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SUMMARY:Meet the Residents: Ajunie Virk\, Arielle Knight\, Jason Rhee
DESCRIPTION:This event has been postponed due to unforeseen reasons. The new date is Friday\, April 24\, 7 pm ET\nIn-person at Squeaky Wheel and online\nFree or suggested donation; get tickets below\nSqueaky Wheel is pleased to present this hybrid artist talk with our Spring 2026 Workspace Residents! Ajunie Virk\, Arielle Knight\, and Jason Rhee will be presenting on their previous and current projects\, along with a Q&A with the residents moderated by curator Ekrem Serdar. \nFor in-person attendees: The event will take place at Squeaky Wheel. Please note that you cannot enter Tri-Main Center after 7:30 pm. Catering from Ali Baba Kebab\, with vegetarian options\, will be provided. \nFor online attendees: A private link will be sent to you; the event will be available at the link at the start date and time. You will have access to the event for 24 hours; Squeaky Wheel members receive 72 hour access. Not a member yet? Sign up here. \nAccessibility: If you’d like to request ASL interpretation for either in-person or the online viewing\, please contact ekrem@squeaky.org by April 2. You can view additional information on Squeaky Wheel’s accessibility information here. \nAjunie Virk will be working on A Foot Off the Windowsill\, a feature length experimental film which follows a recovering addict whose fragile first relationship and year of sobriety collide as she scours her house to destroy a shadow she judges to be a cockroach. The roach—an insect often seen as toxic\, despite its essential role in ecosystems to break down remnants and waste—enters the character’s pristine home\, disrupting their curated world and forcing a reckoning with societal expectation\, relinquishment\, and authenticity. The film blends the use of  3D animation\, green screen performance\, and motion capture to highlight the inconsistencies in the personas we build to dodge the shame inherent in pursuing perfection. \nArielle Knight will be working on an installation version of And Counting… a hybrid documentary and fiction film that conveys the fractured experience of “carceral time”. The film follows a mother and her formerly incarcerated son’s journey home\, confronting their wounds and their hopes to rebuild their bond. Knight’s approach draws on the power of hybridity not as artifice\, but as a means of approaching reality more truthfully. During the residency\, the filmmaker will repurpose and recontextualize materials that did not make it into the short film—outtakes\, archival footage\, and experimental sound pieces—integrating them into an immersive multi-channel environment. \nFilmmaker Jason Rhee will be working on The Untitled EJ Lee Documentary\, an intimate feature-length film  that goes beyond basketball to unveil the untold story of Eun Jung “EJ” Lee\, a diminutive but powerful figure in the world of women’s basketball. The film tells a basketball story that’s never been told before: a female Asian immigrant in the southern U.S. who reached enormous heights on the biggest stages as a player and attempts to do the same as a coach. Following sports narratives  such as Last Chance U\, The Heart of The Game\, and Hoop Dreams\, the film showcases intimate verité footage of EJ and the players on and off the court\, the societal issues that they faced\, and the historical journey of EJ becoming one of the best basketball players in the world. In a society that tends to worship male sports icons\, The Untitled EJ Lee Documentary  seeks to inspire young women\, girls\, members of the AAPI community\, older adults\, and sports enthusiasts at large\, ushering a resilient and awe-inspiring woman into the pantheon of American sports heroes. \nFunding for this session of Squeaky Wheel’s Workspace Residency is provided by the Teiger Foundation and the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts. Thank you to our friends at Rust Belt Books\, Buffalo’s largest used bookstore\, for sponsoring this session of the residency. Special thank you to the panelists of this session of the residency\, Alicia Hawkins\, Donte McFadden\, and Joan Nobile. Learn more about the program here. \nBiographies of the artists\n \nAjunie Virk is an Indian-American writer-director and animator whose work investigates the relationship between surveillance\, identity\, and paranoia in a diasporic middle-America\, conjuring up narratives that force viewers to face uncomfortable truths only apparent after objects of nostalgia are stripped of their familiar contexts. An alumnus of Carnegie Mellon University\, Virk was an artist-in-residence at Bunker Projects\, Brew House Arts\, the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture\, and the Yale Norfolk School of Art. A recipient of the Anne Dowden and Samuel Rosenberg awards\, she has recently screened works at the Coaxial Art Foundation\, Roski Mateo Gallery\, and Light Matters Festival\, among others. \n \nDirector and producer Arielle Knight is an award-winning filmmaker and founder of GoodKnight Films Inc.\, acclaimed for her innovative storytelling that illuminates untold narratives across the Black diaspora. Working at the intersection of documentary and hybrid forms\, her films and collaborations examine how communities navigate social\, economic\, and embodied precarity. She draws on surreal interpretations of political\, social\, and domestic realities\, blurring boundaries between nonfiction and fantasy to create cinematic spaces of escape and freedom. Her work has been supported by the Sundance Institute\, Southern Documentary Fund\, Catapult Film Fund\, and the Ford Foundation\, among others. Through intimate\, personal narratives\, Knight continues to expand the possibilities of contemporary cinema with a vision rooted in Black futurity\, imagination\, and experimentation. \n \nJason Rhee (Director/Producer/Cinematographer) is a Korean American filmmaker with a passion for telling stories centered around his childhood and the AAPI community. Jason spent a decade in comedy prior to working on his feature film at institutions like The Onion and Conan. With a background in screenwriting and comedy\, he helped produce three one- woman shows with comedian Kellye Howard\, including directing a sold-out run at the Steppenwolf Theater as part of its 2022 LookOut series. Jason recently served as a cinematographer for PBS WTTW’s Firsthand webseries on migrants\, unhoused Chicagoans\, and peacekeepers.
URL:https://squeaky.org/event/meet-the-residents-ajunie-virk-arielle-knight-jason-rhee/
LOCATION:Squeaky Wheel\, 2495 Main Street\, Suite 310\, Buffalo\, NY\, 14214\, United States
CATEGORIES:Artist Talk,Hybrid,Residencies
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241004T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241004T193000
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SUMMARY:Squeaky Wheel's 21st Animation Fest!
DESCRIPTION:Friday\, October 4\, 6 pm ET\nIn-person at the Buffalo AKG Art Museum and online\nIn-person is free as part of M&T First Fridays. Online is free or $10 suggested donation\nSqueaky Wheel is excited to present the 21st annual Animation Fest! Featuring eleven films from Buffalo and beyond\, this years edition provides a survey of gorgeous vistas and inventive joy\, with films made in a variety of techniques and media\, from charcoal drawings to 3D animation. \nThe films take on love and identity\, landscapes and gardens\, artificial intelligence\, and much more. Featuring films by Alisi Telengut\, Calvin Hardick\, Delia Hass\, Eva Davidova\, J. Ramos\, Kolya Kishinsky & Geneva Huffman\, Marina Santana De la Torre\, Miranda Javid\, S4RA\, Suncana Brkulj and Tony Nash. \nContent notes: The 10th film in the program\, Red Thumb\, features a foreboding atmosphere and a scene of a character choking another that may not be appropriate for young children. See film descriptions below for caption availability. \nTo attend in-person: The screening will take place at 6 pm at the Buffalo AKG Art Museum’s auditorium. Just show up! \nTo attend online: Get your ticket below! Upon check-out\, you will receive an email titled “Your Squeaky Wheel Film & Media Art Center order has been received!”. A private link will be included in that email; the event will be available at the link at the start date and time. You will have access to the event for 24 hours; Squeaky Wheel members receive 72 hour access. Not a member yet? Sign up here. \nAlisi Telengut’s Baigal Nuur is courtesy of Fabian&Fred Studio. Suncana Brkulj’s Butterfly and Delia Hass’ On Hold are courtesy of Bonobo Studios. Special thank you to Fabian Driehorst\, Vanja Andrijevic\, Charlie Garland and Amina Boyd. This years edition of the Animation Fest was curated by Squeaky Wheel staff Carra Stratton\, Ekrem Serdar\, Mark Longolucco\, and Zainab Saleh. \n            </p>\n<h4>Program</h4>\n<p>                        \nProgram duration: ~53 minutes. Descriptions courtesy of the filmmakers and distributors. \nTony Nash\, Where Was I?\n1:37 minutes\, open captions\, 2024\nThis work was inspired by friendship and nostalgia. \nDelia Hess\, On Hold\n7:11 minutes\, 2024\nA young woman is stuck in the hold queue of a telephone hotline. A surreal episodic short film about the absurdities of urban life and the frustration of a paralysing standstill. \nMiranda Javid\, What Humans Do\n6:40 minutes\, open captions\, 2023\nA macro view of human-actions\, as told from within a singular body. Animated frame by frame with biodegradable ink + paper. \nMarina Santana De la Torre\, La Estación de las Rosas (The Season of the Roses)\n2:45 minutes\, Spanish with English subtitles\, 2024\nChronicle about freedom and sexual diversity. The film centres on the gay relationship between two university students who discover what life is like when they graduate. \nJ. Ramos\, Eldritch Kiss\n2:53 minutes\, open captions\, digital video\, 2024\nA workplace romance sparks up at a small convenience store. Claire is a shy\, awkward girl with a secret. Addie is a nice girl who is unaware of Claire’s truth. Will their newfound love survive Claire’s reveal? \nCalvin Hardick\, Silo\n1:17 minutes\, 2024\nA very personal and specific representation of universal creative energy manifested as a character. Inside of an impossible structure somewhere in the cosmos\, seen through the impenetrable safety of a viewing portal\, we get to witness the moment of ascension into the material plane. We\, the viewers\, our hoppy two dimensional friend\, and the being born in the silo are all segments of an infinite accordion\, seeing\, feeling\, sharing\, and expressing. \nS4RA\, bot3quim\n4:45 minutes\, Spanish with English subtitles\, 2023\nstage for intellectuals\, artists & freethinkers 2 meet\, a cultural institution that has become the sanctuary for creative expression & a symbol of resistance during the portugese dictatorship \nAlisi Telengut\, Baigal Nuur (Lake Baikal)\n8:56 min\, Buryat-Mongolian with English subtitles\, 2023\nThe formation and history of Lake Baikal in Siberia are re-imagined with hand-made animation\, featuring the voice of a Buryat woman who can still recall some words in her endangered Buryat-Mongolian language. \nEva Davidova\, Vinson And Flying Dancers Over A Lush Garden With Animals\n2:46 minutes\, 2024\nVinson and Flying Dancers Over a Lush Garden with Animals is an experimental animation investigating through hundreds of prompts the biases in the dataset of Runway’s LLM about dancers of color\, and the frustrating attempts at feeding concepts like Flying (we ended up writing Falling to achieve Flying)\, Bare Feet\, or Dancing with Animals. The sound is a mix by Eva Davidova\, based on Matthew D. Gantt experiments with Artificial Intelligence in sound. \nKolya Kishinsky and Geneva Huffman\, Red Thumb\n5:52 min\, 2024\nA stop motion short about a gardener who tries to control his environment as he discovers a pulsing red plant. As it physically grows so does their connection\, becoming his prized blooming obsession. \nSuncana Brkulj\, Butterfly\n8:07 minutes\, 2024\nA community of garden creatures all contribute to the flow of life\, using water from a fountain. When a butterfly gets stuck in the fountain\, they’re faced with an unfamiliar situation.             \n            </p>\n<h4>Filmmaker biographies</h4>\n<p>                        \nAlisi Telengut is a Canadian artist of Mongolian origin\, living between Berlin and Tiohti:áke/Montréal. Her work received multiple awards and nominations and has been screened and exhibited internationally\, including at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures\, Sundance Film Festival\, TIFF\, Videonale\, among others. \nCalvin Hardick is a multi-disciplinary illustrator and animator from Buffalo\, NY. \nDelia Hess studied animation at the Lucerne School of Art and Design in Switzerland. Since her graduation in 2012 she has been working independently on her own short film projects as well as on commissioned films and illustrations. She lives and works in Lucerne.\nFilmography: On Hold (2024)\, Emmen by the Lake (2021)\, Circuit (2018)\, Around the Stairway (2018)\, Morning Train (2012\, student film)\, Partition (2011\, student film)\, In the City (2011\, student film) \nEva Davidova explores behavior\, ecological disaster\, and the social implications of technology through performative works rooted in the absurd. Challenging a singular narrative\, she combines ancient mythology with current technologies to address the impending ecological catastrophe. Her practice involves research\, performance\, 360 video and 3D animation\, game engines\, participatory Virtual Reality\, and interactive\, site-specific immersive installations. Davidova has exhibited at the Bronx Museum\, the UVP at Everson Museum\, Buffalo AKG Museum\, MACBA\, CAAC Sevilla\, La Regenta\, ISSUE Project Room\, Harvestworks\, Instituto Cervantes\, and the Museum of Moving Image (MoMI) in New York. \nJ. Ramos is someone inspired by their own experiences with sexuality and mental health. They’re pursuing a BFA in Animation at Villa Maria College\, going into their senior year in 2024. They love animation and working on new projects as they come. \nKolya Kishinsky is a recent RISD graduate and Bay Area born animator where in the foggy hills one’s hand disappears if it’s too far from the body. As in the fog\, his work focuses on searching\, autonomy and creating personal identity. He works in both stop motion and 2D animated mediums as well as holding a printmaking and illustration practice focused on telling surreal yet personal stories.\nGeneva Huffman is a recent graduate from the Rhode Island School of Design\, working in both 2D and 3D aspects of illustration. She particularly enjoys fabrication in the world of stop motion and is constantly tinkering. Geneva is probably making something creepy and macabre this very moment. Be afraid\, be very afraid. \nMarina Santana is a Mexican Director\, cinematographer\, animator and sound designer. Her work explores dreams and eerie circumstances as well as fear of the unknown. She has screened at Ann Arbor\, Shorts México\, Festival Internacional de Cine de Hidalgo\, Austin Arthouse\, ICDOCS\, Pantalla de Cristal\, New York City International Film Festival and Trinidad y Tobago Film Festival. She holds an MFA from the California Institute of the Arts and is an alumni of the Robert Flaherty Film Seminar. \nMiranda Javid (she/her) is an animator\, curator\, and art-educator. Her animations describe cognitive experience\, human bias\, and the relationship between individuals and their communities. \nS4RA is an < non-binary && genderqueer > interdisciplinary artist that feeds on con*sensual power dynamics & gender role play through a /non/ linear looping hybrid process between digital animation & ( immersive : ) environments. also spends endless hours strolling through post-capitalism mazes & it’s influence on libidinal pleasure. \nSuncana Brkulj (1997) earned her MA in animation from the Academy of Fine Arts in Zagreb. Her student films have been selected for screenings at prestigious festivals in Annecy\, Ottawa\, Zagreb\, Stuttgart\, and elsewhere\, winning several awards. After graduating\, Suncana undertook a residency at Open Workshop in Viborg\, where she made her first professional film\, Butterfly. \nTony Nash: I began painting about 50 years ago and now also enjoy making video artwork.             \nSponsors\nThank you to Villa Maria College for being the Reel Sponsor of Squeaky Wheel’s Animation Fest. Thank you to our sponsors Buffalo Spree\, Rigidized Metals\, Rose Jade Consulting Co-op\, Delaware Council Member Joel Feroleto\, Tri-Main Center\, Harlequin Pet Services\, Buffalo State College Communication Dept\, Rich Products Corporation\, Legislator April Baskin\, 26 Allen\, Lumpy Buttons\, Niagara Council Member David Rivera\, PUSH Buffalo\, Buffalo AKG Art Museum Altreuter & Berlin\, If Music Be. \n \nBanner image: A still from Suncana Brkulj’s Butterfly (2024). A colorful\, unrealistic. and dense landscape of cute creatures smiling or looking sad. Some are sitting next to each other\, some are dancing\, some have their hands up in joy. Two circles that could be the sun and moon overlook them.
