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The Occupy with Art blog provides updates on projects in progress, opinion articles about art-related issues and OWS, useful tools built by artists for the movement, new features on the website, and requests for assistance. To submit a post, contact us at occupationalartschool(at)gmail(dot)com .

Entries by admin (551)

Friday
Feb242012

LL:O - Occupy with Art Flash Mob!!!

[LINK]

Come flash mob to The Beatles' Revolution with us!

Three easy steps:

  1. Learn the dance using this YouTube video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b8dcrngOWv4&feature=youtu.be
  2. Show up on March 3, 2012 at the Wayne Morse Free Speech Plaza
    ... (125 East 8th Street Eugene, Oregon) at 4:15pm.
  3. Bring friends and boogey down to The Beatles at 4:30pm.


Come support the Occupy movement by being a part of 'Low Lives: Occupy!' a unique one-night-only program of live performance art, happenings, and public actions, simulcast to presenting host venues around the world.

'Language of Revolution' - Eugene's contribution to the festival - uses Occupy hand signals to create a fun, easy dance for anyone and everyone to enjoy and join in!

Low Lives: Occupy! will take place on Saturday, March 3, 2012 from 6 -10 pm (EST).

Watch the live simulcast on March 3 at http://www.occupywithart.com/llo-live-channel/

Click to read more ...

Friday
Feb242012

OWS Arts & Labor [M4 Meet-up]: Alternative Economies

Alternative Economies: Seeing, Naming, Connecting, Strengthening, Creating

  • March 4, 2012
  • 3-6 PM

#OccupyWallStreet has cracked open a little hole in history, creating a moment where some of the very core institutions of our economy are called into question. Along with indignation and outrage, there is a certain excitement in the air. Things that have been terrifyingl...y stuck seem to be moving. Something seems possible today that wasn't just a month ago. In this space, our conversations and our imaginations are buzzing. What are we doing? What should we do? What's coming next? -Ethan Miller, Occupy! Connect! Create! Imagining Life Beyond ‘The Economy’

The second Arts and Labor Alternative Economies Teach-In looks to the model of the Solidarity Economy as a strategy for organizing new art economies. Rather than waiting for revolution, the solidarity framework allows us to begin where we are, to identify the struggles within our current economic structures, and to imagine alternatives. Built around values such as cooperation, individual and collective well being, social justice, ecological health, democracy, and diversity, the chief principle behind the Solidarity Economy is that rather than creating a new blueprint for society, our task is to identify the alternatives that already exist through the activities of seeing, naming, connecting, strengthening, and creating. How can we apply these principles of the solidarity economy to organize different alternative structures for work, life, art, and labor? Come be part of the conversation.

Schedule: 3:15 PM: Tour of 4th Arts Block led by Tamara Greenfield, Executive Director. Maximum Capacity: 20. Please RSVP at owsartsandlabor@gmail.com.
4-5 PM: Presentation by Cheyenna Weber and Caroline Woolard of SolidarityNYC
5-6 PM: Discussion

Contact: owsartsandlabor@gmail.com
http://artsandlabor.org/alternative-economies/

Click to read more ...

Friday
Feb242012

Occupy Town Square 3 [f26]

ABOUT OTS:

Occupy Wall Street is four months old. We don't live in a park anymore, but we're still here, and we're still fighting for economic justice. Now, OWS is coming to a neighborhood near you. Over the next few months, mobile, daytime occupations, called Occupy Town Squares, will be held in parks and other public spaces, indoor and outdoor, around New York City. For a few hours a week, these events will recreate the essence of the Zuccotti Park Occupation. There will be info tables, teach-ins, trainings, and political discussions.

Whether you consider yourself a supporter of the movement or not, we want to meet you: come share your ideas and stories, learn about the movement, argue with us, debate with us, collaborate with us. If you're already active in OWS, this is a chance to exchange information, to coordinate between working groups, and to get to know our brothers and sisters in the movement.

Friday
Feb242012

Occupy [dot] com's Logo Competition Winner

12090122.jpg

Click the image to read the article at SF Weekly on occupy[dot]com's logo competition and its winner.

[EXCERPT]:

Occupy.com sifted through more than 1,500 entries, which were submitted through 99designs.com, before selecting the winner. "The creative energy of the contest naturally went towards the circle -- It's iconic, it's endlessly reproducible, it's infinitely inviting and inclusive and it symbolizes the connectedness of all of us," occupier David Sauvage wrote in an e-mail to SF Weekly.

Thursday
Feb232012

This week from Yes Lab in NYC

http://hemi.nyu.edu/hemi/images/Yes_Lab_at_Hemi.gif

Dear New Yorker,

Two treats for you: an all-star revolutionary panel this evening (Thursday), and hilarious clown fun this Saturday.

1. This Saturday evening, come prepare fun, funny, and media-savvy actions for F29 with Occupy's newest venture, the +Brigades. BYOB. Beware of clowns. Spread the word!

