Social Saturday - Leigh Claire La Berge and Caroline Woolard / Marx for Cats
Caroline Woolard is Assistant Professor of Sculpture at the University of Hartford, the inaugural Fellow at Moore College of Art and Design & Leigh Claire La Berge is Associate Professor of English at Borough of Manhattan Community College.
Social Saturday - Hovey Brock / CEC Artslink / David Brooks / Mildred's Lane
Hovey Brock presents, “Mildred’s Lane, an Art Institute of Social Engagement,” examining where Mildred’s Lane fits in the “social turn,” as Claire Bishop put it, of contemporary art.
Social Saturday with Nina Burleigh
Nina Burleigh, whose most recent book critiqued the commodified Trump woman, incorporates some of that work and newer research for The Fascinating Fascist Wife: A Taxonomy.
SOCIAL Saturday - A Delaware River Anthology
The Alpine Rooster presents: A Delaware River Anthology
Social Saturday with James Voorhies
James Voorhies is a curator and art historian of modern and contemporary art. He is Chair of the Graduate Program in Curatorial Practice and Professor of Fine Arts at California College of the Arts in San Francisco. Request an invitation
Social Saturday - ORDER of the THIRD BIRD
D.Graham Burnett, Alison Burstein, Jeff Dolven, Jac Mullen, Leonard Nalencz, Sal Randolph, David Richardson present The Goodway Speeches: Evidences of a Birdish “Symposium,” circa 1977
Social Saturday / August 11, 2018
Cocktails at 5pm; performance at 6pm; dinner afterwards.
Mildred's Lane, Beach Lake, PA
Request an invitation at www.mildredslane.com
Who or what is the Order of the Third Bird? The associates of the research collective ESTAR(SER) have dedicated many years of dedicated inquiry to the resolution of this question. New sources, recently uncovered, shed light on key aspects of the Birdish tendency, and allow grounded speculation concerning the activities and sensibilities of these self-sequestering "attention artists.” //// Visit the ESTAR(SER) website; for the Goodway tearsheet, click here.
Digestion Choreographer: Andrea Lekberg, The Artist Baker
Social Saturday - Robert Williams
This Week: 45's Women, the Weird and the Eerie
Robert Williams: Alchemy V / The Rural Uncanny, High Strangeness, Panics and the Hummadruzz
Social Saturday / August 4, 2018 / 5pm
Mildred's Lane, Beach Lake, PA
Request an invitation at www.mildredslane.com
Over the past twenty years, artist and academic Robert Williams has worked on the The Alchemist Shack project (OM: Theatrum Chemicum Britannicum), exploring high strangeness at Mildred’s Lane. His current session examines the tropes of the rural uncanny within the land. It's he final phase of the Alchemist’s Shack, when the great work gets completed. (Visit also his web page.)
Digestion Choreographer: Athena Kokoronis.
Social Saturday - Zoe Beloff
This Week: 3D Ghosts
Zoe Beloff: "Shadow Land or Light from the Other Side"
Social Saturday / July 21, 2018 / 5pm
Mildred's Lane, Beach Lake, PA
Request an invitation at www.mildredslane.com
A rare opportunity to experience 16mm 3D cinema at Mildred's Lane: Zoe Beloff will screen her film “Shadow Land or Light from the Other Side” (2000), and will also discuss her more recent work with 'materialist ghosts.' “Shadow Land or Light from the Other Side” conjures up the the world of Elizabeth d’Espérance, a nineteenth-century materializing medium who could produce full body apparitions.The film investigates how one might think of a medium as a kind of "mental projector," and the phantoms as representations of her psychic reality. It traces this complex interaction between the birth of cinema in relation to both conjuring and mediumship. (Visit www.zoebeloff.com)
No Town Friday event this week. Stop by The Mildred Complex(ity) late afternoon to discover the refreshed Mildred's Lane Archive exhibit.
