s Performing Arts Center. She also plays with the composition think-tank Evolution of the Arm\, free jazz group Root Cellar\, folk-rock bands Haunted Continents and Birddog\, and various other chamber music outfits in the Western New York area. She has toured at home and abroad and has lent her playing to many recording projects in the studio\, including multiple albums and stage performances by Buffalo’s own Goo Goo Dolls. She teaches privately in her own studio and currently lives in Williamsville with her dogs\, rabbits\, and birds. \nMenu by Kevin Thurston\n \nThe menu prepared and selected by artist and chef Kevin Thurston will include glutenfree and vegan options\, including: \n\nTurkey meatballs\, cinnamon scented tomato sauce\nMuhammara (vegan/gf) + pita\nCreamy cucumbers (gf)\nPickle tray from Barrel + Brine (vegan/gf)\nAssorted sweets from Arabic Sweets\nand more!\n\nBiographies of the artists\, filmmakers\, and chef\nArwa Aburawa and Turab Shah are a directing duo dedicated to exploring race\, migration\, the environment and other ongoing legacies of colonialism through film. Together they also co-founded Other Cinemas\, a project dedicated to supporting Black and non-white communities in London through free film screenings and a free\, year-long film school. \nDana Murray Tyrrell is an artist\, curator\, and writer from Niagara Falls\, New York. His artwork can be found in the permanent collections of the Castellani Art Museum\, Roger Tory Peterson Institute\, University at Buffalo Department of Art\, and the Pride Center of Western New York. Recent solo exhibitions include Love Canal at the Earl W. Brydges Library (2024-25)\, Floater at Kingfish Gallery (2021)\, and Blue at the Castellani Art Museum (2017). Select group exhibits include Black Rock Arts (2025)\, the Burchfield Penney Art Center (2023\, 2021)\, and ECHO Art Fair (2016). He currently works at the Burchfield Penney with past roles at Rivalry Projects\, the Niagara Arts & Cultural Center\, and former Albright-Knox Art Gallery. \nElizabeth (Betsy) Tannie Lewin is a digital media artist interested in: technology\, landscape\, identity\, disappearance\, history\, and utopia. \nKatie Weissman began playing the cello at the age of three at Buffalo Suzuki Strings after seeing Yo-Yo Ma appear on Sesame Street and holds a Bachelor of Music in Cello Performance from Boston University. When at home in Buffalo\, Katie is a cellist and vocalist in the contemporary music ensemble Wooden Cities and is a substitute for the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra and Shea’s Performing Arts Center. She also plays with the composition think-tank Evolution of the Arm\, free jazz group Root Cellar\, folk-rock bands Haunted Continents and Birddog\, and various other chamber music outfits in the Western New York area. She has toured at home and abroad and has lent her playing to many recording projects in the studio\, including multiple albums and stage performances by Buffalo’s own Goo Goo Dolls. She teaches privately in her own studio and currently lives in Williamsville with her dogs\, rabbits\, and birds. \nKevin Thurston is the Chef and General Manager of Tipico Coffee. Prior to that\, he co-owned Cafe Godot. In addition to his culinary work\, he wrote Color Me White (BlazeVox) which was illustrated by Mickey Harmon and has numerous publication credits. He has performed with the ensemble BuffFluxus for over 20 years. He lives with his wife and daughter in a Polish workman’s cottage on the outskirts of Buffalo. \nTomonari Nishikawa’s (1969-2025) films explore the idea of documenting situations/phenomena through chosen medium and techniques\, often focusing on the process of art making. His films have been screened at numerous film festivals and art venues\, including Berlinale\, Edinburgh International Film Festival\, Hong Kong International Film Festival\, International Film Festival Rotterdam\, London Film Festival\, New York Film Festival\, Media City Film Festival\, Singapore International Film Festival\, and Toronto International Film Festival. In 2010\, he showed a series of 8mm and 16mm films at MoMA P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center\, and his film installation\, Building 945\, received the 2008 Grant from the Museum of Contemporary Cinema in Spain. He taught in the Cinema Department at Binghamton University.
URL:https://squeaky.org/event/bit-depth-episode-1-nuclear-set/
LOCATION:Squeaky Wheel\, 2495 Main Street\, Suite 310\, Buffalo\, NY\, 14214\, United States
CATEGORIES:BitDepth,Special Event
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