Goings On | 12/02/2019

Goings On: posted week of December 02, 2019

CONTENTS:

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1. Alice Aycock, Candace Hill-Montgomery, Christina Schlesinger, FF Alumns, at Tripoli Gallery, Wainscott, NY, thru Jan. 30, 2020
2. Nam June Paik, FF Alumn, in The New York Times, now online
3. Candace Hill-Montgomery, FF Alumn, at Parrish Art Museum, Watermill, NY, Dec. 6
4. Jon Kinzel, Cathy Weis, FF Alumns, at WeisAcres, Manhattan, Dec. 8
5. Nao Bustamante, FF Alumn, at Museo de Palacio de Bellas Artes, Mexico City, thru Feb. 16, 2020
6. Shirin Neshat, FF Alumn, on BBC.com now online
7. Jaguar Mary, FF Alumn, at Artlife Institute, Kingston, NY, Dec. 7 and more
8. Hector Canonge, FF Alumn, at Nexus, Miami, FL, Dec. 7 and more
9. Sabrina Jones, FF Alumn, at Printed Matter, Manhattan, Dec. 8
10. Rachel Frank, FF Alumn, at Everglades Art Lab, Miami Beach, FL, Dec. 4-8
11. Ellen Fisher, Cathy Weis, FF Alumns, at Weisacres, Manhattan, Dec. 15
12. Dread Scott, FF Alumn, December news
13. Taylor Mac, FF Alumn, December news
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

1. Alice Aycock, Candace Hill-Montgomery, Christina Schlesinger, FF Alumns, at Tripoli Gallery, Wainscott, NY, thru Jan. 30, 2020

15th Annual Thanksgiving Collective: What Have We Done?
November 30 ‐ January 30, 2020
Wainscott, NY – Tripoli Gallery is pleased to present the 15th Annual Thanksgiving Collective: What Have We Done?, its largest exhibition of artists to date. Curated by Tripoli Patterson, the exhibition will include artists John Alexander, Linda K. Alpern, Vahakn Arslanian, Alice Aycock, Katherine Bernhardt, Ashley Bickerton, Ross Bleckner, Dianne Blell, Katherine Bradford, David Bromley, Justin Crawford, Jennifer Cross, Alice Dellal, Jeremy Dennis, Trefny Dix, Sabra Moon Elliot, Hannah Epstein, Eric Fischl, Saskia Friedrich, Félix Bonilla Gerena, Jack Goldstein, Kurt Gumaer, Mary Heilmann, Candace Hill-Montgomery, Bengt Hokanson, Judith Hudson, Bryan Hunt, Yung Jake, Benjamin Keating, Laurie Lambrecht, Brianna Lance, Liz Markus, Bella McGoldrick, Nick Mead, Angelbert Metoyer, Miles Partington, Matisse Patterson, Alexis Rockman, Christina Schlesinger, Nathalie Shepherd, Keith Sonnier, Billy Sullivan, José Luis Vargas, Ross Watts, Nick Weber, Lauren West, Lucy Winton, Darius Yektai, Nico Yektai, and Almond Zigmund. On view from November 30th, 2019 to January 30th, 2020, an opening reception for the artists will be held on Saturday, November 30th, from 5 to 8pm at 26 Ardsley Road (the cross street from East Gate Road), Wainscott, NY 11975.

Every year, the Thanksgiving Collective highlights a selection of artists that have shown with the gallery in the past, and also introduces new artists to the gallery and the East End community. Featuring 50 artists, this year’s Thanksgiving Collective, What Have We Done?, honors the visions of this diverse group of artists, while acknowledging the artists’ continual support of the gallery’s mission to engage and promote the presence of the art community on the East End and its international reach.

From New York and California to Australia and Bali, the artists in the 15th Annual Thanksgiving Collective offer to the world artworks that depict a range of subjects including nature, humans, animals, abstraction, fairy tales, folklores from the past, and visions for the future. As the minds of these artists come together in one space, we can see a unity of consciousness communicated through their artworks. What Have We Done? not only asks us to reflect on the results of our personal creative efforts, it also inspires us to look at our humanity as a whole.

