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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210930T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210930T210000
DTSTAMP:20260421T065141
CREATED:20251230T191435Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251230T191435Z
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SUMMARY:Coalition Building Towards Liberatory Technologies
DESCRIPTION:POSTPONED – Stay tuned for the new date!\nWednesday\, September 30\, 2021\, 7 pm ET\nFree or pay what you can\nRegister here\nAccessibility: ASL interpretation and open captions provided. \nOn the occasion of Johann Diedrick’s Dark Matters\, this panel with artists Johann Diedrick and Jenson Leonard and moderated by Richie Wills will discuss both the discriminatory and exploitative artificial intelligences of our current moment\, and imagine libertory future technologies. How would a libertatory artificial intelligence act? What are the networks\, communities\, and infrastructures we need to build our tomorrows? \nThe event will be available for 24 hours for everyone who registers\, and 72 hours for Squeaky Wheel members. This event is co-presented with Just Buffalo Literary Center. \nAbout the panelists \nJohann Diedrick is a Caribbean-American artist\, engineer\, and musician who makes installations\, performances\, and sculptures for encountering our world through your ears. He surfaces vibratory histories of past interactions inscribed in material and embedded in space\, peeling back sonic layers to reveal hidden memories and untold stories. He shares his tools and techniques through listening tours\, workshops\, and open-source hardware/software. He is the founder of A Quiet Life\, a sonic engineering and research studio that designs and builds audio-related software and hardware products for delightfully encountering our environment and each other. He is a 2021 Mozilla Creative Media Award recipient\, a member of NEW INC\, and an adjunct professor at NYU’s ITP program. His work has been featured in Wire Magazine\, Musicworks Magazine\, and presented at MoMA PS1 (Queens\, NY)\, Somerset House (London\, UK)\, Social Kitchen (Kyoto\, Japan)\, Common Ground (Berlin\, Germany)\, Recess (Brooklyn\, NY)\, Knockdown Center (Queens\, NY)\, and Pioneer Works (Brooklyn\, NY). \nJenson Leonard b. Detroit\, Michigan\, and raised in Pittsburgh\, Pennsylvania\, United States of America. Lives and works in New York\, United States of America. Initially a poet\, Jenson Leonard became interested in memes during his six-year tenure as a cook at a Belgian waffle kiosk. He found himself drawn to the immediacy and reach of instant publication on social media\, the confluence of which exacerbate the arguably inherent power of the image for those who see. His early work used the canonical Twitter meme format\, but developed into the more ornately parodic style that predominates in the left-leaning corners of Facebook. He holds an MFA in Creative Writing from Pratt Institute. He has completed residencies at Obracadobra (Oaxaca\, Mexico)\, Squeaky Wheel (Buffalo\, NY) and Pioneer Works (Brooklyn\, NYC). His work has been featured in VICE Motherboard\, Juxtapoz\, AQNB\, and Rhizome. \nRICHIE WILLS holds a bachelor’s degree in Psychology from the State University of New York at Buffalo. Richie has worked as a Writing Center and BABEL volunteer and as an outreach coordinator for Words on the Street and The Mocha Center. He is also contributing writer for The Galactic Tribe and continues to work as a community organizer. Richie believes in the power of the written word and storytelling to bring people together and break barriers. \nAbout Just Buffalo Literary Center’s Civil Writes Project \nJust Buffalo Literary Center’s Civil Writes Project CELEBRATES the legacy of prominent Black writers who have called Buffalo home\, whose voices shape history\, inspire radical change\, and influence current and future generations of poets and writers; DRAWS INSPIRATION from Buffalo’s history as a gateway to freedom along the Underground Railroad; and CHALLENGES our community to grapple with racism and inequities through literature\, to find pathways toward justice in the power of the written word\, and to open hearts & minds as we confront our shared past and present in order to shape a more equitable future. See more information here. \nBanner image courtesy of Johann Diedrick.
URL:https://squeaky.org/event/coalition-building-towards-liberatory-technologies/
LOCATION:2495 Main Street\, Suite 310\, Buffalo\, NY\, 14214\, United States
CATEGORIES:Symposia & Panels,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://squeaky.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Dark-Matters.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210127T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210127T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T065141
CREATED:20251230T191403Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251230T191403Z
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SUMMARY:On the language of anti-Blackness and the Indian Ocean
DESCRIPTION:Free or suggested donation\nClick here to register\nAccess information:This event will take place over Zoom and feature live closed captions. If you encounter any issues\, please send us a text message at 716-427-4125. \nWhat are the afterlives of the Indian Ocean slave trade\, and what is the role of music through them? What are the politics of the archive in re-imagining the linguistic and historical connections between South Asia\, the Arab world\, and the Swahili coast of East Africa? \nIn this presentation and panel discussion\, Hiba Ali\, Jazmin Graves\, and Beheroze Shroff will explore these questions and share their ongoing research. Hiba Ali will present their in-progress interactive 3D artwork On the language of anti-Blackness and the Indian Ocean\, followed by Jazmin Graves who will present on her scholarship on the African diaspora in western India. Beheroze Shroff will present on her documentary and research practice  on contemporary African descended Sidis of Gujarat\, their culture and spiritual practice. The three panelists will then be in conversation on the history of the Indian Ocean slave trade\, and the terminologies and music for the region of South Asia\, East Africa and the Arab world. \nThis event will take place on Zoom. The event will feature live closed captions that you can enable within the event. Audiences will enter the room with their microphones muted\, and an option to turn on their camera. They will be able to leave questions and responses in the event. We ask all participants to respect Squeaky Wheel’s community