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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)

Thursday
Nov172011

#Occupytheory at Gallatin

The Gallatin Galleries is pleased to announce:
#Occupytheory: A participatory panel event and discussion
...in conjunction with the exhibit This is what democracy looks like

1 Washington Pl, New York, NY 10009 (Broadway and Washington Pl) 
Friday, November 18. 7:30pm-10:30pm


 

Thursday
Nov172011

Occupy Discussion at 3rd Ward

Graphic by Occupy Design

Saturday November 19th, 2011

Imagining a Future // A Discussion about Occupy Wall Street

5:30 pm - 7:30 pm
195 Morgan Avenue, Free

People from across the country and globe are joining the creative community around the Occupy Wall Street Movement, bringing together performers, poets, designers, builders, filmmakers, photographers, and musicians both online and in physical space.

Join us for an evening of discussion and informal presentations from groups helping shape these creative explorations: Occupy Cinema, Occupy Design, the OWS Screenprinting Lab, and more. Hear about their experiences from the field, how they’ve organized their art and performance actions, and discuss the accomplishments and challenges that have emerged within the arts at OWS.

These emergent creative networks are working through new processes to collaborate, critique, and creatively imagine our political and economic future. This event is for anyone would like to ask questions, offer critiques, learn more, or get involved with the creative communities that have mobilized around Occupy Wall Street.

RSVP at www.3rdward.com/rsvp

For more information about the creative responses to OWS, visit http://www.occupennial.org/





Wednesday
Nov162011

March for Black Friday

https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&ik=65725a2d17&view=att&th=133af08f17bf275c&attid=0.1&disp=inline&zw

Hello OWS A&C,

This is my first time writing your group. I joined because I didn't know how else to reach you all to see if you'd be able to help. The people from Occupy 477 Harlem are planning a March for Black Friday. I realize it may be short notice to ask for your help, but we really do need it if we stand a chance making our vision happen.

We are planning a silent march where we would also blindfold our marchers. We'd have them all hold on to ropes that will be held by Lady Justice. The other March facilitators would also hopefully be dressed as Lady Justices. The reason for this is that the march's message is around Slavery and Reparations. We want a Lady Justice that can see to be leading the blind through our march which will also be a teach-in. We will be making stops in places that are meaningful towards how slavery was facilitated and became a source of income in NYC. We will leave from Liberty, our first stop will be at Stuyvesant HS, named after Mayor Stuyvesant who was the mayor to open NYC ports to slavery making it the second largest next to North Carolina. The second would be at Foley Sq, which is also part of the African Burial ground. The third would be at Seaport which was the port where slaves came into NYC. The fourth will be the NYSE where slaves were traded. We will end at Liberty.

We were actually inspired by the beautiful Lady Justice that was coming to OWS a few weeks back. Idk if there's any way to contact her and see if she'd be interested in participating.

If there is any way this group can help make our vision come to life we would greatly appreciate it. Any questions are welcome.

Much Love to all of you,
Chanel

chanel7139@gmail.com



Wednesday
Nov162011

Barricade the Barricade, or Occupy Red Cube

To all performers, artists, merry-makers, interested parties, and any seeking justice for the 99%…

Start your day bright and early to greet the Wall Streeters on their way to work with a dose of rebellious performance

Any performers willing to support this action would be greatly appreciated.

Thursday, November 17
8:00am meet up at Red Cube
8:30am Performance

Barricade the Barricade, or Occupy Red Cube
Help Us Free Public Art

In support of Occupy Wall Street and the Day of Global Action, please join us as we build a living sculpture to surround the Red Cube at Broadway and Liberty, across from Liberty Square. By linking our bodies in the creation of our own public art form, we can render useless the barricades that tarnish the art work displayed on our city streets. Isamu Noguchi, the sculptor of Red Cube, is quoted as saying, “the sculptor is not merely a decorator of buildings but a serious collaborator with the architect in the creation of significant space and of significant shapes which define this space.” (blueofsky.com). Let’s form a living sculpture around the entire Cube and show the world how powerful our bodies can be in defining our space! We will occupy public art and take back what is intentioned for public access! The group, intertwined in various and intricate ways, will remain still and strong throughout the 30 minute performance. Only when participants hear the sound of a helicopter (sure to be there) will they shift their poses to face the Cube. When participants hear the sound of a siren, they will shift to face away from the Cube. These interactions with environment, along with our intertwined bodies, remind us how interconnected we really are.

