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Sunday, June 27, 2021

Das Fickhaus lässt uns böse werden


Das Fickhaus lässt uns böse werden

Some upcoming events and exhibitions from the lovesexy Thomas Dozol, everybody’s favourite juice boy Billy Miller of Straight to Hell aka: The Manhattan Review of Unnatural Acts, and the sublime heritage songstress Janet Klein & her Parlourboys.






Happy belated solstice,

I'm hard at work installing my first institutional that will open next weekend, at Neuer Aachen Kunstverein.

A year postponed, yet won't have many images till the show is up on the wall. Hallo 2021 vibes!

Here are a couple images still, and some words, to open your appetite.

A screen printed edition will also be available once the show opens.

Bis bald,

Thomas

Thomas Dozol - Ghost Light

04 July - 05 September 2021

Opening: 03 July, 17-22h

Neuer Aachener Kunstverein

Passstraße 29, 52070 Aachen

Germany

ANARCHY OF THE IMAGINATION

June 26 - July 30, 2021

Kerry Schuss Gallery • 73 Leonard St., NYC

organized by Ryan Foerster

Anonymous • Mitchell Algus • Aaron Birnbaum • Josh Brand • Freddie Brice • Douglas Brown • Hannah Buonaguro • Robin Cameron • Mary Carlson • Ele D’Artagnan • Pete Deevakul • Anne Doran • Mike Egan • Josh Feigin • Nadia Foerster • Glenna Foerster • Monica Forrestal • Silvianna Goldsmith • Ray Hamilton • Rand Hardy • Dmitri Hertz • Chip Hughes • Hunter Hunt Hendrix • Miles Huston • Daniel Innes • Ken Johnson • Jamian Juliano-Villani • Kate Levant • Alice Mackler • George Mandel • Billy Miller • Zoë Mpeletzikas • Sophy Naess • Kayode Ojo • Eric Palgon • Jose Pazos • Nikholis Planck • Adam Revington • Sven Sachsalber • Rafael Sánchez • Ben Schumacher • Kerry Schuss • Will Stewart • Steel Stillman • Tarwuk • Janice Turner • Jocko Weyland • Ma Yo

https://kerryschussgallery.com/pages/index.php



Ms. Davis photo taken by Love Camel 2003 City of Women Festival, Slovenia




Sunday, June 20, 2021

kein bullshit fick mich gratis


kein bullshit fick mich gratis

That young upcoming art sensation Millennium Star is at it again. Yes, yes and more yes to pretty and demure Maria Norrman and her performance alter ego. I was in a rare position to see Ms. Norrman develop early her genius when she was my student at Malmö Art Academy. Now she is running free completely on her own initiative and she and her work are splendid sights to behold.

Maria Norrman
Susanna Hesselberg
Kulturföreningen Tegel
Utvälinge, Helsingborg, Sweden

Performance as Millennium Star:

Millennium Star will perform under the umbrella of kulturföreningen Tegel in Utvälinge and do a performance where they pick trash by the river and lip sync to old Swedish songs relating to water and the ocean, by artists such as Sven-Olof Sandberg and Jussi Björling. Millennium will be dressed in an outfit partially made of gathered marine plastic.

Xsites-landart opens in Utvälinge on 22 June as well.
Artist: Lena Stenberg

3 September – 3 October
Curating at Galleri CC, Malmö, Sweden
Sebastian Wahlforss, Madeleine Aleman, Vala Tanz
https://gallericc.se/SE-Kommande-utstallningar

14-17 October
Millennium Star is part of the performance program
Theme: Shapeshifters
Supermarket Art Fair, Stockholm, Sweden

TBA
Residency at Cité Internationale des Arts, Paris, France

2022

14-16 January
Millennium Star – 10 years retrospective
Galleri CC-member solo presentation, at Galleri CC, Malmö, Sweden

11 March - 10 April
Curating at Galleri CC (with Arngrímur Borgthorson)

Kulturföreningen Tegel presenterar Konst vid ån - 22/6 i Utvälinge
Konst vid ån är den första utställningen som äger rum i regi av Kulturföreningen Tegel vid det gamla tegelbruket nära Vegeås mynning i Utvälinge. I samma anda som de verksamheter som finns där idag i form av bronsgjuteri, smedja, bilverkstad och snickarverkstad är intentionen att levandegöra bygden ytterligare med konst och kultur. Med vernissage den 22 juni 2021 väljer vi att lyfta två aktuella konstnärer med bas i Skåne.
Susanna Hesselberg är verksam som fotokonstnär och skulptör. I hennes konst iscensätts gränserna för den mänskliga existensen. Det finns ofta en känsla av utsatthet beskriven med humor och medkänsla. I sin fotokonst placerar Susanna ofta människor i naturen och i träd. Verket Tree Guy är i hög grad en förlängning av detta, ett slags förkroppsligat fotografi med en tragikomisk figur som klamrar sig fast på fel plats i världen.
Susanna är född i Norge, verksam i Malmö med en master från Malmö Konsthögskola -99. Hon är representerad vid Galerie Olivier Castaing/Team School Gallery, Paris och hon har ställt ut i Sverige, Norge Danmark och Frankrike.
Maria Norrman som drag queer-karaktären Millennium Star använder feminint kodade uttryck. Hon överskrider flera olika könsuttryck, vid imitationen av en man som klätt sig som en överdriven bild av en kvinna. Millennium Star belyser frågor kring kön, förväntningar och stereotyper. Karaktären tillåter Maria att utforska en existens vid sidan av normer, där ett mer flytande tillstånd kan existera.
Klädd som en havsgudinna som fått med sig marint plastskräp i sina nät kommer Maria att utföra en performance i vilken Millennium Star mimar till gamla sånger om hav och vatten.
Maria har en MFA från Konsthögskolan i Malmö -13 och är idag med i det konstnärsdrivna Galleri CC i Malmö. Hon har tidigare ställt ut i Köpenhamn, Gotlands konstmuseum, och tilldelats ett tvåårigt arbetsstipendium från Konstnärsnämnden.
Kulturföreningen Tegel har som övergripande mål att uppmärksamma den potential Ringugnen, med närområde, i Utvälinge har för att visa konst, musik och annan folkbildande kulturverksamhet. Utställningen är en samproduktion med Helsingborgs kulturförvaltning och X-sites.
Tid och plats
22 juni 2021 till 22 juni 2022
Rodervägen 18, Utvälinge (utanför Jonas Högströms bronsgjuteri).
Vänliga hälsningar
Robert Ek, Sofia Dahlgren och Mats Högström

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The latest from La Famiglia:


Bortolozzi Gazette

Now featuring a new contribution by
JULIETTE BLIGHTMAN

View


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Gayle Hunnicutt vs. Millennium Star










The gorgeous actress Gayle Hunnicutt


Saturday, June 19, 2021

Muskel-Twink, der einen falschen Penis reitet

Muskel-Twink, der einen falschen Penis reitet

Tonight if you can handle the heatwave tune in to the monthly Kollektiv CHEAP Radio broadcast on Reboot FM, CHEAP Funk. Tonight 7:30-8:30pm its CHEAP Palestina - Freies Künstlerradio aus Berlin - Kunst, Diskurs & elektronische Musik. Live aus dem ACUD - UKW 88,4
MHz in Berlin & 90,7 MHz in Potsdam.
This little note from one of my dear ex British students:

Exhibition
Today, Undertow, a group exhibition I am in, opens at the Freelands Foundation. If you are visiting London you can visit in person, or you can click here to see a virtual tour of the show. I am showing 4 small traced paintings and a video.

On Saturday 26th June, I shall be doing a short performance with my work. Numbers are very limited (I can have an audience of 5!), but do let me know if you would like to be there. Otherwise, a recording will be available online.

About the performance:

To Embody Power is ostensibly a talk in which the artist explains the ideas, source material and editing decisions behind her new video work, Modernity/Power (2021).

Over the duration of the performance, the formality and staging of the event are punctured by the artist’s actions which becoming increasingly erratic. Carr becomes more concerned with responding to the material in the video, disavowing the enforced stricture of the talk format and becoming absorbed with her own playful forms of embodiment and voice.

DYCP
I’m looking forward to getting started on some collaboration and networking activities over the next year, thanks to funding from the last round of Developing Your Creative Practice grants awarded by Arts Council England. I’ll be using this to start research for new work at the Midland Hotel and rethinking some of the ways I work. I’m feeling very grateful to ACE for this opportunity.

Studio
I moved into Exchange Place Studios at the end of 2019 and made use of the lockdowns by painting the walls and floor so I really love it in there now. Do drop me a line if you ever want to come by. I have a kettle and teabags!

Artist Support Pledge
In 2020 I cultivated a new relation to my studio practice and I made use of the Artist Support Pledge, mainly on Instagram. The Pledge (started by Matthew Burrows) involves artists posting images of their work to sell for no more than £200. And for each time you reach £1000 of sales you pledge to buy another artist’s work for £200. This has really sustained my practice and given me new ways to enjoy sharing what I do on social media.