guidelines. \nAudiences can view a recording of the event for a period of 24 hours. Squeaky Wheel members will have access to view the event for 72 hours. \nLeft to right: Hiba Ali\, Jazmin Graves\, Beheroze F. Schroff\n\nBios of the artists\nHiba Ali (they/she) is a digital artist\, educator\, scholar\, DJ\, experimental music producer and curator based across Chicago\, IL\, Austin\, TX\, and Toronto\, ON. Their performances and videos concern surveillance\, womxn/ womyn of colour\, and labour. She studies the geographies of Afro-Indo-Arab communities across the Indian Ocean through music\, cloth and ritual. They conduct reading groups addressing digital media and workshops with open-source technology. She is a PhD candidate in Cultural Studies at Queens University\, Kingston\, Canada. They are an Assistant Professor of Art\, New Media Artist/Feminist Art Discourse\, College of Design\, Art & Techology\, University of Oregon\, Eugene\, OR. She has presented their work in Chicago\, Stockholm\, Toronto\, New York\, Istanbul\, São Paulo\, Detroit\, Dubai\, Austin\, Vancouver\, and Portland. They have written for C Magazine\, THE SEEN Magazine\, Newcity Chicago\, Art Dubai\, The State\, VAM Magazine\, ZORA: Medium\, RTV Magazine\, and Topical Cream Magazine. \nJazmin Graves (she/her) is a Thurgood Marshall Fellow in the African and African American Studies Program at Dartmouth College and a PhD candidate in the Department of South Asian Languages and Civilizations at the University of Chicago. Her dissertation\, “Songs to the African Saints of India\,” studies the African diaspora in western India through the lens of Afro-Indian devotional music and rituals. A Junior Research Fellowship from the American Institute of Indian Studies supported her ethnographic and archival research in India from 2018-2019. In 2018\, Jazmin was named one of the MIPAD Global Top 100 Most Influential People of African Descent Under 40. \nBeheroze Shroff is a documentary film maker and long time scholar of Sidis. Shroff teaches in the Department of Asian American Studies at the University of California\, Irvine. Born in Bombay\, Shroff obtained her Master’s in English Literature from the University of Bombay and went on to obtain an MFA–Master of Fine Arts Degree in Film Production at the University of California\, Los Angeles. She has made five documentaries on contemporary African descended Sidis of Gujarat\, their culture and spiritual practice. Shroff was introduced to the spiritual legacy of the Sidis of Gujarat and their ancestral saint Bava Gor\, from the age of seven\, by her parents who became devotees of Sidi saint Bava Gor. Shroff has published widely in several journals and anthologies on different aspects of contemporary Sidi life\, in Gujarat\, India. Most recently\, in 2020\, Shroff has co-edited a three volume publication titled Afro-South Asia in the Global African Diaspora\, which explores the ways in which Africans and people of African descent have shaped and been shaped by the histories\, cultures\, and societies of South Asia. Her documentaries have been shown at the Max Planck Institute in Leipzig\, School of Oriental and African Studies in London\, Commonwealth Institute London\, the Schomburg Library and Museum of Black Culture in New York\, the Pan African Film Festivals in Los Angeles and at the Nairobi and Zanzibar International Arts\, Music and Film Festivals\, among others. \nThis program is made possible thanks to the generous support of the National Endowment for the Arts and Adobe TakingITGlobal. \nBanner image: Hiba Ali\, On the language of anti-Blackness and the Indian Ocean.
URL:https://squeaky.org/event/on-the-language-of-anti-blackness-and-the-indian-ocean-hiba-ali-and-jazmin-graves/
LOCATION:2495 Main Street\, Suite 310\, Buffalo\, NY\, 14214\, United States
CATEGORIES:Residencies,Symposia & Panels,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://squeaky.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HibaAliIndianOcean.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20181116T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20181117T210000
DTSTAMP:20260421T065141
CREATED:20251230T191208Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251230T191208Z
UID:10000728-1542394800-1542488400@squeaky.org
SUMMARY:Symposium | Punctures: Textiles in Digital and Material Time
DESCRIPTION:Friday\, November 16\, 7–9pm | Screening & Performance\nSaturday\, November 17\, 11am–7pm | Artist Presentations + Discussions\n@ Hallwalls Contemporary Art Center (341 Delaware Ave)\nFree and open to the public.\nClick here to RSVP (limited seating available. RSVP by 11:59pm on Thursday\, November 15.) \nSqueaky Wheel presents a convening of artists and scholars from several nations from North America for a convening exploring the interwoven histories of textile arts and media arts from early cinema to the current digital age. Topics include: a participatory media arts project focusing on the lives of Chinese immigrant garment workers; how Lakota hair weaving practices point towards alternative interfaces; and a “biomythography” of Black life through an epic project about a seamstress. \nTaking place in the theatre of Hallwalls Contemporary Art Center\, Punctures functions as a public platform that will inform Squeaky Wheel’s large-scale\, multi-site exhibition of the same name\, opening in late 2019. Using the concept of needlework—sewing\, stitching\, weaving and other textile practices—as a material and metaphorical underpinning\, the symposium and eventual exhibition of Punctures will explore questions regarding gendered labor in domestic\, industrial\, and artistic fields\, along with the material and immaterial threads of 20th and 21st century art and industry. \nThe symposium opens on the evening of November 16th with a screening of films by Jodie Mack\, Laura Huertas Millán\, Abraham Ravett\, and a multi-media performance by Kite followed by presentations and panel discussions on November 17th. Contributors include: Terri Francis\, Kyla Gordon\, Kite\, Beryl Korot\, Chris Lee\, Jodi Lynn Maracle\, Tiona Nekkia McClodden\, Stephen Monteiro\, Tina Rivers Ryan\, Ekrem Serdar\, Jasmina Tumbas\, Kelly Walters\, the WASH Project\, and Betty Yu. \nSeating is limited and RSVP is required. Click here to RSVP and confirm your attendance. \n\nSchedule\nFriday\, November 16\, 2018 \n7pm | Digital and Material Time\nFilms and performance\, including Point de Gaze (2012) by Jodie Mack\, La Libertad (2018) by Laura Huertas Millán\, Tziporah (2007) by Abraham Ravett\, and a multi-media performance titled Listener by Kite.