URL:https://squeaky.org/event/squeaky-wheels-21st-animation-fest/
LOCATION:Buffalo AKG Art Museum\, 1285 Elmwood Avenue\, Buffalo\, NY\, 14222\, United States
CATEGORIES:Hybrid,Screenings
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240823T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240823T203000
DTSTAMP:20260612T080411
CREATED:20251230T191612Z
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SUMMARY:Meet the Residents: Ahmed T. Ragheb\, Lily Ekimian Ragheb\, and Kathryn Ramey
DESCRIPTION:Friday\, August 23\, 2024\, 7 pm ET\nOnline and in-person @ Squeaky Wheel\nFree or suggested donation. Catering from AliBaba Kebab provided for in-person attendees.\nASL interpretation available; request by Tuesday\, August 20.\nRegister below\nSqueaky Wheel is pleased to present this hybrid artist talk with our Summer 2024 Workspace Residents! Ahmed T. Ragheb & Lily Ekimian Ragheb (Pittsburgh\, PA) and Kathryn Ramey (Roslindale\, MA) will be presenting on their previous and current projects\, along with a Q&A with the residents moderated by curator Ekrem Serdar. \nFor in-person attendees: The event will take place at Squeaky Wheel. Please note that you cannot enter Tri-Main Center after 7:30 pm. \nFor online attendees: A private link will be sent to you; the event will be available at the link at the start date and time. You will have access to the event for 24 hours; Squeaky Wheel members receive 72 hour access. Not a member yet? Sign up here. \nAhmed T. Ragheb & Lily Ekimian Ragheb will be working on Visitor\, a short experimental essay film about an Egyptian vampire who travels to America in search of family. The film will pair a fictional voiceover narrative with docu-style video footage of the post-industrial landscapes of Pittsburgh and Buffalo. Consisting of hand-held\, point-of-view shots with no on-screen actors\, the observational style of Visitor will facilitate an exploration of Arab and Arab-American cultural identity\, immigration\, family and the changing landscape of the American Rust Belt. \nDuring her residency\, Kathryn Ramey will be working on SILVER & earth: Marina A which will be presented to the public on Friday\, September 6 at Silo City. The multi-channel digital and 16mm projection performance will highlight environmentally conscious artistic practices within reclaimed post industrial sites such as Silo City. Part of a larger suite of work\, SILVER & earth: Marina A\, focuses on analogue film\, using outdated material that would otherwise find its way to a landfill through a variety of experimental gestures. These include: phytograms in which Vitamin C\, plant material and soda or wood ash is used to print onto film; burying film in compost; among other methods. Ramey’s project marks a deepening of Squeaky Wheel’s partnership with Silo City to also support ecological media arts practices. \nBiographies of the residents\nAhmed T. Ragheb & Lily Ekimian Ragheb are a married experimental filmmaking duo based in Pittsburgh. Lily – American\, Russian and Armenian – grew up between Washington\, D.C.\, and Cairo\, Egypt. Ahmed – Egyptian\, Dutch and American – was born and raised in Cairo. Their films emphasize identity\, place\, feminism\, cultural dislocation and domestic relationships and are noted for their use of voiceover and mixed media. Their work has screened at Oscar-qualifying festivals including Uppsala Short Film Festival (Nominated\, Ingmar Bergman Award)\, Athens Int’l Film & Video Festival and RiverRun\, as well as the Arab American National Museum\, Pittsburgh Shorts\, and the Arab Film and Media Institute’s Arab Film Festival. Together they founded the independent production company Studio Ragheb. \nKathryn Ramey (1967)\, Vancouver\, WA / USA. A Guggenheim and Creative Capital fellow with an MFA in film and a PhD in anthropology who has made over a dozen films and installations\, contributed numerous articles to anthologies and journals and written the essential text Experimental Filmmaking: BREAK THE MACHINE (2015). Her films operate at the intersection of experimental analogue processes and ethnographic research and are characterized by hand-processing\, optical printing\, and animation. She has screened at several festivals such as Toronto\, Ann Arbor\, TriBeca\, Ji.hlava\, and 25fps\, among others. \nBanner photo: Two photographs side by side: Ahmed Ragheb and Lily Ekimian Ragheb sitting side by side in a black and white photograph. Kathryn Ramey\, a white woman in her 50’s with long gray blond hair in a bun wearing a black and white plaid mock turtle-neck blouse and a black cotton blazer and pink glasses sits smiling facing the camera in front of a white picket fence with green trees and blue sky in the background. This photo was taken at Camden Film Festival.
URL:https://squeaky.org/event/meet-the-residents-ahmed-ragheb-lily-ekimian-ragheb-and-kathryn-ramey/
LOCATION:Squeaky Wheel\, 2495 Main Street\, Suite 310\, Buffalo\, NY\, 14214\, United States
CATEGORIES:Artist Talk,Hybrid,Residencies
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240507T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240507T210000
DTSTAMP:20260612T080411
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SUMMARY:Rushes: Films and actions by Jason Livingston
DESCRIPTION:Tuesday\, May 7\, 7 pm ET\n@ Journey’s End Refugee Services (2495 Main St #530\, Buffalo\, NY 14214) and online\nFree or suggested donation\nTickets available below\nSqueaky Wheel presents an evening of films\, actions\, and conversation with artist Jason Livingston. This evening of films showcases Livingston’s long-standing work on the climate crises and protest movements through visual and linguistic play. Featuring his celebrated film Ancient Sunshine (2020)\, the screening features work made by the filmmaker from 2012 to the present day. This event is organized on the occasion of his exhibition with Phoebe A. Cohen\, In the Sun’s Absence. The artist will be present to deliver an artist talk ahead of the screening\, and the exhibition will be open after the screening at Squeaky Wheel. \nFor in-person attendees: JERS is located on the fifth floor of Tri-Main Center; head left after you exit the elevator. Please note that you cannot enter Tri-Main Center after 7:30 pm. \nFor online attendees: Upon check-out\, you will receive an email titled “Your Squeaky Wheel Film & Media Art Center order has been received!”. A private link will be included in that email; the event will be available at the link at the start date and time. You will have access to the event for 24 hours; Squeaky Wheel members receive 72 hour access. Not a member yet? Sign up here. Please note that the artist talk will not be available online. \n            Program (click to expand)                        \nTotal program time approximately 65 minutes. \nIntroduction and artist talk by Jason Livingston \n#RUSHES/URL\n11:52 min\, silent\, 16mm on digital video\, 2015 \nAn in-camera 16mm edit of the 1st anniversary/birthday/funeral of OWS in New York City\, as seen from an embedded role in the Jellyfish Brigade\, an ad hoc affinity group formed to participate in the day’s event. Bold impact fonts compliment and countervail the images toward a warm antagonism. \n“Experimental filmmakers with no obligation to spoon feed the public fared better in documenting Occupy in a manner that proved more meditative and avoided reducing the movement to a list of talking points. Jason Livingston’s short film\, #Rushes\, provides an alternative to what the filmmaker himself labels “populist agitprop.” The two versions of the film deploy contrasting reflexive strategies designed to challenge standard representations of dissent and on-the-spot reportage of street activism. Offering a glimpse of a festive protest cum celebration commemorating the first anniversary of Occupy Wall Street in 2012\, Livingston juxtaposes the culture-jamming antics of the Jellyfish Brigade with familiar scenes of police intimidation and use of force. Demonstrators dressed in whimsical costumes holding signs such as “No Fossil Fuels…Frack Wall Street\, Not Water” highlight the march’s blend of earnestness and carnivalesque glee; the differences in tone are reinforced by\, on the one hand\, the satirist Reverend Billy’s comic spiel and\, on the other\, the unironic politicking of perennial presidential candidate Jill Stein and Cheri Honkala\, her 2012 vice-presidential candidate. \nForsaking digital for 16mm with in-camera edits\, the initial version of #Rushes was projected silently to live audiences. Refusing to bombard the audience with riot porn clichés\, talking heads\, voice over—or even the ambient sounds of a demonstration—Livingston instead solicited a running commentary from the audience at various screenings and encourage a participatory ethic and aesthetic. His decision to shoot in 16mm and move away from the more au courant DSLR aesthetic evolved from his revulsion towards consumerist pressure to abandon “technologies deemed obsolescent.” \nAlthough Livingston’s regarded his stripped-down aesthetic—and his promotion of audience participation—as “Occupy poetics\,” a screening at Union Docs in Brooklyn convinced him to launch an extended auto-critique of his own neo-Brechtian assumptions concerning “active spectatorship.” Despite the fact that #Rushes inspired some impassioned responses from audiences (particularly a frenetic screening at Squeaky Wheel in Buffalo which Livingston loved because it engendered a “lot of talking” over the silent images)\, he feared “that by encouraging ‘participation’ (i.e. talking) without sufficient direction on my part\, I was inadvertently disavowing my role as the maker (not that it’s much power in the end…)\, and actually promoting a very\, very vague participatory democracy that felt all too much like upper management’s penchant for doodlepolls\, or asking workers for ‘input’.” \nLivingston’s ambivalence towards his own attempt to emulate Occupy-style egalitarianism one microcinema at a time convinced him to accompany the film with narration\, later transformed into a series of memes embedded in a second version of the film\, that undercuts the celebration of a participatory ethos with what he terms a “warm antagonism.” Warm antagonism might be defined as playful self-laceration\, almost a parody of the type of self-criticism that was once de rigueur among authoritarian leftists. In the self-détourned version of #Rushes\, Livingston proclaims:: “Against participation\, not because participation denies the primary role of the artist in any given work and thus projects an anti-hierarchical fantasy…but because participation itself is a bureaucratic imagination.” While there’s a tongue-in-cheek aspect to Livingston’s self-indictment\, the cadences of his manifesto also undermine the pieties of “active spectatorship” and the hallowed entity known as the “emancipated spectator.” In certain respects\, the alternative film world’s penchant for participatory events might constitute a farcical equivalent of the pseudo-participation that anarchists discerned as integral components of Yugoslavian experiments in self-management. From another perspective\, the film’s dialogue with its audience\, and with itself\, is close to the kind of “auto-ethnography” that David Graeber proposes as a riposte to the vanguardist sensibility.” – Richard Porton\, author of Film and the Anarchist Imagination\, 2nd edition \n7.24.14\n4.5 mins\, silent\, 16mm film on digital video\, 2014 \nDemonstration in support of Gaza and against Operation Protective Edge on July 24\, 2014 in Ithaca\, NY. \nShale Raga\n4.5 min\, sound\, digital video\, 2015 \nSet to an excerpt of Don Cherry’s Malkauns from his border-erasing 1975 album\, Brown Rice\, Shale Raga extracts a mining industry in-house video to put pressure on carbon-based capitalist sorcery\, in this case EcoShale technology\, which is patented by Alberta-based Red Leaf Resources\, Inc. and promises to “revolutionize” oil shale production in the Book Cliffs of eastern Utah by accelerating geological time. The video is a counter-spell to ward off venture capital’s appetite for ancient life forms baked into rock. \nACID REIGN\n4.5 min\, sound\, digital video\, 2012 \nCombining archival/found footage\, treated images and diaristic Hi-8 video\, ACID REIGN explores the ongoing battle between human beings’ technologies of control and other life forms. In this case\, animals re-inhabit a post-human urban landscape. \nAncient Sunshine\n19.5 mins\, sound\, 16mm film on digital video\, 2021 \nA fossil cast in plastic\, an artificial plateau\, classic cars running on the fumes of the nation. Ancient Sunshine marks a path through fossil fuel extraction and climate defense in the American West. The film proposes solidarity against the violence by which “earth” becomes “resource.” \nUtah Tar Sands Resistance has been fighting experimental mining in the Tavaputs Plateau for almost a decade\, setting up camp every summer in sight of heavy equipment and construction crews. The film asks\, how might the concept of horizontalism be applied to the physical horizon\, its decimation\, and to capital’s propensity for vertical extrication? Ancient Sunshine interweaves the endless remaking of the Western landscape with labor history\, reflections on anarchist organization\, and interspecies economies. \nAncient Sunshine consists of interviews with the Utah Tar Sands Resistance primary organizers and other Utah land protectors\, and sets their voices in and against an industrialized landscape. The film presents an array of voices\, drawing attention to the role of resistance and kinship during times of threat and extinction. \nToward a poetic solidarity\, toward a formal politics. \n            \nBiography of the artist\nJason Livingston is a media artist\, filmmaker\, and educator. His award-winning films have been widely exhibited at festivals and museums\, including the National Gallery of Art in Washington\, D.C.\, the International Film Festival Rotterdam\, and Media City in Canada. He is currently researching histories of extractive cinema and abolitionist re-imaginings of our shared world as a Presidential Fellow in the Department of Media Study\, University at Buffalo. \nBanner image: A still from Jason Livingston’s film #Rushes/URL (2012). Two policemen on scoooters on a sunny day in New York City. On top and on the bottom of the image are superimposed words like a mid-2000s meme in Impact font: “AGAINST THE ACTIVATED SPECTATOR.”