Many thanks to friends and supporters who’ve maintained and even extended our usual ways of communicating, over social media and online—developing a deeper sense of community over the last year has been really nurturing.

I envisage sending out newsletters a little more frequently so if not of interest to you do feel free to unsubscribe.

Best wishes,
Allie

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This event is happening tonight from my hot Geneva posse. I am not good at cut & paste on the computer so I hope i copied correctly.

Event by spoutnik, Olga Rozenblum and Jehane Zouyene

spoutnik

Price: Free · Duration: 1 hr 30 min

Public · Anyone on or off Facebook

𝐆𝐚𝐳𝐞.𝐒: 𝐏𝐞𝐫𝐟𝐨𝐫𝐦𝐚𝐧𝐜𝐞 𝐝𝐞 𝐌𝐚𝐫𝐢𝐚𝐧𝐧𝐞 𝐂𝐡𝐚𝐫𝐠𝐨𝐢𝐬 𝐞𝐭 𝐑𝐨𝐦𝐲 𝐀𝐥𝐢𝐳𝐞́𝐞
(work in progress)
JOUR 2 : programme "Corps, Travail, Droits, Représentations", en collaboration avec le Centre Grisélidis Réal de documentation internationale sur la prostitution (CGR) -Aspasie, avec le soutien du Centre Maurice Chalumeau en sciences des sexualités (CMCCS), de la Haute école d'art et de design de Genève - HEAD et de la Fondation Emilie Gourd.
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Prenant pour point de départ le concept de Gaze, désignant les représentations du monde depuis des perspectives de vision spécifique, Romy et Marianne déploient un manifeste porn et radical autour de la définition d’un « Sex worker Gaze ». Au cours de ce cheminement réflexif, autobiographique et performatif, elles s’attardent sur les zones floues qui délimitent soumission aux injonctions et ré-appropriations des normes dominantes depuis leurs expériences de travailleuses du sexe.
Marianne Chargois est travailleuse du sexe, artiste et performeuse. Elle crée des évènements artistiques, féministes et politiques sur les corps et les sexualités minorisées. Elle organise entre autres depuis 2018 le SNAP, Festival dédié aux représentations des TDS.
Romy Alizée est photographe, actrice et travailleuse du sexe. Son travail aborde les enjeux de l’auto-représentation en tant qu’artiste féministe et queer dans une démarche d’empuissancement à travers la sexualité. Elle documente en photographie les communautés queer depuis plusieurs années.
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𝐃𝐮𝐫𝐞́𝐞 : 50 minutes
𝐂𝐨𝐧𝐜𝐞𝐩𝐭𝐢𝐨𝐧/𝐑𝐞́𝐚𝐥𝐢𝐬𝐚𝐭𝐢𝐨𝐧 : Marianne Chargois
𝐏𝐞𝐫𝐟𝐨𝐫𝐦𝐚𝐧𝐜𝐞, 𝐭𝐞𝐱𝐭𝐞𝐬, 𝐩𝐡𝐨𝐭𝐨𝐬, 𝐯𝐢𝐝𝐞́𝐨𝐬 : Romy Alizée, Marianne Chargois
𝐂𝐨𝐧𝐬𝐞𝐢𝐥 𝐚𝐫𝐭𝐢𝐬𝐭𝐢𝐪𝐮𝐞 : Matthieu Hocquemiller
𝐀𝐯𝐞𝐜 𝐥𝐞𝐬 𝐩𝐚𝐫𝐭𝐢𝐜𝐢𝐩𝐚𝐭𝐢𝐨𝐧𝐬 𝐯𝐨𝐜𝐚𝐥𝐞𝐬 𝐝𝐞 : Amar Protesta, Maxime Maes, Kay Garnellen, Beverly Ruby
𝐀𝐢𝐝𝐞 𝐦𝐮𝐬𝐢𝐜𝐚𝐥𝐞 : Vivian Allard
Co-programmation : Olga Rozenblum, Jehane Zouyene
JOUR 1 : https://www.facebook.com/events/1220377571709866
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I was just thinking about the British actress Joan Plowright the other day. I just adore her. She is one of my all time favourites.














Thursday, June 17, 2021

verfrüht/versehentlich


verfrüht/versehentlich

Miss Evelyn Venable is taking care of herself - going to her many doctor appointments and purging free all things that don't bring the little lady absolute joy. With so many exhibitions on the event horizon its the only way to make valuable use of fleeting time. Added to the list is getting out her novel Mary Magdalene. Miss Venable's literary agent has been very understanding but one shouldn't push it.

Received a lovely email from one of my very talented Work Master HEAD students in Geneva, Loren Kagny updating all her recent accomplishments which are many and varied. Loren is one young artist you have to support!

these two images are from my latest show

Tales of Nursing
at eeeeh!

you can now see the documentation
here
or
here

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I am happy because almost everything got soldout very quick at Radd Lounge

♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡

& My shop in online again
there is a few items left

♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡









you can now support my art by subscribing to my patreon page
here

♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡

(ノ◕ヮ◕)ノ*:・゚✧Thank youuu

LorenKagny.com

instagram

Merci


english is not my first language - thank you

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Oh and be sure to see my brilliant former Chicago Art Instititute student Keioui Keijaun Thomas exhibition at Participant Inc in New York City.  

Keioui Keijaun Thomas: Hands Up, Ass Out
Curated by Shehab Awad as Executive Care*
June 6 – July 18, 2021
Wednesday–Sunday, noon–7pm, appointments are required

Opening Reception
Sunday, June 6, 12–7pm

Live-Stream Performance
My Last American Dollar: FINAL RUN
June 8, 8pm EST on participantafterdark.art

Video Premiere
I Looked Up at the Sky and I, Imagined All of the Stars Were My Sisters, 2021
July 18, ONE NIGHT ONLY/24-hour screening on participantafterdark.art

Hands Up, Ass Out is New York-based artist Keioui Keijaun Thomas' first long-form exhibition, and the culmination of a body of work six years in the making, from 2014–2020. Amassed from iterations of writing, image-making, performances, and choreographies, Hands Up, Ass Out showcases Keioui's journey toward self-affirmed transcendence from the tokenization that exploits and oppresses young, talented, and femme black bodies.

*Executive Care is an all-encompassing agency at the service of artists founded by Shehab Awad in 2020.














Thursday, June 10, 2021

Milchfarm


Milchfarm

One of my dearest friends from the Los Angeles salad days of the 1980s and 1990s is Jose Montano. Jose worked in Hollywood for many years as an award winning production designer. He gave up all of that to return to his families roots of social justice work in the Pacific Northwest. Jose became involved with this very sizzling Negro Homo Project of his husband Ty Keenen. Here is the sweet note he sent me:

Tia Vag,
Here are few links to the ‘Negro Homo’ project should you want to include them in your divine ‘Speaking From The Diaphragm’.

https://vimeo.com/556012965


https://vimeo.com/560551686


https://vimeo.com/553845167


'NEGRO HOMO'

The Album to be released June 11 2021

Listen today at: https://www.tykeenen.com


negrohomo.com


Darling, I hope your Exhibition is coming together with the most illuminating light of Truth!


Big Hug and Kisses from Ty and I,


Love José


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And this missive from Gelitin kollektiv accolite Rita Novak of Vienna, Austria the love child of Kim Novak and Sammy Davis Jr. :


Dears,

Einladung zum Late Opening
Do 10.6.21, 18.00
Offizielle Eröffnung der Ausstellung mit Begrüßung von Hemma Schmutz, Direktorin Lentos, einer Einführung der Kuratorinnen Sabine Fellner und Elisabeth Nowak-Thaller sowie Eröffnung der Schau durch Doris Lang-Mayerhofer, Kulturstadträtin der Stadt Linz.
Sitzplätze im Auditorum bereits ausgebucht, die Ausstellung kann ab 17 Uhr bei freiem Eintritt besucht werden

Meine Arbeiten werden anwesend sein - ich leider absent.
Die Ausstellung "Wilde Kindheit" läuft noch bis 5.9.2021
Wir freuen uns über Euren Besuch!

--
Rita Nowak Studio
www.ritanowak.com




its an easy rule for kids to follow today and any day that Judy Garland and Freddie Bartholomew are THE WAY!

Sunday, June 06, 2021

Muscle Pup erwirbt zum Valentinstag von Daddy Bears gestochen

Muscle Pup erwirbt zum Valentinstag von Daddy Bears gestochen

My sumptuously beautiful child of high art Jonathan Berger is back in the Pacific Northwest for his second solo show at Adams & Ollman Gallery in Portland, Oregon. Mr. Berger is a singular talent of monumental scope who is so brilliant and detailed oriented. His exhibition at Participant Inc. last year was heralded the world ever. Jonathan has worked consistently with his art mother Vaginal Davis since he was a weenager at California Institute of the Arts(Cal Arts) as a collaborator, producer and production designer for numerous international projects. Now the cleft coast gets a chance to view his lovely genius.