\nThe opening of the symposium features a screening of works meant to ground us in the histories and images around the connections between textiles and media art\, while also looking at how textile practices have formed political\, material\, and epistemological points of departure for media artists. \nPoint de Gaze\nJodie Mack\n5min\, 16mm film\, silent\, 2012\nNamed after a type of Belgian lace\, this spectral study investigates intricate illusion and optical arrest. – Jodie Mack \nTziporah\nAbraham Ravett\n7min\, 16mm film\, silent\, 2008\nTziporah is the Hebrew word for “bird.” This is another cinematic response to grief and loss. – Abraham Ravett \nLa Libertad\nLaura Huertas Millán\n29 mins\, HD video\, Spanish with English subtitles\, 2017\nProduced out of Harvard´s Sensory Ethnography Lab\, Laura Huertas Millán´s masterful La Libertad follows a group of matriarchal weavers in Mexico\, whose backstrap loom – a pre-Hispanic technique preserved for centuries by Indigenous women in Mesoamerica – provides the formal structure for the film´s exploration of handicrafts and their ties to freedom. With echoes of the influential ethnographic work of Chick Strand\, La Libertad combines astute observation\, testimony\, subtle transfers in scale\, space and texture\, as it weaves its own singular study of labour\, creativity\, and the mysterious traces that circulate between them. – Andréa Picard \nListener\nKite\nLakota-Sys (L-Sys)\, 2018\nListener is a science fiction story told through a performance artwork. The story is about a woman wandering alone in the future\, receiving transmissions from the Far Place on her Listening devices. During the live performance\, Kite uses a hair-braid with sensors to control sound and video. The hair-braid changes a synthesizer\, which sends sound to machine learning software\, which manipulates the video. This image is a still from the ‘Lakota-System (L-Sys)’ visual interface. The artist asks\, “How can Lakota understandings of hair effect the design of technology? What does a Lakota data-visualizing interface look like?” – Kite \nSaturday\, November 17\, 2018 \n11am | Registration\nCoffee and light refreshments. \n11:30am | Underpinnings\nEkrem Serdar & Kelly Walters. Moderated by Chris Lee.\nThe history of media arts\, of film and electronic arts\, is interwoven with influences\, material\, sociological\, and metaphorical with textile arts. Mirroring the gendered reception of craft in art contexts through the 20th century\, the debt of media arts to textiles remains under-acknowledged. How can a focus on textile arts help us think differently about how we practice media arts? In the opening panel\, curator Ekrem Serdar will chart the research that’s leading to Squeaky Wheel’s exhibition opening in 2019\, while Kelly Walters\, the designer of Punctures\, will speak of her design and textile practice. \n12:30pm | Quilted Americana\nTerri Francis & Tiona Nekkia McClodden. Moderated by Kyla Gordon.\nTextiles are embodied knowledge: their fabrics and patterns\, represent an accumulation of practices through history\, and mark their moment. The way we engage with them are not dissimilar to how we engage with home movies: we watch the flickering images of our families\, studying the bonds between our generations. The following panel features an artist project that aims to mythologize biography\, and a research project that finds the myths in daily life. Dr. Terri Francis will present on her upcoming book Quilted Films: African American Home Movies and Historical Memory\, 1924–1975\, which reframes personal family films as both art and historical artifact. Tiona Nekkia McClodden will speak about her upcoming work The Seamstress\, which forms the second part of her project Be Alarmed: The Black Americana Epic. \n1:30pm | Break \n3pm | Weaving an Interface\nKite & Stephen Monteiro. Moderated by Jodi Lynn Maracle.\nThe influence of textile practices expands into the current day\, from how Jacquard looms influenced early computing to the very way our fingers interact with our smartphones. What is often forgotten in how these practices are implemented are the histories embedded within them. Bringing together two guests both based in Montreal\, scholar Stephen Monteiro will speak of how textile practices have influenced modern interface designs\, while artist Kite will be talking about Listener\, performed as part of the symposium the night before. \n4pm | Garment Workers\nBetty Yu & the WASH Project. Moderated by Jasmina Tumbas.\nAny discussion on art has the potential for a romanticization of women’s labor\, ignoring the sweatshops and gross exploitation of workers\, displacement\, and other factors inherent in global capitalism. Artist and activist Betty Yu will present on her interactive installation work The Garment Worker (2014) that focuses on the daily life of a garment worker and the hardships they encounter working in a sweatshop\, providing a rare look into garment working conditions that Chinese immigrants face in New York City through the personal story of the artist. Yu is joined by representatives from Buffalo’s The WASH Project\, who will present on how their organization establishes an outlet for simple\, open & free practice of creativity\, play\, and human engagement\, while serving as a human services hub for the immediate Burmese community & beyond. \n5pm | Binding History \nBeryl Korot in conversation with Tina Rivers Ryan.\nMade thirty years after the Holocaust\, Beryl Korot’s haunting Dachau\, 1974 owes its rigorous formalism to the visual structure of woven cloth. Documenting tourists visiting Nazi Germany’s first concentration camp\, the work aims to grapple with both what is there\, and what was. Korot’s life and pioneering practice has been dedicated to finding the material and immaterial threads binding the practice of textiles and media art practice\, elucidating how this relationship can bind histories. The artist is joined in this panel by Dr. Tina Rivers Ryan for a conversation on her life and work. \n\nBiographies of the presenters\, moderators\, and filmmakers\n \nTerri Francis directs the Black Film Center/Archive at Indiana University\, Bloomington.  