Category Archives: WEB/TELEVISION/RADIO

ALIZA NISENBAUM IN CONVERSATION

A few years ago, I painted a group of women in a Minneapolis community education garden. It was really interesting to paint them in this space that was all about food justice, and that started me thinking about the way Europeans have allotments [community gardens], so I was going to paint people on their allotments in Liverpool.

The pandemic started me thinking about making paintings of keyworkers and first responders, to humanize them and put a face to the people who have been working so hard during this crisis. It has really changed our sense of what is an essential worker. Sometimes they’re deemed low-skilled workers—such as people who work in supermarkets—but they have proved crucial to our survival. — Aliza Nisenbaum

Columbia University School of the Arts presents COMPLEX ISSUES—PAINTING THE NHS, a conversation with Nisenbaum and Tom Kalin on the painter’s new series at Tate Liverpool that “captures the stories of British frontline NHS (National Health Service) workers and highlights the impact that Covid-19 has had on their jobs and home lives.”*

COMPLEX ISSUES—PAINTING THE NHS*

ALIZA NISENBAUM and TOM KALIN IN CONVERSATION

Columbia University School of the Arts

Tuesday, February 2.

3:30 pm on the West Coast; 6:30 pm East Coast.

Aliza Nisenbaum, from top: Tumbao de Omambo, 2020, oil on canvas; Naveena, Student Nurse and Succulents, 2020, photograph by Jeff McLane; Team Time Storytelling, Alder Hey Children’s Hospital Emergency Department, Covid Pandemic, 2020, photograph by McLane; Ryan, Respiratory Doctor in Training, 2020, photograph by McLane; Nimo, Sumiya, and Bisharo harvesting flowers and vegetables at Hope Community Garden, 2017, image courtesy of the Minneapolis Institute of Art; Jenna, Friday Night in Brooklyn, 2019, oil on canvas. Images © Aliza Nisenbaum, courtesy of the artist and Anton Kern Gallery, New York.

ENGADIN ART TALKS — LONGUE DURÉE

This weekend, Engadin Art Talks presents LONGUE DURÉE, a 12-hour stream gathering the ideas, thoughts, projects, and performances of nearly fifty artists, architects, designers, writers, scientists, and curators.

Participants include Etel AdnanZiba ArdalanMichel AuderAlexandra BachzetsisTosh BascoDaniel BaumannCristina BechtlerElisabeth BronfenGion CaminadaGabriel ChaileJulian CharrièreBice CurigerChris DerconKatharina De VaivreManthia DiawaraSimone FattalPeter FischliChristina ForrerNorman FosterDario GamboniTrajal HarrellFritz HauserRaphael HeftiEmma HodcroftClaire HoffmannLuzius KellerJürg KienbergerRagnar KjartanssonAlexander KlugeRoman KrznaricGrażyna KulczykIsabel LewisBen Moore, Hans Ulrich ObristMadlaina PeerGriselda PollockKate RaworthMarkus ReymannKenny SchachterMerlin SheldrakeAdam SzymczykWu TsangLeo TuorPhilip UrsprungRico ValärNot Vital, and Stefan Zweifel.

See link below for program and streaming details.

LONGUE DURÉE

Engadin Art Talks

Now streaming.

From top: Bice Curiger and Andy Warhol in 1976 at Galerie Bruno Bishofberger, Zürich, courtesy and © the gallery; Trajal Harrell (right) and Thibault Lac in Harrell’s Antigone (Jr.), photography credit David Berge and Wilfried Thierry, image © Trajal Harrell, courtesy of the artist; Etel Adnan in 2016, photograph by Fabrice Gibert, image © Etel Adnan, courtesy of the artist and Galerie Lelong; Ragnar Kjartansson (center) in his video World Light (2014), image © Ragnar Kjartansson, courtesy of the artist, Luhring Augustine, New York, and i8 Gallery, ReykjavÍk; Wu Tsang in New York, December 2018, photograph by Maciek Jasik, image courtesy and © the artist and the photographer.

SAM POLLARD — MLK / FBI

Join Sam Pollard for an online talk about his new documentary MLK / FBI. The conversation is presented by the International Documentary Association and moderated by Lisa Kennedy.

See links below for information on the IDA event and streaming the film.

MLK / FBI—SAM POLLARD IN CONVERSATION

IDA

Tuesday, January 26.

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

MLK / FBI

Directed by Sam Pollard.