Jonathan Berger, Margaret Morton, Maria A. Prado
June 5 –July 17, 2021 THERE IS NOTHING LIKE LIVING LIFE ON THE LAM. LIKE BEING FREE

Adams and Ollman is pleased to announce Jonathan Berger’s second solo exhibition with the gallery. The exhibition includes a new series of text sculptures, each of which is a discrete line fragment, excerpted from his recent large-scale project An Introduction to Nameless Love. These pieces are presented alongside work he has included by two of his collaborators from that project—the photographer Margaret Morton (1948-2020) and homeless women’s advocate and activist Maria A. Prado.

From 2014-2019, Berger conducted a series of dialogues with diverse subjects about these types of relationships. Drawing on conversations and correspondences, the ongoing outcome of this process was a series of autonomous texts, each of which was generated collaboratively between Berger, the subject(s), and a guest editor of specific significance to each story. The exhibition presented these narratives as a series of large-scale, text-based sculptures comprised of thousands of meticulously cut and formed tin letters.

For this exhibition, Berger isolates and removes lines from these larger texts which constitute An Introduction to Nameless Love, creating an installation of discrete floating silver tin quotations, words, terms, phrases, statements, and crystalline relational moments. Unlike the original exhibition, which functioned much like a book with chapters, Berger's presentation of small-scale pieces at Adams and Ollman renders an environment where seemingly disparate parts of each of these distinct stories form unlikely relationships to one another, further illuminating the project's overarching investigation of "nameless love" in new ways. In this regard, the environment Berger creates from these excerpts in Adams and Ollman’s main gallery functions more philosophically, allowing for both direct moments of connection and transitional spaces of contemplation, speculation, and invention.

One of the stories chronicled in An Introduction to Nameless Love is that of Maria A. Prado, who lived underground from 1988-1995 and again from 2006-2007 as part of a homeless community known as The Tunnel, which occupied a two and a half mile long abandoned Amtrak freight train tunnel that ran under Manhattan’s Riverside Park. The space was originally created by Robert Moses in 1934 in order to hide the Hudson River Railroad from the expensive apartments on Riverside Drive and became no longer operational in the early 1970s. The space began being occupied by the homeless in 1973 and continued to function as a self-sustaining self-governed community, of different inhabitant groups, each of which constituted a neighborhood of sorts, until all of the residents were evicted in 1996. Subsequently, several years later, the space began being inhabited again.

In 1991, Prado met the photographer and oral historian Margaret Morton, who had been invited to The Tunnel by a member of the community she had met in Riverside Park. Up until the initial evictions, Morton photographed a small group of residents, documenting their daily lives and the architectural dwellings they created within the vast concrete space. Her images and text from extensive interviews comprise her book The Tunnel, which was published by Yale Press in 1995. The book is broken into chapters which document the life of different members, including Prado.
In 2010 with encouragement by Morton, Prado began writing her life story. The text meticulously documents her search for her biological mother which brought her from Connecticut to her birthplace of New York City and the process of finding empowerment in the wake of her experiences with incarceration, homelessness, domestic violence and witnessing her community become HIV positive. Prado’s twenty-one-year journey overcoming the struggles of street life, informed specifically by her Afro-Latina perspective, led her to found The Prado of Transitioning Forward, a transitional/congregate housing program to assist homeless women in becoming self-sufficient.

Concurrent with the exhibition, Prado will resume work on the unfinished manuscript of her memoir, Findin’ Ma, collaborating with editor, writer, oral historian, and art historian Stephanie E. Goodalle, whose work focuses on the experiences of the Black diaspora. Throughout the two months that the exhibition is on view, pages of Findin’ Ma will be displayed on one wall of the gallery as Prado and Goodalle complete them, allowing the book to unfold in real time.

Presented alongside Prado’s writing is a cinematic slideshow that Morton assembled and narrated about The Tunnel. She created the video as an artist’s talk, covering the four photographic projects for which she is best known, which include Transitory Gardens, Uprooted Lives (1993), The Tunnel: The Underground Homeless of New York City (1995), Fragile Dwelling (2000), and Glass House (2004). Each project serves as an archive of human perseverance in the face of adversity and the capacity of vernacular architecture created by self-organized alternative communities to serve as a force of agency, transformation, and self-actualization. Morton’s images are imbued with the depth of her long-term relationships with those pictured in them.
Jonathan Berger (b. 1980, New York) lives and works in New York City. Over the past fifteen years, his practice has encompassed a spectrum of activity, pursuing a rigorous investigation of the many ways in which the exhibition site can be repurposed. He maintains an interest in abstract and experimental forms of non-fiction, including embodied biography and portraiture, as rendered through the creation of large-scale, narrative-based exhibitions made from both constructed and found objects. He has presented solo installation projects at the Carpenter Center for the Arts, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA; the Busan Biennial, South Korea; Vox Populi, Philadelphia; Participant, Inc., Maccarone, Karma, and Grimm-Rosenfeld Gallery, all New York; Frieze Projects, London; Adams and Ollman, Portland; and VEDA, Florence. His collaborative and curatorial projects have been presented at venues including MOCA, Los Angeles; The Hebbel Theater, Berlin; and The Queens Museum of Art, Participant Inc., and Performance Space 122, New York, among others. His current project, The Store, is on view at the Aspen Art Museum through 2021. From 2013–2016, Berger served as Director of 80WSE Gallery at NYU, where he mounted a wide range of major exhibitions and collaborative projects presenting the work of Ellen Cantor, Bob Mizer, Printed Matter, James Son Ford Thomas, Michael Stipe, Vaginal Davis, Susanne Sachsse, and xiu xiu, among others. He is a Clinical Associate Professor in the Department of Art and Art Professions at New York University.
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Just received this news from those hot ladies known as Chicks on Speed:
NEW MUSIC | You are invited to pre-save an upcoming drop, click below and it will be on your playlists of your prefered music platform. Interambiento by VooCha (Melissa E. Logan) is a music release made with Armageddon Turk, Mary Ocher, Ortis and NLLY.

A time travel into the future as well as a love song about the internet: With the perspective of a limited internet the collab offers melancholia, miami vice moments, 80s guitars, cinematic vibes and rather than a smooth ride grit and bumps.
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Artist's Edition to benefit Tulsa Community Remembrance Coalition

As you may know, today marks a somber day in Tulsa, Oklahoma. One hundred years ago, white mobs attacked Tulsa’s Greenwood District, popularly known as “Black Wall Street,” burning more than 1,500 homes and bombing over 600 Black-owned businesses. Survivors and their descendents are still asking for restitution and repair from the city of Tulsa, the state of Oklahoma, the United States Congress, the Supreme Court, and insurance companies that have withheld compensation for damages over the last century.

In an initiative developed in collaboration with Tulsa-based activist Dr. Tiffany Crutcher, a descendant of a survivor of the Massacre, artists Adrian Aguilera and Betelhem Makonnen partnered with Philbrook Museum to produce an artist’s edition of their work untitled (a flag for John Lewis or a green screen placeholder for an America that is yet to be) (2020): a small lapel pin of a green American flag. With this piece, in their continuing series of reimagined U.S. flags, Aguilera and Makonnen honor all past and present liberation workers who continually fight for freedom, justice, and equal rights not only for some, but all Americans. Aguilera and Makonnen's reimagined flag asks us to consider our role in the construction of our American future. The edition is $10, and can be purchased online at this link

All net proceeds from the sales of this edition will support the Black Wall Street Memorial, a project powered by the Tulsa Community Remembrance Coalition. The Coalition is led by descendants of survivors of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre. Dr. Crutcher has been working with other descendants and survivors of the Massacre to lead calls for reparations and accountability in Tulsa. Read more about Dr. Crutcher’s important work here, the Terence Crutcher Foundation here, and the Tulsa Community Remembrance Coalition here.

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Hadn't received any info for quite sometime from that incredible singer Billy Ray Martin who use to live several years ago for a very short period in the building where my atelier is housed. Billy is continuing to put out releases and re-mixes and the like so fans of hers feel free to check to place your orders now:

Pre-order now. Heading for the Night - The Frankie Knuckles Mixes. VInyl, CD, digital

Pre-order finally :)) Release date is 9th of July, Vinyl End August.. The unreleased Frankie Knuckles remixes. Pre-order now at https://www.billieraymartin.co...
The CD is exclusively available on the website (we listened to your moans and there's a CD now :)All other Formats are also available in all digital stores stores and record shops worldwide.

Info for digital stores at https://www.billieraymartin.co...





sexy young and talented, the artist known as Jonathan Berger



Chicks on Speed

Wednesday, June 02, 2021

erhabener Geschlechtsverkehr

erhabener Geschlechtsverkehr

I would really like for for someone out in the feral expanse of worldwidewebdom to send me a copy of the book Enemies in Love by Alexis Clark. The tome is about the true story of a 23 year old Black nurse during WW2 who falls in love and later marries and has children with a 19 year old German POW.