URL:https://squeaky.org/event/rushes-films-and-actions-by-jason-livingston/
LOCATION:Journey’s End Refugee Services\, 2495 Main Street\, Suite #530\, Buffalo\, NY\, 14214\, United States
CATEGORIES:Hybrid,Screenings
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240419T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240419T203000
DTSTAMP:20260612T080411
CREATED:20251230T191540Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251230T191540Z
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SUMMARY:Meet the Residents: Everest Pipkin\, Kristin McWharter\, Jaehoon Choi\, Léwuga Tata Benson
DESCRIPTION:Friday\, April 19\, 2024\, 7 pm ET\nOnline and in-person @ Squeaky Wheel\nFree or suggested donation. ASL interpretation provided. Catering from AliBaba Kebab provided for in-person attendees.\nRegister below\nSqueaky Wheel is pleased to present this hybrid artist talk with our Spring 2024 Workspace Residents! Everest Pipkin (Truth or Consequences\, NM)\, Kristin McWharter (Chicago\, IL)\, Jaehoon Choi (Troy\, NY)\, and Léwuga Tata Benson (Buffalo\, NY) will be presenting on their previous and current projects\, including essays on video games\, and media art installations that explore notions of language and translation\, historic children’s games and locative sound\, and the devastating effects of oil extraction. Their event will conclude with a Q&A with the residents moderated by curator Ekrem Serdar. \nFor in-person attendees: The event will take place at Squeaky Wheel. Please note that you cannot enter Tri-Main Center after 7:30 pm. \nFor online attendees: A private link will be sent to you; the event will be available at the link at the start date and time. You will have access to the event for 24 hours; Squeaky Wheel members receive 72 hour access. Not a member yet? Sign up here. \nDuring their residency\, researcher resident Everest Pipkin will be working on The Fortunate Isles: Fragment Worlds\, Walled Gardens\, and the games that are played there\, a speculative essay about the edges of space within video games. Based on a talk Pipkin gave at the 2023 Roguelike Celebration\, the essay will focus on the concept of the walled garden\, expanding it to include games and games spaces. It looks at ornamental gardens\, cloisters\, isolate spaces\, and even mythological or utopian fantasies of worlds\, and goes beyond to where the garden stops and a wildness of bugs\, errors\, logical failures and edge cases begin. The essay seeks to connect the logic of potent isolation to the games we make and play.  \nJaehoon Choi will be working on an untitled media art installation on the intermingling of translation and language through light and sound. Influenced by the work of Karen Barad\, the artist will be working with mylar film\, projection\, and audio from speech recordings in various languages. The work is latest in a series of installations that delve into the artists concern\, the first of which\, “Hello. hEllo! heLLo? hellO” was created and showcased at EMPAC in May 2023. \nKristin McWharter will be working on Marco Polo\, an interactive sound installation\, based on the children’s game where one player\, with eye’s closed\, calls out “Marco” and listens for the location of other players who call out “Polo” in response. McWharter will be adapting the children’s game in a new work that incorporates megaphones\, RF transmissions\, and a series of sculptural beacons for audiences to engage with locative sound. Noting the Italian explorer’s role in shaping racist notions of Western superiority\, the project reflects on the history of trade route landscapes and the consequences of western culture’s history of continuous evasion and pursuit. \nLéwuga Tata Benson will be working towards their exhibition Fueling Change: A Multimedia Exploration of Niger Delta’s Oil Crisis that will open at Buffalo Arts Studio on July 26\, 2024. Utilizing oil drums\, video\, and audio\, the project focuses on the oil industry’s effects upon the people of the Niger Delta in Western Nigeria and the social\, economic\, and environmental consequences of unregulated oil extraction practices. \n            Biographies of the residents                        \nEverest Pipkin is a game developer\, writer\, and artist from central Texas who lives and works on a sheep farm in southern New Mexico. Their work both in the studio and in the garden follows themes of ecology\, tool making\, and collective care during collapse. They hold a BFA from University of Texas at Austin\, an MFA from Carnegie Mellon University\, and have shown and spoken at The Design Museum of London\, The Texas Biennial\, The XXI Triennale of Milan\, The Photographers Gallery of London\, Center for Land Use Interpretation\, and other spaces. When not at the computer in the heat of the day\, you can find them in the hills spending time with their neighbors— both human and non-human. \nJaehoon Choi is a computer musician / sound artist / researcher based in New York and Seoul. His practice involves embodied experimentation through a technical medium\, which involves both the process of making and bodily engagement. As a researcher\, he is interested in how a creative practice that involves embodied experimentation with a technical medium can suggest a different form of techne and contribute to technodiversity. His works have been presented at Venice Biennale\, MATA Festival\, NEW INC\, San Francisco Tape Music Festival\, NIME\, ICMC\, CeReNeM\, ECHO Journal\, ZER01NE\, Dunkunsthalle\, EIDF\, Visions Du Reel\, CEMEC\, and etc. He is currently pursuing a Ph.D. in Electronic Arts at the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and graduated from Stanford University’s Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics (CCRMA) as a Masters. \nKristin McWharter uses performance and play to interrogate the relationship between competition and intimacy. Her work conjoins viewers within immersive sculptural installations and viewer- inclusive performances that critically fuse folk games within virtual and augmented worlds. Her software installations and performative objects incorporate experimental technologies and playful interaction to produce performances that speculate upon alternative forms of social behavior. Inspired by 20th century sports narrative\, collective decision making\, and technology as a contemporary spiritual authority\, her work blurs the boundaries of intimacy and hype culture to challenge viewer relationships to affection and competitive drive. Her work has been exhibited at The Hammer Museum\, Walt Disney Concert Hall\, Bangkok Arts and Cultural Center\, Ars Electronica\, Museo Altillo Beni\, and FILE Festival among others. McWharter received her MFA from UCLA in Design Media Arts and is currently an Assistant Professor in Art & Technology Studies at SAIC. \nLéwuga Tata Benson: As an interdisciplinary artist and filmmaker\, my work bridges cultures and explores the dynamic interplay between identity\, environmental sustainability\, and human connection. Rooted in my Ogoni heritage in Nigeria\, I draw inspiration from our tradition of repurposing to prevent waste. This ethos infuses my art\, as seen in installations like “The Land Gives Until It No Longer Can\, 2022\,” “Hang in There\, 2022\,” “Traces of Displacement\, 2023\,” “Carrying Identity\, Carrying The Weight\, 2023\,” and “Fueling Change\, 2024.” In Ogoni storytelling\, we engage all the senses\, integrating songs\, dance\, and props for a holistic experience. My artistic practice seamlessly incorporates these traditions to create immersive narratives that provoke thought\, foster empathy\, and celebrate cultural richness. My journey has been marked by awards and accolades\, including the NYSCA 2024 Grant and the Gregory Capasso scholarship for outstanding work in film\, underscoring my commitment to the arts. \n            \nImage descriptions: Four photographs in a grid\, left to right\, top to bottom: Everest Pipkin\, a white nonbinary artist\, stands in front of a cottonwood tree in a field. They have short brown hair\, glasses\, and are wearing a striped sweater. It is a sunny day. A photograph of Jaehoon Choi by Steven Pisano; a portrait of artist Kristin McWharter sitting in her studio; and Léwuga Tata Benson\, a Nigerian-born artist from Buffalo\, New York.
URL:https://squeaky.org/event/meet-the-residents-everest-pipkin-kristin-mcwharter-jaehoon-choi-lewuga-tata-benson/
LOCATION:Squeaky Wheel\, 2495 Main Street\, Suite 310\, Buffalo\, NY\, 14214\, United States
CATEGORIES:Artist Talk,Hybrid,Residencies
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240228T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240228T210000
DTSTAMP:20260612T080411
CREATED:20251230T191539Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251230T191539Z
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SUMMARY:Malek Rasamny and Matt Peterson's Spaces of Exception
DESCRIPTION:Wednesday\, February 28\, 2024\, 7 pm ET\nIn-person and online\nFree or suggested donation\nTickets required; get tickets below\nMalek Rasamny and Matt Peterson’s feature length non-fiction film Spaces of Exception (90 minutes\, 2018) features interviews with members of the American Indian Movement\, the Mohawk Warrior Society\, and Diné families resisting displacement on Black Mesa\, as well as members of Fatah\, Palestinian environmental and media activists\, autonomous youth committees\, and the families of political prisoners and martyrs. The film investigates and juxtaposes the struggles\, communities\, and spaces of the American Indian reservation and the Palestinian refugee camp. It was shot from 2014 to 2017 in Arizona\, New Mexico\, New York\, and South Dakota\, as well as in Lebanon and the West Bank. Spaces of Exception is an attempt to understand the significance of the land—its memory and divisions—and the conditions for life\, community\, and sovereignty. \nSpaces of Exception comes out of the long-term multimedia project The Native and the Refugee\, which has been presented in Canada\, Denmark\, Ecuador\, England\, France\, Guatemala\, Italy\, Jordan\, Lebanon\, Palestine\, Portugal\, Syria\, Turkey\, and the United Arab Emirates\, within the refugee camps and reservations were the film was shot\, and at venues including cinemas\, museums\, and universities. \nCo-director Matt Peterson will join us for a conversation and Q&A with Jason Corwin (Seneca Nation\, Deer Clan\, Clinical Assistant Professor of Indigenous Studies) upon the conclusion of the film. This event is presented in collaboration with PLASMA at the Department of Media Study\, curated by Elia Vargas. Special thank you to Burning Books and Jason Livingston. Copies of the book\, The Mohawk Warrior Society: A Handbook on Sovereignty and Survival by Louis Karoniaktajeh Hall\, and edited by Kahentinetha Rotiskarewake\, Philippe Blouin\, Matt Peterson\, and Malek Rasamny\, will be available for purchase courtesy of Burning Books. \nFor in-person attendees: See how to get to Squeaky Wheel here. Please note that you cannot enter Tri-Main Center after 7:30 pm. \nFor online attendees: Upon check-out\, you will receive an email titled “Your Squeaky Wheel Film & Media Art Center order has been received!”. A private link will be included in that email; the event will be available at the link at the start date and time. You will have access to the event for 24 hours; Squeaky Wheel members receive 72 hour access. Not a member yet? Sign up here. \n\nTeaser from The Native and the Refugee on Vimeo. \nRecent interviews with the filmmakers and reviews of the film\n“‘The Native and the Refugee’ Shares Narratives of Resistance” (Andreas Petrossiants\, Frieze) \n“In conversation with Kareem Estefan” (e-flux) \nSpaces of Exception by A.M. Gittlitz (Screen Slate) \nSpaces of Exception by Caitlin Quinlan (Reverse Shot) \nBiographies of the filmmakers and participants\nMatt Peterson is an organizer at Woodbine\, an experimental space in New York City. He previously directed the documentary feature Scenes from a Revolt Sustained (2014)\, and co-edited the books In the Name of the People (2018) and The Reservoir (2022). \nMalek Rasamny is a documentary filmmaker\, researcher and writer. His work has been featured in publications including The New Inquiry\, Lundi Matin and Newlines Magazine. He is currently working on a doctoral research project at Paris Nanterre University concerning the social phenomenon of reincarnation within the Druze community of Lebanon. \nJason Corwin is a citizen of the Seneca Nation\, Deer Clan and a lifelong media maker. He was the founding director of the Seneca Media & Communications Center and has produced several short and feature length documentaries. Jason has extensive experience as a community-based educator utilizing digital media and land-based learning to engage with Indigenous ways of knowing\, sustainability\, and social justice topics. He is currently a Clinical Assistant Professor at University at Buffalo’s Department of Indigenous Studies. \nBanner image: A still from the film Spaces of Exception\, showing Standing Rock covered in snow under a gray sky. There is a road with a car in the middle of the frame\, and a few people in big coats. Over 50 flags of Indigenous nations and other countries are on either side of the road.
URL:https://squeaky.org/event/malek-rasamny-and-matt-petersons-spaces-of-exception/
LOCATION:Squeaky Wheel\, 2495 Main Street\, Suite 310\, Buffalo\, NY\, 14214\, United States
CATEGORIES:Hybrid,Screenings
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240219T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240308T200000
DTSTAMP:20260612T080411
CREATED:20251230T191539Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251230T191539Z
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SUMMARY:Extended: Jordan Lord | Works from The Voice of Democracy\, with Abby Sun and Pooja Rangan
DESCRIPTION:A still from the film An All-Around Feel Good by Jordan Lord. Prominent black borders are on the left\, right and bottom edges of the image.  Framed by the black borders is an image of the Colorado State Fair\, taken from the bleachers on a bright sunny day. The camera is facing outside the main stage\, where there are horses and riders in a pen\, numerous parked cars and a tractor\, and several U.S. flags\, and audience members both near the camera and across the stage. On the bottom is the caption “Belonging to the nation-state is not premised on seeing or attending.”\nNow extended through March 8: Online access to works in the exhibition\nOnline and in-person: Friday\, February February 23:\n5:30 pm ET: Screening of How Is It That You Frame Old Glory in Your Mouth?\n7 pm ET\, online and in-person: Conversation with Jordan Lord\, Abby Sun\, and Pooja Rangan.\nASL interpretation and CART provided\, catering from Alibaba Kebab for in-person attendees.\nFree or suggested donation; get tickets below\nCelebrating the closing of Jordan Lord’s solo exhibition The Voice of Democracy\, Squeaky Wheel invites audiences from Buffalo and beyond to watch the works in the exhibition online\, and join us for a screening and conversation between the artist\, Abby Sun\, and Pooja Rangan. The works in the exhibition analyze the politics of voice and accent across disability\, race\, class\, and gender\, and how they shape the terms of entry to democracy. \nAttendees will have the opportunity to experience the four works by the artist included in the exhibition anytime between February 19 through February 23. \n\nHow Is It That You Frame Old Glory in Your Mouth? (digital video\, 74 minutes\, sound\, open captions\, audio description\, 2023)\nAn All-Around Feel Good (digital video\, 25 minutes\, sound\, open captions\, audio description\, 2024)\nI didn’t set out to make a film about religion (digital video\, 30 minutes\, sound\, open captions\, audio description\, 2024)\nDocumentary Participation Agreement (PDF contract template\, 2023)\n\nOn Friday\, February 23\, online and in-person attendees are invited to a dedicated screening of How Do You Frame Old Glory in Your Mouth? at 5:30 pm ET and a conversation about the exhibition with Lord\, Rangan\, and Sun at 7 pm ET. Catering with vegetarian options will be provided for in-person attendees; ASL interpretation and CART will be provided for all. \nLearn more about the exhibition here. \nBiographies of the artist and participants\nJordan Lord (US) is a filmmaker\, writer\, and artist whose work addresses the relationships between historical and emotional debts\, framing and support\, access\, and documentary. Their films have been shown at festivals and venues including MoMA Doc Fortnight\, Dokufest Kosovo\, Union Docs\, and the Berwick Film and Media Arts Festival. Their film Shared Resources (2021) won the John Marshall Award for Contemporary Ethnographic Media at the Camden International Film Festival and the Critics Jury Prize at the Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival. They have presented solo exhibitions at Piper Keys and Artists Space. In 2021\, they were profiled as one of the 25 New Faces of Independent Film by Filmmaker Magazine\, and their work has been featured in publications such as Screen Slate\, Millennium Film Journal\, and Hyperallergic. \nAbby Sun (she/her) is IDA’s Director of Artist Programs and Editor of Documentary magazine. Before joining IDA\, Abby was the Curator of the DocYard and co-curated My Sight is Lined with Visions: 1990s Asian American Film & Video with Keisha Knight. As a graduate student researcher in the MIT Open Documentary Lab\, Abby edited Immerse. She has bylines in Film Comment\, Filmmaker\, Film Quarterly\, Notebook\, Sight & Sound\, and other publications. Abby has served on festival juries for Hot Docs\, Dokufest\, Palm Springs\, New Orleans\, and CAAMfest\, as well as nominating committees for the Gotham Awards and Cinema Eye. She has reviewed projects for IDFA Forum\, BGDM\, NEA\, SFFILM\, LEF Foundation\, Princess Grace Foundation\, the Boston Foundation\, Sundance Catalyst\, and spoken on and facilitated panels at Locarno\, IFFR\, TIFF\, NYFF\, EFM\, and other film festivals. Along with Keisha\, Abby received a fall 2022 Warhol Foundation Curatorial Research Fellowship. She produced Shared Resources and\, with Jordan Lord\, received a 2022 American Stories Documentary Fellowship for the upcoming The Voice of Democracy. Her hometown is Columbia\, Missouri\, US. \nPooja Rangan is Associate Professor of English and Chair of Film and Media Studies at Amherst College. Her research explores the humanitarian preoccupations of documentary media\, with an emphasis on the ethics of voice and listening. Rangan is author of Immediations: The Humanitarian Impulse in Documentary (Duke University Press\, 2017) and co-editor of Thinking with an Accent: Toward a New Object\, Method\, and Practice (University of California Press\, 2023). Her forthcoming book The Documentary Audit (from Columbia University Press)\, explores the politics of listening in documentary\, asking how accented\, disabled\, and abolitionist practitioners trouble established documentary values of justice and accountability. Rangan co-edits the Investigating Visible Evidence book series at Columbia University Press and serves on the editorial board of the journal World Records; she also served as Board President of the documentary arts showcase\, The Flaherty. \nThis project was made possible through support from the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts and Humanities New York with support from the National Endowment for the Humanities.
URL:https://squeaky.org/event/jordan-lord-works-from-the-voice-of-democracy-with-pooja-rangan/
LOCATION:Squeaky Wheel\, 2495 Main Street\, Suite 310\, Buffalo\, NY\, 14214\, United States
CATEGORIES:Artist Talk,Hybrid,Screenings,Virtual
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20231208T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20231208T210000
DTSTAMP:20260612T080411
CREATED:20251230T191524Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251230T191524Z
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SUMMARY:Emily Watlington presents The Radical Accessibility of Video Art (for Hearing People)
DESCRIPTION:Friday\, December 8\, 2023\, 7 pm ET\nIn-person at Squeaky Wheel and online\nFree or suggested donation; ASL interpretation available\nTickets available below\nJoin us for a special presentation by critic and curator Emily Watlington titled The Radical Accessibility of Video Art (for Hearing People). A coalition of moving image artists is using closed captions and image descriptions as an artistic medium. They are modeling types of access that are not afterthoughts\, but folded into a work’s makeup. This lecture will discuss those artists\, locating them alongside the video art pioneers who were initially drawn to video because it promised a radical kind of accessibility the white cube didn’t afford. \nFor in-person attendees: The event will take place at Squeaky Wheel. Please note that you cannot enter Tri-Main Center after 7:30 pm. \nFor online attendees: Upon check-out\, you will receive an email titled “Your Squeaky Wheel Film & Media Art Center order has been received!”. A private link will be included in that email; the event will be available at the link at the start date and time. You will have access to the event for 24 hours; Squeaky Wheel members receive 72 hour access. Not a member yet? Sign up here. \nWe are excited to welcome Emily Watlington to Buffalo for the first time since her virtual Workspace Residency in 2020. This event is presented as part of the series [Speaking in Foreign Language].  \nBiography of the speaker\nEmily Watlington is a critic\, curator\, and senior editor at Art in America. Her writing often focuses on disability culture\, but also those places where art and science meet. She is a Fulbright scholar with a master’s degree from MIT—in the history\, theory\, and criticism of architecture and art—and in 2020 she received the Theorist Award from C/O Berlin. When she is able to step away from New York\, where her life revolves around reading\, writing\, and seeing art\, she is curious about roller skating\, foraging mushrooms\, deserts\, animal liberation\, and outer space. \nLiza Sylvestre\, Captioned-Channel Surfing (still)\, 2016. Courtesy of the artist. Image description: Movie still\, close-up of a white man and woman wearing summer clothes in a rural setting looking excited in a phone booth. A caption reads “They are so young and excited and happy.”