One of the artworks on view will be Ashley Bickerton’s Seascape: Floating Ocean Chunk No. 1, a sculpture designed to float, its functionality encourages the viewer to think about its possible existence and purpose in our future environment. Alice Aycock’s Armageddon Allegra similarly addresses the interaction between civilization and the natural environment, combining the technology of digital printing with hand-painted watercolor to illustrate a mysterious body of organic and mechanical forms. Meanwhile, the human body perseveres in a new sculpture by Eric Fischl titled The Wait. Carved from black marble, a woman kneels with arms stretched in front of her and head bowed, an image of strength and hope for a future that is unknown.

For press inquiries or further information, please contact info@tripoligallery.com or call 631.377.3715.

TOP

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

2. Nam June Paik, FF Alumn, in The New York Times, now online

Please visit this link:

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/01/arts/design/nam-june-paik-tate-modern.html

thank you.

TOP

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

3. Candace Hill-Montgomery, FF Alumn, at Parrish Art Museum, Watermill, NY, Dec. 6

Forgot to mention I’ll be showing & reading through a version of The Process of Labor & Delivery, a 20 page book length version of the book you have of mine in archive (you have the hardcover) at PechaKucha, Dec. 6th at The Parrish Art Museum. Two minutes for each image & text read. PechaKucha is the Japanese word for chitchat as it’s done in many venues, same evening, same time around the world. Twenty minutes total.

https://parrishart.org/programs-events

TOP

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

4. Jon Kinzel, Cathy Weis, FF Alumns, at WeisAcres, Manhattan, Dec. 8

December 8, 2019 at 6pm: Cathy Weis Projects presents Sundays on Broadway
Sundays on Broadway and curator Cathy Weis present an evening of performances by Jon Kinzel, Jimena Paz, and Vicky Shick.
Jon Kinzel will show video and dance stemming from Pacific Terminus (2019), an ongoing collaborative project with visual artist Bob Ajar/recent performance residency at Telematic. Dancer Simon Courchel will be involved with this showing.
Jimena Paz will present a solo work-in-process.
Over a number of years, Marilyn Maywald-Yahel and Vicky Shick have been exploring nuance, intimacy and extravagance through movement. This segment is a glimpse of that work.

WeisAcres
537 Broadway, #3
All events begin at 6:00 pm – doors open at 5:45 pm.
No reservations. No late seating.
$10 suggested contribution.
Keep in mind, this is a small space. Please arrive on time out of courtesy to the artists.

TOP

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

5. Nao Bustamante, FF Alumn, at Museo de Palacio de Bellas Artes, Mexico City, thru Feb. 16, 2020

#ZapataDespuésDeZapata

“There was Zapata before-and perhaps, if Mexico does not destroy itself, there will be Zapata after”
-Octavio Paz
The Secretary of Culture, through the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Arte y Literatura y el Museo del Palacio de Bellas Arte, are pleased to present the exhibit “Emiliano. #ZapataDepuesDeZapata”
Conceptualizing Zapata as an uncontainable icon, this project interrogates the irrepressible nature of images-passing from one field of meaning to another-and as part of a continuous visual diaspora between Mexico and the United States.

Zapata embodies race, patriotism, social struggle, and masculinity. His images have ignited and been present at protests and social movements, including the student movement of 1968 in Mexico City, the Chicano Rights movement of the 1970s, the Zapatista uprising in Chiapas in 1994, and the immigration rallies of 2006 in California.

His portrait was captured in photographs by Hugo Brehme and Agustín Casasola, and in prints by José Guadalupe Posada. Diego Rivera would paint his image more than 70 times, and José Clemente Orozco and David Alfaro Siqueiros would immortalize him in murals and paintings in the U.S.

In contemporary art, artists such as Alberto Gironella, the muralist Arnold Belkin, conceptual artists Felipe Ehrenberg, Carlos Aguirre, and the collective Grupo Mira used Zapata to critique state politics throughout the Dirty Wars of the 1970s.

In California, the Chicano muralists in L.A’s Estrada Courts and Chicano Park in San Diego, and the artists Rupert García, Emmanuel Martínez,

Daniel Salazar, Rubén Ortiz-Torres, Mario Ybarra Jr. and the feminist performance artist Nao Bustamante have transformed, from the 1970s to today, the image of this Mexican hero as a way of discussing Mexican- American culture and the rights of immigrants, women, and queer collectives.