Save the date of November 22, 2021 when I will have my first solo exhibition in Berlin at Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi. The name of the installation is The Wicked Pavillion and will take place at the main Isabella Bortolozzi space and its annex Eden Eden. Stay tune for more info as it develops but below are some other Famiglia Bortolozzi events:

Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi is pleased to announce

Giuseppe Desiato

“Like the quietness of flowers…”

(rituals, ephemeral monuments and brides)

curated by Elena Re

The exhibition continues through 30 July 2021

Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi

Schöneberger Ufer 61, 10785 Berlin

Tues–Sat, 12–6pm

Eden Eden

Bülowstr. 74, 10783 Berlin

Fri–Sat, 12–6pm and by appointment


Juliette Blightman and Steve Reinke

Extimacy / Needlepoint of Cruelty

Art Basel OVR: Portals 2021

VIP preview:

16 June, 2pm CET – 17 June, 2pm CET

Public days:

17 June, 2pm CET – 19 June, 12 midnight CET

Dorothy Iannone and Juliette Blightman

The Vleeshal Opera

Vleeshal, Middleburg, Netherlands

27 June – 12 September 2021

Opening: 26 June 2021

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So excited for art photographer extroidinaire Annette Frick who keeps having so many wonderful accomplishments and winning marvelous art prizes. Here is the latest in her cosmos:

vielleicht habt Ihr Lust die Ausstellung in der ich 2 Räume mit meinen

Arbeiten gestalte

zu besuchen.

parallel erscheint ein Risoprint Heft in kleiner Auflage.

Ich freue mich Euch dort zu treffen.

Herzlichst Annette

bitte unbedingt um Anmeldung zum Empfang

Neue Mysterien:

Luiza Prado & Annette Frick

Dieter-Ruckhaberle-Förderpreis

Ausstellung in der GalerieETAGE im Museum Reinickendorf [1]

28.05.-01.08.2021

Öffnungszeiten: Mo-Fr, So 9-17h

Ausstellungseröffnung im Garten des Museums Reinickendorf:

Sonntag, 06.Juni, 12-16 Uhr

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Two other young gifted artists whose careers I follow relentlessly are Damien Davis of New York and Christophe DeRohan Chabot of the famous patrician French dynasty. See b below:


Dear Friends,

Excited to share that my first museum curatorial project But No Elephants! will open this Thursday at the Sugar Hill Children's Museum of Art & Storytelling.

Inspired by a children's book my mother used to read to my late brother and I, this show (co-curated with Priyanka Dasgupta and the Museum’s Interim Director Charlene Melville) Unpacks the various ways in which we have reexamined what community looks like over the last year, and the potential we all have as individuals to contribute towards a more open and inclusive future.

It has been an honor to work with the museum’s past Artists-in-Residence (Derek Fordjour, Leslie Jiménez, Lina Puerta, and David Shrobe) on this show, and a privilege to put work from such an accomplished group of artists in a space we all once called home.

Looking forward to the conversations this show will hopefully generate, and hoping you will join me this Thursday as we contemplate an even more radical future for the community of Sugar Hill.

Damien

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ETABLISSEMENT D’EN FACE

PRESENTS

CHRISTOPHE DE ROHAN CHABOT

ARNAULT MARK RIHANNA

OPENING

SATURDAY 10.04.21

2PM – 8PM

EXHIBITION

11.04.21 – 13.06.21

What pleasure? The title of the exhibition indicates the identities and enables the association: Bernard Arnault, president of the LVMH group, Mark Zuckerberg, president of Facebook and Rihanna, pop singer and businesswoman, president of the Fenty brand. Formally, the display insists on the notion of sequence: that of structures, portraits and the black-red-blue color code. The reframings indicate the artist’s engagement with these images, mummified and sublimated icons, presented in icy placidity. Plasticized and chromatically coupled, the sequentiality acts out the rhythm of the dynamics of pleasure: it fixes the perception, directs the movements, provokes the desires.

How to get pleasure? In the epistemic model of the network, we cannot make clear distinctions between the types of agency of the works of art, the artists and the spectators. The only function of these actors is to perform the network, and their identity is thus given by their behavior. The backlighting of these images is maintained, refusing a compensatory effect of the exit of the digital. These images are avatars[1], and the users become by-products of their activity.

In Établissement d’en face, the repetition of structures, a hybrid mime of fair booths and tombs, forces the bodies to an inter-passivity that responds to the inter-mediality of the images. These entities do not possess their own reflection or rather, their reflection is diluted in the color code associated with them. Christophe de Rohan Chabot displaces the language strategies of these networks through a form of funeral rite.

Paolo Baggi

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Also the latest from the divine Sherry Milner:

Monday, May 17, 2021

Der edle Jilt


Der edle Jilt

My boss at Arsenal Institute für film und video Kunst Empress Stefanie Schulte Strathaus went on a delightful power walk with me the other day and gave me a copy of the new book Die Experten by Merle Kröger that chronicles the exploits of her family. Like many Americans I also have a German background on my father’s side so this tome is of great interest to me.

Does anyone remember a band out of Hollywood in the late 80s and early 90s called Momma Stud? They were signed briefly to Virgin Records and had quite an enigmatic punky soul sound of the Sly Stone variety. I knew one of their backup singers Laura Espinosa a beautiful and very vivaciously spirited young girl who was friends with Iris Parker of the progressive R&B group Madame X. Laura had been the girlfriend of the lead singer of the band Fishbone and later was the concubine of comic actor Eddie Murphy, who treated her very ungentlemanly to put it mildly.

Saw on YouTube a short documentary that wasn’t very good on the band. I wonder what became of one of their cohorts a group of similar vein with the clever moniker of Section Eight which refers to a housing subsidy for the poor in the US welfare system.

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One of my dear Work Master HEAD Students in Geneva Jimmy Nuttall is having an exhibition in his native Australia. Jimmy is very talented so to those of you down under and below I beseech thee to engage:


Hi,

If you're free and happen to be in Melbourne THIS Wednesday night (19th May 2021) I invite you to the exhibition opening of MY BED MY BODY MY BAG at TCB.

Join me at 6pm, 1/5 Wilkinson St, Brunswick, Victoria, Australia.

MY BED MY BODY MY BAG is an exhibition of new work that considers solitude, desire and handicrafts.

In 2020, I unexpectedly lived in regional Victoria with my sister and I began producing handmade bags which I sold to friends across the world. They were a connection between my remote post and my previous active, cosmopolitan life.

That year, amongst my collaging materials I kept a print-out of a photo I took of a photographic collage by gay American artist and filmmaker, Curt McDowell. His work portrayed the “carnal abundance” of sexual and gay liberation during the '60s through to the '80s. He died of AIDS during The Crisis.

In 2016, I took a photo of his collage because I was struck by his gaze and his collaging style. I saw it during a time of romance and everything felt fast and adventurous. I thought about this stark disparity of feeling when I sat at my collaging table or when I am in the studio.

I enjoy the pleasures of revisiting these feelings in the process of making.

--

Jim Nuttall

I live and work on Wurundjeri Country and Taungurung Country of the Kulin Nation and pay my respects to Elders past, present and emerging. Sovereignty was never ceded.

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I was going through some of my old letters and papers coming across a zine called Rotortiller Hausjungen. This zine was quite the ambitious offering at the time created by a handsome, muscular diminutive San Diegan chap named Martin Nesvig. This was about 30 years ago but it seems like a century has past. Well in a way it has.

I wondered what became of Mr. Nesvig and it turns out he is an associate professor of history at the University of Miami. Something at the time told me he would wind up as a fagademic and I was right, as I usually am about people and situations. I’ll always remember SPEW 2 the Homographic Convergence at LACE Gallery where Mr. Nesvig and his older craggier doppelgänger a man who went by the name “Teg” of a Minneapolis zine called Bundle of Sticks put on quite the public display of affection at the convention that got all the “hornpigs” hot and bothered seeing the two fit men tear into each other so to speak.

The late great Goddess Bunny got into a major knockout “sluggo” with the late Tired Danielle of the Epiphany during SPEW 2.

Getting back to Teg and Bundle of Sticks it seems he got himself into some legal woes a few years back concerning black magic rituals and other obsessions. Here is the appropriate links if you care to know more

https://www.newspapers.com/clip/9605618/john-tomars-jr-black-magic/

https://www.newspapers.com/clip/9605526/john-tomars-jailed/

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THE FILMS OF GUILLAUME DUSTAN (2000-2004)
EXPOSITION A FRI ART KUNSTHALLE FRIBOURG JUSQU'AU 6 JUIN

JOURNÉE SPECIALE : CONFÉRENCE, LECTURES, PROJECTION SURPRISE...
LE SAMEDI 15 MAI À PARTIR DE 15H

15h : Intervention d'Elliot Evans + discussion
Elliot Evans est l'auteur.e de Queer Permeability: The Body in French Thought from Wittig to Preciado (2020), iel co-organise le cycle de séminaire Critical Sexology, et a écrit plusieurs articles dans des revues comme Paragraph ou Sexualities tels que "your blood dazzles m/e’: Reading Blood, Sex, and Intimacy in Monique Wittig and Patrick Califia" en 2017, et "Your HIV-positive sperm, my trans-dyke uterus’: anti/futurity and the politics of bareback sex between Guillaume Dustan and Paul B. Preciado" en 2015. Cet article, dont un extrait est publié dans le livret Les films d'entretien, nous a rappelé et permis de comprendre de quelles manières Preciado s'adresse à Dustan dans Testo Junkie.