Social Saturday - Allison Smith
Allison Smith: History in the Making
Amy Yoes: Fire Project #7
Social Saturday / July 14, 2018 / 5pm
Mildred's Lane, Beach Lake, PA
Request an invitation at www.mildredslane.com
"Allison Smith is internationally known for her large-scale performances and installations that critically engage popular forms of historical reenactment and traditional craft, such as quilting, pottery, and wood-carving, in order to redo, restage, and re gure conceptions of history and collective memory. "—Jennifer Baker ////// Amy Yoes will burn her Fire Project #7 right after the Social Saturday dinner. Black-and-white photographs and a limited edition of drawing charcoal will be all that remains. (Visit www.allisonsmithstudio.com / www.amyyoes.com)
Digestion Choreographer: Liza Pittard.
Social Saturday - Pablo Helguera
Mildred's Lane SOCIAL Saturday, July 7, 2018
Pablo Helguera: Parable Soiree
REQUEST AN INVITATION
Pablo Helguera presents a soiree of various parables, inviting guests to create and present a parable of their own. The winning parable will receive a special price.
Pablo Helguera (Mexico City, 1971) is an artist based in New York. A longtime friend of Mildred's Lane, his work is often associated with Transpedagogy and Socially Engaged Art. He has exhibited widely and is the author of "Education For Socially Engaged Art (2011), Art Scenes (2012) and The Parable Conference (2014) amongst many others.
Amy Yoes Fire # 7 is postponed until Saturday, July 14th. Torrential rains this week have delayed the construction of the structure. However, the work in progress will be a special feature none-the-less!
Laura Silverman, founding Naturalist of The Outside Institute will be serving cocktails featuring local wild flavors of the season.
Digestion Choreography by Coco Fusco
When she is not cooking, she spends time making art, writing, and teaching. And she devotes a great deal of time to caring for her teenage son.
REQUEST AN INVITATION
www.mildredslane.com
SOCIAL Saturday - THE GEOPHAGIC WATER CLOSET
The Geophagic Water Closet
Caroline Earley, Brian Gillis, and Kate Walker
Meet Fellows;
Agustine Zegers _ Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA
Sarah Malekzadeh _ School of Visual Arts, NYC
Nicole Levaque _ Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA
Allie Linn _ MICA Curatorial; Maryland Institute College of Art, Baltimore, MD
Viola Bordon _ Washington University, Sam Fox School of Visual Arts, St. Louis, MO
Dana Robinson _ School of Visual Arts, NYC
Featuring DIGESTION CHOREOGRAPHY with Barbara DeVries and Leila Gordon
In this session, the artists have designed a permanent installation for the Main Building at Mildred's Lane. Earley, Gillis, and Walker lead the fellows through investigations around multiple perspectives of 'bathroom'; including cultural, psychological, and gendered. During this design phase, the water closet is created to function simultaneously as bodily space and archive of the site's identity; its social and cultural histories, related scientific data, physical and environmental attributes, and a record of the activities of Mildred's Lane.
Caroline Earley’s ceramic art practice draws on her interests in science, politics and cultural issues and incorporates hand, wheel, and industrial approaches. Her work explores the relationship between ceramic form and human bodies through the shifting interplay of form, appendage, and surface.
Earley was recently awarded the 2017 MoNA Luminaries Artist Award, Jeffry Mitchell Award for Sculpture from the Museum of Northwest Art. She was the Premiere Award winner of the 2016 Portage Ceramic Awards and the Grand Prize winner of the 2013 Idaho Triennial. She exhibits internationally and is represented by Milford Galleries, Dunedin and Whitespace Gallery in Auckland, New Zealand.
She received her Master of Fine Arts from the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee and is Professor of Art, Ceramics at Boise State University.
Brian Gillis examines sociocultural issues as consequent evidence of particular historic moments. His work uses a variety of production strategies and conceptual approaches. These often draw from specific sites and related institutions and range from the production of objects and editions of multiples to site-specific installations and actions.
Gillis is the recipient of distinctions including fellowships from the Illinois Arts Council, Oregon Arts Commission, MacDowell Colony, and a recent residency at the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art. Gillis has exhibited his work nationally and internationally at institutions including CUE Art Foundation, the Mint Museum, and the Milwaukee Art Museum, as well as the Cluj Museum of Art in Romania and Heilongjiang University in China.
Gillis received a Master of Fine Arts from the New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University. He is an Associate Professor of Art at the University of Oregon.