She guest edited a close-up on Afrosurrealism in film and video for the 2013 fall issue of Black Camera: A International Film Journal. She published her path breaking study of Jamaican non-theatrical films in “Sounding the Nation: Martin Rennalls and the Jamaica Film Unit\, 1951-1961” in Film History in 2011. Her book Josephine Baker’s Cinematic Prism\, a study of how the entertainer used humor to master her conundrums\, is forthcoming from Indiana University Press. \nKyla Gordon is a scholar and curator. She is the Curatorial Research Assistant at Squeaky Wheel Film & Media Arts Centre. She received her MA in Visual Culture from New York University\, has studied Modern Art at Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne\, and has BAs in Art History and English from the University at Buffalo\, SUNY. She has a background in curatorial work\, archives\, and arts administration. She has worked in galleries and cultural institutions around the world\, including Metropolitan Museum of Art\, Interview Magazine\, Hallwalls\, 80WSE\, Shakespeare and Company\, and Re:Voir Film Gallery. Her scholarly interests include textiles\, costume studies\, film\, kitsch\, and British history. \nKite aka Suzanne Kite is an Oglala Lakota performance artist\, visual artist\, and composer raised in Southern California\, with a BFA from CalArts in music composition\, an MFA from Bard College’s Milton Avery Graduate School\, and is a PhD student at Concordia University and Research Assistant for the Initiative for Indigenous Futures. Her research is concerned with contemporary Lakota epistemologies through research-creation\, computational media\, and performance practice. Recently\, Kite has been developing a body interface for movement performances\, carbon fiber sculptures\, immersive video & sound installations\, as well as co-running the experimental electronic imprint\, Unheard Records. \nBeryl Korot is a pioneer of video art. By applying specific structures inherent to loom programming to the programming of multiple channels of video she brought the ancient and modern worlds of technology into conversation. This extended to a body of work on handwoven canvas in an original language based on the grid structure of woven cloth\, as well as to works on paper that combine ink\, pencil and digitized threads. Two early multiple channel works\, Dachau 1974 and Text and Commentary works have been seen at the Whitney Museum (1980\,1993\, 2000\, 2002); the Kitchen\, New York\, NY (1975); Leo Castelli Gallery\, New York\, NY (1977); Documenta 6\, Kassel\, Germany (1977); The Köln and Düsseldorf Kunstvereins (1989 and 1994); the Carnegie Museum\, Pittsburgh\, PA (1990); the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum\, Ridgefield\, CT (2010); bitforms gallery\, New York\, NY (2012/2018); the Whitworth Gallery\, Manchester\, England (2013); Museum Abteiberg\, Mönchengladbach\, Germany (2013); Art Basel\, Basel\, Switzerland (2014)\, The Institute of Contemporary Art\, Boston\, MA (2014); Tate Modern\, London\, England (2014); Center for Media Art (ZKM)\, Karlruhe Germany (2008/2017); The San Francisco MOMA (2016)\, and The Museum of Modern Art\, NYC (2017/18) amongst others. Two video/music collaborations with Steve Reich\, The Cave (1993) and Three Tales (2002) brought video installation art into a theatrical context\, and have been performed worldwide since 1993. Korot’s work is in both private and public collections including MoMA\, NYC\, the Kramlich collection’s New Art  Trust shared with the Tate Modern\, MoMA NYC and SF MoMA\, the Sol LeWitt Collection\, and the Thoma Art Foundation. \nChris Lee is a graphic designer and educator based Buffalo\, NY\, and Toronto\, ON. He is a graduate of OCADU (Toronto) and the Sandberg Instituut (Amsterdam)\, and has worked for The Walrus Magazine\, Metahaven and Bruce Mau Design. He was also the designer and an editorial board member of the journal Scapegoat: Architecture/Landscape/Political Economy. Clients\, primarily in the cultural sector\, have included cmagazine\, Art Museum\, grunt gallery\, the Aga Khan Museum\, and Casco Art Institute: Working for the Commons\, among others. Chris collaborates with designer/developer Seungyong Moon\, under the banner of MuyongJiyong 무용지용 (無用之用). Chris’ research explores graphic design’s entanglement with power\, standards\, and legitimacy. He has contributed projects and writing to the Decolonising Design\, Journal of Aesthetics & Protest\, The Copyist\, Graphic\, Volume\, and Counter Signals. Chris is the guest-co-editor of the “Graphic Design” issue of cmagazine along with Ali Shamas Qadeer. He has facilitated workshops in the US\, Canada\, Scotland\, the Netherlands and Croatia\, and has been invited to lecture at the Gerrit Rietveld Academie\, ArtEZ\, The Sandberg Instituut\, The Design Academy Eindhoven\, CalArts and OCADU. Chris is an Assistant Professor at the University at Buffalo SUNY\, and a member of the programming committee of Gendai Gallery and Squeaky Wheel. He is a graphic design research fellow of Het Nieuwe Instituut in Rotterdam (2017/18)\, participant of the fifth edition of the Summer University of the Bibliothèque Kandinsky at the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris. Cairolexicon.com \nJodie Mack is an experimental animator who received her MFA in film\, video\, and new media from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2007. Combining the formal techniques and structures of abstract/absolute animation with those of cinematic genres\, her handmade films use collage to explore the relationship between graphic cinema and storytelling\, the tension between form and meaning. Musical documentary or stroboscopic archive: her films study domestic and recycled materials to illuminate the elements shared between fine-art abstraction and mass-produced graphic design. The works unleash the kinetic energy of overlooked and wasted objects and question the role of decoration in daily life. Mack’s 16mm films have screened at a variety of venues including the Ann Arbor Film Festival\, Edinburgh International Film Festival\, Images Festival\, Projections at the New York Film Festival\, and the Viennale. She has presented solo programs at the 25FPS Festival\, Anthology Film Archives\, BFI London Film Festival\, Harvard Film Archive\, National Gallery of Art\, REDCAT\, International Film Festival Rotterdam\, Shenzhen Independent Animation Biennale\, and Wexner Center for the Arts among others. Her work has been featured in publications including Artforum\, Cinema Scope\, The New York Times\, and Senses of Cinema. She is an Associate Professor of Animation at Dartmouth College and a 2018/19 Film Study Center Fellow at Harvard University. \nBorn and raised in Buffalo\, NY\, Jodi Lynn Maracle is a Kanien’keha:ka mother\, artist\, scholar and activist currently pursuing her dreams of building her Kanien’keha language proficiency. She received her MA from the University of Buffalo while completing the first year of a Mohawk immersion program in Buffalo\, NY. As an artist\, Jodi has shown work throughout Dish with One Spoon territory working primarily in textile and earth based installations invoking Haudenosaunee material forms and language combined with modern forms of making to