URL:https://squeaky.org/event/emily-watlington-presents-the-radical-accessibility-of-video-art-for-hearing-people/
LOCATION:Squeaky Wheel\, 2495 Main Street\, Suite 310\, Buffalo\, NY\, 14214\, United States
CATEGORIES:Hybrid,Presentation
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20231205T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20231205T210000
DTSTAMP:20260612T080411
CREATED:20251230T191538Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251230T191538Z
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SUMMARY:Trinh T. Minh-ha’s Surname Viet Given Name Nam
DESCRIPTION:Tuesday\, December 5\, 2023\, 7 pm ET\n@ Journey’s End Refugee Services and online\nFree or suggested donation\nTickets available below\nAn essential work by one of the most influential filmmakers living today\, Surname Viet Given Name Nam (108 mins\, 1989) is presented as part of the series [Speaking in Foreign Language]. Vietnamese-born Trinh T. Minh-ha’s profoundly personal documentary explores the role of Vietnamese women historically and in contemporary society. Using dance\, printed texts\, folk poetry and the words and experiences of Vietnamese women in Vietnam—from both North and South—and the United States\, Trinh’s film challenges official culture with the voices of women. A theoretically and formally complex work\, Surname Viet Given Name Nam  explores the difficulty of translation\, and themes of dislocation and exile\, critiquing both traditional society and life since the war. Presented with an introduction by curator Ekrem Serdar. Special thank you to Women Make Movies. \nFor in-person attendees: JERS is located on the fifth floor of Tri-Main Center; head left after you exit the elevator. Please note that you cannot enter Tri-Main Center after 7:30 pm. \nFor online attendees: Upon check-out\, you will receive an email titled “Your Squeaky Wheel Film & Media Art Center order has been received!”. A private link will be included in that email; the event will be available at the link at the start date and time. You will have access to the event for 24 hours; Squeaky Wheel members receive 72 hour access. Not a member yet? Sign up here. \nBiography of the filmmaker\nTrinh T. Minh-ha is the recipient of numerous awards and grants (including the “Trailblazers” Award at MIPDOC\, Cannes; AFI National Independent Filmmaker Maya Deren Award\, fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation\, the National Endowment of the Arts\, the Rockefeller Foundation\, the American Film Institute\, The Japan Foundation\, and the California Arts Council)\, her films have been given over fifty retrospectives in the US\, the UK\, Brazil\, Canada\, Italy\, Korea\, Spain\, the Netherlands\, Slovenia\, France\, Germany\, Switzerland\, Austria\, Japan\, India\, Taiwan\, Hong Kong\, Jerusalem\, and were exhibited at the international contemporary art exhibition Documenta 11 (2002) in Germany. They have shown widely in the States\, in Canada\, Senegal\, Australia\, and New Zealand\, as well as in Europe and Asia (including in Italy\, Belgium\, Spain\, Sweden\, Finland\, Japan\, India\, Taiwan\, Jerusalem\, Reassemblage was exhibited at The New York Film Festival (1983) and has toured the country with the Asian American Film Festival among other festivals. Naked Spaces received the Blue Ribbon Award for Best Experimental Feature at the American Int’l. Film Festival and the Golden Athena Award for Best Feature Documentary at the Athens International Film Festival in 1986; it toured nationally and internationally with the 1987 Biennial of the Whitney Museum of American Art. Surname Viet Given Name Nam has received the Merit Award from the Bombay International Film Festival\, the Film as Art Award from the Society for the Encouragement of Contemporary Art (SF Museum of Modern Art) and the Blue Ribbon Award at the American Film and Video Festival. Shoot for the Contents won the Jury’s Best Cinematography Award at the 1992 Sundance Film Festival and the Best Feature Documentary Award at the Athens International Film Festival\, and toured internationally with the 1993 Biennale of the Whitney Museum. A Tale of Love showed internationally in over twenty-four film festivals\, including Berlin and Toronto. The Fourth Dimension (Locarno\, Viennale\, Edinburg\, London) and Night Passage continue to exhibit widely (UK\, Austria\, Spain\, Japan\, Korea\, Shanghai). \nTrinh Minh-ha has traveled and lectured extensively—in the States\, as well as in Europe\, Asia\, Australia and New Zealand—on film\, art\, feminism\, and cultural politics. She taught at the National Conservatory of Music in Dakar\, Senegal (1977-80); at universities such as Cornell\, San Francisco State\, Smith\, and Harvard\, Ochanomizu (Tokyo)\, Ritsumeikan (Kyoto)\, Dongguk (Seoul); and is Professor of Gender & Women’s Studies and of Rhetoric at the University of California\, Berkeley. \nImage: A still from Trinh T. Minh-ha’s film\, Surname Viet Given Name Nam (1989). A mostly dark image\, with a barely lit woman with black hair looking to the left of the image.
URL:https://squeaky.org/event/trinh-t-minh-has-surname-viet-given-name-nam/
LOCATION:Journey’s End Refugee Services\, 2495 Main Street\, Suite #530\, Buffalo\, NY\, 14214\, United States
CATEGORIES:Hybrid,Screenings
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20231102T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20231102T210000
DTSTAMP:20260612T080411
CREATED:20251230T191524Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251230T191524Z
UID:10001127-1698951600-1698958800@squeaky.org
SUMMARY:Mindy Seu’s Cyberfeminism Index
DESCRIPTION:Thursday\, November 2\, 2023\, 7 pm ET\n@ Squeaky Wheel and online\nFree or suggested donation\, ASL interpretation provided\nTickets available below\nAn essential publication covering dozens of years of vital media art\, the recently published Cyberfeminism Index gathers over 1\,000 short entries of radical techno-critical activism in a variety of media\, including excerpts from academic articles and scholarly texts; descriptions of hackerspaces\, digital rights activist groups\, bio-hacktivism; and depictions of feminist net art and new media art. Squeaky Wheel is excited to welcome designer\, professor\, researcher\, and editor of Cyberfeminism Index Mindy Seu who will present on the project and will be joined in conversation with Dr. Tina Rivers Ryan\, Curator at the Buffalo AKG Art Museum. Copies of Cyberfeminism Index will be available for purchase courtesy of Burning Books. This event is presented in collaboration with Trinity Square Video. \nFor in-person attendees: See Squeaky Wheel’s location and accessibility info here. Please note that you cannot enter Tri-Main Center after 7:30 pm. \nFor online attendees: Upon check-out\, you will receive an email titled “Your Squeaky Wheel Film & Media Art Center order has been received!”. A private link will be included in that email; the event will be available at the link at the start date and time. You will have access to the event for 24 hours; Squeaky Wheel members receive 72 hour access. Not a member yet? Sign up here. Online attendees can purchase a copy of Cyberfeminism Index through our partners at Burning Books here. \nBiographies of the presenters and about our partners\nMindy Seu (b. 1991\, California) is a designer and technologist based in New York City. Her expanded practice involves archival projects\, techno-critical writing\, performative lectures\, design commissions\, and close collaborations. Her latest writing surveys feminist economies\, historical precursors of the metaverse\, and the materiality of the internet. Mindy’s ongoing Cyberfeminism Index\, which gathers three decades of online activism and net art\, was commissioned by Rhizome\, presented at the New Museum\, and awarded the Graham Foundation Grant. She has lectured internationally at cultural institutions (Barbican Centre\, New Museum)\, academic institutions (Columbia University\, Central Saint Martins)\, and mainstream platforms (Pornhub\, SSENSE\, Google)\, and been a resident at MacDowell\, Sitterwerk Foundation\, Pioneer Works\, and Internet Archive. Her design commissions and consultation include projects for the Serpentine Gallery\, Canadian Centre for Architecture\, and MIT Media Lab. Her work has been featured in Frieze\, Dazed\, Gagosian Quarterly\, Brooklyn Rail\, i-D\, and more. Mindy holds an M.Des. from Harvard’s Graduate School of Design and a B.A. in Design Media Arts from the University of California\, Los Angeles. She is currently Assistant Professor at Rutgers Mason Gross School of the Arts and Critic at Yale School of Art. \nDr. Tina Rivers Ryan is Curator at the Buffalo AKG Art Museum and an internationally recognized expert in the history of media art\, including video and digital art. Her exhibitions at the AKG include 2021’s “Difference Machines: Technology and Identity in Contemporary Art” (co-curated with Paul Vanouse and winner of the 2022 Award of Excellence from the Association of Art Museum Curators) and 2022’s “Peer to Peer” (the first U.S. museum survey of artists working with blockchain technologies). Her next exhibition\, “Electric Op\,” will examine the six-decade history of the relationship between geometric abstraction and media art. In addition to her curatorial work\, she is a regular contributor to Artforum and has written commissioned essays for many of the world’s leading museums\, including The Met\, Dia\, and the V&A. Dr. Ryan holds five degrees in art history\, including a BA from Harvard and PhD from Columbia. \nBurning Books is a radical bookstore in Buffalo\, NY. We opened in September of 2009 on the anniversary of the Attica prison uprising.\nWe focus exclusively on social justice issues and work to support individuals and movements that are struggling against oppression and domination in all its forms. We have a highly curated selection of titles dealing with activism\, race\, antifascism\, environmentalism\, colonialism\, indigenisim\, capitalism\, feminism\, queer studies\, animal liberation\, class\, disability\, and more; including books for children\, middle graders\, and young adults. We also carry posters\, games and gift items – all following our mission of social justice and sustainability. Through our speaker series\, we bring vital perspectives from authors and activists around the country to discuss paths towards positive change in our world. We are happy to be a partner of – and the main distributor for – the Certain Days Freedom for Political Prisoners yearly calendar\, which acts as a major fundraiser for U.S. Political Prisoner support across the country. If you’d like to help ensure that the kind of radical and empowering ideas that Burning Books has fostered remain alive and kicking\, please take a moment to sign up for Friends of Burning Books. \nFounded in 1971\, Trinity Square Video is one of Canada’s first artist-run centres and its oldest media arts centre. We are a not-for-profit\, charitable organization. For 50 years\, Trinity Square has been a champion of media arts practices. Our activities are guided by a goal to increase our members’ and audiences’ understanding and imagination of what media arts practices can be. Trinity Square strives to create supportive environments\, encouraging artistic and curatorial experimentation that challenge medium specificity through education\, production and presentation supports. As video-based practices have become increasingly present across disciplines\, Trinity Square engages artists and curators in critical investigations into the changing conditions of perception\, materiality and the virtual. We consider all of our artistic activities and structures through a process of critical self-reflection\, continuously evaluating the ethical positioning of our programming\, jury structures\, inter-organizational relationships\, et cetera. In addition to holding aesthetic worth in its own right\, our artistic programming extends our education and production activities in order to generate new knowledges. Trinity Square’s programming is guided by three priorities: 1) promoting an expanded definition of media arts; 2) promoting the meaningful engagement of diverse voices in all levels of our operations; and 3) supporting and nurturing the production of new works by artists and curators. Our membership represents the diversity of the city and honours the original mandate of the organization—seeking to reduce barriers to access related to race\, gender\, sexual orientation\, and socio- economic and physical ability. \nImage description: A photograph of a thick green book with the title Cyberfeminism Index by Mindy Seu. Image courtesy of Inventory Press.