From November 27, 2019 until February 16, 2020

TOP

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

6. Shirin Neshat, FF Alumn, on BBC.com now online

Please visit this link:

http://www.bbc.com/culture/story/20191104-shirin-neshat-a-stare-that-challenges-us-to-look-away

thank you.

TOP

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

7. Jaguar Mary, FF Alumn, at Artlife Institute, Kingston, NY, Dec. 7 and more

Did you miss the first iteration of Artemisia Negra at Para//el Space in Williamsburg? Come to Kingston for the second round of ritual invoking and anointing of the plant ally, mugwort, on December 7th. During the ritual, you’ll receive a mugwort cleansing including a smudge, a sweeping and clearing with branches of mugwort and a dot of artemisia paste on your third eye. I’ll also offer you some delicious mugwort tea so that you can smell it, breathe it and become familiar with its energy.

Artemisia Vulgaris is the Latin name for mugwort, the ancient plant with a plethora of medicinal and magical qualities, including the ability to induce lucid dreaming. It grows in abundance all over Kingston. AV is literally communicating with us and offering their medicine everyday. Come by, say hello and have some mugwort tea and snacks before the ritual begins.

And here’s an extra special ting…Juma Sultan, the legendary drummer for Jimi Hendrix and the Experience will do live percussion for the performance!!

Doors open at 7:30 pm and the performance and anointing starts at 8pm. Your donation of $10 – $20 is much appreciated and helps to pay the artists.

Show up on Saturday, December 7
ART LIFE INSTITUTE
7:30 – 9:30pm
185 Abeel Street
Kingston, NY 12401
Parking on Ravine Street

For complete information and more please visit this link:

https://mailchi.mp/cd72096b102e/december-performances-at-artlife-more

thank you.

TOP

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

8. Hector Canonge, FF Alumn, at Nexus, Miami, FL, Dec. 7 and more

Hector Canonge, FF Alumn presentations during MIAMI ART WEEK: Performance at Edge Zones Gallery, Public Interventions for NEXUS, and screening ESTADOS ALTERADOS (Altered States) worldwide.

Friday, December 7, 3-6 pm
NEXUS -Transcontinental Art Platform
Lummus Park, South Beach Miami
Ad-hoc Performances

Saturday, December 8, 2-5 pm
NEXUS -Transcontinental Art Platform
Knight Plaza, Biscayne Bay, Miami
As-hoc Performances

Saturday, December 8, 7 pm
PerforMIA 19
A Night of Performance and Sound Art
Curated by Charo Oquet
Edge Zones Art Center
3317 NW 7th Avenue, Miami

December 1 – 18
Worldwide
ESTADOS ALTERADOS (Altered States)
Organized and curated by Hector Canonge, the program is a selection of Video Performance and Documentation projects that reflect of the present upheavals in many countries in South America. Ecuador fighting for social equality, Chile striking against neo-liberal regime, Argentina against its economic austerity, Brazil flighting for racial equality, Colombia involved in political fights and Bolivia facing its current coup d’etat and its deficit right wing christian extremist government.

ESTADOS ALTERADOS will be featured on December 1st as part of the NY Latin American Arts Triennial and later will travel to various cities and institutions around the world. Some of the presentations include:

December 1: New York, Estados Unidos en el marco de la TRIENAL DE ARTE LATINOAMERICANO DE NUEVA YORK, Teatro LATEA.
December 5: Buenos Aires, Argentina – CENTRO CULTURAL PACO URONDO.
December 6: Berlín, Alemania – ORGAN KRITISCHER KUNST, OKK.
December 7: Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Bolivia – MUSEO DE ARTE CONTEMPORÁNEO.
December 13: Bogotá, Colombia, – RED RIZOMAS, Facultad de Artes, Academia Superior de Artes de Bogotá, ASAB.
December 14: Lima, Perú – GALERÍA LIMA ARTE CONTEMPORÁNEO.
December 15: Santiago, Chile – Iniciativa CUBOSOMA en ESPACIO AILANTO.
December 16: Mexico City, Mexico – ESPACIO 553
December 18: Belo Horizonte, Brazil – CASA PERPENDICULAR.