  • Date: Saturday, Feb. 25, 7pm
  • Where: Judson Church (Thompson St. entrance), New York City

2. Tonight (Thursday), come seriously consider how change happens, the role of electoral politics, the nature of revolution, and other big questions. Moderated by Nation editor Richard Kim, the panel will include Richard Schechner, Yotam Marom, Chaia Heller, and Nelini Stamp. Bring ID!

 

See you soon!

Your friends at the Yes Lab

[Also, from the Yes Lab blog]:

Wednesday
Feb222012

Tonight [#f22] at Living Theatre!

Very Special Events happening tonight at The Living Theatre!


Paul Goodman Changed My Life

"Political Origins of The Living Theatre"


Today, Wednesday February 22nd: come see Paul Goodman Changed My Life by Jonathan Lee, about the man who made anarchists out of Judith Malina and Julian Beck.  9:45pm start time after the play, and talkback featuring Judith and Paul McLean from Occupy With Art. Learn more at http://www.paulgoodmanfilm.com/

LIVING THEATRE: [LINK]

MORE THIS WEEK AT LIVING THEATRE: [LINK]

Wednesday
Feb222012

1st Mission Statement for Arts & Culture [#A30, 2011]

 

[NOTE: This text was referenced during the Space Team screening project at Hyperallergic, "Wall Street Stunts: OWS Arts & Culture Before September 17." We are meeting Tuesday evenings at 7PM, through the end of March. The link to the original is HERE. Thanks to Adrian for research.]

Wednesday
Feb222012

The Corporate Leviathan

[At Occupy Design]:

A leviathan is a mythical serpent beast that is feared by all. Historically the Leviathan has been used to describe the nature of the Government as powerful and dominating. Today we face a new leviathan: Corporations controlled by the 1%. Unlike our Government, we have no control over this power aside from the methods by which we are forced to support it. This image is call to action and resistance; to mobilize and fight back against these systems of oppression.
Attribution: 
Join The Fight Propaganda
Wednesday
Feb222012

The People's Puppets of Occupy Wall Street - Creation of Neighborhood Heights 

(PHOTO: Paul Talbot)

Check out the subway video of Neighborhood Heights.. Visit the ideal way the world should be.

Monday
Feb202012

Occupy CAA

[From Nancy Popp]
If any of you will be at College Art Association in Los Angeles this week, I'll be chairing a panel on Saturday, Feb 25th at 2:30p.

I am hoping this panel will provide an entry to 'Occupy" CAA, and open up the very restrictive structure of the conference to create a more equitable platform for discussion.

This panel will be multi-sited, participation-based, and open to students and the general public in conjunction with OTIS College of Art and Design's Re/Locating Learning: Public Practices as Art:
Please join us in the West Lobby of the Los Angeles Convention Center; we will be starting the panel in Conference Room 403A.

Click to read more ...

Monday
Feb202012

Protest History: Underground Press Syndicate 

[NOTE: Occupy with Art supports the OWS [People's] Library. "Protest History" is the second installment of a fantastic essay by Lisa Charnigo, "Occupy the OccuPAST: Echoes of Dissidence in the UPS Underground Newspaper Collection," serialized on the OWSL site. Part 1 (of 4) is HERE. Part 2 is HERE.]

“Modern civilization is a dangerous, insane process– destructive of man’s natural potential, murderous to other species of life, symbol addicted, anti-life. Drop out of the social game.”

 

[EXCERPT]

 

While the underground newspapers of the sixties and early seventies were united in their opposition to the Vietnam War, their content and purpose was by no means uniform. Some of the papers focused on hippie “drop out” culture, such as the short-lived but beautifully- illustrated San Francisco Oracle published from 1966 to 1968. The Oracle captured the pinnacle of the “Summer of Love” in Haight-Ashbury, covering such subjects as expanding consciousness, experimentation with Eastern spirituality, and human be-ins. Contributors to the Oracle included writers, poets, thinkers, and artists such as Timothy Leary, Gary Snyder, Ken Kesey, Alan Watts, Allen Ginsberg, Michael Bowen, and Allen Cohen. Revolution, as espoused in the Oracle, is an expansion and change of consciousness which occurs within an individual. As Timothy Leary proclaimed in the first issue of the Oracle, “Drop out! Modern civilization is a dangerous, insane process– destructive of man’s natural potential, murderous to other species of life, symbol addicted, anti-life. Drop out of the social game.” Perhaps no other paper in the underground newspaper collection achieved the Oracle’s sophistication in artistic expression. The paper is just as interesting to look at, with its beautiful psychedelic imagery, as it is to read. Allen Cohen, the paper’s editor, wrote that the idea for the Oracle came to him in a “rainbow newspaper” dream. The Oracle, however, only represented one spectrum of the rainbow of underground papers. On the other end of the spectrum were papers which were opposed to flowers, peace, and mind expansion as a central means to obtain social and political justice.