URL:https://squeaky.org/event/mindy-seus-cyberfeminism-index/
LOCATION:Squeaky Wheel\, 2495 Main Street\, Suite 310\, Buffalo\, NY\, 14214\, United States
CATEGORIES:Book Launch,Hybrid
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20231017T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20231017T210000
DTSTAMP:20260612T080411
CREATED:20251230T191524Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251230T191524Z
UID:10001123-1697569200-1697576400@squeaky.org
SUMMARY:Echolocations: Films in translation and transcription
DESCRIPTION:Tuesday\, October 17\, 7 pm ET\n@ Journey’s End Refugee Services (2495 Main St #530\, Buffalo\, NY 14214) and online\nFree or suggested donation\nTickets available below\nGathering nine short films\, this screening looks at how voice and language are made legible across borders and power. Bringing together essay films and personal non-fiction films\, historical analyses and experimental films\, the filmmakers’ approaches to subtitles\, captions\, translations\, and interpretation grapple with the histories\, present\, and futures of imperialism\, colonialism\, racism\, and ableism. Alternately playful\, angry\, contemplative\, utopian\, and generous\, the films help us imagine new relationships\, between films and audiences\, and between each other\, across languages and voices. \nFeaturing films by Alex Dolores Salerno\, Astria Suparak\, champoy\, JJJJJerome Ellis\, Johann Diedrick\, Nadia Shihab\, Saif Alsaegh\, Sky Hopinka\, and Buffalo filmmaker Olivia Ong Evans who will be in person. Presented as part of [Speaking in Foreign Language]. \nThis event will take place in person at Journey’s End Refugee Services (JERS) and online. \nFor in-person attendees: JERS is located on the fifth floor of Tri-Main Center; head left after you exit the elevator. Please note that you cannot enter Tri-Main Center after 7:30 pm. \nFor online attendees: Upon check-out\, you will receive an email titled “Your Squeaky Wheel Film & Media Art Center order has been received!”. A private link will be included in that email; the event will be available at the link at the start date and time. You will have access to the event for 24 hours; Squeaky Wheel members receive 72 hour access. Not a member yet? Sign up here. \nAccessibility: For in-person audiences: ASL interpretation can be requested with 3 days notice for the Q&A with Olivia Ong Evans. For both in-person and online attendees: Several of the films have open captions. Some of the films\, such as champoy’s english is yr mother tongue and Astria Suparak’s On the Neon Horizon have no spoken dialogue\, while Nadia Shihab’s Echolocation elects not to translate moments where Iraqi Turkmen is spoken. The subtitles in Sky Hopinka’s wawa actively think through the act of translation from Chinuk Wawa to English. Alex Dolores Salerno’s El Dios Acostado provides captions and audio descriptions in English and Spanish. Please see individual film notes below. \n            </p>\n<h4>Program</h4>\n<p>                        \nThe total program length is ~85 minutes. Program notes courtesy of the artists.\n\nchampoy\, english is yr mother tongue\, 4 min\, 2020 \nWhen the American colonial education system in the Philippines imposed English as the sole language for teaching\, suppressing indigenous languages and turning classrooms into sites of linguistic dominance. How did we learn to embrace translation as a playful act? How did we reclaim our agency as a people and assert our own identities in the face of oppressive language policies? How How De Karabaw De Batuten. \nSaif Alsaegh\, 1991\, open captions\, 12 min\, 2018 \n1991 revolves around a conversation between the filmmaker\, an Iraqi asylum-seeker living in the US\, and his mother Bushra\, an Iraqi immigrant who was living in Turkey while she awaited approval to immigrate to the US. Both are in uncertain positions regarding their immigration statuses and have not been able to see each other for years. 1991 navigates the distance between them. Through a facetime phone conversation\, the film expresses the ways that a relationship becomes virtual and symbolic across forced distance. 1991 is set in a cabin where the filmmaker lives a semi-imaginary\, peaceful life\, building fires\, cooking\, and dancing. The central phone conversation details Bushra’s memory of the filmmaker’s birth in the middle of the 1991 Gulf War and the danger and suffering she went through. Through poetic juxtaposition of the virtual landscape of the phone\, the calm landscape of the cabin\, and the chaotic landscape of memory\, the film paints a cruel image of the horror of war\, displacement\, and separation. \nNadia Shihab\, Echolocation\, open captions\, 9 min\, 2021 \nThe rain in Oakland\, my grandmother’s home in Baghdad\, my aunts’ voices in What’s App\, my daughter learning to count to 10\, my brother playing the darbuka\, the cicadas in Texas\, the walls of my studio\, the search for new forms.\nNote: Dialogue in Iraqi Turkman is intentionally not translated / subtitled. \nJJJJJerome Ellis\, Impediment is Information\, open captions\, 15 min\, 2021 \nThis music-video-poem work centers on an 18th century newspaper advertisement for the recapture of a fugitive slave with “an impediment in his speech.” A handheld camera captures blurry conifers; a saxophone prays to a mountain. By rearranging the words of the advertisement to create lines of poetry\, I am seeking new meanings and sites of resistance in the archive. The work was commissioned by ISSUE Project Room in New York City. It premiered on Juneteenth\, a day that recognizes the emancipation of those who had been enslaved in the United States. In creating this work for the occasion of Juneteenth\, I wanted to celebrate Black freedom practices. I think these practices divinely exceed official proclamations\, emancipatory and otherwise. \nJohann Diedrick\, Dark Matters\, 2021 \nDark Matters exposes the absence of Black speech in the datasets used to train voice interface systems in consumer artificial intelligence products such as Alexa and Siri. Utilizing 3D modeling\, sound\, and storytelling\, the project challenges our communities to grapple with racism and inequity through speech and the spoken word\, and how AI systems underserve Black communities. \nAstria Suparak\, On the Neon Horizon\, 8:27 min\, 2023 \nOn the Neon Horizon is a short video essay that takes one of the world-building tics of white science fiction — gratuitous signage in Asian languages — to consider its utopian potential and dystopian applications. \nFantastical mise en scène\, breathtaking B-roll footage\, and special effects deliriums from four decades of mainstream sci-fi by white American\, Australian\, Canadian\, European\, and New Zealander filmmakers craft an insidiously Asian futurescape — sometimes achieved by simply shooting in a present-day Asian country or a North American Chinatown. In aggregate\, these productions inextricably tether non-white cultures to criminality and contagion\, portraying Asian cultures and people as existential threats to white Western ideas of freedom. \nSky Hopinka\, wawa\, open captions\, 4 min\, 2014 \nFeaturing speakers of chinuk wawa\, an Indigenous language from the Pacific Northwest\, this film begins slowly\, patterning various forms of documentary and ethnography. Quickly\, the patterns tangle and become confused and commingled\, while translating and transmuting ideas of cultural identity\, language\, and history. Courtesy of Video Data Bank. \nAlex Dolores Salerno\, El Dios Acostado\, 11 min\, 2020 \nEl Dios Acostado entangles conversations of rest\, care\, and colonialism\, and asks us to consider what the land has to teach us about rest. The video incorporates access as part of its aesthetic. Adding to the slow pace of the video\, all of the visual descriptions and narration are repeated twice\, once in Spanish and once in English\, with a doubling of large captions centered in the frame. The video begins with a nap alongside the mountain “Mandango”\, meaning “dios acostado” or “sleeping god”\, and describes the gentrification of the small town of Vilcabamba\, which was dubbed “the valley of longevity” by European and North American researchers in the 70s who the artist’s mother encountered as a child. The video then cuts to her hometown\, San Pedro de la Bendita\, a nearby town spared from worldwide recognition. Introduced through a view of family tombstones at the town’s cemetery\, the artist’s mother describes her relationship to her hometown\, highlighting the love and care that can flourish with a relationship to land and community. \nOlivia Ong Evans\, Identity Karma\, 11 min\, 2021 \nIdentity Karma is an abstract video project that emerged from a period of research and reflection on Suharto’s New Order Era in Indonesia. Creating the video was a way to reflect on the intergenerational consequences of cultural repression\, and the personal effects of anti-Chinese discrimination. It is an homage to my ancestors\, to my mother\, and to the land. The video was guided by the question: What happens to our cultural and racial identities when we are alone? It jumps between over-saturated\, multi-layered moments and landscapes removed from social context\, and scattered words in English\, Bahasa Indonesia\, Simplified Chinese\, and Hokkien. The distance and frustration of miscommunication co-exists with the closeness and familiarity that can be expressed through language. Footage from Bogor\, Indonesia and Haudenosaunee land in Buffalo and Western New York interact throughout the video.             \n            </p>\n<h4>Biographies of the artists</h4>\n<p>                        \nAlex Dolores Salerno (b. 1994\, Washington D.C.) is an interdisciplinary artist based in Brooklyn\, NY. Informed by queer-crip experience\, community\, and culture\, they work to critique standards of productivity\, notions of normative embodiment\, 24/7 society\, and the commodification of rest. Salerno received their MFA from Parsons School of Design and their BS from Skidmore College. They have exhibited at the Museum für Moderne Kunst (Frankfurt)\, Espacio de Arte Contemporáneo de Castellón (Castellón)\, ARGOS centre for audiovisual arts (Brussels)\, Art Windsor-Essex (Canada)\, The Shelley & Donald Rubin Foundation’s 8th Floor Gallery\, the Ford Foundation Gallery (NYC)\, among others. Salerno is a recipient of the 2022 Wynn Newhouse Awards\, and their work has been featured in the New York Times and Art in America. They recently participated in the Visual Artist AIRspace Residency at Abrons Arts Center (2022-2023)\, and they are currently in residence at BRIClab: Contemporary Art Residency Program at BRIC (2023-2024). \nAstria Suparak is an artist and curator based in Oakland\, California. Her cross-disciplinary projects address complex and urgent issues (like institutionalized racism\, feminisms and gender\, and colonialism) made accessible through a popular culture lens\, such as science fiction movies\, rock music\, and sports. \nchampoy (pronouns: they/them/he/him/she/her/siya ) is a Filipinx interdisciplinary artist\, filmmaker and educator weaving historical and personal narratives through film\, installation and performance.” \nJJJJJerome Ellis is a proud stutterer. Through music\, literature\, performance\, video\, and photography he researches relationships among blackness\, disabled speech\, divinity\, nature\, sound\, and time. His body of work includes: contemplative soundscapes using saxophone\, flute\, dulcimer\, electronics\, and vocals; scores for plays and podcasts; albums combining spoken word with ambient and jazz textures; theatrical explorations involving live music and storytelling; and music-video-poems that seek to transfigure archival documents. Born in 1989 to Jamaican and Grenadian immigrants\, he lives in Norfolk\, Virginia\, USA with his wife\, ecologist-poet Luísa Black Ellis. They like walking in the woods and drinking tea together. \nJohann Diedrick (he/him) is an artist\, engineer\, and educator who makes listening rooms for encountering new sonic possibilities off the grid. His performances\, installations\, and sculptures surface resonant histories of past interactions inscribed in material and embedded in space\, peeling back vibratory layers to reveal hidden memories and untold stories. He shares his tools and techniques through listening tours\, workshops\, and open-source hardware/software. \nNadia Shihab is an artist whose work explores the personal\, the relational and the diasporic. Her first feature documentary Jaddoland was awarded five festival jury awards including the Independent Spirit “Truer than Fiction”” Award in 2020. Her recent short films include Sister Mother Lover Child (2023)\, Echolocation (2021) and Amal’s Garden (2012). Her work has screened internationally\, including at Cinema du Réel\, Walker Art Center\, Berkeley Art Museum\, Black Star Film Festival\, Images Festival\, DOXA\, Camden International Film Festival\, Kassel Dokfest and Cairo International Film Festival. Her creative practice is preceded by a decade of work as a community practitioner and housing advocate in the San Francisco Bay Area. She was raised in west Texas by immigrant parents from Iraq and Yemen and is an Assistant Professor in Film in the School for the Contemporary Arts at Simon Fraser University. \nOlivia Ong Evans is an artist living in Buffalo\, New York on Haudenosaunee homelands. Her video art often explores themes of migration and identity construction through experimental glitch. To shape identity from change\, to find meaning in misunderstanding\, to imagine home. Her video Identity Karma was created as part of the Squeaky Wheel Workspace Residency in the Summer of 2021. \nSaif Alsaegh is a United States-based filmmaker from Baghdad. Much of Saif’s work deals with the contrast between the landscape of his youth in Baghdad growing up as part of the indigenous Chaldean minority in the nineties and early 2000s\, and the U.S. landscape where he currently lives. His films have screened in festivals including Cinéma du Réel\, Kurzfilm Hamburg\, Kassel Dokfest\, Aesthetica Short Film Festival\, and in galleries and museums including the Wisconsin Triennial at the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art and Rochester Contemporary Art Center. \nSky Hopinka (Ho-Chunk Nation/Pechanga Band of Luiseño Indians) was born and raised in Ferndale\, Washington and spent a number of years in Palm Springs and Riverside\, California\, Portland\, Oregon\, and Milwaukee\, Wisconsin. In Portland he studied and taught chinuk wawa\, a language indigenous to the Lower Columbia River Basin. His video\, photo\, and text work centers around personal positions of Indigenous homeland and landscape\, designs of language as containers of culture expressed through personal\, documentary\, and non fiction forms of media. His work has played at various festivals including Sundance\, Toronto International Film Festival\, Ann Arbor\, Courtisane Festival\, Punto de Vista\, and the New York Film Festival. His work was a part of the 2017 Whitney Biennial\, the 2018 FRONT Triennial and Prospect.5 in 2021. He was a guest curator at the 2019 Whitney Biennial and participated in Cosmopolis #2 at the Centre Pompidou. He has had a solo exhibition at the Center for Curatorial Studies\, Bard College\, in 2020 and in 2022 at LUMA in Arles\, France. He was a fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University in 2018- 2019\, a Sundance Art of Nonfiction Fellow for 2019\, an Art Matters Fellow in 2019\, a recipient of a 2020 Alpert Award for Film/Video\, a 2020 Guggenheim Fellow\, and was a 2021 Forge Project Fellow. He received the 2022 Infinity Award in Art from the International Center of Photography\, and is a 2022 MacArther Fellow. \n            \nAstria Suparak\, On the Neon Horizon\, 8:27 min\, 2023Saif Alsaegh\, 1991\, 12 min\, 2018Alex Dolores Salerno\, El Dios Acostado\, 11 min\, 2020Johann Diedrick\, Dark Matters\, 2021Nadia Shihab\, Echolocation\, 9 min\, 2021Olivia Ong Evans\, Identity Karma\, 11 min\, 2021JJJJJerome Ellis\, Impediment is Information\, 15 min\, 2021Sky Hopinka\, wawa\, 4 min 2014champoy\, english is yr mother tongue\, 4 min\, 2020\nImages from left to right\, top to bottom: Astria Suparak\, On the Neon Horizon (2023); Saif Alsaegh\, 1991 (2018); Alex Dolores Salerno\, El Dios Acostado (2020)\, Johann Diedrick\, Dark Matters (2021); Nadia Shihab\, Echolocation (2021); Olivia Ong Evans\, Identity Karma (2021); JJJJJerome Ellis\, Impediment is Information (2021); Sky Hopinka\, wawa (2014); champoy\, english is yr mother tongue (2020).\nBanner image: JJJJJerome Ellis\, Impediment is Information (2021).