More information:
http://www.hectorcanonge.net

TOP

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

9. Sabrina Jones, FF Alumn, at Printed Matter, Manhattan, Dec. 8

Dear friends,

I invite you to celebrate the publication of
Shameless Feminists: the 50th issue of World War 3 Illustrated.
When: Sunday December 8th, 4-6pm
Where: Printed Matter, 231 11th Avenue, (at 26th St.) NYC, 10001
What: Comic books, artists and editors, refreshments, live slide shows by shameless feminist contributors.
Free and open to the public, so bring anyone you like.

Come celebrate this new anthology of feminist comics, bursting with over 30 contributors, many new to the pages of WW3. The editors asked for angry, hopeful, untold and unbelievable stories – and received beauty, truth, guts and defiance. Edited by Isabella Bannerman, Sandy Jimenez, Sabrina Jones (me!) and Rebecca Migdal.

I hope to see you there,
Sabrina

TOP

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

10. Rachel Frank, FF Alumn, at Everglades Art Lab, Miami Beach, FL, Dec. 4-8

Hi friends,

Greetings from Miami Beach and the Everglades!

I’ve been out camping and filming in the beautiful mangrove swamps of Big Cypress and Everglades NP with Coral Projects. My ceramic Mangrove Kernos sculptures were placed in a grove of Swamp Apples on Miccosukee tribal land with guidance from Houston Cypress of Love the Everglades. Footage of my artwork and travels will be edited together and presented at Untitled Fair in Booth 7, Special Projects amidst a grove of native plants, such as Sea Lavender and Dahoon Holly.

CORAL PROJECTS: Everglades Art Lab
Presented by Benrubi Gallery at UNTITLED, Art
Participating artists: Vanessa Albury, Rachel Frank, Thale Fastvold and Tanja Thorjussen of Locus with the Reverend Houston Cypress of Love the Everglades
UNTITLED, ART Special Projects
Miami Beach
December 4 – 8, 2019

If you are in Miami, would love to see you!

Rachel

TOP

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

11. Ellen Fisher, Cathy Weis, FF Alumns, at Weisacres, Manhattan, Dec. 15

Sunday, December 15, 2019: Sundays on Broadway and co-curators Emily Climer and Cathy Weis present an evening of performances by Ellen Fisher, Carolyn Hall, and the seasonal return of Shorties.
Choreographer and performer Ellen Fisher will present Simple, a work that asks: when does movement become dance?
Carolyn Hall has created timelines of the history of New York City fish and fisheries and will be experimenting with a physical conversation in which she and the audience move with and among the data thereby encouraging new connections between us and our surrounding urban aquatic environment.
Shorties returns! This Sundays on Broadway staple features a flurry of micro-dances-one- to-two minute improvisations-performed in quick succession by ten surprise performers.
WeisAcres
537 Broadway, #3
All events begin at 6:00 pm – doors open at 5:45 pm.
No reservations. No late seating.
$10 suggested contribution.
Keep in mind, this is a small space. Please arrive on time out of courtesy to the artists.
For more information, visit www.cathyweis.org

TOP

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

12. Dread Scott, FF Alumn, December news

Dear Harley

Slave Rebellion Reenactment, my community engaged project about freedom and liberation, was performed November 8-9 in New Orleans and its surrounding Parishes. It was awesome. Hundreds of people from near and far joined and supported the reenactment. I’m grateful for everyones’ contributions. I’m biased, but it did really kick ass.

I will be in Miami to speak about the project at the Faena Festival later this week. I hope to see you there.

Information about all of this including links to media coverage as well as upcoming exhibitions is below.

Best,

Dread

dreadscott.net (http://www.dreadscott.net/)
Photos of Slave Rebellion Reenactment by Soul Brother

On to New Orleans! Freedom or death! We’re going to end slavery! Join Us!

Hundreds of reenactors echoed the chants of self-liberated, formerly enslaved people as they marched to seize Orleans territory in 1811 in the largest rebellion of enslaved people in US history. We were performing Slave Rebellion Reenactment (SRR), a community engaged performance spanning 24 miles over two days, through the River Parishes outside New Orleans and culminating in the city itself.

Hundreds of Black and indigenous people, each dressed in 19th-century garments, flags and banners flying, came together to form the Army of the Enslaved. Our two-day march through communities, beside former slave labor camps (a.k.a. plantations) and the toxic chemical plants that have replaced them, was a gesture of historical resistance.