interrogate multiple experiential realities of specific locations and landscapes. She works as a consultant and presenter with many arts organizations and academic institutions to foster greater understanding of Haudenosaunee philosophies\, languages\, material culture and contemporary realities. She is currently a PhD student at the University of Buffalo. Of her many accomplishments\, she is most proud of hearing her son excitedly speak his Mohawk language each day. \nLaura Huertas Millán is a French-Colombian artist and filmmaker. Entwining ethnography\, ecology\, fiction and historical enquiries\, her moving image work engages with strategies of survival\, resistance and resilience against violence. Building complex visual and sonic worlds infused by the real\, her cinematographic practice circulates between contemporary art venues and international film festivals. Part of the official selections of the Viennale (Vienna)\, the Toronto International Film Festival\, the New York Film Festival\, La Habana or Cinéma du Réel (Paris)\, her films have earned prizes in Locarno\, FIDMarseille\, Doclisboa and Videobrasil\, among others. She has participated in screenings and exhibitions in institutions such as the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum (New York)\, the Centre Pompidou (Paris)\, Galerie Nationale du Jeu de Paume (Paris)\, Museo de Arte Moderno de Medellín\, Les Laboratories d ́Aubervilliers\, Western Front (Vancouver) and Instituto de Visión (Bogotá). Retrospectives of her films have been held at the ICA (London)\, Mar del Plata Film festival\, Toronto ́s Cinematheque (TIFF Lightbox) and the Flaherty Seminar. Her works are part of public and private collections as the Kadist Foundation (Paris-San Francisco)\, the Centre National des Arts Plastiques (CNAP) and the Cisneros Fontanals Art Foundation (Miami). She is currently preparing her first feature film\, after completing in 2017 a PhD between PSL University (SACRe program) and the Sensory Ethnography Lab (Harvard University). \nStephen Monteiro is the author of The Fabric of Interface: Mobile Media\, Design\, and Gender (MIT Press\, 2017) and editor of The Screen Media Reader (Bloomsbury\, 2017). He is an affiliate assistant professor of communication studies at Concordia University\, Montreal. \nTiona Nekkia McClodden\, an artist and curator\, has looked critically at intersections of race\, gender\, sexuality and social commentary through an interdisciplinary practice that includes documentary film\, experimental video\, sculpture\, and sound installation. McClodden is the recipient of numerous awards and honors\, among them the 2017 Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Award and the 2016 Pew Fellowship in the Arts in Philadelphia. She has exhibited her work at many venues internationally\, including the Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia\, the Whitney Museum of American Art\, Museum of Modern Art\, MOCA LA\, MCA Chicago\, MOMA PS1\, the Kansai Queer Film Festival in Osaka and Kyoto\, Japan\, and the London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. \nAbraham Ravett holds a B.F.A and M.F.A in filmmaking and photography and has been an independent filmmaker for the past thirty-five years. He was born in Polandand raised in Israel and the U.S.A. Mr. Ravett received grants for his work from the Massachusetts Cultural Council; National Foundation for Jewish Culture: Fund for Documentary Filmmaking; National Endowment for the Arts; The Massachusetts Council on the Arts and Humanities; The Japan Foundation; The LEF Foundation; The Marion and Jasper Whiting Foundation; and a 1994 filmmaking fellowship from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. His films have been screened internationally\, including at several one-person shows at New York’s Museum of Modern Art. His work has won “Top Prize” at the Viennale 2000\, Ann Arbor Film Festival\, and Onion City Film/Video Festival. In 1999\, he collaborated with dancer/choreographer Bill T. Jones on his solo performance “The Breathing Show.” A retrospective of Ravett’s films was shown at the 2014 Festival Film Dokumenter Yogyakarta\, Indonesia. \nDr. Tina Rivers Ryan is Assistant Curator at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo\, New York. As a curator\, scholar\, and critic\, her work focuses on the histories of art and technology from the 1960s to the present. Her writing has been commissioned by museums including The Metropolitan Museum of Art\, the Walker Art Center\, and the Albright-Knox\, and regularly appears in Artforum. \nEkrem Serdar is the curator at Squeaky Wheel Film & Media Art Center\, where he is responsible for the organization’s exhibitions\, public programming\, and artist residencies. He is the recipient of a Curatorial Fellowship from the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts (2017). His writing has appeared in The Brooklyn Rail\, Millennium Film Journal\, 5harfliler\, among other publications. \nJasmina Tumbas (PhD\, Art History\, Duke University) is an Assistant Professor of Contemporary Art History & Performance Studies in the Department of Global Gender and Sexuality Studies at the University at Buffalo. Her teaching and research fields focus on modern and contemporary art history and theory\, histories and theories of performance\, body and conceptual art\, art and activism\, feminist art\, critical theory\, and contemporary East European art history. She is currently finishing her first book\, The Erotics of Dictatorship: A Visual Exegesis of Gender & Sexuality under Yugoslav Socialism\, and her second\, Media Violence\, Ethnic Roma\, and Gender: Feminist Resistance Beyond Citizenship\, and serves as co-editor for the anthology Radical Art in Transition: Counter-Culture\, Protest\, Resistance and Contemporary Art in the Balkans since 1968. Her research has appeared in ArtMargins\, Camera Obscura: Feminism\, Culture\, and Media Studies\, ASAP Journal\, and Art and Documentation/Sztuka i Dokumentacja\, and in the anthologies Shifting Corporealities in Contemporary Performance and Performing Arts in the Second Public Sphere. \nKelly Walters is a designer and educator whose work investigates the intersection of black cultural vernacular in mainstream media. She feels her role as a designer is to understand how socio-political frameworks and shifting technology influence the sounds\, symbols and style of black people. She has worked as a designer for SFMOMA\, the RISD Museum\, Alexander Isley\, and Blue State Digital. She has produced websites\, digital social campaigns\, books and other printed matter for clients such as: Google Fiber\, Google for Entrepreneurs\, FairTrade