URL:https://squeaky.org/event/echolocations-films-in-translation-and-transcription/
LOCATION:Squeaky Wheel\, 2495 Main Street\, Suite 310\, Buffalo\, NY\, 14214\, United States
CATEGORIES:Hybrid,Screenings
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://squeaky.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/impediment-still-1.jpg
GEO:42.8906261;-78.8721258
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230928T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230928T210000
DTSTAMP:20260612T080411
CREATED:20251230T191523Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251230T191523Z
UID:10001115-1695927600-1695934800@squeaky.org
SUMMARY:The Animation Fest: A Retrospective @ North Park Theatre
DESCRIPTION:Thursday\, September 28\, 7 pm ET\n$7\nPurchase tickets to in-person screening at North Park Theatre (or just show up!)\nPurchase tickets to online screening via Eventbrite\nJoin us at the legendary North Park Theatre for a special retrospective screening that brings together 10 short films from the past 20 years of our Animation Fest! The short films collected here exemplify our little fest’s promise and potential: Personal visions and experiments\, and surprising and poignant uses of tools and technologies; and social and political commitment and critique. Open to young people and adults\, this special screening is Squeaky Wheel’s big fundraiser for the year – we invite our communities near and far to join us in celebration! \nThe 10 filmmakers present a vital cross section of our many communities\, from legends of the field to former Squeaky Wheel students from Buffalo and beyond\, including films by Adele Han Li\, Amanda Bonaiuto\, Ayoka Chenzira\, Hannah R.W. Hamalian\, Helen Hill\, Jazmyn Palermo\, Jodie Mack\, Leslie Supnet\, Maria Zjaia\, Miranda Javid\, and Robert C Banks. \nBegun as an outdoor screening in 2004\, the fest celebrates animation in all its forms. Often organized by emerging guest curators\, the fest has featured hundreds of classic and cutting edge animated works. All funds from this event go towards our award-winning exhibition\, education\, and equipment access programs. Join us! \nPlease note that the final two films\, X: The Baby Cinema and Second Sun feature flickering effects. Jodie Mack’s Unsubscribe #4: The Saddest Song in the World will not be available online\, and will only be screened in person. The total duration of the in-person screening is ~53 minutes; the online screening duration is ~50 minutes. \n            </p>\n<h4>Program (click to expand)</h4>\n<p>                        \nMaria Ziaja\, One Speck in the Universe\, 1 min\, open captions\, 2013\nMaria Ziaja\, Flying Bird\, 1 min\, 2013\nMaria Ziaja created these two videos during her time taking a Stop-Motion Animation class as part of Squeaky Wheel’s Tech Arts for Girls program\, taught by Alice Alexandrescu; the two films were included in the 2013 edition of the Animation Fest\, programmed by Squeaky Wheel’s 2013 staff and interns\, including Jax Deluca\, Mark Longolucco\, and Ryan Crowley. \nHelen Hill\, Madame Winger Makes a Film: A Survival Guide for the 21st Century\, 10 min\, 2001\nMadame Winger wants you to make a film about something you love. She shows you her favorite low budget filmmaking techniques\, from camera less animation to processing your own film in a bathtub. Filmed in 16 mm. Helen Hill’s work was featured in the first edition of the Animation Fest. Special thank you to Mark Johnson and the Harvard Film Archive. \nHannah R.W. Hamalian\, The Golden Age\, 9:58 min\, open captions\, 2021\n“An experimental documentary examining the traumatic history of being a woman at work in the animation industry. I put myself into conversation with a generation of women who experienced restricted creative opportunities in animation and a lack of acknowledgement as artists. Each manipulated frame is an ode to the disregarded labor of women\, wielded to create films that told young girls to dream.” – Hannah R.W. Hamalian. The Golden Age was included in the 2022 edition\, curated by Ekrem Serdar and Zainab Saleh; her work was previously included in the 2017 edition guest curated by Savion “Ineil Quaran” Mingo. \nAyoka Chenzira\, Hair Piece: A Film for Nappy Headed People\, 10:26 min\, open captions\, 1985\n“I was very concerned with the question of black women in this country and self-image aesthetics. If you look at all the commercials that come out and tell you how to fix yourself\, they are all based on the idea that there is something wrong with you. And so\, having a child\, these things became very glaring\, and I think that’s a part of Hairpiece. Hairpiece is funny\, but it comes from a position of real anger.” – Ayoka Chenzira. Included in the 2004 edition of the Animation Fest\, Hair Piece was one of the twenty-five films selected for the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress in 2018. The film received a 4K restoration by the Academy Film Archive and The Film Foundation with funding from the Hobson/Lucas Family Foundation\, which is the version that is on view. Film courtesy of Kino Lorber and Milestone Films. \nAdele Han Li\, Chella Drive\, 3:29 min\, digital video on projection\, sound on speakers\, 2016.\n“A dreamlike memory of a teenager’s summer complacency and the luscious suburban environment that surrounds her. Made using hand drawn animations projected onto real life settings and rephotographed frame by frame.” – Adele Han Li. Chella Drive as included in the 2016 edition curated by Ekrem Serdar. \nJodie Mack\, Unsubscribe #4: The Saddest Song in the World\, 2:50 min\, 2010\n…broken-hearted and mashed up. – Jodie Mack. This film was included in the 2012 edition of the Animation Fest; Mack’s films were included also in the 2016 edition of the fest. Film courtesy of Canyon Cinema.\n \nAmanda Bonaiuto\, Batfish Soup\, 5 min\, 2016\n“Wacky relatives give way to mounting tensions with broken dolls\, boiling stew and a bang.\nDIRECTOR’S NOTES:\nBatfish Soup is a fictionalized absurdist film based on memories of freakish childhood visitations with my grandparents. Though the film’s spark was autobiographical\, the film transformed over the course of its production into something more fictional. This film epitomizes my interest in the darkly humorous underpinnings of domestic drama. I produced this film as my first year film in the MFA Experimental Animation Program at California Institute of the Arts.”\nBatfish Soup was included in the 2017 edition of the Animation Fest\, guest curated by Jean Zhu. Bonaiuto work was additionally screened in the 2019 edition\, guest curated by Leanne Goldblatt. \nMiranda Javid\, What Humans Do\, 6:40 min\, 2023\n“A macro view of human-actions\, as told from within a singular body. The film is a catalog of homo sapien instincts; its sequences interlace extractive qualities of our species with embodied sensory experience\, in favor of a mindful awareness of what humans do to their habitats and planet Earth at-large.” – Miranda Javid. \nJazmyn Palermo\, Teenie Hams’ Adventures in Genderland\, 9:54 min\, 2018\n“Teenie Hams’ Adventures in Genderland is a stop-motion animation that explores a transgender perspective of finding oneself. As Teenie enters a world of fairies\, witches\, creatures\, ghouls and vampires\, they find themself on an adventure in the world of people they have only heard of in scary stories. They find friends and helpful hands along the way on their adventure of exploration and self discovery.” – Jazmyn Palermo. Teenie Hams’ Adventures in Genderland was included in the 2020 edition\, guest curated by Tabia Lewis. \nRobert C Banks\, X: The Baby Cinema\, 5 min\, 1992\nDrawing by hand directly on 16mm film\, Banks challenges commercial appropriations of the image of Malcolm X. The film was included in the 2007 edition of the Animation Fest\, guest curated by Kerry Maeve Sheehan.\n \nLeslie Supnet\, Second Sun\, 3 min\, 2014\n“The rising sound of drums emphasizes flashes of lights\, images of the solar system and a post-apocalyptic imagining of the birth of our Second Sun.” – Leslie Supnet \n“Leslie Supnet’s hand-drawn animation piece is an extension of her previous work First Sun (2014)\, with the monochrome drawings of the latter giving way to bright primary pencil colours. Like its predecessor\, Second Sun extensively employs basic geometrical shapes to represent cosmic phenomena and is scored to an exhortative percussive soundtrack hinting at a ritual\, a summoning. The figures move strictly horizontally or vertically on checkered paper as though underscoring their mathematically precise cyclicity\, with the central solar circle spawning clone stars\, moons\, planets and an entire solar system. The overall impression is that of witnessing a trance-inducing cultic invocation.” – Experimenta India” \n                        </p>\n<h4>Biographies of the filmmakers (click to expand)</h4>\n<p>                        \nWorking in painting\, video\, and installation\, Adele Han Li explores creating immersive and evocative environments through mixing materials and colliding surfaces. Her work has been exhibited at festivals and galleries throughout the US and internationally. Beyond her own creative projects\, Adele was previously programmer and festival manager of the Slamdance Film Festival\, and is passionate about cultivating inclusive and nurturing spaces for fellow artists. She studied animation at CalArts and painting at Yale and is now playing with textiles\, projectors and ceramics in her home studio just outside Los Angeles\, California. \nAmanda Bonaiuto (b. 1990) is an animation director\, artist\, and educator living in New York. She is best known for her short films and commissioned pieces which have screened at film festivals and galleries worldwide. She’s inspired by humor and tilted realities. She received a BFA from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts\, Boston in 2012 and an MFA in Experimental Animation from the California Institute of the Arts in 2018. She is an assistant professor of Illustration at Parsons School of Design\, and makes films and commissions in her studio. \nMeet Ayoka Chenzira\, the multi-talented and award-winning filmmaker\, Emmy and NAACP nominated television director\, and digital media artist.\nAs a child\, Ayoka discovered her interest in storytelling while listening to women talk in her mother’s Philadelphia beauty parlor. With a background in modern dance\, photography\, and music\, she discovered her passion for filmmaking after being taken to every age-inappropriate movie that her cinephile parent could find. Since then\, Ayoka is known to work across a range of genres\, including drama\, science fiction\, documentary\, animation\, and interactive cinema. As an actor’s director\, able to work with various acting styles and degrees of experience\, Ayoka’s visionary style of storytelling and character development takes center stage as does her ability to emotionally and visually elevate a story. Read more here. \nHannah R.W. Hamalian (she/her) is an artist intrigued by how complicated the world is. In her animation and film practice she tends towards an experimental and poetic mode of expression\, working with the movement of animation in collaboration with dance and landscape to represent paradox and complexity. She uses an interdisciplinary approach to aim for the emotional core of an experience and craft immersive soundscapes that create a space specifically designed for asking questions.\nHannah’s work has screened and shown at festivals internationally\, including ADF’s Movies by Movers\, KLIK Amsterdam Animation Festival\, Athens International Film and Video Festival (Ohio\, USA)\, and the Squeaky Wheel Animation Fest (New York\, USA). She received her BA from Carleton College and her MFA from UW-Milwaukee\, and she currently teaches at Lane Community College in Eugene\, OR. \nHelen Hill (1970 – 2007) was an experimental animator\, filmmaker\, educator\, artist\, writer and social activist who lived her last years in New Orleans\, Louisiana. A native of Columbia\, South Carolina\, Hill revealed her artistic talents at an early age\, making her first short\, animated Super 8 films when she was eleven. While studying English at Harvard (BS ’92)\, she minored in Visual and Environmental Studies where she made three 16mm animated short films: Rain Dance\, Upperground Show and Vessel. After receiving an MFA from the California Institute of the Arts in Experimental Animation\, Hill\, along with her husband Paul Gailiunas\, moved to his native Canada where he was studying medicine and where she continued to create films and teach film animation at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design (now NSCAD University) and at the Atlantic Filmmakers Cooperative (AFCOOP). Soon after\, Hill and Gailiunas moved to New Orleans where Gailiunas would found a medical clinic for artists and low-income patients and where Hill\, meanwhile\, co-founded the New Orleans Film Collective and taught filmmaking. Read more here. \nJazmyn Palermo is a visual and expanded media artist living and working in Buffalo\, NY. They studied Fine Art at Alfred University with a focus in photography and video art. Their work explores a transgender perspective on fairy tales\, folklore\, and horror themes incorporating a stop-motion process and a lot of papier-mache. Their process includes asking their friends to put on a wig and move very\, very slowly. Jazmyn is inspired by the wonderful people they know and the beautiful place they live. They would like their work to create a comfortable place to enjoy the magic of finding yourself. \nJodie Mack (born 1983; London\, UK) is an experimental animator. Her films unleash the kinetic energy of material remnants of domestic and institutional knowledge to illuminate the relationship between decoration and utility. Straddling the boundary between rigor and accessibility\, her cinema questions how we ascribe value to things.\nMack’s 16mm films have screened at a variety of venues including the Locarno Film Festival\, the Toronto International Film Festival\, the New York Film Festival\, the Jeonju International 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 was a 2017/18 Radcliffe Fellow; a 2019 Artist in Residence at the Headlands Center for the Arts; a 2021 MacDowell Fellow; and a 2022 Visual Studies Center Fellow. She is a Professor of Animation at Dartmouth College. \nLeslie Supnet is an experimental filmmaker who creates media works that explore loss and change. Using animation\, live-action\, found footage and material exploration\, Supnet’s process is guided by lyricism and personal affect\, often bending analog and digital techniques. Leslie completed her MFA in Film at York University in 2016. Leslie’s works have screened at festivals such as TIFF\, International Film Festival Rotterdam (IFFR)\, International Film Festival Oberhausen\,Images Festival\, Onion City\, The Edge of Frame Weekend at the London International Animation Festival and as part of special programmes at the National Museum of Fine Arts of Quebec\, Art Gallery of Hamilton and the AGO. She has created commissions for Toronto Reel Asian International Film Festival\, ArtSpin/Pleasuredome\, Film POP!/POP! Montreal and Plug In ICA. \nMaria Ziaja is from Buffalo\, NY\, and is most passionate about Sustainability and Environmental Policy. She graduated from Vassar College with a degree in Environmental Studies and Russian and has worked in environmental consulting\, non-profit conservation initiatives\, and EHS policy for energy companies. She currently works at the Greenway Institute\, where she is helping reshape engineering education around goals of equity and sustainability. Before moving out of Buffalo for college\, Maria spent her formative years taking TechArts classes at Squeaky Wheel\, both at the Ansonia Building and Market Arcade locations. She feels that over the years these classes helped her grow creatively and develop an appreciation for the arts that still influences her work (now in the education sector). She is honored to be part of the Animation Fest! \nMiranda Javid (she/her) is an animator\, curator\, and art-educator currently living in Kingston New York. Her animations describe topics like cognitive experience\, human bias\, and the relationship between individuals and their communities. \nRobert C. Banks Jr. was born and raised in Cleveland\, Ohio in 1966\, and has attended Cleveland Institute of Art and Cleveland State University\, and has also served in the U.S. Air Force. Inspired by his father\, Banks is an experimental filmmaker\, cinematographer\, and teacher of filmmaking and photography at numerous colleges and universities. Banks’ films have been screened at numerous prestigious film festivals and art institutions\, both domestically and abroad\, such as Sundance Film Festival\, SXSW Film-Music Festival\, International Film Festival Rotterdam\, Museum of Modern Art\, The Robert Flaherty Film Seminar\, Chicago Underground Film Festival\, and Ann Arbor. He is a recipient of numerous awards\, including Filmmaker of the Year at the Midwest Filmmaker’s Conference\, and his film retrospectives have been featured at The BBC British Short Film Festival\, The Cleveland Cinematheque\, and The Walker Center for the Arts. One of Banks’ best-known works is the 1992 short film X: The Baby Cinema\, which chronicles the commercialization of Malcolm X’s image and legacy. Some of his other films include Motion Picture Genocide\, My First Drug\, the Idiot Box\, Outlet\, Goldfish and Sunflowers\, AWOL\, Autopilot\, and Don’t Be Still\, all of which were shot and edited on 16 and 35 mm film. Several of his short films have been added to the private collections of institutions such as The Yale University Film School and The Walker Center for the Arts. Most recently\, Banks has completed his first 35 mm feature film\, Paper Shadows\, which was seven years in the making.             \nSponsors\nSqueaky Wheel’s Animation Fest is presented with generous support from the Richard W. Rupp Foundation\, FGI Landscaping\, PUSH Buffalo\, TriMain Center\, Rigidized Metals\, BreadHive\, Buffalo Expendables\, Buffalo State College Communication Dept\, Rose Jade Consulting Coop\, Lumpy Buttons Gifts\, Good Neighbors Credit Union\, and Villa Maria College. The North Park Theater event is presented with generous support from Councilman Joel Feroleto. \n\nBanner image: Hannah Hamalian\, The Golden Age. Yellow\, green\, and black paint is smeared into an abstracted version of a familiar cartoon dog character.
URL:https://squeaky.org/event/the-animation-fest-a-retrospective-north-park-theatre/
LOCATION:North Park Theatre\, 1428 Hertel Avenue\, Buffalo\, NY\, 14216\, United States
CATEGORIES:Fundraiser,Hybrid,Screenings
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230818T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230818T210000
DTSTAMP:20260612T080411
CREATED:20251230T191505Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251230T191505Z
UID:10001109-1692385200-1692392400@squeaky.org
SUMMARY:Meet our residents: Alicia Solstice Hawkins and Maggie Hazen
DESCRIPTION:Friday\, August 18\, 2023\, 7 pm ET\nOnline + in-person @ Squeaky Wheel \nFree or suggested donation. ASL interpretation provided. \nRegister here\nSqueaky Wheel is pleased to present this virtual artist talk with our Summer 2023 Workspace Residents! Alicia Solstice Hawking (Los Angeles\, CA) and Maggie Hazen (Hudson Vallery\, NY) will be presenting on their previous and current projects\, and engage in a Q&A moderated by curator Ekrem Serdar. \nDuring their time with Squeaky Wheel\, the residents will be working on media art projects with significant ties to Buffalo’s history and current landscape. Alicia Solstice Hawkins will work on Don’t Go Back to Sleep\, a a poetic and observational 15-minute documentary about Bob\, an elder\, almost 80 years of age\, who attempts to re-engage his art practice while contending with the aftermath of a major stroke. Charting Bob’s life starting from Buffalo’s Fruit Belt neighborhood\, the city’s East and West Sides\, and Los Angeles\, where he resides now\, the film will follow several different timelines of his life through his poignant\, witty\, and moving voiceover paired with poetic imagery and sound. Maggie Hazen will work on Night Moth: A Mythology of Escape\, a mixed reality project made in collaboration with DW. DW\, who lives in Western New York\, is a formerly incarcerated young artist who was recently released from Brookwood Secure Center for Youth in New York’s Hudson Valley; Hazen met her while teaching art classes at the facility in 2019. Night Moth revolves around Luna\, a 3D digital avatar for DW\, and Luna’s journey of self-discovery\, liberation\, and healing. Night Moth will culminate in four artworks\, including a video installation exhibition\, a documentary\, a sketchbook\, and an interactive concept website. \nIn-person attendees can enjoy food\, including vegetarian options\, from Ali Baba Kebab. Learn how to get to Squeaky Wheel’s new location at Tri-Main Center here.  \n Online attendees can view the event for 24 hours. Squeaky members will have access to the event for 72 hours. \nTo learn more about the Workspace Residency\, click here. \nBiographies of the residents\nAlicia Solstice Hawkins: I was born and raised on the Lower West side of Buffalo. A childhood in the Rust Belt informs my aesthetic and inspires me to craft stories that highlight perseverance and explore multiple perspectives that are not usually featured in mainstream narratives. I often focus on topics related to complex and intersecting identities\, the tension between the healing and antagonistic power of nature\, and unexpected resilience. \nI earned a MA in documentary film from UW\, Seattle\, and my award-winning thesis film was screened at various festivals\, colleges\, and museums throughout the US and Canada. After working as an educator and media producer for organizations with social and racial justice initiatives\, I returned to graduate school and earned an MFA from Temple University with an emphasis on screenwriting. Recent screenwriting projects include Horseshoe Falls\, a feature-length film set on the Lower West Side of Buffalo in the early ‘90s\, and The Jar\, a queer speculative fiction film set in Days Park. For more\, please see: aliciafilm.com \nMaggie Hazen is a New York-based visual artist from Los Angeles. Hazen’s artistic practice is characterized by the transformative power of sculpture\, video\, collage\, performance\, and installation\, which she employs to explore the complex ways in which subjects interact with and perform within the spaces they occupy. Through the synthesis of narratives drawn from popular culture and institutional systems\, Hazen’s works aim to deconstruct the familiar and make it strange\, revealing what lies hidden in plain sight. Hazen is the founder and an active member of the Columbia Collective\, which is dedicated to supporting the visibility of young incarcerated and formerly incarcerated artists who have been rendered invisible by the system. Launched in 2019 at the Columbia Secure Center for Girls in the Hudson Valley\, the collective has since grown to find a new home at the Brookwood Secure Center for youth. \nHazen’s work has been exhibited\, screened and performed at institutions including The Bronx Museum\, Bronx\, NY; Foreland Contemporary Art Campus\, Catskill\, NY; Pulse Miami Beach as part of Pulse Play\, Miami\, FL; The Museum of Tolerance\, Los Angeles\, CA; Microscope Gallery\, Brooklyn\, NY; Vox Populi\, Philadelphia\, PA; Light Year on the Manhattan Bridge\, Brooklyn\, NY; The Granoff Center at Brown University\, RI; Performance Works Northwest\, Portland\, OR; The CICA Museum in South Korea; and The Boston Young Contemporaries exhibition; Boston\, MA; among others. Hazen has held residencies at Pioneer Works\, Brooklyn\, NY; De:Formal online artist residency; The Shanghai Institute of Visual Art\, Shanghai\, China\, I:O residency at the Helikon Art Center\, Izmit\, Turkey; Vermont Studio Center in Vermont and The Pasadena Side Street Projects\, Pasadena; CA. She participated as a fellow in the Bronx AIM program and The Saas-Fee Summer Institute of Art at European Graduate School in Switzerland. She has studied at Biola University\, Brown University\, and the Rhode Island School of Design. She has taught at the Rhode Island School of Design\, New York University\, The Stevens Institute of Technology\, The Shanghai Institute of Visual Art\, and the Bard College Clemente courses in the humanities program. She is currently a visiting artist-in-residence at Bard College in the Studio Arts program. \nWorkspace Residency is generously supported by the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts.  \nImage description: Portraits of Alicia Solstice Hawkins and Maggie Hazen superimposed on a blue red backgrop. Alicia Solstice Hawkins is standing on a beach in her photograph. Next to her is a portrait of Maggie Hazen\, a white queer person from Southern California. She has blonde hair and is wearing a black beanie hat and a black sweater. She is candidly looking into the camera with a curious gaze.