Any and all are welcome to join our living sculpture. No prior experience necessary.
Wear read in solidarity with the Cube.

There will be a sign detailing 5 simple rules for this action, so any passersby may join:

  1. Observe the human barricade/sculpture.
  2. Join human sculpture/barricade whenever a traffic light turns green. Link to someone else and find a comfortable pose you can sustain. Please respect self and others when connecting to other bodies.
  3. When you hear a helicopter, shift your pose to face inward toward the Cube.
  4. When you hear a siren, shift your pose to face outward away from the Cube.
  5. Come and go as you please, when a traffic light turns green.
 

We also welcome musicians, puppeters, and any others who wish to share their talents in this inspiring action. Come support the sculpture with your creativity!!

See you there!!

Peace together,

Amy



Wednesday
Nov162011

See more of Sharon Rosenzweig's investigative Occupy cartoons in our Political Cartoon Section.

Wednesday
Nov162011

11-15

Here is an image of a drawing I did today from a Daily News photo taken at last night's raid.  (Photographer: John Taggert). - Kathleen McDermott

Tuesday
Nov152011

NYCGA ARTS & CULTURE IN ACTION

THIS IS WHAT A 1% POLICE STATE LOOKS LIKE!

See more images HERE at the Facing Change blog.

Tuesday
Nov152011

WHAT DO WE DO NOW?

By Occupennial Co-organizer Paul McLean

Since late September, Occupennial has provided artists with the opportunity to share art inspired by the occupation of Zuccotti Park in the financial district of lower Manhattan, and satellite occupations that have sprung up around the country and the world. Occupennial has opened a virtual space in which documentation of #OWS and other occupations can be catalogued and revisited. We have created areas for memorializing the artist actions that have helped shape and empower #OWS, and we have built the architecture for occupant artist community and production, including listings, proposal throughputs, resource exchanges and a growing network of organizations and venues dedicated to supporting 99% expression in all its peaceful, artist forms. Occupennial has also initiated a program of actualization for occupation-generated artist projects, starting with our successful collaboration with Printed Matter in Chelsea, with other amazing ventures currently in process.

The police action and clearance of Liberty Square in the early morning hours of November 15 remind us of the tremendous importance of establishing and maintaining an archive of the Occupy art that is inspiring the 99% to stand up and displace the 1% choke-hold on our commonwealth, and democracy. The urgency of your contributing to our database, chronicling this historic moment couldn't be greater. It would be a tragic cultural loss to let the memory of #OccupyWallStreet, and the hundreds of occupations that have occurred in communities of every description, spanning the globe, to fade away. Therefore, we at Occupennial once more ask you to please send us your photos, videos, poems, songs, paintings, drawings, cartoons, ideas, texts and art-action documentation, so we can continue to grow a communal archive for the occupation.

Contact us:
Use the CONTACT button at the top of the page or send your content via email to occupennial@gmail.com

Send us your Occupy art, etc., and occupation documentation:
Use the CONTACT button at the top of the page or send your content via email to occupennial@gmail.com; or use the Drop Box in the sidebar.

Sweeping away the encampment at Liberty Square will not stop the Occupation. It's too late for that, now. ...But it's up to us, the 99%, to insist on our own survival as a movement, and as free people. To ensure our cause doesn't disappear we must commit to preserve the shared memory of what we've done individually and together, what we've expressed, to continue our actions in support of #OWS and all the occupations, and to create new expressions of 99% solidarity every day, wherever we are.

With love and appreciation,
Paul

Tuesday
Nov152011

REMEMBER LIBERTY!!