« "this book has no other reason to be, outside of the space of uncertainty which exists between . . . living-you and dead-you, between my desire to carry your line and the impossibility of reviving your sperm." (Testo Junkie, Paul B. Preciado, 2008: 20)
I want to explore what Preciado means here and how this sheds light on her views on bareback in its relation to queer by considering an anecdote that Preciado recounts later on in Testo Junkie. »

Elliot, qui enseigne à Birmingham et vit à Margate, interviendra en visioconférence pour parler de son travail autour de Dustan et introduire le film surprise qui sera projeté plus tard dans la journée...

16h30 : Autour de la table du Rayon : Philippe Joanny + Julien Laugier, Pascaline Morincôme, Olga Rozenblum

Philippe Joanny (né en 1968) est écrivain. Il publie un premier ouvrage en 1999, Le Dindon, dans la collection "Le Rayon" créée par Dustan, son meilleur ami. En 2008, il fonde la revue Monstre ("Monstre est une revue éditée par des pédés de Belleville, pour les fol.le.s du monde entier"), avec Tim Madesclaire, Gauthier Boche et Gilles Beaujard. En 2019, il publie Comment tout a commencé (Grasset), une autobiographie romancée à la troisième personne. Remarqué par la critique à sa sortie, le livre sera récompensé du prix du Roman gay 2019.
Pascaline, Julien et Olga sont les commissaires de l'exposition et les diffuseur.seuse.s des films de Dustan.
Il y aura des lectures d'extraits de livres du Rayon (certains extraits ont été également publiés dans le livret La communauté), une discussion autour de l'entretien réalisé avec Françoise Vigna à propos de l'expérience d'édition de Dustan et l'histoire des éditeur.trice.s LGBTQ en France, et une diffusion de textes d'autres jeunes auteur.trice.s.

19h : projection surprise








Friday, May 07, 2021

Muskelmann Fickfest Diletante



I am so proud of my dear friend and long time colleague Michele “Meesh” Mills. She is one of the smartest people I know and one of the kindest, most sincere and hard working. Not exactly a ripe recipe for making it big in Hollywood. But against all the odds she has prospered. Michele Mills has won three Primetime Emmy Awards as a television producer. Quite an accomplishment.

Hollywood is a hard knock town and believe you me she has paid many dues and deserves every bit of her success which has been a struggle. Back in the early aughts Michele was my guardian at the gate of my performance space Bricktops at the Parlour Club in the Russian Quartier of Hollywood. No one can outshine the brilliantine beauty and dexterity of our Miss Meesh!!!!

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Just heard that Bill Gates and his wife Melinda are divorcing. I can remember in the 90s being taken to a fancy dinner by the director of the Center of Contemporary Art in Seattle at the time and her pointing out the couple who were eating dinner reading books and not even talking to each other. Why bother going out to dinner if you’re not going to engage. Well now that they have parted I gather they can slither up next to their individual cash registers for warmth and comfort. It may be a little lumpy but at least it rings.

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So saddened by the recent death of Johnny Crawford who played Chuck Connors wistful son on the 1950s-early 1960's TV Western drama. Later he became somewhat of a teenage singing idol with his Chet Bakeresque voice. He was in an Oscar winning short subject called The Resurrection of Bronco Billy (1970) and starting in the 1980s led a 1920s dance band orchestra. He showed off a hot bod in The Naked Ape (1973) with a young Victoria Principal. I loved him in the preachy Billy Graham religious movie The Restless Ones (1965) with Kim Darby as a teenage vixen. My fave of his pictures has to be Village of the Giants (1966) with humpy invert Tommy Kirk and a young Beau Bridges with Tisha Sterling, Ann Sotherns daughter.

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One of my wondrous ex students Anne Duk Hee Jordan from Weissensee Art Academy in Berlin is part of this intriguing exhibition:


Terrestrial Assemblage
one month of outdoor exhibition
with accompanying symposium exploring ecology in border areas
at Floating University Berlin

We had hoped to be able to open the exhibition Terrestrial Assemblage in this crazy pandemic times outdoors in the open area of the Floating University, without too much restrictions to receive visitors. Unfortunately, due to the new federal covid19 emergency measurements, the official opening event of the exhibition on Thursday 6 May is no longer possible. Visiting the exhibition in the open area is only possible for learning and working purposes (like in the zoo or botanical garden).

In line with the founding idea of the Floating University Berlin, we offer the exhibition as a platform for learning and inspiration, not as a place for events.

Please arrange your visit through booking a time slot at the following link and dont forget to bring your FFP2 mask!

BOOK YOUR TIME SLOT

Exhibition: 6 May – 6 June 2021, Th – Su, 4 - 9 pm

Symposium: 18 May 2021, 10 am - 6 pm

Livestream on www.terrestrialassemblage.com and

in the auditorium of the Floating University Berlin
Address: Lilienthalstraße 32, 10965 Berlin

Curators: Pauline Doutreluingne & Keumhwa Kim

Artists: Ana Alenso, Marco Barotti, Ines Doujak, Anne Duk Hee Jordan, Han Seok Hyun, Folke Köbberling, Mischa Leinkauf, Santiago Sierra, Shira Wachsmann, Clemens Wilhelm

Participants Symposium: Kim Seung-Ho (DMZ Ecology Research Institute), Dr. Bernhard Seliger (Hanns Seidel Stiftung Seoul Office), Mischa Leinkauf, Shira Wachsmann, Santiago Sierra, Ana Alenso & Ricardo Avella, Anne Duk Hee Jordan, Dr. Liana Geidezis (BUND Fachbereich Grünes Band), Melanie Kreutz (BUND Fachbereich Grünes Band), Nadav Tal (EcoPeace Middle East) and Kyung Jin Zoh (korean Institute of Landscape Architects)




Saturday, April 24, 2021

The Donut Aperture - Rutschig, feucht, kräuselnd, pink und vor allem homosexuell

My West Coast Gallery Adams & Ollman in the Pacific Northwest has a new exhibition opening so if you are on the Zest Coast stop by or call first to find out the pandemic perimeters.

Paul Lee: Tamborine Heart April 24-May 22, 2021
Adams & Ollman Gallery 418 NW 8th Avenue Portland Oregon 97209 +1 503-724-0684 AdamsandOllman.com

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My NYC gallerists Ben Tischer and Gala Verdugo have a new exhibit opening or has it already opened? Well below is info for you tri-staters:


FIVE MINUTES TO LIVE

Ellen Jong, Yeni Mao

May 1 – June 13 18, 2021

New Discretions is pleased to present Five Minutes to Live, a two-person exhibition featuring the work of Ellen Jong and Yeni Mao. This is the second of the Home Invasion Series, staged by appointment only, in a West Village apartment.

Though time no longer exists, we are tethered by our personal histories.

Using traditional Chinese methods of ink-making as an entry point, Ellen Jong creates sculptural works that reflect on dynamic personal and collective notions of her identity. Process is integral. Chinese ink is ground from solid blocks, adding water to make a liquid. Jong reverses the process, creating liquid ink and then dehydrating it to sculpt malleable solid forms. Her pigmented ink simulates the plasticity of caution tape, yet maintains the capacity to liquefy when exposed to extreme heat or moisture. "In essence, the ink is alive and always has potential to transform," states Jong. The artist has called the ink "a time machine," in that one must go backwards in both history and process in order to move towards the future of the work.

Jong's two works, entitled Mirror Mirror (2020), examine the quarrels of time. In the first, the cursive flow remains pristine. In the second—a doppelganger of the original—some of the material's pigment properties have been allowed to seep into its foundation. In both, the background is composed of photographic prints of glowing, red-toned sunsets, captured in Los Angeles during the 2020 lockdown.

The sculptural practice of Yeni Mao engages in issues of fragmentation, exploring the subjective body and architecture through restraint, domination and absence. Mao works with agency of materials, objects and building systems, emphasizing the tension between both their embedded and given significance. He refers to his making process as “accessing the lizard brain,” a series of impulses, allowing him to layer his own personal histories over the expansiveness of these concerns.

