Category Archives: CONVERSATION

PLURAL POSSIBILITIES & THE FEMALE BODY WORKSHOP

On the occasion of the exhibition PLURAL POSSIBILITIES & THE FEMALE BODY—organized by Nina Bozicnik and Dr. Ann Poulson, now in its final weeks—the Henry Art Gallery presents an online art reflection and writing workshop with Brittney Frantece.

See link below for registration information.

BRITTNEY FRANTECE—ART REFLECTION AND WRITING WORKSHOP

Henry Art Gallery

Tuesday, April 27.

4 pm on the West Coast; 7 pm East Coast.

Plural Possibilities & the Female Body, Henry Art Gallery, February 27, 2021–May 9, 2021, from top: Wangechi Mutu, All the way up, all the way out, 2012, collage on linoleum, collection of John and Shari Behnke, photograph by Robert Wedemeyer, image © Wangechi Mutu, courtesy of the artist and Vielmetter Los Angeles; Brittney Leeanne WilliamsOur Horizon, 2019, oil and acrylic on canvas, collection of Josef Vascovitz and Lisa Goodman, photograph by RCH photography, image © Brittney Leeanne Williams, courtesy of the artist and Monique Meloche Gallery, Chicago; Lynn Hershman Leeson, TV Legs, 1990, gelatin silver print, collection of John and Shari Behnke, images © Lynn Hershman Leeson, courtesy of the artist; Christina Quarles, Vulgar Moon, 2016, acrylic on canvas, collection of Josef Vascovitz and Lisa Goodman, image © Christina Quarles, courtesy of the artist.

RACHEL KUSHNER IN CONVERSATION

Sometimes I am boggled by the gallery of souls I’ve known. By the lore. The wild history, unsung. People crowd in and talk to me in dreams. People who died or disappeared or whose connection to my own life makes no logical sense, but exists, as strong as ever, in a past that seeps and stains instead of fading. The first time I took Ambien, a drug that makes some people sleep-fix sandwiches and sleepwalk on broken glass, I felt as if everyone I’d ever known were gathered around, not unpleasantly. It was a party and had a warm reunion feel to it. We were all there.

But sometimes the million stories I’ve got and the million people I’ve known pelt the roof of my internal world like a hailstorm. — Rachel Kushner*

A series of online events:

On Tuesday, Kushner will join Hal Foster to talk about her new book of essays The Hard Crowd. The following day she will join Dana Spiotta in conversation. And a week after that, Kim Gordon will sit down with the author.

RACHEL KUSHNER and HAL FOSTER—THE HARD CROWD

London Review 

Tuesday, April 6.

11 am on the West Coast, 2 pm East Coast, 6 pm London, 7 pm Paris.

RACHEL KUSHNER and DANA SPIOTTA IN CONVERSATION

City Lights 

Wednesday, April 7.

6 pm on the West Coast, 9 pm East Coast.

RACHEL KUSHNER with KIM GORDON

Skylight Books

Wednesday, April 14.

6:30 pm on the West Coast, 9:30 pm East Coast.

*Rachel Kushner, The Hard Crowd: Essays 2000–2020 (New York: Scribner, 2021). Text © Rachel Kushner, courtesy of the author and Scribner.

From top: Rachel Kushner, photograph by Chloe Aftel; Rachel Kushner, The Hard Crowd: Essays 2000–2020. Images courtesy and © the author and Scribner.

BARBARA LONDON IN CONVERSATION

Barbara London—author of Video Art: The First Fifty Years, and founder of the video-media program at MoMA—will discuss her curatorial practice and forthcoming traveling exhibition Seeing Sound.

See link below to register for the online talk.

CURATOR’S PERSPECTIVE—BARBARA LONDON

Independent Curators International

Tuesday, April 6.

1 pm on the West Coast, 4 pm East Coast.

From top: Barbara London, courtesy and © London and Independent Curators International; London, Video Art: The First Fifty Years (2020), cover image courtesy and © Phaidon; Yuko Mohri, You Locked Me Up in a Grave, You Owe Me at Least the Peace of a Grave, 2018, installation view Childhood: Another Banana Day for the Dream-Fish, Palais de Tokyo, Paris, 2018, image © Yuko Mohri, courtesy of the artist and Project Fulfill Art Space, Mother’s Tankstation; Juan Cortés, Supralunar, 2018, custom-built mechanisms in perspex (dimensions variable), Arduino, LED lights, custom-built speakers, 4 channel sound, installation view, image © Juan Cortés, courtesy of the artist.

BLACK FUTURES SYMPOSIUM

Kimberly Drew, Jenna Wortham, and The Underground Museum present the Black Futures Symposium, a weekend-long series of online talks, readings, performances, and meditations. On the closing day, Joy Yamusangie and Ronan McKenzie will stream their 2020 film WATA.

See link below to register.

BLACK FUTURES SYMPOSIUM

The Underground Museum

Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, March 26–28.

From top: Joy Yamusangie and Ronan McKenzie, WATA (2020), still, image courtesy and © the filmmakers; Jenna Wortham (above) and Kimberly Drew, Black Futures Symposium, image courtesy and © The Underground Museum; WATA poster, image courtesy and © the filmmakers; Black Futures, edited by Drew and Wortham, cover image courtesy and © One World.

JOY HARJO LIVE

United States Poet Laureate Joy Harjo—author of An American Sunrise—will present recent and new work live from Oklahoma.

To register for this online event, see:

JOY HARJO

REDCAT

Tuesday, March 23.

5 pm on the West Coast, 8 pm East Coast.

From top: Joy Harjo, photograph by Matika Wilbur, courtesy of REDCAT; Harjo, An American Sunrise (2020) cover image courtesy and © W. W. Norton.