Painting by Katherine Gressel

Tuesday
Nov152011

ATTN: 100,000 NYC ARTISTS!!

Monday
Nov142011

OccupyPortraits.blogspot.com

SHARE YOUR OCCUPATION ART

Are you an artist? Can you draw? Our project is to support the Occupy Wall Street movement by making protraits of the occupants, documenting the range of participants and recording their messages, using our special skills as artists.

The Occupy movement is now global. We ope to collect images from artists everywhere.

Send us your art from your Occupation. Please send 72 dpi jpegs or a link to your web album to sbrzweig@gmail.com.


This is a quick sketch of a mother and son.  He had been in the navy for 10 years, he's now in the reserves.  He said, "People in the military are just like everyone else-- we know the difference between right and wrong."  His mom looked on as passerbys eagerly engaged him in conversation: "I was a single mom," she said.  I must have raised him right."

OccupyWall Street, Oct. 15. Andrea Kantrowitz.



Monday
Nov142011

OCCUPIED BLUESTOCKINGS: Reminder!

Painting by Alex Powers

From Janelle of Bluestockings:

Hi Everyone,
Some of you may remember the call for art I posted back on the A&C google group a few weeks ago.  Many of you in A&C, and in other OWS working groups responded with some absolutely amazing contributions, and I just want to invite all of you to the opening tomorrow night. Organizing this show was such an awesome experience! I collaborated with so many kick-ass artists, performers, and activists.  I hope you all can come to BLUESTOCKINGS tonight at 7pm to celebrate some of the amazing artwork coming out of the Occupy Movement.
-Janelle

MORE INFO HERE.

Monday
Nov142011

By Mark Hurwitt

Saturday
Nov122011

Curb Exchange

Please join us on Sunday, November 13 for Curb Exchange, a self-guided audio- and print walking tour of Wall Street that explores the history of the neighborhood and the financial system from the perspective of the people. Come and learn about the historic struggles that have led to the rise of the Occupy Wall Street movement!

We are proud to be endorsed by the Arts & Culture NYC General Assembly Working Group. We encourage the 99% — including all occupiers, supporters, activists, volunteers, and citizens — to take the Curb Exchange tour, which explores the history of the neighborhood and the global financial system it has come to symbolize from the perspective of the people.

We'll be meeting up at newsstand outside of 40 Wall Street on Sunday, November 13 at 2 pm. Download the audio tour beforehand at www.curbexchange.org.

Start Curb Exchange tour at newsstand outside of 40 Wall Street

Hope to see you there!

Friday
Nov112011

SOUNDS FROM OCCUPY LA

[FROM GX JUPITTER-LARSEN]

Noise I've recorded from OLA

FYI (please feel free to share):

http://jupitter-larsen.com/noise/occla.09.11.2011.mp3

http://jupitter-larsen.com/noise/occla.07.10.11.mp3

http://jupitter-larsen.com/noise/occla2011.mp3

I've been posting these on different blogs of mine...

Such as:

http://gx-communique.blogspot.com/search/label/Occupy%20LA

Keep up the great work...

ALL THE BEST

GX

Friday
Nov112011

OCCUPIED BLUESTOCKINGS

OCCUPIED:  AN OCCUPY MOVEMENT GROUP SHOW
EXHIBITION: NOVEMBER 14TH THROUGH DECEMBER 8TH
OPENING RECEPTION: MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14TH, 7-10PM

OCCUPIED, is an art show and events series inspired by the evolution of the Occupy Wall Street Movement, hosted by BLUESTOCKINGS.  Over 30 artists from around the world contributed posters, prints, signs, photographs, drawings/works on paper, and multimedia installations.  The show opens Monday NOV 14th and runs through DEC 8th, 2011.  The show and events series is intended as a "cultural benefit" for OWS Arts&Culture and BLUESTOCKINGS. It will be a vehicle through which to engage in dialogue and contemplation of the OWS movement thus far.