USA\, Hillel International\, and PayPal. From 2015–2016\, she was awarded an Association of Independent Colleges of Art & Design (AICAD) Post-Graduate Teaching Fellowship in the Graphic Design program at California College of the Arts in San Francisco. Kelly received dual degrees at the University of Connecticut\, earning a BFA in Communication Design and a BA in Communication Sciences. She completed her MFA in Graphic Design from the Rhode Island School of Design. Kelly was most recently an assistant professor of graphic design at the University of Connecticut. \nUsing the arts as a common denominator\, the WASH Project establishes an outlet for the simple\, open & free practice of creativity\, play\, and human engagement. WASH also serves as a human services hub for the immediate Burmese community & beyond: a neighborhood access point for information regarding a wide range of community services & cultural opportunities. From this effort\, we continue to cultivate the development of a small\, yet dynamic center of local community life\, a place that people of all ages & walks of life come to; a place\, that by the way it is designed & the way it is operated\, strengthens its neighborhood\, collaboratively\, via a model of creativity & open engagement. \nBetty Yu is a multimedia artist\, filmmaker\, educator and activist born and raised in NYC to Chinese immigrant parents. Ms. Yu’s documentary “Resilience” about her garment worker mother fighting sweatshop conditions\, screened at national and international film festivals including the Margaret Mead Film and Video Festival.  Yu’s multi-media installation\, The Garment Worker was featured at Tribeca Film Institute’s Interactive. She worked with housing activists and artists to co-create Monument to Anti-Displacement Organizing that was featured in the Agitprop! show at Brooklyn Museum. Betty was a 2012 Public Artist-in-Resident and received the 2016 SOAPBOX Artist Award from Laundromat Project.  In 2017\, Ms. Yu has been awarded several artist residences from institutions such as the International Studio & Curatorial Program\, Skidmore College’s Documentary Studies Collaborative and SPACE at Ryder Farm. In 2015\, Betty co-founded Chinatown Art Brigade\, a cultural collective using art to advance anti-gentrification organizing. Betty won the 2017 Aronson Journalism for Social Justice Documentary Award for her film\, Three Tours. Ms. Yu is currently 2017-18 fellow of the Intercultural Leadership Institute.  Betty is also an adjunct assistant professor teaching new media\, film theory\, art and video production at various colleges in NYC which include The New School\, John Jay College\, Marymount Manhattan College and Hunter College. In addition Betty Yu sits on the boards of Third World Newsreel and Working Films\, two progressive documentary film organizations. Ms. Yu holds a BFA from NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts and a MFA in Integrated Media Arts from Hunter College. \n  \n\nPunctures logo design by Kelly Walters.
URL:https://squeaky.org/event/symposium-punctures-textiles-in-digital-and-material-time/
LOCATION:Hallwalls Contemporary Art Center\, 341 Delaware Avenue\, Buffalo\, NY\, 14202\, United States
CATEGORIES:Symposia & Panels
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20171118T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20171119T120000
DTSTAMP:20260421T065141
CREATED:20251230T191110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251230T191110Z
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SUMMARY:To and From 1967: A Rebellion with Martin Sostre
DESCRIPTION:Ephraim Asili\, Fluid Frontiers\, 2017\nSaturday\, November 18\, 2–6pm | Sunday\, November 19\, 12–5pm\n Location: Frank E. Merriweather Jr. Library\, 1324 Jefferson Ave\, Buffalo\, NY 14208 (map)\n Free and open to the general public \nA two day series of screenings and discussions\, with Karima Amin\, Max Anderson\, Ephraim Asili\, Obsidian Bellis\, Paris Henderson\, Meg Knowles\, Savion Mingo\, Elisa Peebles\, and Brett Story. See the full schedule below. \nOn the 50th anniversary of the Long Hot Summer—an urban rebellion that took place around the United States\, including on Buffalo’s East Side—Squeaky Wheel\, Just Buffalo Literary Center\, and Open Buffalo present To and From 1967\, a two-day series of screenings\, discussions and events inspired by prison justice activist Martin Sostre (1923-2015). \nFeaturing filmmakers\, journalists and storytellers from Buffalo and beyond\, Sostre’s story and commitment act as a prism for this event series\, refracting the ways in which incarceration envelops society at large\, situating 1967 in Buffalo\, and exploring possible futures rooted among a celebration of the African diaspora\, among other discussions. \nThe event also marks the installation of Reviving Sostre\, a participatory artwork centering Martin Sostre. Local artists Paris Henderson\, Savion Mingo\, and Obsidian have hand-made custom bookshelves with the goal of recreating Sostre’s presence where his store once stood on Jefferson Avenue. Sostre’s store carried progressive\, leftist and Black radical literature. In order to make this revival true to his legacy we call on you to donate your books of these genres. Bring your books to the event on Saturday\, or drop them off at Squeaky Wheel by 5pm\, Friday\, November 17. \nSchedule\nAll events take place at the Frank E. Merriweather Jr. Library at 1324 Jefferson Ave\, Buffalo\, NY 14208. Light refreshments will be available between sessions. \nSaturday\, November 18 \n\n\n2pm\nScreening + Talk | Framing 1967 with Karima Amin\nWe begin our weekend with a screening of the documentary Frame Up: The Imprisonment of Martin Sostre (Pacific Street Films\, 30min\, 1974\, USA)\, which charts Martin Sostre’s wrongful imprisonment following the rebellion on Buffalo’s east side\, his rise as a prisoner’s rights activist\, and his role as one of the most noted political prisoners of his time. The screening will be followed by a conversation on the history of 1967 in Buffalo and the effects of the incarceral state upon our city with storyteller and activist Karima Amin (Prisoners are People Too!) \nThe screening will be followed by a conversation on the history of 1967 in Buffalo and the effects of the incarceral state upon our city with storyteller and activist Karima Amin (Prisoners are People Too!) \n  \n \n4pm\nScreening + Q&A | The Prison in Twelve Landscapes with Brett Story and Meg Knowles\nReflecting on Martin Sostre’s work on exposing the gross human rights violations of the prison system\, we present The Prison in Twelve Landscapes (90min\, 2015\, USA). Story’s film depicts the way today’s systems of mass incarceration affect our communities far outside the prison walls. Unfolding as a cinematic journey through a series of landscapes across the USA\, The Prison… shows us where prisons do work and affect lives\, from a California mountainside where female prisoners fight raging wildfires\, to a Bronx warehouse full of goods destined for the state correctional system\, to an Appalachian coal town betting its future on the promise of prison jobs. \nThe screening will be followed by a Q&A with Meg Knowles and director Brett Story in person. \nSunday\, November 19 \n \n12pm\nArt Tour + Call to Action | Reviving Sostre with Obsidian Bellis\, Paris Henderson\, and Savion Mingo\nLocation: Starting at Merriweather Library\, traveling to 1412 Jefferson Ave.