URL:https://squeaky.org/event/meet-the-residents-alicia-solstice-hawkins-and-maggie-hazen/
LOCATION:Squeaky Wheel\, 2495 Main Street\, Suite 310\, Buffalo\, NY\, 14214\, United States
CATEGORIES:Artist Talk,Hybrid,Residencies
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230407T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230407T210000
DTSTAMP:20260612T080411
CREATED:20251230T191451Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251230T191451Z
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SUMMARY:Meet the Residents!
DESCRIPTION:Friday\, April 7\, 2023\, 7 pm ET\nOnline + in-person @ Squeaky Wheel \nFree or suggested donation. ASL interpretation provided. \nClick here for tickets\nSqueaky Wheel is pleased to present this virtual artist talk with our Spring 2023 Workspace Residents! Dena Kopolovich (Flushing\, NY)\, Elenie Chung (Los Angeles\, CA)\, Laura Jaramillo (Durham\, NC)\, and Miranda Javid (Port Ewen\, NY) will be presenting and speaking to their previous and current projects\, and engage in a Q&A moderated by curator Ekrem Serdar. \nDuring time with Squeaky Wheel\, the residents will be working on a variety of projects including animations\, hybrid works\, lyrical essays on cinema\, and non-fiction films. Dena Kopolovich will be working towards the completion of her upcoming short film Container Film\, an experimental essay film created in a hybrid 16mm and digital format\, that engages with Ursula K. Le Guin’s essay\, “The Carrier Bag Theory of Fiction”. Elenie Chung will be assembling All the Films in My Grandfather’s Closet a planned hybrid docu-fiction\, telling the tale of Chung’s grandfather\, a Chinese Trinidadian whose life had been defined by an early marriage\, resistance to cultural customs and the changing times in Trinidad and Tobago from the 1930s to 2020s. Laura Jaramillo will be developing a book of lyrical essays investigating the fraught history of Colombian national cinema during the War on Drugs and global neoliberalization\, interwoven with her own biography as a diasporic Colombian and her family’s history. Miranda Javid will continue animating\, sound recording\, and editing Human Behavior\, a three-minute hand-drawn film drawn with sumi ink on tracing paper\, which asks viewers how even small gestures can impact others.  \nIn-person attendees can find information on how to get to Squeaky Wheel’s new location at Tri-Main Center here. The event will be available to register and view for 24 hours. SW members will have access to the event for 72 hours. \nTo find out more about the Workspace Residency\, click here. \nBiographies of the residents\n \nDena Kopolovich (b.1991) is a multimedia artist & filmmaker from New York. Her recent work uses past and present aesthetics to investigate the origin and continuity of meaning. She is interested in using cinematic forms to explore the derivation of instinctive human rituals & objects. In 2022 she completed a fellowship at LABA Laboratory for Jewish Culture\, where she spent a year creatively interrogating ancient mythological texts. She is an Adjunct Professor in the Film & Media Department at Hunter College and a Teaching Artist at the cinema-arts non-profit Mono No Aware. Dena received her education from the Purchase College Conservatory of Theater Arts\, with a concentration in Directing and the Integrated Media Arts MFA at Hunter College. \nElenie Chung is a filmmaker and artist\, born and raised in Trinidad and Tobago\, currently based in Los Angeles\, CA. She is interested in using female relationships as a method of illustrating cultural disconnection and ancestral amnesia. Her films have screened in international festivals and art exhibitions. Since attending the University of California\, Los Angeles to achieve an MFA in Film Directing/Production\, she has been working remotely at Women Make Movies\, a non-profit feminist media arts organization based in New York City and has been contributing to film organizations in Los Angeles to amplify under-recognised films by women\, international and non-white filmmakers. \nLaura Jaramillo is a critic and poet working at the intersection of film and media theory\, lyrical poetry\, and essay. She received her PhD in critical theory from Duke University where she wrote her dissertation on avant-garde Latin American and Spanish cinema. She is the author of two books of poetry Material Girl (subpress\, 2012) and Making Water (Futurepoem\, 2022). Her writings on film and contemporary media have appeared in JumpCut\, Feminist Media Histories\, and IndyWeek. She is currently at work on a book of essays about the death and rebirth of Colombian cinema during the neoliberal era. \nMiranda Javid is an animator\, curator\, and art-educator with a Masters in Fine Art from the University of California Irvine and a BFA from the Maryland Institute College of Art. Her animations describe topics like cognitive experience\, human bias\, and the relationship between individuals and their communities. These films have shown nationally and internationally at festivals like the Ann Arbor Film Festival\, Eyeworks Film Festival\, Slamdance\, the Flaherty Seminar\, and Malt Adult. She is a Kenan Fellow\, a Denniston Hill resident\, a Sherman Fairchild grantee\, and a recipient of the Nancy Harrigan Prize\, given through the Baker Artist Fund. Her drawings have been shown at Commune1 in Cape Town\, S Africa\, The Baltimore Museum of Art\, The Mint Museum of Art in North Carolina\, and Vox Populi in Philadelphia\, PA. Currently\, she lives in unceded Munsee territory also known as the Hudson Valley in New York State. \nWorkspace Residency is generously supported by the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts.  \nImage description: Four photographs against a graphic background. Left to right and top to bottom are: a portrait of Dena Kopolovich\, gazing off to the left and smiling\, wearing a light brown turtleneck\, with curly long auburn hair that is styled down. The background is a brick wall painted two different shades of red; A close up of Elenie Chung\, a young woman of East Asian descent wearing glasses and with short black hair. She is wearing a green and pink checkered wool scarf; Laura Jaramillo\, a woman in a black dress stares off to the right of the frame. There are trees and foliage behind her; and Miranda Javid\, a femme iranian woman in her mid-thirties stands in front of lush trees.
URL:https://squeaky.org/event/meet-the-residents/
LOCATION:Squeaky Wheel\, 2495 Main Street\, Suite 310\, Buffalo\, NY\, 14214\, United States
CATEGORIES:Artist Talk,Hybrid,Residencies
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230303T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230303T203000
DTSTAMP:20260612T080411
CREATED:20251230T191504Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251230T191504Z
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SUMMARY:Exhalations: Films by Kalpana Subramanian
DESCRIPTION:***New date: Friday\, March 3\, 2023\, 7 pm ET***\nIn-person @ Journey’s End Refugee Services\, and online\nFree or suggested donation\nClick here to register\nFor over 20 years\, Kalpana Subramanian has created a remarkable body of work spanning films\, media art\, children’s books\, scholarship\, and curatorial work. Her recent work is invested in a cinema of breath: a framework for radical cinema grounded in intersectional-feminist and decolonial thought\, alternative approaches to embodiment\, and what Achille Mbembe calls “the universal right to breathe.” This solo screening by the celebrated film and media practitioner brings together recent and older short films from 2002 to the present day\, including the entirety of her Light Mediated series. The filmmaker will be present for a Q&A following the screening. \nThis online and event will take place in the theater of Journey’s End Refugee Services\, located at the 5th floor of Tri-Main Center. Please note that the online event will only have the films\, not the Q&A with the artist. The online films will be available for 24 hours. Squeaky Wheel members will receive extended access for 72 hours. \nProgram\nTotal duration: 54 minutes. Please note that woolgathering contains flickering imagery. \nThe Maze of Lanes (SD\, 6 min\, Sound\, Color\, 2002) \nIncantation (HD\, 8 min 37 sec\, sound\, color\, 2021) \nwoolgathering (HD\, 3 min 10 sec\, sound\, color\, 2020) \nTattva (HD\, 4.34 min\, Sound\, Color\, 2018) \nLight Mediated Series \nLiquid is Light (8mm transferred to Digital\, 4 min 2 sec\, sound\, B&W\, 2016) \nEmpyrean (HD\, 6 min 20 sec min\, silent\, color\, 2016) \nLight Rooms (HD\, 1 min 45 sec\, silent\, color\, 2016) \nPrismatic Resonance (HD\, 12 min 46 sec\, sound\, color\, 2016) \nA Dialogue of Dissonance (HD\, 6 min 23 sec\, Sound\, Color\, 2016) \nBio\nKalpana Subramanian is an artist-filmmaker and scholar of experimental film and media. Her current research investigates the poetics of breath in experimental film using a transcultural and interdisciplinary approach. Her work has been supported by grants including a Humanities Institute Advanced PhD Fellowship (University at Buffalo\, 2022-23)\, the UK Environmental Film Fellowship (2006) and the Fulbright Nehru Academic and Professional Excellence Fellowship (University of Colorado Boulder\, 2015-16). Her films have been presented at venues including the Yamagata International Documentary Film Festival\, Toronto International Film Festival\, Interfilm Berlin\, National Gallery of Modern Art (Mumbai\, India)\, UNESCO (France)\, Antimatter Media Arts (Canada)\, Asia Society\, Union Docs and Flaherty NYC Seminar (USA) among others. She has received awards for her films at the Documentary Festival of History and Archeology (Perugia\, Italy\, 2015)\, Montana CINE International Film Festival (2003\, 2005) and CMS Vatavaran (2008). Her curated film programs have been screened at the Alternative cinema series (Colgate University\, USA)\, Bristol Experimental Expanded Film (UK) and Simon Fraser University (Canada) among others. She is presently a doctoral candidate and an adjunct lecturer at the Department of Media Study\, University at Buffalo. \nSpecial thank you to Kathy Spillman and Journey’s End Refugee Services. \nBanner image: Kalpana Subramanian\, Incantation (2021). A photograph depicting multiple images projected on a surface. The shadows of what look like two young people\, arms on each other’s shoulders\, standing under an arched gateway to a historic building in Delhi\, India. Upon this image is an extended hand\, palm open. It looks like the young people are in the palm.
URL:https://squeaky.org/event/exhalations-films-by-kalpana-subramanian/
LOCATION:Squeaky Wheel\, 2495 Main Street\, Suite 310\, Buffalo\, NY\, 14214\, United States
CATEGORIES:Hybrid,Screenings
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221014T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221014T190000
DTSTAMP:20260612T080411
CREATED:20251230T191451Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251230T191451Z
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SUMMARY:Squeaky Wheel's 19th Animation Fest!
