• Vogue’ology

    Date posted: November 18, 2010 Author: jolanta
    Vogue’ology contains seemingly incompatible elements: aesthetic experience and political activism; community events and forensic research; public manifestations and private workshops. The exhibition is a joint project between the Ballroom Archive & Oral History Project and the sound art collective Ultra-red. Central to the collaboration is a shared interest in developing terms that can serve to organize the Ballroom Archive, a community-initiated effort to gather histories of the House/Ballroom scene. The House/Ballroom scene emerged in New York City in the first half of the last century and is today found in cities across the United States.

    Vogue’ology

    Wednesday, November 17 through Tuesday, November 30, 2010

    Arnold and Sheila Aronson Galleries

    Sheila C. Johnson Design Center, Parsons The New School for Design

    66 Fifth Avenue at 13th Street

    EXHIBITION OPENING CELEBRATION

    Thursday, November 18, 5:00–6:30 p.m

    Vogue’ology contains seemingly incompatible elements: aesthetic experience and political activism; community events and forensic research; public manifestations and private workshops. The exhibition is a joint project between the Ballroom Archive & Oral History Project and the sound art collective Ultra-red. Central to the collaboration is a shared interest in developing terms that can serve to organize the Ballroom Archive, a community-initiated effort to gather histories of the House/Ballroom scene.

    The House/Ballroom scene emerged in New York City in the first half of the last century and is today found in cities across the United States. Members of the scene have organized themselves into houses, such as the House of Ebony, the House of Evisu, and the House of Garçon, which function as intentional communities, social networks, and artistic collectives. Houses sponsor Balls: large events at which members compete in multiple performance categories. For generations of transgender, bisexual, lesbian and gay primarily Latino and African American men and women, the Balls have provoked radical explorations of style, identity, and social inequality. Vogue, the community’s signature performance form, originally inspired by poses in Vogue magazine, enacts an analysis of normative gender, class, and racial identities.

    Rather than exhibiting the archive or attempting to represent the House/Ballroom scene itself, Vogue’ology investigates the processes and goals of archiving as they pertain to the specific characteristics and conditions of the House/Ballroom scene. Its structure and aesthetic elements amplify the resonances between the vocabularies of both archive and Balls, particularly their common interest in protocol, category, disassembly, and recombination.

    CURATORS
    
Arbert Santana Evisu, member of House of Evisu

    Carin Kuoni, Director, Vera List Center for Art and Politics

    Robert Sember, member of Ultra-red sound art collective, 2009–2010 Vera List Center Fellow

    * * *

    The exhibition is accompanied by a series of free public programs:

    LISTENING SESSIONS
    
Gallery visitors are encouraged to interact with the exhibition and share their responses in writing, at the gallery or via email (info@ultra-red.org). In addition, the artists are facilitating a public listening session in the gallery, to consider collectively the intersection of object and analysis, and to evaluate and debate the political consequences and possibilities of recording history.

    Monday, November 29, 2010, 6:00–8:30 p.m.

    PANEL DISCUSSION
    
Organized Listening: Sound Art, Collectivity and Politics
    
Thursday, November 18, 6:30–8:30pm

    The New School, Theresa Lang Community and Student Center
    
Arnhold Hall, 55 West 13th Street, 2nd floor

    Participants include Edgar Riviera Colon and Rev. Jamaul Roots from Ballroom Ministries; human rights advocate and filmmaker Karen Hakobian; artist Paige Sarlin of 16 Beaver; musician, writer and curator Alex Waterman of Plus Minus Ensemble and Either/Or Ensemble.

    Facilitators: Dont Rhine and Robert Sember.

    PANEL DISCUSSION
    
Living the Fight: AIDS Activism
    
Tuesday, November 30, 7:00 – 9:00 p.m.

    The New School, Malcolm Klein Reading Room

    66 West 12th Street, Room 510

    With Lolisa Gibson, Johnny Guaylupo, Charles Long, and Pedro Julio Serrano

    Cosponsored by Health Education, Global Studies, and Natural Sciences and Math/Interdisciplinary Science at Eugene Lang College, Campus Queer Collective, Parsons Diversity Initiative, Lang’s Ethnicity and Race Program, Office of Intercultural Support, VDay@New School, The New You, Association for International Development, and the Vera List Center for Art and Politics.

    FILM SCREENING

    Sex In An Epidemic

    Wednesday, December 1, 2010, 6:30–8:30 p.m.

    The New School, Theresa Lang Community and Student Center
    
Arnhold Hall, 55 West 13th Street, 2nd floor

    Screening of Jean Carlomusto’s award-winning film Sex In An Epidemic (2010) is followed by a conversation with Arbert Santana Evisu, Kevin Trimell Jones, Black LGBT Archivists Society of Philadelphia, and Robert Sember.

    WORKSHOP
    
Let’s Be Real: Sex Is Positive
    
Thursday, December 2, 5:00–7:00 p.m.

    The New School, 6 East 16th Street, Room 713

    A playful and exploratory safer sex workshop led by New School students. Sponsored by The New You and Health Education.

    Presented as part of the Vera List Center’s 2009–2011 focus theme, Speculating on Change.

    newschool.edu

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