Come out to BLUESTOCKINGS this MON NOV 14th @ 7PM to celebrate the opening night of OCCUPIED featuring artwork inspired by, and from artists working with the Occupy Wall Street Movement. Tonight’s program also includes performance, music, food, drink and discussion. The exhibition will be up through Thursday, December 8th.



OCCUPIED: AN OCCUPY MOVEMENT GROUP SHOW runs November 14th thru December 8th at Bluestockings 172 Allen St, NYC, NY (1 blk south of Houston St @ Stanton, 2nd Ave stop on the F train).  The opening party is Monday November 14th, 7 to 10pm, is free and open to the public.  For more information contact Bluestockings at 212-777-6028 or art@bluestockings.com. www.bluestockings.com, http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=154380834660987, http://www.facebook.com/bluestockingsnyc




BLUESTOCKINGS is a volunteer powered and collectively owned radical bookstore, fair trade cafe, and activist center in the Lower East Side of Manhattan. Through words, art, food, activism, education, and community, we strive to create a space that welcomes and empowers all people. We actively support movements that challenge hierarchy and all systems of oppression, including but not limited to patriarchy, heterosexism, the gender binary, white supremacy and classism, within society as well as our own movements. We seek to make our space and resources available to such movements for meetings, events, and research. Additionally, we offer educational programming that promotes centered, strategic, and visionary thinking, towards the realization of a society that is infinitely creative, truly democratic, equitable, ecological, and free.

Friday
Nov112011

The Blanket

I hear change.
Pressing my ear to the earth and its stirring bones,
baby vibrations kiss my skull,
I close my eyes and smile;
I detect approaching footfalls.
In conversations, the sketchy sparks of electrified embryos,
these restless hatchlings of hybrid hopes
spring from incubation, fall from lips and
onto my shirt, shoes and into the dirt we walk on.
They are not lost shards of fragmented dreams.
I choose to believe they are seeds.

I hear change.
Surrounds me: a lyric of tongue spoken with hands and feet,
a melody of ideas, philosophy, theology
married to passion in search of a savior
fashions a harmony, this whispered anthem
scratches my ear.
It is not an elegant sound, these staccato pinging
sutures of suffering sewn into faces
of mommies and daddies staring at babies
unconscious to thundering ticks of time
countdown seconds to roll call;
masses lined up for closeted stations in Purgatorio Nuevo.
And notes of simpatico silence as cellos
mourning the passing of faith in the night,
struggle to harmonize poorly with courage,
that blood of the ages which oils fear and flight;
I hear it.

I sense change.
I cannot feel it. The wind won’t reveal it. I’m numb to its presence.
I find no evidence trail on my tongue,
nor DNA refugees hiding in fingertips.
These trained eyes strain to identify
its invisible silhouette walking among us, and fail.
Yet, it is coming.
I know this because it is cold in here.
I should be shivering but I am not.
An other-earthly cloak has fallen,
cast around myself, its warmth just barely
coats me with a holy intuition.
Wrapped and huddled on front porch step,
eyes fixed upon that dark horizon
expectation welds me to this patient space
where, as prodigal children returning to rescue,
christening streaks of breaking light
will herald our transformation.

2011 Sojourner109

Friday
Nov112011

From the Brooklyn Rail

99% - The Occupy Wall Street Collaborative Film
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15 AT 7:30 PM
UNION DOCS // 322 UNION AVE. BK, NY
FREE // DONATIONS TOWARD FILM ACCEPTED

Please join the Brooklyn Rail and UnionDocs for a collaborative (yet structured) event about the feature documentary in-progress: 99% - The Occupy Wall Street Collaborative Film.  The event will consist of a screening of material followed by a moderated Q&A with both NYC-based participating filmmakers and contributors across the U.S. via Skype about the opportunities and challenges in making a collaborative documentary about a current event.  It will then be opened to questions from the audience followed by an informal reception. Space is limited so please arrive promptly.

The Rail's Williams Cole will introduce and the Q&A will be moderated by Christopher Campbell, film critic for the Documentary Channel, IndieWIRE, and Movies.com, where he writes the bi-weekly Doc Talk column.