IFC Films

Now streaming.

Sam Pollard, MLK/FBI (2020), from top: The Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., in image from the film; President John F. Kennedy (left), FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, and Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, February 23, 1961, at the White House, photograph © Associated Press; MLK/FBI poster; image from the film; Dr. King in an image from the film. MLK/FBI images courtesy and © the filmmaker and IFC Films.

ONE NIGHT IN MIAMI Q & A

Vulnerability is what makes them strong. They’re not cyborgs—they have fears and they actually do have emotions. I think most of the Black men in our lives are like that and we don’t get to see that represented that often, so that was really one of the things that attracted me to it. — Regina King

ONE NIGHT IN MIAMI—written by Kemp Powers and directed by King—is an imagining of the real life meeting of Malcolm X (Kingsley Ben-Adir), Sam Cooke (Leslie Odom, Jr.), Jim Brown (Aldis Hodge), and young boxer Cassius Clay (Eli Goree), on the verge of becoming Muhammad Ali.

Join Powers and all four of the film’s leads for an online conversation, moderated by Jacqueline Coley. See links below for Q & A and streaming details.

ONE NIGHT IN MIAMI Q & A

American Cinematheque

Monday, January 25.

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

ONE NIGHT IN MIAMI

Directed by Regina King.

Amazon Studios

Streaming now on Amazon Prime.

Regina King, One Night in Miami (2020), from top: Kingsley Ben-Adir (left, behind bar), Eli Goree (in bowtie) with Aldis Hodge (hand on Goree’s shoulder) and Leslie Odom, Jr. (right, glass in air); Odom, Hodge, Ben-Adir, and Goree; Odom; One Night in Miami one-sheet; Goree (center); Ben-Adir; Hodge; Goree, Ben-Adir, Hodge, and Odom. Images courtesy and © Amazon Studios.

FUTURE BODIES FROM A RECENT PAST

Contemporary sculpture is populated by hybrid techno-bodies. But such connections between technology and the body reach far back into modernity. The symposium explores these lines of reference: How can sculpture be thought of and defined in relation to technological developments? How, in turn, does sculpture relate to changing concepts of the body and corporeality? What are the consequences for a theory of contemporary sculpture? These and other questions form the focus of the discussion with leading theorists from various disciplines.*

Museum Brandhorst presents the online symposium FUTURE BODIES FROM A RECENT PAST—SCULPTURE, TECHNOLOGY, AND THE BODY SINCE THE 1950S. Participants include Marta Dziewanska, Louis Chude-Sokei, N. Katherine Hayles, Namiko Kunimoto, Jeannine Tang, Ursula Ströbele, and many others.

See link below to register.

FUTURE BODIES FROM A RECENT PAST—SCULPTURE, TECHNOLOGY, AND THE BODY SINCE THE 1950S*

Museum Brandhorst

Thursday, January 21 through Saturday, January 23.

From top: Mark Leckey, UniAddDumThs, 2014–ongoing, detail from the section Man, installation view Mark Leckey: UniAddDumThs at Kunsthalle Basel, 2015, photograph by Philipp Hänger, image © Mark Leckey, courtesy of the artist and Kunsthalle Basel; Alina Szapocznikow, Untitled (Fetish VII), 1971, Ursula Hauser Collection, Switzerland, image © 2020 VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn, courtesy of the Estate of Alina Szapocznikow, Piotr Stanislawski, Galerie Loevenbruck, Paris, and Hauser & Wirth; BINA48 (Breakthrough Intelligence via Neural Architecture 48), robotic face combined with chatbot functionalities, owned by Martine Rothblatt’s Terasem Movement, modeled after Rothblatt’s wife, image © 2010 Hanson Robotics; Albert Renger-Patzsch, Marmor an der Lahn (Metamorphit), 1963, plate 55, Gestein, 1966, image © 2020 Albert Renger-Patzsch and VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn; David Smith, Forging series of sculptures in progress, Bolton Landing Dock, Lake George, New York, circa 1956, image © 2020 Estate of David Smith and VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn; Tishan Hsu, Autopsy, 1988, installation view Tishan Hsu: Liquid Circuit at the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, 2020, private collection, image © Tishan Hsu, courtesy of the artist and the Hammer Museum; Aleksandra Domanović, production photograph of The Future Was at Her Fingertips, 2013, image © Aleksandra Domanović, courtesy of the artist.