SRR culminated in New Orleans’ Congo Square with music and dancing. We interrupted the historic timeline in which the revolt was violently suppressed, with a celebration that recognized the courage and achievement of the freedom fighters. The 1811 rebellion is a profound “what if?” story. It had a small but real chance of succeeding-what would that have meant for US and world history? SRR created a beautiful liberated space and invited people to dream “what if?” for the future.

Civic and church leaders from LaPlace and Reserve, LA marched alongside activists and community members fighting the toxic petrochemical corporations that are poisoning people in Cancer Alley through which we marched. Descendants of people who participated in the 1811 revolt performed with people recently released from prison. Some crossed the country to join the rebellion, like the aunt and uncle of Oscar Grant (murdered by police in 2009), who flew in from Oakland. The project stirred the lives of many, participants and audience alike.

Slave Rebellion Reenactment has received tremendous coverage. Some highlights are:
Guardian Newspaper 7 minute video (https://www.theguardian.com/world/video/2019/nov/14/freedom-or-death-bringing-americas-largest-slave-revolt-back-to-life) : It presents a very good overview of SRR.
New York Times article (https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/09/us/a-slave-rebellion-rises-again.html) by Rick Rojas: Good coverage and great pictures.
PBS NewsHour (https://www.pbs.org/newshour/show/largest-slave-revolt-in-u-s-history-lives-on-in-reenactment) : An overview and interviews with reenactors and scholars
Brut video (https://youtu.be/FVTJ-stWW5w) : It follows a young reenactor as she prepares for and performs in SRR.

In addition to news documentation, SRR was filmed by John Akomfrah, the amazing British film artist. Stay tuned for where the multi-channel film installation will be presented late next year.

For more information: www.slave-revolt.com
Press

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2019/nov/11/louisiana-slave-rebellion-reenactment-artist-dread-scott
New York Times (https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/09/us/a-slave-rebellion-rises-again.html) (Rick Rojas)
The Guardian (https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2019/nov/11/louisiana-slave-rebellion-reenactment-artist-dread-scott)
PBS NewsHour (https://www.pbs.org/newshour/show/largest-slave-revolt-in-u-s-history-lives-on-in-reenactment)
Brut (https://www.brut.media/us/news/reenacting-america-s-largest-slave-rebellion-e3488b78-8f8d-4d91-8baa-b7efb665647f)
The Observer (https://observer.com/2019/11/dread-scott-slave-rebellion-reenactment-antenna-performance-preview/)
AJ+ (Al Jazeera) (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m8Ar1PpnQCk)
KPFK Radio, Michael Slate Show (https://revcom.us/a/621/michael-slate-interviews-dread-scott-en.html)
Fashionista (https://fashionista.com/2019/11/1811-german-coast-uprising-slave-rebellion-reenactment-costumes)
NPR All Things Considered (https://www.npr.org/2019/11/03/775907330/artist-dread-scott-prepares-for-slave-revolt-re-enactment)
New York Times (https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/06/arts/design/dread-scott-louisiana-slave-revolt.html) (Richard Faucett)
CNN (https://www.cnn.com/2019/11/10/us/gallery/slave-rebellion-reenactment/index.html)
AP News (https://apnews.com/ef4e534d154249798e4680c8fdf3d528)
WDSU TV News (https://www.wdsu.com/article/slavery-rebellion-reenactment-road-closures/29733935)
Colorlines (https://www.colorlines.com/articles/slave-rebellion-be-reenacted)
The Gambit – New Orleans Weekly (https://www.theadvocate.com/gambit/new_orleans/news/the_latest/article_042401ba-fb4e-11e9-93e4-dbe5a07d7ae7.html)
Newsweek (https://www.newsweek.com/german-coast-uprising-1811-reenactment-new-orleans-louisiana-1468198)
iHeart Radio WYLD Sunday Journal with Hal Clark (https://wyldfm.iheart.com/featured/sunday-journal-with-hal-clark/content/2019-10-18-slave-rebellion-reenactment/)
BOMB Magazine (https://bombmagazine.org/articles/collective-resistance-karen-kaia-livers-alison-parker-dread-scott-interviewed/)
The Art Newspaper Art Newspaper Podcast (https://www.theartnewspaper.com/news/artist-reimagines-louisiana-slave-uprising-with-a-different-outcome)
Vanity Fair (https://www.vanityfair.com/style/2019/09/dread-scott-slave-rebellion-reenactment)
Exhibitions, Ongoing