With fig 25.9 headhunter (2021), Mao references the story of his grandfather, who he never met, disassembling and rebuilding a schoolhouse in his small Malaysian village. There is also reference to the Land Dayak, an indigenous group with a headhunting tradition, amongst whom his grandfather lived in Borneo. This is work made by and for the body.
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Ellen Jong (b.1976, New York) has a multi-disciplinary practice recognized for using vernacular material and personal history to tackle body, form and place. She launched her career as a photographer, publishing two monographs—Pees On Earth and Getting To Know My Husband's Cock. Solo exhibitions have included Basement 6, Shanghai; Allegra LaViola, New York; and the Vice Flagship, New York. Group exhibitions include Whitney Houston/Every Woman Biennial, LaMaMa Galleria, New York; Current: Abortion curated by Barbara Zucker, A.I.R. Gallery, New York; XXX curated by Mathieu Borysevicz, Bank MABSociety Gallery, Shanghai, China; Self-Publish Be Happy curated by Bruno Ceschel, Micamera Milan, Italy; Toy Box with White Box, Robert Miller Gallery, NY. Her work has been featured in Photograph Magazine, The New Yorker, The Guardian, Foam Magazine, amongst others. Ellen Jong lives and works in Los Angeles and New York.
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Yeni Mao (b. 1971, Canada) has been the subject of numerous solo exhibitions, including “vol. 1: cowboys” at guadalajara90210, Guadalajara; “vol. 2: cabal” at PAOS GDL, Guadalajara; “Regatta” at Munch Gallery, New York; “Dead Reckoning” at Collette Blanchard, New York; and “Whiskey Papa” at Zidoun-Bossuyt, Luxembourg. Group exhibitions include “Otrxs Mundxs“ at Museo Tamayo, Mexico City; “Los juegos del capricornio” at Arróniz Arte Contemporáneo, Mexico City; “Luego, la Forma” at Galería de Arte Mexicano (GAM), Mexico City; ”Transnational” at Proxyco, New York; “The Waste Land” at Nicelle Beauchene, New York; and The IX Bienal De Artes Visuales Nicaraguenses, Managua, Nicaragua. Mao has been awarded multiple residencies including Casa Wabi in Mexico, The Lijiang Studio and Red Gate Gallery in China, The Fountainhead Residency in Miami, OAZO-AIR in Amsterdam, and Flash Atöyle in Turkey, and he is a recipient of the Pollock Krasner 2021. His work has been written about in The New York Times, Time Out New York, The Advocate, The Village Voice, and the Bangkok Post. Concurrently, Mao has a solo exhibition “I desire the strength of nine tigers” at Fierman in New York. Yeni Mao lives and works in Mexico City and New York.

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My Berlin gallerist has an exhibit that utilises both of her spaces:

Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi is pleased to announce

GIUSEPPE DESIATO

“Like the quietness of flowers...”

(rituals, ephemeral monuments and brides)

curated by Elena Re

28 April – 31 July 2021

Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi
Schöneberger Ufer 61, 10785 Berlin

Eden Eden
Bülowstraße 74, 10783 Berlin
For appointment and inquiries contact the gallery at info@bortolozzi.com

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One of my all-time favourite people in the world is “Jeffreyland” Hilbert aka: Jeffrey Hilbert. I met Jeff when he first moved to Los Angeles from the problematic White Republic of Idaho in the late 1980s. He was a hunky big peniled Goodtime Charlie of a ginger lad who had started his own incredible queer zine called Sin Bros and later launched an amazing series of clubs and dance parties starting with Sit & Spin. What made Jeff stand out was he approached doing clubs with a passionate whimsy and was a complete newcomer to the alternafag and post punk scene where everybody knew each other and in many cases had grown up together in cliques going to the same high schools and colleges. It wasn’t an easy gnut to crack but Jeff’s wit and spirit really broke through. Jeff is also an iconoclast with a family background of peeps who don’t take any feral excrement from anyone. Jeff is one of the blackest white queer boys I’ve ever met. He doesn’t suffer any foolios and will tell a motherfucker off in a clapbeat with no pause just the way black folk are prone to do it. I always seem to gravitate to white kids with this special and unique quality which is so refreshing and rare in the caucasoid world. Well Jeffrey was one of the founders along with Frank Rodriguez, Dale Johnson and Paul Rossi of Wasted Youth of my punk rock beer bust and performance space Club Sucker at the Garage (1994-1999). When i was invited to take part in the 13th Gwangju Biennale in South Korea I knew i wanted to do something that involved Club Sucker. My initial idea that i would recreate the place and have Jeffrey and my fellow co-hosts and DJ’s come to Korea and we’d recruit some local young queers and stage some akshuns of the lovesexy variety that took place back in the 1990s. Unfortunately the Rona Barrett pandemic reared its “fugly” tentacles and all the fun site specific plans i initially harbored had to be shredded. My installation opened in South Korea April 1st and runs till May 9th, but I was able to get Jeffrey and the others to contribute a music selection of what they DJ’d at the club that would be played in loop in the Club Sucker prong of the exhibition.

After years of working in the advertising department of Sony Pictures and with his own independent company Jeffers married the love of his life Henry Morin and left Los Ang and moved to Houston,Texas where his husband is from to help take care of his man's elderly mother. Jeff is really one you can count on when the going gets rough. He is a true blue friend in every sense of the imagination. He also refuses to age and looks younger today than when i first met him in the 80s.

Jeff has been producing an online forum called WeAreFlagrant which is beyond brilliant. Received this email from him recently with accompanying saucy images:

Ladybirdland,

I was happy to be invited to help realize your Sucker vision in South Korea. Imagine if all of us were able to be there to DJ and hostess the punque rawk shenanigans. Sponsored by Ensure, Kamchatka vodka, Depends and Double Scorpion poppers.Yeah, I'd read about Jeffrey Shanker and his Covid+ sex tourism circuit party for elder 'roid Marys. And the basic, moneyed, aspirational faggles flocked to (H)PV to dance and prance and not social distance with other like-minded office cogs. We really missed our calling. We could've aimed really, really low and appealed to the fey masses with dull house remixes and D-level diva appearances and made a fortune. Instead, we did events that netted us tens of dollars, but enriched our souls.

Houston continues to drain my lifeforce. It really is ghastly here. But I am a bit more at ease since Henry and I have been double-vaxxed. I still wear a mask everywhere and do all the rest. Are you able to venture out? I thought for sure La Merkel would be the first to get her countrymen/women/non-binary vaxxed.

Always a treat to hear from you. I love and miss you.

XO J









Wednesday, April 21, 2021

Rosa Hintertür des blonden Mannes brennt mit Leidenschaft!

Received a very sweet note and package including a delicious pink tote bag from Joe von Hutch the managing editor of Daddy Magazine. Daddy is a black owned Berlin online mag that has morphed into a print version. Daddy is a dreamy little periodical publication with a 1980s queer zine feel that you’d be wise to support. Was delighted to see an interview with the enigmatic artist and activist Diana Arce. Ms. Arce is a young Black/LatinX woman who is certainly making a difference with akshun and humour, just like Daddy Mag itself. www.daddy.land
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I just read that my old pal the Swiss artist Urs Fischer was divorced from Imitation of Christ’s Tara Subkoff. I didn’t even know he was married.

Haven’t seen Urs since he participated in Platinum Oasis at the Corral Sands Motel, the endurance art event that Ron Athey and I curated in Hollywood back in 2001/2. I first met Urs through Cyril Kuhn one of my former Swiss German students at Cal Arts when Ron Athey and I were tag team teaching a performance art class and curating a monthly performance salon called G.I.M.P. Unlimited in Silverlake at a Sushi Restaurant on Hyperion Blvd. Urs was always super flirtatious with me but other then a little smooching things never progressed to fornication.
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CHEAP Kollektiv’s monthly radio program Cheap Funk on Reboot FM will hit the airwaves- Sat 24.4. 19:30-20:30. This month’s theme is CHEAP Sex Lizard. If you can’t listen to the program live you can alway catch it online as a podcast as well as all our other programs from the past five years or so. Freies Künstlerradio aus Berlin - Kunst, Diskurs & elektronische Musik. Live aus dem ACUD - UKW 88,4 MHz in Berlin & 90,7 MHz in Potsdam

Tara Subkoff and Urs Fischer
Ann Rutherford

Rita Hayworth

Thursday, April 08, 2021

Queer Room: Pang im Arschloch-Training

One of my top students at Malmö Art Academy in Sweden Ms. Maria Norrman has an exciting new exhibition that opens soon. If you are in the Scandic environ you owe it to yourself to see it.

Maria Norrman - Jane Avril 10 - 30 April 2021Galleri Ping-Pong, Malmö, Sweden

Opening hours:
Wednesday-Friday: 12-17
Saturday: 12-16
Sundays 13-16 NOTE: Extra Sunday open during this exhibition.

The exhibition at Galleri Ping-Pong shows the project Jane Avril which revolves around my relationship with the historical person Jane Avril (1868-1943), a French dance artist mostly known today through the posters of her friend Toulouse-Lautrec.

When I was 15 years old I saw a photograph of Jane Avril in a book about Toulouse-Lautrec's art. It was a striking sense of affinity, as if I had found a soulmate or a reflection of myself from another time. Jane Avril had her own artistic expression and an exciting life story.