99% - The Occupy Wall Street Collaborative Film is a feature documentary film spearheaded by over 50 independent filmmakers, photographers, and videographers across the country. The end product will be a compelling, cinematic, resonant, and honest portrait of the Occupy Wall Street movement. Founded by NYC filmmakers Audrey Ewell and Aaron Aites, the project currently counts among its collaborative many award-winning documentary producers, directors, musicians, and editors (as well as PR people and distributors) including Michael Galinsky and Suki Hawley (Battle for Brooklyn, Horns and Halos), Ava DuVernay (distributor of independent black films via AFFRM, director/producer I Will Follow), Aaron Yanes as supervising editor (a frequent Barry Levinson editor, he's also edited many award-winning features and documentaries, from Sundance Grand Jury Prize winner Padre Nuestro to James Toback's Cannes prize-winning Tyson), Tyler Brodie (Another Earth, Terri), Bob Ray (Total Badass), and many more.

SPACE IS LIMITED. PLEASE ARRIVE PROMPTLY.

Wednesday
Nov092011

UPDATE: Occupy Printed Matter 

[Click the image to read the excellent Hyperallergic review of Occupy Printed Matter by Liza Eliano. Phase 2 of the evolving installation of Occupant art at Printed Matter will begin on Saturday. Contact Adrian Rocchio (see Printed Matter Storefront in the Active Project Proposals on the left sidebar for contact info] to find out more. One note from Max Schumann of PM: Please keep your submissions/dimensions @12-14" in any direction. Some wiggle room on that, but check out the image above. Big paintings/prints/signs/sculptures will occupy the space we're all trying to share. A screen-printing event is in the works for Saturday, and we'll pass on more details as they emerge. What a great first Occupennial project! Kudos to all!]

Adrian's Update:

The Printed Matter window installation is first and foremost a way to help spread the #occupywallstreet message to the doorway of the Gallery district. But it also provides #OWS artists a way to both learn from and engage in tribute to their art activist forebears.

Paul from Occupennial had visited Printed Matter for their retrospective of Colab. He announced at an Arts & Culture meeting that members of Printed Matter were offering their storefront and window for an #occupywallstreet art installation. He also reminded us that artists from various reputable art groups were themselves occupying Liberty Plaza, including those from Colab. I volunteered to take lead in organizing the window installation and two battle-scarred members of our working group volunteered to help. Two newer members of Arts & Culture also offered their time.

I first did research on the organizations involved. Since I had visited Printed Matter before I knew a little of their work. However being a spoiled New Yorker I figured it was one of many types of specialty book stores. Had I been more productive in my artistry or been active in researching artists’ publications I would have discovered soon enough that Printed Matter was not only one of a kind but a valuable organization. My research also brought me knowledge of the Colab collective. It was my immediate impression that if the OWS Arts & Culture working group didn’t reflect the principles of agency, inclusiveness, collaboration, and empowerment, indicative of the Colab collective, then I had never understood the meaning of kindred spirits. For not only did Colab produce engaging art they developed a way to do it outside bureaucracies. In point of fact, one of Colab’s resolute and successful endeavors was to attain public grants and funding without the necessity of middlemen and administrators.

On curating I found these three steps to be helpful. The first is to do research on the organization, venue, and participating artists or organizations. Second, is to have necessary documents prepared in advance. And the third, to solicit artwork from artists while informing them of their rights. All these things I learned while in the process of doing the installation. After making pre-production list of things that needed to be done, I wrote a quick summary of the organization to inform potential contributors about Printed Matter, their offer to us, and our goals.

I set up a new thread in the New York City General Assembly / Arts & Culture forum informing artists of the space and history of Private Matter and about Colab. I then emailed guild co-organizers the same information as that in the forum, with the inclusion of contact information, and asked them for assistance in providing artwork. These two steps were done immediately for the fact that the Printed Matter space was already available.

I planned on creating a list of artwork to be contributed so that my team could discuss how they would be displayed and to determine whether there would be theme or how we will rotate it. I also planned on creating an inventory and to make consignment "receipts" for contributors and secure transportation or a method of delivering work.
 