New Orleans, Louisiana
University of New Orleans UNO Gallery
Dread Scott: The Power of Resistance (https://unosota.wixsite.com/stclaudegallery)
October 11, 2019 – December 1, 2019

Birmingham, Alabama
Space One Eleven
We Dare Defend Our Rights: The Gun Show (https://spaceoneeleven.org/6229-2/)
September 6, 2019 – December 27, 2019

New York, New York
The Core Club
At the Core: New Members of the National Academy of Design
September 9, 2019 – January 9, 2020

Stony Brook, New York
Paul W. Zuccaire Gallery, Stony Brook University
Artists as Innovators: Celebrating Three Decades of New York State Council on the Arts/New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowships (https://zuccairegallery.stonybrook.edu/2019/04/artists-as-innovators-celebrating-three-decades-of-nscanyfa-fellowships/)
October 26 – December 14, 2019

Charlotte, North Carolina
Harvey B. Gantt Center for African-American Arts + Culture
…and justice for all (https://www.ganttcenter.org/exhibitions/and-justice-for-all/)
November 2, 2019 – April 12, 2020
Exhibitions, Upcoming

Hamburg, Germany
Hamburger Kunsthal
Mourning: On Loss and Change (https://www.hamburger-kunsthalle.de/en/exhibitions/mourning)
February 7, 2020 – June 14, 2020

Clinton, New York
Ruth and Elmer Wellin Museum of Art Hamilton College
SUM Artists: Visual Diagrams and Systems-Based Explorations (https://www.hamilton.edu/wellin/exhibitions/detail/sum-artists)
February 15, 2020 – June 14, 2020
Lectures, Talks & Panels

Miami, FL
Unlocking Freedom (https://www.eventbrite.com/e/faena-festival-the-last-supper-talk-series-tickets-83669296117)
Faena Festival: The Last Supper – Talk Series
Mammoth Garden, Faena Hotel Miami Beach
Friday, December 6, 4:30 pm

Best,

Dread

info@dreadscott.net
www.dreadscott.net
+1 718 791 5401

TOP

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

13. Taylor Mac, FF Alumn, December news

Holiday Sauce goes on tour:
D.C. (Kennedy Center Opera House)
Richmond (Alice Jepson Theatre)
Ann Arbor (Power Center)
Seattle (The Moore Theater).

RICHMOND, VA
December 7 & 8 at the Alice Jepson Theatre
Get 15% off with the promo code JINGLEJUDY
https://modlin.richmond.edu/events/page.html?eventid=16479&informationid=casData,startdate:2019-12-08,enddate:2019-12-08,starttime:193000,endtime:220000

WASHINGTON, D.C.
December 12 at the Kennedy Center
Get 20% off by clicking the link below
https://www.kennedy-center.org/calendar/event/MUCOC?promotionno=377215

ANN ARBOR, MI
December 14 & 15 at the Power Center
Get $10 off with the promo code TAYLORFRIEND
tickets.ums.org/4271/4386?premove+Y&promo=TAYLORFRIEND

SEATTLE, WA
December 19 & 20 at The Moore Theatre
Get 15% off with the promo code STGFRIENDS
https://www.stgpresents.org/groups/stgfriends

“Taylor Mac’s Holiday Sauce,” plies acerbic wit, subversive politics, circus pageantry, sartorial riot and boundless compassion to the holidays.” -San Francisco Chronicle

“Mac might be considered a heathen freak in certain quarters, but “Holiday Sauce” was imbued with such freewheeling love and generosity that it tapped into the true spirit of the season.” — The LA Times

TOP

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Goings On is compiled weekly by Harley Spiller

~~end~~
—————————————–
To subscribe, unsubscribe, or for information
send an email to info@franklinfurnace.org
—————————————–
Franklin Furnace Archive, Inc.
80 Arts – The James E. Davis Arts Building
80 Hanson Place #301
Brooklyn NY 11217-1506 U.S.A.
Tel: 718-398-7255
Fax: 718-398-7256
mail@franklinfurnace.org

Martha Wilson, Founding Director
Michael Katchen, Senior Archivist
Harley Spiller, Administrator
Dolores Zorreguieta, Program Coordinator