I became obsessed with her and I tried to bridge time and space. I strived to get to know her world through studies and performance. I wanted to connect with her using clothes and style. One method I used was to regularly dress in 1890s style clothes that I sewed myself, as everyday clothing.

I did a cancan performance in high school. Using movement, I sought a fusion between me and her that I felt arose when I lost myself in the dance.

After graduating from high school in 2006, I went to Paris and visited places connected to Jane Avril and wore her clothes throughout my stay. She has been in my life for more than 18 years and serves as a dear friend, a spirit and a source of inspiration.

A few years ago, I decided to actively resume the artistic work around the relationship. Experiences and new sources had given me a deeper understanding of her dance method. She put herself in a trance, improvised movements and became one with them.

In a performance for camera, I summoned her and recreated two of her dances. When I saw the result, it was like seeing her. I have also recreated more of her clothes, stayed in Paris where I took cancan lessons, I revisited places connected to Jane Avril and searched in archives for traces of her.

The exhibition shows works from 2004 up to the present for the first time. The exhibition consists of video installations, a video essay, video stills, photography and texts. Several works in the exhibition sum up the relationship and the project, with space for my relationship with Jane Avril to continue.
Maria Norrman 2021

Maria Norrman's art relates to how clothes, body, identities and gender are perceived and received. She explores the meeting between her and other people's fantasies. The works examine why we fantasize and create images around topics such as gender, history and sexuality. Norrman works mainly with video and photography. She also works with costume, clothing, performance and installation.

Norrman was born in 1987 and graduated with an MFA from Malmö Art Academy in 2013. She is a member of the artist-run Gallery CC in Malmö and works as a drag artist under the name Millennium Star. Norrman has previously exhibited at Udstillingsstedet Sydhavn Station, Copenhagen, 2020, Lorensborgs köpcentrum with Gallery Extra, 2019, Gotlands konstmuseum, Visby, 2017, and was awarded a 2-year work grant from Konstnärsnämnden 2019.

www.marianorrman.net
www.instagram.com/c.maria.norrman/?hl=en

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The wooly and wonderous Lobster Lady Rebecca Goyette is at it again:


Hello Friends, Colleagues and Lobsta Lovahs:

So thrilled to present you with a multimedia experience, "My Snake Is Bigger Than Your Snake" at Freight+Volume Gallery. The gallery will be hosting a proper opening April 15th from 6-9 PM, I look forward to celebrating with you all! Please RSVP: aya@freightandvolume.com

Also, check out a sneak peak of the "My Snake" film to premiere April 15th:

My Snake Is Bigger Than Your Snake Trailer

Air hugs and elbow bumps,
Rebecca




Witchy Cat Tarot is here! Mermaid Dolls/Patron Raffle/ Prints/ Super Moon


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The latest in the postcard series by Sherry Milner and Ernie Larson:












Tuesday, March 23, 2021

klaffende bawdy Spalte gefüllt bis zum Rand

This cute note from that amazing video artist and researcher Angela Anderson:

Dear friends far and wide,

You're cordially invited to attend this *very* interesting lecture series which I am helping to coordinate as part of my thematic fellowship at Academy Schloss Solitude. I would like to draw your particular attention to the lecture by Heather Davis on Monday, March 29th, which I will be moderating.

Don't forget to register if you want to attend - go to the eflux announcement for the registration links if they don't work in this email.

https://www.e-flux.com/announcements/382716/mutations/

Mutations
A Lecture Series
March 22–May 10, 2021

www.akademie-solitude.de
www.kfw-stiftung.de
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“It is time to focus beyond logical systems and to utilize the potential of an inter- and transdisciplinary approach to (artistic) research in order to critically rethink the concept of ‘Mutations’ and, consequently, life.”

“Mutations. A Lecture Series” brings together a dynamic group of researchers, artists, thinkers, curators, and scholars. Curated by the fellows of the interdisciplinary artist residency “Mutations” at the Akademie Schloss Solitude, Stuttgart, and in cooperation with the KfW Stiftung, Frankfurt, it is the first of several public platforms which are being developed within the scope of the program. Interconnected with the evolving digital platform, mutations.akademie-solitude.de, which will be launched at the end of March, the lecture series is both an outcome of the program and a source of knowledge for further discussion. Within the fellows’ individual backgrounds in fields such as fine arts, architecture, music, philosophy, or life sciences, the lecture series aims to contribute a transdisciplinary approach to artistic investigation.

The following experts represent different voices that offer a spectrum of perspectives on the concept of mutations and its multifaceted impact on social, political, and scientific structures.

March 22, 2021, 7pm CET
JoAnn Kuchera-Morin

Composer, professor of Media Arts and Technology and Music at UC Santa Barbara, USA, Director of the Allosphere Research Facility, and a researcher in multi-modal media systems, content, and facilities design. To register for this lecture, please click here.

March 29, 2021, 7pm CET
Heather Davis

Assistant professor of Culture and Media at The New School, NYC, USA, member of the Synthetic Collective, and co-editor of Art in the Anthropocene: Encounters Among Aesthetics, Politics, Environments and Epistemologies and Desire Change: Contemporary Feminist Art in Canada. To register for this lecture, please click here.

April 7, 2021, 12pm CET
Eben Kirksey*

Anthropologist, writer, storyteller, and associate professor (Research) at Alfred Deakin Institute in Melbourne, Australia. To register for this lecture, please click here.

April 12, 2021, 7pm CET
Marcia C. Castro

Associate professor of Demography at the Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, USA. To register for this lecture, please click here.

April 14, 2021, 7pm CET
Natasha Ginwala*

Associate curator at Gropius Bau, Berlin, and artistic director of the Gwangju Biennale 2020. To register for this lecture, please click here.

April 19, 2021, 7pm CET
Andres Lepik

Director of the Architekturmuseum TU Munich and professor of Architectural History and Curatorial Practices at the TU Munich, Germany. To register for this lecture, please click here.

May 3, 2021, 7pm CET
Sophia Roosth

Anthropologist, Max Planck Sabbatical Award Laureate 2020, and Cullmann Center Fellow, New York Public Library 2020/2021. To register for this lecture, please click here.

May 10, 2021, 7pm CET
Brenna Bhandar

Senior lec­turer in law at SOAS, Uni­ver­sity of London, United Kingdom. To register for this lecture, please click here.

*Please note that the lectures by Eben Kirksey and Natasha Ginwala will both be held on Wednesdays.

Following each lecture, there will be a Q & A where viewers are encouraged to join in on the discussion. Lectures are free and open to the public. Registration is, however, requested. For further information, the link to the series, and to register, please visit our website under akademie-solitude.de or contact the project coordinator Rose Field at r.field [​at​] akademie-solitude.de. All lectures will be recorded and made available online.

The thematic focus group “Mutations” is a cooperation between the Akademie Schloss Solitude, an international and transdisciplinary artists’ residence based in Stuttgart, and the KfW Stiftung, Frankfurt, an independent non-profit foundation which focuses on intercultural dialogue and artistic production in the global context. The lecture series takes place within the KfW Stiftung’s Mondays102—an event series at the Villa 102, the platform for culture and dialogue of the KfW and its foundation.

Since October 2020, seven international artists and creative thinkers have been engaging, both locally and digitally, with the topic of mutations through immersive group labs. “Mutations” is comprised of the following fellows: Sabina Hyoju Ahn: Media and Sound Artist (South Korea) | Angela Anderson: Video Artist and Researcher (USA/Germany) | Grayson Earle: New Media Artist (USA) | Ana María Gómez López: Artist, Writer, and Researcher (The Netherlands/Colombia/USA) | Clara Jo: Video Artist (Germany) | Maxwell Mutanda: Multidisciplinary Researcher, Visual Artist, and Designer (Zimbabwe) | Joana Quiroga: Visual Artist and Philosopher (Brazil).

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One of my brilliant and sweet Work Master HEAD students Viktor Tibay is in an exhibition. Check it out:

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Circuit, centre d’art contemporain, Accès quai Jurigoz,

case postale 303, CH – 1001 Lausanne, +41 21 601 41 70

www.circuit.li



Alfatih, Anouk, Lorraine Baylac,
Delphine Coindet, Pauline Cordier,
Nicolas Geiser, Tobias Kaspar,
Daniela Keiser, Viktor Korol,
Hélène Iratchet, Claire Van Lubeek,
Yves Mettler, Flora Mottini,
Guido Nussbaum, Laurence Pittet,
Natalie Portman, Viktor Tibay, ...

Ouverture du 19 mars au 09 juillet 2021
du mardi au samedi de 14h à 18h

et sur rendez-vous

Nous sommes heureux d’annoncer le lancement à Circuit d’un projet séquentiel intitulé ∞.