Monday
Feb202012

Low Lives: Occupy! Anti-Art and the Readymade Revolution


by Ashley Sanders

On March 3rd, thousands of people in over ten different countries will point their projectors to occupy building facades, movie screens and bare white walls with transmissions from a performance phenomenon known as Low Lives: Occupy! LL:O! is an artistic celebration of the Occupy movement that uses the medium as its message, pushing the grainy, live-stream, camera-phone-style footage that made Occupy famous to stage a series of simultaneous, real-time performances that interrogate, explore and push the limits of what Occupy means. The pieces will run the gamut from direct action to spectacle, and the audience will be equally diverse and democratic: anyone with an internet connection can gather with any number of people and watch as artists and activists from everywhere stage five minute pieces that blur the line between art, politics, and performance.

Click to read more ...

Sunday
Feb192012

InterOccupy Arts Call |#F22 |: 10pm Eastern/7pm Pacific 

InterOccupy Arts Call | Wed Feb 22 | 10pm Eastern/7pm Pacific 
Artists as Bridges: How are artists connecting Occupy and other movements for economic and social justice?

As Occupy and 'The 99%' movement expands, it continues to deepen its connections with communities and issues of all kinds. On this call, we will hear from artists who are doing powerful, innovative work of 'bridging', using the unique power of art, music, performance and spectacle, to connect Occupy to new issues and communities, and vice versa.   

Click to read more ...

Sunday
Feb192012

ROUND 2: Wall Street Stunts! [#F21]


SPATIAL OCCUPATION @ hyperallergic
Round 2/Session 3 [Screenings+]
7PM Tuesday

181 N. 11th Street [Williamsburg/BK/NYC]
 
RSVP: ows-arts-and-culture-spaces@googlegroups.com



Saturday
Feb182012

Occupy Resources for FREE

Many great sources of posters, flyers, grapics and so forth are currently out there on the internet. Here are some:

Occupy Design - "Look through this site for protest signs, logistical signs, infographics, and icons."

Occuprint - "Occuprint showcases posters from the worldwide Occupy movement, all of which are part of the creative commons, and available to be downloaded for noncommercial use, though we ask that artists are given attribution for their work."

Occupytogether "free for you to download, print, and hang up within your community, not only to promote local efforts, but the solidarity of all occupiers around the country."

Click to read more ...

Saturday
Feb182012

Art and Everything in the Commons

Over the weekend a group called The Future of Occupy held a three day event in Greenpoint, Brooklyn. Dozens of speakers discussed issues that many in the Occupy Movement care about. Affordable health insurance, student loan debt, climate change, alternate economies, etc. It's worth a look at their site to see if they have a project that might match your interests. Last night I went and there were about 50 people there. This group is not to be confused with Occupy the Future.

posted by Chris Cobb

Saturday
Feb182012

Press Release for LOW LIVES: OCCUPY! [#f18]

PRESS RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

For further information, contact:
Paul McLean
Co-organizer, Occupy with Art
artforhumans@gmail.com

OCCUPY WITH ART ANNOUNCES
LOW LIVES: OCCUPY!


February 17, 2012 (New York, NY)–Occupy with Art will partner with international presenter Low Lives and The Hemispheric Institute of Performance and Politics to present “Low Lives: Occupy!,” a unique one-night-only program of live performance art, simulcast via an online streaming network to presenting host venues around the world. Low Lives: Occupy! will take place on March 3, 2012 from 6 – 10pm (EST). Mark Read, creator of the 99% Bat Signal / The Illuminator, will contribute a special projection and performance in conjunction with Low Lives: Occupy! in New York City.

Click to read more ...

Friday
Feb172012

The Dusty Show [Schau] with Clay Pigeon

[From Paul T]

Click the radio to hear the latest from the beyond-awesome Dusty Show with Clay Pigeon, or visit their WFMU channel to listen to the previous OWS-centric DSw/CP programs, HERE.

Thursday
Feb162012

Occupy the SEC

Check out Paul Talbot's photos from the SEC march in NYC in the OwA Photo Section.

Thursday
Feb162012

OWSJ: No es lo Que Dicen

By Jason Flores-Williams for the Occupy Wall Street Journal

[LINK]

[EXCERPT]:

When you see prison movies or documentaries about prison, it’s all about the visits. Wives coming on Thursday, girlfriends coming Friday, kids coming on Saturday. But prison is really about distances and disconnection. It’s loneliness and estrangement. One person’s life is frozen while the other person’s life has movement. This creates fractures between people. The inmate is sitting in a cage thinking that everyone’s forgotten him, while the other is trying to survive in the ruins often left by the inmate.

Prison takes a terrible situation and makes it exponentially worse. Rather than healing or rehabilitating people, it deepens every wound, rips open every scab and spreads infection in every possible direction. Prison mutilates families. It takes whatever might have been once healthy, good or at least salvageable, and leaves it twisted and damaged beyond repair.

That the Christian family values people are the ones most in favor of the drug war, incarceration and severe punishment is one of the sickest and most grotesque cancers on our society. Nothing reveals the lie that is the Right in America more than the fact that these self-proclaimed lovers of liberty and personal freedoms are the ones most responsible for the draconian laws that have ripped families apart for generations. It is my fervent belief that the drug war—which has damaged millions of children and families for more than forty years across five continents—would have been addressed more pragmatically and sensibly if not for a pocket of right wing Christians in North America who have used it as a vehicle to express the blackness of their ugly and vindictive hearts.