\nBRING YOUR BOOKS! Before his arrest in 1967\, Martin Sostre was known in Buffalo as the proprietor of the Afro-Asian Bookstore on 1412 Jefferson Ave\, which he envisioned as a political center for Afro-American youth. Local artists Obsidian Bellis\, Paris Henderson and Savion Mingo have created an art installation comprised of three hand-made bookshelves with the goal of recreating Sostre’s presence where his store once stood. Join us for a walk to Reviving Sostre\, led by the artists\, and donate your own progressive\, leftist and Black radical literature to the shelves. \n  \n \n1pm\nPerformance + Talk | Operations of Freedom with Elisa Peebles and Max Anderson\nMartin Sostre’s activism was not limited to the prison system. He continually reflected on how issues regarding justice and equity affected the situations he was in at that moment\, and how his efforts could be most effective. Reflecting on the different shapes activism can take\, Elisa Peebles\, an artist\, activist and producer originally from the East Side of Buffalo\, NY\, presents a special performance called Operations of Freedom: The Case for Culture as the New Frontline. \nThe performance will be followed by a conversation between Elisa Peebles and Max Anderson on the merits of different approaches to activism. \n  \n \n3pm\nScreening + Q&A: Ephraim Asili’s African Diaspora Series\, with Max Anderson\nBringing together pasts\, presents\, and possible futures of the African diaspora\, To and From 1967 concludes with a screening of five short films by Ephraim Asili. As we look from 1967 to 2017 and beyond\, Asili’s films listen to sounds and gestures across centuries and oceans. These personal\, speculative films allow us to imagine where a trace of a movement may lead\, rooted in collective histories. \nThe screening will be followed by a conversation between Ephraim Asili and Max Anderson. \nThe films to be screened in the African Diaspora series include: \nForged Ways\n2011 | 15min | Ethiopia / United States\nFilmed on location in Harlem (NY) and Ethiopia\, Forged Ways oscillates between the first person account of a filmmaker\, a man navigating the streets of Harlem\, and the day to day life in the cities and villages of Ethiopia. \nAmerican Hunger\n2013 | 19min | Ghana / United States\nOscillating between a street festival in Philadelphia\, the slave forts and capitol city of Ghana\, and the New Jersey shore\, American Hunger explores the relationship between personal experience and collective histories. American fantasies confront African realities. African realities confront America fantasies. \nMany Thousands Gone\n2015 | 8min | Brazil / United States\nFilmed on location in Salvador\, Brazil (the last city in the Western Hemisphere to outlaw slavery) and Harlem\, NY ( an international stronghold of the African Diaspora)\, Many Thousands Gone draws parallels between a summer afternoon on the streets of the two cities. A silent version of the film was given to jazz multi-instrumentalist Joe McPhee to use an interpretive score. The final film is the combination of the images and McPhee’s real time “sight reading” of the score. \nKindah\n2016 | 00:12:00 | Jamaica / United States\nKindah was shot in Hudson\, NY and Accompong\, Jamaica. Accompong was founded in 1739 after rebel slaves and their descendants fought a protracted war with the British leading to the establishment of a treaty between the two sides. The treaty signed under British governor Edward Trelawny granted Cudjoe’s Maroons 1\,500 acres of land between their strongholds of Trelawny Town and Accompong in the Cockpits. Cudjoe\, a leader of the Maroons\, is said to have united them in their fight for autonomy under the Kindah Tree — a large\, ancient mango tree that still stands to this day. The tree symbolizes the kinship of the community on its common land. \nFluid Frontiers\n2017 | 00:23:00 | Canada / United States\nFluid Frontiers is the fifth and final film in an ongoing series of films exploring Asili’s personal relationship to the African Diaspora. Shot along the Detroit River\, Fluid Frontiers explores the relationship between concepts of resistance and liberation exemplified by the Underground Railroad\, Broadside Press\, and artworks of local Detroit Artists. All of the poems are read from original copies of Broadside Press publications by natives of the Detroit Windsor region and were shot without rehearsal. \n\nBios \nKarima Amin is a storyteller\, educator\, and author from Buffalo\, NY who shares tales in her repertoire throughout the US and Canada with storylovers of all ages. With 24 years in public school education to her credit\, and more than three decades of storytelling\, she provides performances\, workshops\, keynotes and author visits to promote literacy\, increase cultural awareness\, enliven staff development\, and improve human relations. Her voice is very familiar in a community where she has shared fables on local radio (WBLK-FM) for a decade.\nKarima is a co-founder of “Spin-A-Story Tellers of WNY” and “Tradition Keepers: Black Storytellers of WNY.” She is also a member of the National Storytelling Network and the National Association of Black Storytellers. Her most recent stories in print appear in The Adventures of Brer Rabbit and Friends\, African American Children’s Stories: A Treasury of Tradition and Pride\, and My First Treasury: Grandma Loves You. In 2004 she reissued some of her favorite stories on the CD You Can Say That Again! with local musician S’wayne\, which earned a “Parents Choice Foundation Gold Award” and “Storytelling World” honors. In 2012\, Karima received the Zora Neale Hurston Legacy Award from the National Association of Black Storytellers\, Inc.