Une exposition évolutive et transformable à caractère organique, durant laquelle les
recherches des artistes invité·e·s se croiseront, cohabiteront par chevauchements,
glissements, remplacements, déplacements et retours. Le projet se déploie sur une
durée d’accrochage ouverte et modulable quis’étendra au moins jusqu’en juillet,
avec, au fil et au gré des échanges et des collaborations, la possibilité d’une
prolongation en septembre.

Les états successifs du projet seront régulièrement annoncés afin d’informer de

l’intervention d’un·e artiste, de la présence d’une nouvelle œuvre, et de suivre ces

séquences, ponctuations événementielles et des contenus inattendus.

Actuellement présentés à Circuit :

Anouk, Lorraine Baylac, Nicolas Geiser, Guido Nussbaum

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And this from the amazing New York based artist Damien Davis:

Mrs. is very pleased to present Weightless, Damien Davis’s first solo exhibition with the gallery, on view March 20 - May 8, 2021.

Mae Jemison, the first Black woman to travel into space, brought a collection of objects to accompany her on the 8-day voyage beyond the earth’s atmosphere. Among them were a certificate for Chicago public school students celebrating accomplishments in math and science, a Bundu carving from Sierra Leone, a banner for the first Black sorority Alpha Kappa Alpha, and a poster of dancer Judith Jamison in Alvin Ailey’s signature solo Cry, which the choreographer dedicated to “all Black women everywhere–especially our mothers.”1 In the dance, a performer wields a white cloth used at one moment for cleaning, and at another, as a head wrap, and as a gown; a vessel pregnant with struggle, triumph, and joy. Jemison’s companion artifacts were selected to fill-in the gaps of who and what had never before been in outer space, and together form a map reclaiming links and stretching time.

Since 2014, Damien Davis has built his own lexicon of, as the artist describes, “the visual language of historical representations, focused primarily on people, places, and things marked as ‘Black’” to question how cultures “code, decode, and recode representations of race.” This vocabulary also embodies aspects of what art historian Cheryl Finley describes as the “symbolic possession of the past” by contemporary African diaspora and African American artists who reclaim emblems of the past in order to understand their connection to the present.2 Across Davis’s work, the meaning of icons shift as imagery accumulates and associations form, conjuring historical narratives while inviting speculation on alternate purposes and futures. Chains recall the violence of the transatlantic slave trade, while offering their strength to hold new assemblages up. Cowries scatter as currency traded, hidden, or lost, while giving a skeptical side-eye, for we will never know the full story of their travels. Initially produced as vector files which are then output to a laser-cutter, each element in Davis’s work is infinitely repeatable, up for recombination, and stored in memory, safeguarding their reproduction and assuring their continued presence. Industrial hardware sutures these fragments together, yet each joint can be tightened and taken apart using only one’s hands.

In new works produced for Weightless, Jemison’s spaceship and other forms add to Davis’s symbology, expanding his investigation into past and present up to the stars and out to a future where Black life persists and thrives. Here, we find Jemison’s orange flight suit collaged atop Huey P. Newton’s rattan throne. Her space helmet converges with a Zulu isicholo hat forming an Afrofuturist crown. Glittering inlays echo the shine of Chicago’s lights at night that caught Jemison’s eye from space. Teeth, a long-standing element of Davis’s lexicon, remind us of how they were used to assign value to bodies, but now, we also recall Jemison’s research: her work on board the spaceship Endeavor included the study of bone cells. Trained in biofeedback, another of Jemison’s tasks was to research how to maintain one’s body suspended, without gravity, in weightlessness. How would the body react, and what would our psyche do when we achieved this state?

At the close of Herbert Marcuse’s Essay on Liberation, the philosopher asks how can we envision liberation when our imagination for political and social solidarities is so repressed, when we are so weighed down? Or, as he wrote, “What are the people in a free society going to do?” In searching for an answer, he quotes a “young [B]lack girl” who replied, “for the first time in our life, we shall be free to think about what we are going to do.”3 This speaker was plausibly abolitionist scholar Angela Y. Davis. As art historian Sandrine Canac writes in her recovery of Angela Davis’s presence, this reply acknowledges our limited capacity to see and to articulate liberation without first taking on the political work of securing liberation for all. It also gestures towards a broader horizon, to a site somewhere beyond the boundary of our atmosphere, towards new constellations of liberation, solidarity, and a future teeming with life, where, for the first time, we will be free to see and speak the future we want–where we will be weightless.

-Lauren van Haaften-Schick

The one and only Damien Davis, one of New York Cities most talented artists.















Friday, March 19, 2021

Diese aufgepumpte Prostituierte wird nicht aufhören zu stöhnen, wenn dieser monströse Dong in ihm ist


Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi is pleased to announce

Art Basel OVR: Pioneers

VAGINAL DAVIS:
SPEAKING FROM THE DIAPHRAGM

24 – 27 March 2021

Vaginal Davis has been a prolific producer of club performance, video and Xerox Zines, and other forms of antagonistic low-cost, high-impact work. Ms Davis derails collector-friendly raciness in spectacles of femininity, queerness and blackness. — Dominic Johnson, Frieze

*

Adams and Ollman
Artists, Exhibitions, Fairs, News, Gallery


Dear John
March 19 – April 17, 2021

James Castle with Evgeny Antufiev, Katherine Bradford, Andrew Cranston, Vaginal Davis, Lois Dodd, Ficus Interfaith, Nick Goss, Jessica Jackson Hutchins, Chris Johanson, David Korty, Isaac Tin Wei Lin, Sarah McEneaney, Ryan McLaughlin, Jeffry Mitchell, Dina No, Hilary Pecis, Conny Purtill, Emily Mae Smith, Becky Suss, Ricky Swallow and Willa Wasserman

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That young, very pretty and sexy artist Elliot Reed who is like a black dorky Jerry Lewis on Seconal has an exhibition opening in New York City where he is stationed in residence through the Studio Museum of Harlem. Check it out if you are in the Tri-State area.

Elliot Reed Three Works (March 25 - April 25 2021)

Open to the public one viewer at a time

-Saturdays and Sundays between 12and 6 pm or by appointment-

Like every living thing, Elliot Reed struggles between present and past.

But instead of kneading and glossing this conflict into seeming clarity, Reed makes a virtue of vagueness. His work seeks to have 50-ply blanket of layers, like archaeological artifacts whose discoveries elicit more questions than they answer.

The 29-year-old Reed might be better known for his performance works, but the only performance here is imaginary – via “Drawing,” the centerpiece of the show, which lived one life as a dance floor before retiring into wall piece objecthood.

Even the title of the show, Three Works, is a piece of misinformation. Actually, there are five.

Because Reed’s works chafe at definition even as they court it, no attempt will be made to decrypt them here. Instead, there are two helpful lists of layers which the works variously inhabit and the tensions they explore.

1. Drawing (2019-2021) approximately 4ft x 9ft - wood, latex paint, indigo, sweat, rubber, blood, saliva, dirt, velcro

2. Sheath (2021) - hand-studded leather jacket, 24k gold hex spikes, brass studs, display stand

3. Concrete (2020-21) - flowers, metal shelf, paper, cellophane, ink

4. Untitled (Legs) (2021) - framed set of two matte photo prints

5. Untitled (Umbrellas) (2021) - framed set of two matte photo prints

The works have 24 layers, as:
plinth
calendar
body
envy
dance
tea leaves
sex
trash
revision
cryptography
minimalism
collection
memory
homage
history
set
exclusion
shibboleth
evidence
chic
perversity
monument
pyx
legend

The works have 32 tensions, between:
suggested and stated
tangible and untouchable
inclusion and exclusion
ab-ex and minimalism
joy and sadness
theatrical and permanent
visible and invisible
past/plasticity, present/plasterity, future/posterity
smudged and pristine
loss and leftover
peace and violence
flux and stasis
race and erasion
packaging and prize
communal and contemplative
public and personal
fabrication rate and approval rate
lazy/passive and industrious/active
artifact and human
sculpture and painting
utilized floor and fetishized wall
purpose and accident
valueless and value-added
artwork and film screen
flotsam and jetsam
digital and manual
horizontal and vertical
simple and multiple
show and shambles
literal and abstract
myth and truth
life and death

Elliot Reed is a contemporary artist and director. His projects span performance, choreography, video, and sculpture. He is the founder, director, and sole employee of Elliot Reed Laboratories, a production office located within the artist’s body. Established in 2014, Elliot Reed Laboratories holds a copyright with The Library of Congress and a Los Angeles County business license.

Elliot Reed’s work has shown at MoMA PS1, The Getty Museum, Kaufman Music Center, Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, The Broad Museum, Geffen Contemporary at MOCA, OUE Skyspace, The Hammer Museum, University of Chicago, University of Southern California, and UCLA, in addition to international performances in Tokyo, Osaka, London, Vienna, Berlin, and Mexico City. In 2019 he taught a sound course at California Institute of the Arts (CALARTS). He received the Rema Hort Mann emerging artist grant in 2019 as well as a danceWEB scholarship for ImPulsTanz performing arts festival in Vienna, and was 2019-20 Artist In Residence at The Studio Museum in Harlem.