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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20211009T113000
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CREATED:20210920T154304Z
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UID:6837-1633779000-1633784400@www.arttable.org
SUMMARY:New York | Curator Guided Tour of Amant
DESCRIPTION:Join Ruth Estévez\, Amant’s Artistic Director for a private tour of The Amant Foundation’s 21\,000 square foot multi-building SO-IL designed “art campus” in East Williamsburg. Opened in June 2021\, the complex serves as Amant’s new headquarters\, as well as the home for its exhibitions\, public events\, archival projects\, performances\, and residency program. Conceived as a research and process-oriented platform\, Amant provides a public forum that presents and supports the practices of both established and under-recognized artists working across diverse creative fields. \n \nWe will also tour the inaugural exhibition\, “Grada Kilomba: Heroines\, Birds and Monsters” the first solo exhibition of the artist in the United States. Working with theory\, performance\, film\, and literature\, Kilomba reveals the narratives of the colonial past\, giving space to the silenced voices whose traumas are ever present. In her own words: “What if history has not been told properly? What if our history is haunted by cyclical violence precisely because it has not been buried properly?” \nThe tour will culminate with light snacks in the bookstore. Registrants will also receive a list of nearby restaurants where we can continue the conversation after the tour. \n  \nThis program is free and open to ArtTable members only. Not an ArtTable member? Join today! \nPlease read before registering:\nCovid-19 Guidelines: \nTo ensure a positive and safe experience\, and in keeping with the ‘Key to NYC’ requirements outlined by the New York City Mayor’s Office\, as well as CDC recommendations\, Amant adheres to the following protocols: \nFrom September 2nd\, Amant will require all visitors (12+) to show proof they have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine authorized for emergency use by the FDA or WHO. For more information regarding this requirement\, visit Key to NYC. \nAmant recommends that all visitors (age 2+) wear face coverings while inside of Amant and maintain the 6-ft social distancing rule when interacting with any staff and other visitors. Additional masks are available at the reception desk. \nAccessibility: \nAmant is committed to making its space as welcoming as possible for all visitors. Entry at 315 Maujer St. is step-free and suitable for wheelchair users. The galleries\, the bookstore\, and the restroom facilities are also wheelchair accessible. All the on-site visitor and exhibition related materials are available in English and Spanish. Printed and digital copies can be found at the reception desk. Amant offers descriptive audio guides\, as well as large print materials\, for all the exhibitions. ASL interpretation for events at Amant is available on request. Amant requires two weeks’ notice to confirm an interpreter. \n  \n\n  \nThank you to Randy Rosen\, Judith Richards\, and Regan Lynn Larroque of the New York Chapter Programs Committee for organizing this program. \n\nAbout the Speaker\nRuth Estévez is a curator and stage designer. Her research work focuses on artistic practices that explore how the spoken and written language operates within the visual arts\, contemporary culture and politics. \nShe is the co-curator of the 34th São Paulo Biennial\, which opens in September 2021. From 2018 to 2020 she was senior curator-at-large at the Rose Art Museum in Waltham\, and curator of Idiorhythmias\, the performance program at MACBA in Barcelona. She was Redcat Gallery Director in Los Angeles and Chief Curator at the Carrillo Gil Museum in Mexico City\, where she also founded LIGA\, Space for architecture\, a non for profit platform focused on spatial practices. \n\nImages: \n\nAmant facade – Photographed by Rafael Gamo\nArtwork image courtesy of Grada Kilomba and Goodman Gallery\nRuth Estévez
URL:https://www.arttable.org/event/new-york-special-access-amant-foundation/
LOCATION:Amant Foundation\, 315 Maujer Street\, Brooklyn\, NY\, 11206
CATEGORIES:New York
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.arttable.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Amant-1.jpeg
ORGANIZER;CN="ArtTable New York":MAILTO:programs@arttable.org
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20211014T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20211014T110000
DTSTAMP:20260414T043619
CREATED:20211005T150242Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211006T141533Z
UID:6964-1634209200-1634209200@www.arttable.org
SUMMARY:NoCal | Curator Guided Tour of 'Judy Chicago: A Retrospective' at the de Young Museum