DESCRIPTION:Friday\, October 14\, 2022\, 5:30 pm ET\nIn-person at the Burchfield Penney Art Center as part of M&T Second Fridays\nFree or suggested donation\nTo attend the in-person event\, just come to BPAC!\nFor the online screening\, register here\n \nSqueaky Wheel is excited to present the annual 19th Animation Fest! The annual festival features some of the most exciting voices working in animation today\, from Western New York and beyond. \nThe eleven short films in the 19th Animation Fest feature animation techniques such as rotoscoping\, 3D animation\, stop-motion\, hand-drawn celluloid films\, music videos and documentary works. These unique and personal films address topics and concerns such as gender and sexuality\, women in the history of animation\, disability and belonging\, the perceptual possibilities of animation\, and much more. \nFeaturing films by Ahmad Saleh\, Anne-Marie Bouchard\, Hannah R.W. Hamalian\, James Leong Holston\, Kelly Gallagher\, LIZN’BOW (Liz Ferrer & Bow Ty Enterprises Venture Capital)\, Lynn Kim\, Marisa Michaels and Sianna Le\, Poyen Wang\, Wenhua Shi\, and Youmee Lee. Curated by Ekrem Serdar and Zainab Saleh. \nAccess information:  \nFor in-person viewers\, see accessibility information for BPAC here. The in-person screening will feature an ASL interpretation for the introduction and Q&A. See individual film descriptions for caption and subtitle information in the “Program” section below. \nFor online viewers: See individual film descriptions for caption and subtitle information in the “Program” section below.The screening will be available to view for 24 hours\, and 72 hours for Squeaky members. Ahmad Saleh’s Night is not available for online viewers. \nPlease see the individual film descriptions for content notes. Some of these films may contain strong themes such as war\, trauma\, body dysmorphia\, flicker\, or images that may be unsuitable for young children. \n            <strong>Program</strong>                        \nYoumee Lee\, Rite of Identity\n4:16 min\, sound\, 2022\, USA \nA 2D animation film about a deaf girl who has exceptional artistic talent but struggles with an overwhelming soundscape. Many deaf symbols and motifs are conveyed through her lens. The film is based on Youmee Lee’s personal experience as a deaf student in a mainstream school. \nWenhua Shi\, Because the Sky is Blue\n4 min\, sound\, 2021\, USA \nMuybridge captured the galloping horse one hundred forty years ago in a brief 12 frames. The duration of today’s social media video clips is similar to Muybridge’s brevity. Wenhua tries to reimagine what subject Muybridge would capture today. All source footage is from Wenhua’s social media feed. He used the cyanotype method to reprint the individual frames to create the final short videos. \nAnne-Marie Bouchard\, Bleue\n2:48 min\, sound\, 2021\, Canada\nContent notes: Flickering imagery \nAn improvised film around the color blue and a questioning. This gestural film is woven over my moods during the pandemic lock-down. Constraints: 100 feet of transparent film; work on the persistence of vision (drawings 1 image out of 2). Acrylic paint\, nail polish\, and inks are applied directly on 16mm film. Marie-Loup Cottinet improvised the music on her cello over the animation. \nJames Leong Holston\, Olive and Otis\n5:20 min\, sound\, 2022\, USA\nContent notes: Animated nudity\, body dysphoria\, brief animated images of surgery and blood \nA short animated horror film about dysphoria\, gender transition\, and the self. \nMarisa Michaels and Sianna Le\, You Are What You Eat\n1 min\, sound\, 2022\, USA \nA short\, gem-like and precise animated film by two students working collaboratively at Nichols School. Winner of the Squeaky Wheel award at the 2022 Nichols School Flickfest. \nHannah Hamalian\, The Golden Age\n9:58 min\, sound\, English with captions\, 2021\, USA \nAn experimental documentary examining the traumatic history of being a woman at work in the animation industry. I put myself into conversation with a generation of women who experienced restricted creative opportunities in animation and a lack of acknowledgement as artists. Each manipulated frame is an ode to the disregarded labor of women\, wielded to create films that told young girls to dream. \nPoyen Wang\, Recess\n4:16 min\, silent\, 2020\, USA \nRecess is a moving image work from The Black Sun series\, which is informed by the literature of Japanese author Motojiro Kajii. Melancholy atmosphere permeates throughout a series of dreamlike vignettes in Recess\, depicting a boy-man figure sitting alone in a timeless\, cave-like classroom. The wind blows the curtains; ceiling fans operate endlessly; clouds slowly pass through the blue sky; a group of butterflies subtly flap their wings on a bulletin board. Conversely\, the protagonist remains still while a ray of sun breaks the darkness of the room through the window\, almost like a rope\, illuminating the statue-like figure. Written in a confessional manner\, Kajii conflates fiction and autobiography\, reflecting on the banality and wonder of quotidian life through the vision of a dying person. Reinterpreting Kajii’s literature through my lived experience as a queer person and an immigrant from East Asia\, I create a series of portraits and still lifes to explore repressed emotions and foreground mortality and alienation as a universal human experience. \nKelly Gallagher\, In the Future\n3:30 min\, sound\, English with captions\, 2021\, USA \nKnowing that another world is possible\, individuals young and old share their hopes and dreams for the future. \nAhmed Saleh\, ليل (Night)\n16 min\, sound\, Arabic with English subtitles\, 2021\, Palestine/Germany\nContent notes: Non-violent depictions of war victims and parental trauma \nThe dust of war keeps the eyes sleepless. Night brings peace and sleep to all the people in the broken town. Only the eyes of the mother of the missing child stay resilient. Night must trick her into sleeping to save her soul.\nPlease note: This film will only be available in the in-person screening \nLynn Kim\, CONDUIT\n5:25 min\, sound\, 2022\, USA\nContent notes: Flickering imagery \nA running body powers the cycle between states of being. CONDUIT is a tribute to Korean musical rituals and the wonder of locomotion\, both spiritual and physical. \nLIZN’BOW (Liz Ferrer & Bow Ty Enterprises Venture Capital)\, Dame Leche\n3:24 min\, sound\, English and Spanish partially subtitled\, 2022\, USA\nContent notes: Flickering imagery\, brief language \nLiz Ferrer and Bow Ty’s collaborative work spans film making\, photography\, video\, and performance art. Through a queer and comedic lens\, their work together has been building a reputation for critiquing American and Latin pop. Their most recent projects together are feminist reggaeton band Niña and new media collaborative LIZN’BOW. Niña is a feminist reggaeton duo and performative art project. They started this project to bring diverse voices to the traditionally male genre of reggaeton. Dame Leche was directed\, produced\, written\, edited\, and animated by Liz Ferrer and Bow Ty. This video is part one of our visual album Niñalandia. Niñalandia pushes social constructs by bringing diverse voices to the traditionally male genre of reggaeton. Dame Leche is set in a post climate change Miami where half of the city is underwater\, people ride jet skis to work and everyone has an addiction to leche. This project has been funded by Oolite Arts Ellies Creator Award. \n            \n            Filmmaker biographies                        \nAhmad Saleh is a Palestinian/German writer and director. His first film\, HOUSE\, 2012 was nominated for the German Short Film Award and his second film\, AYNY\, 2016 won the Student Academy Award. Recently he finished his third short film\, NIGHT and is developing his first feature. \nAnne-Marie Bouchard lives and works in Québec City. She directed several experimental videos and installations. Her work is about exploring the mysteries and wonders of the world and questioning the way we perceive and analyze it. To sense\, to feel\, to be immersed\, and to question: her cinema is poetry.\n \nHannah R.W. Hamalian (she/her) is an artist intrigued by how complicated the world is. In her animation and film practice she tends towards an experimental and poetic mode of expression\, working with the movement of animation in collaboration with dance and landscape to represent paradox and complexity. She uses an interdisciplinary approach to aim for the emotional core of an experience and craft immersive soundscapes that create a space specifically designed for asking questions. \nJames Leong Holston is a Los Angeles-based animator and filmmaker originally from Berkeley\, California. He studied Experimental Animation at the California Institute of the Arts and graduated in 2022. \nKelly Gallagher is a filmmaker\, animator\, and Associate Professor of Film at Syracuse University. Her creative work is rooted in themes of resistance\, struggle\, political histories\, and personal explorations. Her award-winning films and commissioned animations have screened internationally at venues including: the Museum of Modern Art\, the National Gallery of Art\, Sundance Film Festival\, the Smithsonian Institution\, and Tribeca Film Festival. Her most recent animations have also screened on Netflix and PBS. She’s presented solo programs of her work at institutions including: SFMOMA\, Close-Up Cinema London\, SF Cinematheque\, and Wexner Center for the Arts. \nLiz and Bow‘s work has been featured at Mana Contemporary\, Squeaky Wheel\, Borscht Film Festival\, ICA Miami\, The Bass Museum\, The Satellite Show Art Fair Art Basel\, Albright-Knox Art Gallery\,  The Koubek Center\, Cunsthaus\, MOCA Miami\, Museum of Modern Art Santo Domingo\, and Albright Knox Center. They are recipients of the Knights Art Challenge award from the Knight Foundation\, Franklin Furnace Grant\, Locust Projects WaveMaker\, Oolite Arts Ellies Award\, Knight Sundance Short Film Miami Intensive Fellows\, Atlantic Center for the Arts Residency\, Elsewhere Southern Constellations Fellowship\, Caldera Arts Residency\, Squeaky Wheel Residency\, Borscht Film Festival Grant\, En Residencia Fellowship\, Tempus Projects Residency Fellowship\, Acre Residency\, and La Sierra de Santa Marta Residency. \nLynn Kim is a Korean American filmmaker and educator who uses live-action and animation techniques to create short films that explore the social conditions and realities of the human body. She is particularly interested in how questions around gender\, race\, health and sexuality can be explored through metaphorical and abstract means\, and her work is often centered in her own body and lived experiences. \nPoyen Wang was born in Taiwan and is currently based in New York City. His recent practice employs world building through 3D computer graphics to create narratives that grapple with issues of identity\, sexuality and masculinity. He has solo exhibitions at Taipei Digital Art Center (2020)\, 18th Street Arts Center (Los Angeles\, 2018)\, Flux Factory (New York\, 2018)\, and the National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts (2016). \nWenhua Shi pursues a poetic approach to moving image making\, and investigates conceptual depth in film\, video\, interactive installations and sound sculptures. His work has been presented at museums\, galleries\, and film festivals. He is the founder and one of curators of RPM Fest. \nBased in upstate New York\, Youmee Lee is a deaf Korean American animator who weaves narrative illustrations into her art. She currently teaches courses on deaf art and cinema after earning her M.F.A. in Film and Animation at Rochester Institute of Technology. Growing up with limited access to the aural world\, she delved entirely into the visual world and studied art in New York City\, Amsterdam\, and Seoul. As a first-generation American raised by an immigrant family\, her work is a colorful tapestry of her intersectionality. She strives to deconstruct the stigma towards people with disabilities. Youmee continues to explore storytelling with different materials\, embodying the nuances of sign language and physical movements. Her goal is to create visually poetic work that is accessible to a wide audience.             \nAbout our Partner Sponsor \nAnimators belong at Villa. Look around: Animation is everywhere—movies and TV\, advertising\, video games. Future animators are curious\, creative\, and embrace technology in meaningful ways. But most importantly—they’re storytellers. They have rich imaginations and take inspiration from other disciplines like photography\, music\, and film. At Villa\, you’ll channel what you discover to create characters and environments that capture the interests of a range of audiences. Click here for more information. \nImage: Lynn Kim\, CONDUIT (2022). A traced image of a person moving over a black backdrop. An abstract white shadow falls on the floor.
URL:https://squeaky.org/event/squeaky-wheels-19th-animation-fest/
LOCATION:Burchfield Penney Art Center\, 1300 Elmwood Ave\, Buffalo\, 14222\, United States
CATEGORIES:Hybrid,Screenings
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220826T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220826T210000
DTSTAMP:20260612T080411
CREATED:20251230T191436Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251230T191436Z
UID:10000864-1661540400-1661547600@squeaky.org
SUMMARY:Jenson Leonard's Workflow
DESCRIPTION:Friday\, August 26\, 7 pm ET\nOnline or in-person at Squeaky Wheel\nFree or suggested donation\nClick here to get tickets\nOnline and in-person at Squeaky Wheel (617 Main Street\, Buffalo\, NY 14203). For in-person attendees: Participants must be masked through the duration of the event. The online video will be available to register and view for 24 hours. SW members will have access to the event for 72 hours. \nSqueaky Wheel is excited to present a screening of Jenson Leonard’s newest short video Workflow. Presented as the closing event of the artists exhibition GLAND PRIX\, Leonard will be joined by his Summer 2020 co-resident Johann Diedrick for a conversation on the film after the screening. \nLearn more about GLAND PRIX here. \n“Drawing from Aria Dean’s essay ‘Notes on Blaccelleration’\, Workflow is a film centered around the velocity and momentum of blackness as it relates to the philosophical concept of acceleration-the idea that the only way out of capitalism is through its intensification. Workflow is primarily concerned with the interplay of blackness and aesthetic vocabularies of finance capital\, how the black (non)subject grapples with its commodified status within the labor market despite\, or resultant of its own history as a commodity via chattel slavery\, threading linkages between the primitive accumulation of the New World and speculative accumulation of latter day. Workflow is defined as “the sequence of industrial\, administrative\, or other processes through which a piece of work passes from initiation to completion”\, my film seeks to disabuse notions of completion wherein blackness is\, as Dean notes\, ‘always already accelerationist’ via its incongruence with western humanism\, and thus always already disengaged from the locomotive fetish of capital. The film presents a quarterly earnings report for a fictitious financial advisory firm that depicts a floating phantasmagoric Michael Jackson Halloween mask espousing a surrealist poem/public relations speech that points to the shared grammars inherent in afro pessimism and speculative finance. Behind the floating head\, stock footage premised around the shape of ‘the grid’ and the promise of sustainability & renewability highlight the inherent relationship of infrastructure\, visual knowledge production\, and statecraft.” – Jenson Leonard \nBiographies of the artists \nJenson Leonard\, (artist) 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. \nJohann Diedrick (guest speaker for Screening: Jenson Leonard’s Workflow\, taking place on August 25\, 2022) is an award-winning artist\, engineer\, and musician that makes installations\, performances\, and sculptures for experiencing the world through sonic encounter. He surfaces resonant histories of past interactions inscribed in material and embedded in space\, peeling back vibratory 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 revealing new sonic possibilities off the grid. He is the Director of Engineering at Somewhere Good\, a 2022 Future Imagination Collaboratory Fellow at the Tisch School of the Arts at NYU\, a 2021 Mozilla Creative Media Award recipient\, a 2020 Pioneer Works Technology resident\, 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 internationally at MoMA PS1\, the New Museum\, Ars Electronica\, Science Gallery Dublin\, Somerset House\, and multiple NIME conferences\, among others. \nImage description: An image from Workflow\, courtesy of Jenson Leonard. A floating\, plastic\, seemingly smiling mask of Michael Jackson with no eyeballs is super-imposed on a distorted landscape of futuristic blue skyscrapers.
URL:https://squeaky.org/event/jenson-leonards-workflow/
LOCATION:Squeaky Wheel\, 2495 Main Street\, Suite 310\, Buffalo\, NY\, 14214\, United States
CATEGORIES:Hybrid,Screenings
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220819T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220819T210000
DTSTAMP:20260612T080411
CREATED:20251230T191435Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251230T191435Z
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SUMMARY:Meet the Residents: Muse Dodd and Rob Cosgrove
DESCRIPTION:Friday\, August 19\, 2022\, 7 pm ET\nOnline or in-person at Squeaky Wheel\nFree or suggested donation\nClick here for tickets\nFor in-person attendees: Participants must be masked through the duration of the event. \nSqueaky Wheel is pleased to present this virtual artist talk with our Summer 2022 artist residents\, Muse Dodd (Atlanta\, GA) and Rob Cosgrove (Sunnyside\, NY). The two artists will be presenting and speaking to their previous and current projects\, and engage in a Q&A moderated by curator Ekrem Serdar. \nDuring their residency\, Muse Dodd will be utilizing the facilities of Squeaky Wheel and our Workspace partner The Foundry to build models and sets for their installation and performance work Black in Both Directions that supposes that Black people invented time travel. Their project will utilize projection mapping\, draw on Afro-diasporic notions of time using oral testimonies\, and images created by the artist and archival video footage. Rob Cosgrove will be utilizing the space and resonance of Silo City to work on Floaters\, a networked sonic performance in Silo City Marine A\, performed live for the public at the end of his residency. Inspired by the floating grain elevators used in the First Ward of Buffalo\, and drawing on the artist’s own family history in the area\, Cosgrove’s work contemplates the shifting networked relationship between the industrial and social communities in one of the city’s oldest neighborhoods. \nThe event will be available to register and view for 24 hours. SW members will have access to the event for 72 hours. \nTo find out more about the Workspace Residency\, click here. \nBiographies of the residents \nMuse Dodd (They/Them) is an Anti-disciplinary Artist\, Curator and DJ from Severn\, MD based in Atlanta. Their work centers on the questions\, How do you remember and what do you choose to forget? Through the act of remembering\, Muse uses their body to map the lived experience of Africans in America. Muse channels trauma to connect with\, process and alchemize pain; both personal and collective through movement\, ritual and collective dreaming. Muse holds a BA in Film Production from Howard University and studied at the Film Academy in Prague. Muse was a 2020 Corrina Mehiel fellow and a 2019-2020 Leslie Lohman Museum Artist Fellow and was the 2019 DCAC Curatorial Fellow. A former Artist-in-Residence at the Flux Factory\, they were also a 2018 Artist-in-Residence at the ARoS Museum in Denmark. Muse video work has been commissioned for performances at The Shed\, Mabou Mines Theater\, and Dixon Place. Muse has also screened and exhibited work at Lincoln Center\, The BWI Marshall Airport\, Prince George’s African American Museum and Cultural Center\, The DC Arts Center\, and The Flux Factory. Through their work\, Muse hopes to create space for Black bodies to be free\, if only for a frame.  \nRob Cosgrove is a percussionist\, composer\, and artist interested in creating embodied sounding through intermedia installations and performances. His works explore the feeling of a sound as a tactile\, visual\, and visceral entity by investigating the peripheries of sonic experience and the ways these contexts affect our perception. Rob has exhibited / performed at Pioneer Works (Brooklyn)\, Harvestworks (Manhattan)\, Chicago Design Museum (Chicago)\, National Gallery of Art (Washington D.C.)\, Coaxial (Los Angeles)\, Eastern Bloc (Montréal)\, DOX Centre for Contemporary Art (Prague)\, and KM28 (Berlin). Rob is a member of Ensemble Decipher and most recently completed residencies at Practice Gallery (Philadelphia) and the Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center (Troy). \nWorkspace Residency is generously supported by the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts.  \nImage description: Two photographs side by side. On the left is Muse Dodd\, a brown skinned\, Black\, non-binary person with blonde eyebrows\, wears a red camo durag while gazing at the camera and stands in front of a mustard backdrop. Their photograph is by Landon Spears. On the right is a photograph of Rob Cosgrove\, looking down surrounded by trees.
URL:https://squeaky.org/event/meet-the-residents-muse-dodd-and-rob-cosgrove/
LOCATION:Squeaky Wheel\, 2495 Main Street\, Suite 310\, Buffalo\, NY\, 14214\, United States
CATEGORIES:Artist Talk,Hybrid,Residencies
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