The first contributors to offer work were those who had been attending Arts & Culture meetings and who responded quickly to email requests. The first artists to contribute work included puppeteers, painters, and a performance artist. My first attempt at coordinating the pickup went well. I met two artists at Liberty Plaza and picked up handmade posters from Archives. That Saturday Imani Brown and I went to a donated Dumbo art studio to pick up puppets. We then met Johnny Sagan (a.k.a. Snowy Wilderness), Claudia Vargas, and Vance Dekker-Vargas at Printed Matter to set up the work. The installation was fun and after a few changes the composition was complete.

The wonderful Flowchart of the Declaration of the Occupation was designed by a woman who wishes to remain anonymous but who can be contacted at flowchartart@gmail.com. Noah Fischer contributed a Washington quarter mask. One of a collection of iconic masks used in his Summer of Change 2011 performance, “a series of numismatic ritual offerings to our nation’s bankers; those citizens worthy of prizes and honors; which we as artists are honored to bestow in public.” This pre-Occupy Wall Street performance was momentously aligned with the Occupy Wall Street’s message and continues to represent the cents-less tribute the masses pay to financial district deities who we must reason truly have our best interests at heart even if and especially when their mysterious ways devastate individuals and communities. The puppets were contributed by the Puppetry Guild of Arts & Culture. Artist ______ mixed media collage is titled “Eat the Rich” 2011.  Her son Artist _______'s work is titled “Thirst” 2011 and was made with acrylic spray paint on paper. Handmade signs, drawn on-site through the weeks of the occupation, were consigned from Archives of #OWS.

Everyone at Printed Matter has been helpful if at times busy with their own work. Max has been incredibly helpful and is always available when needed. We have already acquired work for this coming Saturday and hope to have performers, musicians, and a screen printing table setup outside. I’ve posted a new topic in nycga.net titled Occupy Chelsea in the hopes that this call at Chelsea’s threshold may the first of many exhibitions: “Fiery Occupy Chelsea rises, deep thunder rolls around its shore, burning with the fires of Orc.” (William Blake modification)
 

Best,
Adrian Rocchio

>

PRESS RELEASE FROM PRINTED MATTER

Printed Matter is pleased to announce a collaboration with Occupy Wall Street, co-ordinated by the OWS Occupennial and a team of occupant artists.  Through November 26th the Printed Matter storefront window will feature Occupy Printed Matter, a rotating installation of work created by artists participating in the #OccupyWallStreet arts and culture working group, the inaugural artist action from that committee.  The political, social and cultural impact of OWS and the broader Occupy movement has already been widely felt;  it is our hope that providing a modest outlet in Chelsea will serve both as an expression of solidarity with the movement and an opportunity to extend its reach into new communities.

The installation, which includes work of varying media from several dozen occupant artists, will change over the course of the month as new material is created in response to transpiring events. Work currently includes a large scale Flow Chart for the Declaration of the Occupation of NYC, a coin-shaped mask from the 2011 Summer of Change, a spray-painted poster calling for the Separation of Corporation and State, as well as cut-out demonstrators voicing the fundamental concerns of the movement.

Printed Matter will host a series of events on the remaining Saturdays in November, 12-5 PM, during which visitors are invited to make artwork reflecting their economic/political demands.  Drawings and writings will then be screenprinted by OWS onto cards and added to a bulletin board for display outside of Printed Matter.

The window installation coincides with Printed Matter's exhibition A Show about Colab (And Related Activities), on view through the end of November.  Active in the late-seventies through mid-eighties, Collaborative Projects, Inc. has a compelling relationship to OWS: Historically, Colab came together in the wake of the 1970's recession and on the eve of Reagan's ushering in the era of financial deregulations and social austerity, which continues to this day. Organizationally, like OWS, Colab was set up to be non-hierarchical and inclusive with open meetings and rotating officers.  Occupy Wall Street has invited former members of Colab to contribute to the installation, while some Colab alums have been active in OWS demonstrations and assemblies.