\, for striving to preserve and perpetuate the art of storytelling. \nA lifelong New Yorker\, Max Anderson (Director of Communications\, Open Buffalo) has lived and grown in the state’s Capital\, Mid-Hudson\, Central and Finger Lakes regions before putting down stakes in Buffalo. As a son and brother of West Indians who ventured to the United States in search of opportunity\, Anderson is passionate about supporting all individuals and families struggling for a foothold in the evolving Buffalo/Niagara economy. Prior to joining Open Buffalo\, Anderson spent about 10 years working in the newspaper industry. During the latter part of his journalism career\, Anderson covered city governance\, economic development and criminal justice (focusing on police-community relations) as an editorialist for Rochester’s Democrat and Chronicle newspaper. Anderson serves on the Next Generation United Advisory Council (through the United Way of Buffalo and Erie County)\, the board of The Foundry (a hub of business incubation and hands-on education)\, and Squeaky Wheel Film and Media Art Center. \nEphraim Asili is a Filmmaker\, DJ\, and Traveler whose work focuses on the African diaspora as a cultural force. His films have screened in festivals and venues all over the world\, including the New York Film Festival\, NY; Toronto International Film Festival\, Canada; Ann Arbor Film Festival\, MI; San Francisco International Film Festival\, CA; Milano Film Festival\, Italy; International Film Festival Rotterdam\, Netherlands; MoMA PS1\, NY; LAMOCA\, CA; Museum of Fine Arts\, Boston\, MA; and the Whitney Museum\, NY. As a DJ\, Asili can be heard on his radio program In The Cut on WGXC\, or live at his monthly dance party Botanica. Asili currently resides in Hudson\, NY\, and is a Professor in the Film and Electronic Arts Department at Bard College. \nObsidian Bellis is a black genderqueer artist born and raised on the East Side of Buffalo\, NY. Obsidian expresses themselves with their work using elements of nature and the divine. Their work is often analog and they work with a variety of mediums such as found objects\, paper collage\, watercolor\, acrylic\, pencil\, pen\, markers & charcoal. They are a co-founder for D.O.P.E. Collective (Dismantling Oppressive Patterns for Empowerment) which was started in 2015 by black youth of the city to hold space for marginalized people by providing education and performance spaces. In Spring of 2017\, Obsidian created Maybe Heaven to use their creative and caregiving passions to provide a safe space for other Femmes of Color and “non-traditionally” taught artists and their artistic endeavors. \nParis J Henderson is a visual artist born & raised in Buffalo NY. His work ranges from hand drawn illustrations\, digital work & video art. Active in the organizing scene\, Paris is also a founding member of local creative collective United Melanin Society\, a group aimed at uplifting artist of color in the WNY area. \nA producer of more than 40 short documentary films\, Meg Knowles is an assistant professor of media production in the Communication Department at Buffalo State College. Her award-winning films have been screened at festivals\, galleries\, and museums\, including the Museum of Modern Art\, Anthology Film Archives\, Portland PDX Film Festival\, the Athens International Film and Video Festival (1st Prize\, Experimental Documentary Category) as well as on Free Speech TV and PBS. Meg recently served as a judge for the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences’ Emmy Awards (Editing Category) and for the Society of Professional Journalists’ Sigma Delta Chi Award (Television Documentary Category). Meg has a B.A. in Art History from Vassar College\, an M.A. in Media Study from the University at Buffalo and an M.F.A. in Film Media Arts from Temple University. \nSavion Mingo is a multidisciplinary artist born in Buffalo\, NY and raised in the Kenfield/Langfield Projects. Although his work varies from fine arts to graphic design\, his medium of choice is digital: including collage\, vector illustration\, and painting. Savion is a ghetto organizer\, co-founding D.O.P.E. Collective (Dismantling Oppressive Patterns for Empowerment) in 2015\, a Black youth-led anti-oppression arts organization which provides decolonial education\, access to health services\, and builds alternative arts spaces for marginalized peoples. He is also a sexual health advocate for youth and is a proud lover of zines! \nElisa Peebles is an artist\, activist and producer originally from the East Side of Buffalo\, NY. After receiving a B.S. in Media\, Culture and Communication Studies from New York University\, Elisa has spent the past several years living\, working and creating in Buffalo and New York City. Her most recent exhibition\, Bodies of Light: Exit Strategy\, at the gallery pop up Decolonize This Place\, brought artists of color from both cities together around the themes of resistance and perseverance. Prior to this\, Elisa created and co-directed the Buffalo Myth Project\, and was a producer on the Sundance and SXSW – selected short Actresses\, as well as several other independent and commercial short films. A hip-hop performer\, Elisa was selected to perform at the Brooklyn Academy of Music’s 2015 Everybooty Pride Festival. She uses music\, film\, audio and other methods of storytelling to contemplate issues around collective memory\, urban development\, social justice\, and the intersection of race\, gender and sexuality. Currently\, Elisa is a producer of the satirical web-series Dark Justice. \nBrett Story is a writer and independent non-fiction filmmaker based out of Toronto and New York. Her films have screened at True/False\, Oberhausen\, Hot Docs\, the Viennale\, and Dok Leipzig\, among other festivals. Her second feature documentary\, The Prison in Twelve Landscapes (2016) was awarded the Special Jury Prize for Canadian Feature Documentary at Hot Docs\, the Prize for Best Canadian Documentary at the DOXA Documentary Festival\, and a Special Jury Mention at the Camden International Film Festival. The film was broadcast on PBS’s Independent Lens. Her journalism and film criticism have appeared in such outlets as CBC Radio and The Nation magazine\, and she is currently completing a book manuscript for the University of California Press titled The Prison out of Place. Brett holds a PhD in geography from the University of Toronto and is currently a postdoctoral research fellow at the Center for Place\, Culture and Politics at the City University of New York Graduate Center. She was the recipient of the Documentary Organization of Canada Institute’s 2014 New Visions Award\, and is a 2016-2017 Sundance Institute Art of Nonfiction Fellow.
URL:https://squeaky.org/event/to-and-from-1967-a-rebellion-with-martin-sostre/
LOCATION:NY
CATEGORIES:Symposia & Panels
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