DESCRIPTION:Join Claudia Schmuckli\, Curator-in-Charge of Contemporary Art and Programming at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco\, for a guided tour of the Judy Chicago: A Retrospective exhibition at the de Young Museum. Meet up with your fellow NoCal members at the entrance to the exhibition on October 14th at 11am. Following the tour\, enjoy a no-host lunch with Schmuckli at the de Young Café. \nThis program is $5 and open to ArtTable members only. Members may bring a guest for an additional $10. Please note that museum admission and lunch are not included. \nNot an ArtTable member? Join today! \n\nPlease read before registering:\nCovid-19 Guidelines: \nIn accordance with an order from the San Francisco Department of Public Health\, all individuals regardless of vaccination status must wear a mask while inside the de Young museum. Proof of vaccination is not required for regular museum visits to the de Young.\, but is a requirement to attend some onsite events. \nThe museum continues to have safety measures in place to ensure a safe and healthy environment for visitors and staff. The measures include frequent cleaning of high-touch areas\, sanitizing stations\, and Plexiglass shields at the Tickets and Membership Desks. \n*The museums reserve the right to deny entry\, refuse service to\, or revoke the admission of any visitor who does not comply with safety guidelines. \nIf you are showing COVID-19 symptoms\, please stay home. This is critical to the health and safety of museum staff and communities. \nAccessibility: \nThe Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco are committed to offering services that make its collections\, exhibitions\, and programs accessible to all visitors. Programs and visiting options for individuals with disabilities as well as other underserved populations in the community are crucial for creating equity in access to the arts. Please click here to read more about accessibility options at the de Young Museum\, and email programs@arttable.org if you need assistance in setting up accommodations for this program. \nGetting There: \nJohn F. Kennedy Drive is currently closed to vehicular traffic from Kezar Drive to Transverse Drive. Paid parking is available in the Music Concourse garage; access from the Fulton Street and 10th Avenue entrance. A limited number of accessible parking spots are available in the garage. For information on public transportation\, please visit the SFMTA website. Cars have the ability to drop off visitors in front of the de Young using Hagiwara Tea Garden Dr. This is accessible via the intersection of MLK and Music Concourse drive. \n  \n \n  \n\nAbout Claudia Schmuckli\nClaudia Schmuckli is the inaugural Curator-in-Charge of Contemporary Art and Programming at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. Since joining in the fall of 2016\, she has developed a dynamic program of exhibitions\, commissions\, and acquisitions that dialogue with the institution’s sites\, buildings\, and collections in view of a self-critical reassessment of the Museums’ histories and identities. \nCurrently on view at the Fine Arts Museums are her most recent exhibitions Wangechi Mutu: I am Speaking\, Are You Listening? at the Legion of Honor and Judy Chicago: A Retrospective\, at the de Young. Prior to these presentations\, Schmuckli curated Uncanny Valley: Being Human in the Age of AI\, the first major museum exhibition in the United States to reflect on the political and philosophical stakes of artificial intelligence and Specters of Disruption\, an exhibition drawn from the Museums’ Collections\, which connected the geological and colonial underpinnings of the de Young Museum to the current conditions in Northern California. Other projects include interventions at the Legion of Honor by Alexandre Singh\, Lynn Hershman Leeson\, Sarah Lucas\, and Urs Fischer\, as well as projects by Lisa Reihana\, Leonardo Drew\, Ranu Mukherjee\, Matt Mullican\, and DIS at the de Young. \nPreviously\, Schmuckli was the director and chief curator of the Blaffer Art Museum at the University of Houston\, where she organized over thirty exhibitions including solo shows dedicated to The Propeller Group\, Matthew Ronay\, Analia Saban\, Slavs and Tatars\, Candice Breitz\, Tony Feher\, Johan Grimonprez\, Gabriel Kuri\, Chantal Akerman\, and Amy Sillman\, among many others. Schmuckli began her career in New York as a curatorial assistant at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and an assistant curator at the Museum of Modern Art. She is a Swiss citizen and holds an MA degree in art history from the Ludwigs-Maximilians-Universität in Munich\, Germany. \nAbout the exhibition\nPioneering feminist artist Judy Chicago’s retrospective spans her early engagement with the Californian Light and Space Movement in the 1960s to her current body of work\, a searing investigation of mortality and environmental devastation\, begun in 2015. The exhibition includes approximately 130 paintings\, prints\, drawings\, and ceramic sculptures\, in addition to ephemera\, several films\, and a documentary. Together\, these works of art chart the boundary-pushing path of the artist named Cohen by birth and Gerowitz by marriage\, who\, after trying to fit into the patriarchal structure of the Los Angeles art world\, decided to change her name and the course of history. \nOrganized on the heels of the 40th anniversary of Chicago’s landmark installation\, The Dinner Party\, in San Francisco and opening in conjunction with the 100th anniversary of women’s right to vote across the United States\, Judy Chicago: A Retrospective pays homage to an artist whose lifelong fight against the suppression and erasure of women’s creativity has finally come full circle. \n  \nThank you to Dorothy Dávila\, ArtTable Board Member\, for organizing this program\, and to Claudia Schmuckli for her time and expertise. \n\nImages: \n\nThe de Young Museum\, courtesy of hisour.com.
URL:https://www.arttable.org/event/nocal-curator-guided-tour-of-judy-chicago-de-young-museum/
LOCATION:de Young Museum\, Golden Gate Park \ 50 Hagiwara Tea Garden Drive\, San Francisco\, California\, 94118\, United States
CATEGORIES:Northern California
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.arttable.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/De-Young-Museum.jpeg
ORGANIZER;CN="ArtTable Northern California":MAILTO:programs@arttable.org
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20211028T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20211028T163000
DTSTAMP:20260414T043619
CREATED:20211012T213836Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211015T134859Z
UID:7010-1635438600-1635438600@www.arttable.org
SUMMARY:NoCal | Curator Tour of 'New Time: Art and Feminisms in the 21st Century'\, at BAMPFA
DESCRIPTION:Join Claire Frost\, Curatorial Assistant at BAMPFA\, for a guided tour of New Time: Art and Feminisms in the 21st Century at the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. Afterwards\, join Claire and your fellow ArtTable members at a nearby outdoor patio for no-host drinks and a discussion under guidance of local writer/curator and ArtTable member\, Marcia Tanner. \nThis program is $5 and open to ArtTable members only. Members may bring a guest for an additional $10. This includes entry to the museum but not post-tour drinks. \nNot an ArtTable member? Join today! \n\nPlease read before registering:\nCovid-19 Guidelines: \nIn accordance with an order from the San Francisco Department of Public Health\, all individuals regardless of vaccination status must wear a mask while inside the museum. All staff and visitors are required to wear face coverings. BAMPFA has increased sanitizing high-touch areas using products approved for use against COVID-19. Hand sanitizer stations are available throughout the building. \nIf you are showing COVID-19 symptoms\, please stay home. This is critical to the health and safety of museum staff and communities. Please click here for additional health and safety guidelines at BAMPFA. \nAccessibility: \nThe UC Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAMPFA) is wheelchair accessible. A wheelchair is available at the admissions desk for visitor use. Assisted listening devices are available at the admissions desk for all film programs. Please click here for additional accessibility information at BAMPFA. \nGetting There: \nBAMPFA is located at 2155 Center Street\, between Oxford Street and Shattuck Avenue\, in downtown Berkeley. BAMPFA is Bartable and parking is available. Please click here for more information. \n  \n \n  \n\nAbout the speakers\n \nClaire Frost is Curatorial Assistant at the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. In addition to BAMPFA\, she has held positions at the Contemporary Jewish Museum\, ArtSpan\, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art\, and Intersection for the Arts. A Bay Area resident since 2011\, she took a two year hiatus to attend grad school in Chicago\, where she received her MA in Modern and Contemporary Art History\, Theory\, and Criticism at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2017. Her graduate studies focused on the intersection of identity and historiography and the way in which artists’ communities are documented\, particularly in relation to second wave feminism and conceptual art. She is the founder and curator of the apartment galleries COLLABO in Chicago\, and Claire Frost in San Francisco. \nFormer PR Director at SFMOMA and Executive Director of the San Jose ICA\, art writer and independent curator Marcia Tanner has organized three exhibitions of contemporary feminist art: Bad Girls West\, 1994\, the Wight Art Gallery\, UCLA; Brides of Frankenstein\, 2005\, San Jose Museum of Art; and We Interrupt Your Program\, 2008\, Mills College Art Museum. She has been an ArtTable Member since 1987.] Her Berkeleyside review of New Time can be found here.\nAbout the exhibition\nNew Time: Art and Feminisms in the 21st Century is a major survey exploring recent feminist practices in contemporary art. In 1980 Lucy Lippard argued that feminist art is “neither a style nor a movement” but rather “a value system\, a revolutionary strategy\, a way of life.” Taking Lippard’s statement as a point of departure\, the exhibition examines the values\, strategies\, and ways of life reflected in current feminist art. In keeping with Griselda Pollock’s observation that “feminism is a historical project and thus is itself constantly shaped and remodelled in relation to the living process of women’s struggles\,” New Time aims to demonstrate that feminism in the twenty-first century is multifaceted\, encompassing many complex issues and perspectives\, and therefore cannot be reduced to a single subject\, style\, or agenda. Although artworks made since 2000 are the primary focus\, the objects and installations on view span several generations\, mediums\, geographies\, and political sensibilities. In this way the project seeks to convey the heterogeneous\, intergenerational\, and gender-fluid nature of feminist practices today. Click here to read more about the exhibition. \nThank you to Kitty Teerling\, Artigo Tours\, for organizing this program. \n\nImages: \n\nLinda Stark: Stigmata\, 2011; oil on canvas over panel; 36 x 36 in.; BAMPFA\, purchase made possible through a gift of the Paul L. Wattis Foundation.\nClaire Frost
URL:https://www.arttable.org/event/nocal-curator-guided-tour-of-new-time-art-and-feminisms-at-bampfa-with-claire-frost/
LOCATION:BAMPFA\, 2155 Center St\, Berkeley\, CA\, 94720\, United States
CATEGORIES:Northern California
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.arttable.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/xdrfHCHRVn-e1634074761370.png
ORGANIZER;CN="ArtTable Northern California":MAILTO:programs@arttable.org
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