Kate Walker’s work encompasses hybrid painting objects and performance video projects, which intersect with our current cultural moment. Often collaborating with groups of students, or community members, these include choreographed performances or staged events that speak to specific contemporary social issues. Recent projects focus on visibility and agency of the queer body, and imaginary manifestations of current Utopian and dystopian urges.
Recent grants and awards include selection as a finalist for the 2018 New Zealand Painting and Printmaking Award, Idaho Commission on the Arts Grant, Alexa Rose Foundation Grant, and residencies at the Australia National University and Whitireia New Zealand. Walker has shown her work nationally and internationally including
Select 2, Garvey Simon, New York (2017), Out of Sight, Seattle, WA (2017) (collaborative work with Caroline Earley), ‘REUNION’- LGBTQA Symposium Show, Greenly Gallery, Bloomsburg University PA (2017), The Annual Wallace Art Awards, New Zealand (2014) and 28th Festival Les Instants Video, Marseilles, France (2015).
Walker received her MFA from the University of Arizona in 2005 and is an Associate Professor, at Boise State University.
Social Saturday - OPEN HOUSE
Wilding, Wasting, Workstyling
Donna Cleary, Daria Dorosh, Kristyna and Marek Milde, J. Morgan Puett, Shelley Spector, Amy Lou Stein
and featuring Wilding fellows;
Agustine Zegers (Virginia Commonwealth University)
DianeAntohe (Virginia Commonwealth University)
Amanda Heidel (SUNY NewPaltz)
Michelle Burdine (Ohio State University)
Cara Piazza (Independent)
Kim Tucker (Ontario, Canada Independent)
Gionna Forte (Independent)
Eric Kobal (Washington University Sam Fox School)
Jillian Hirsch (University of Tennesee, Knoxville)
Tien Wen-Hao (Independent)
Mildred's Lane is having an open house social this week. We invite you to visit the site and projects ongoing. Kristyna and Marek Milde are working on their permanent site project, Plantarium. Donna Cleary is drying botanicals in preparation for tincture making. Amy Lou Stein is advising on a mother indigo dye systems, starting with planting. Shelley Spector shares applied skills in the art of soap-making from recycled products. With collective outcomes, we will experiment with our printing press. J. Morgan Puett refines our daily workstyles as we go.
SOCIAL SATURDAY PRESENTATIONS:
Donna Cleary pulls from her experiences as a Registered Nurse, mother and Herbalist to embody Healer, Medicine Woman, Wise Woman. Donna’s interest lies in traditional healing practices. A descendant of Irish Herbalists, she has reclaimed that familial knowledge. Focusing on the rituals, ceremonies, and objects that accompany medicinal vehicles, her crocheted fertility sculptures reflect on the past by comingling the Feminine Mystique with Pagan Goddess Symbolism, the cycles of life, death, and regeneration. Graduating from the School of Visual Arts in 2014, her exhibitions include Freight and Volume, Petzel Gallery, A.I.R., Art in Odd Places, with reviews by Roberta Smith, Hyperallergic, Rhizome. She attended residencies at MASS MoCA, Cill Rialiag, chaNorth, Mildred's Lane and founder of 184 Project Space. www.donnacleary.net
Kristyna and Marek Milde are Brooklyn-based interdisciplinary artists duo, originally from Prague, Czech Republic. Their work takes a form of sculptures, installations, and participatory site interventions that investigate codes and mechanism of culture and modern lifestyle exploring its shifting relationship to the context of environment and nature. The Mildes were awarded residencies at ISCP, LMCC Process Space, Queens Museum Studio in the Park, EFA SHIFT, and A-Z West. They exhibited in the Queens Museum, MoMA Studio, Wave Hill, Smack Mellon, EFA, Abrons Art Center, Knockdown Center, HVCCA, Russell-Wright-Design Center, Temple Contemporary, DOX Center for Contemporary Art; Futura; Meet Factory. Their work has been featured in the New York Times, Brooklyn Rail, Flash Art, Hyperallergic, BTR Radio, and Czech National Television, among others. In 2007 they received MFAs from the Queens College, CUNY. www.mildeart.com
J. Morgan Puett is a trans-disciplinary, artist with accomplished work in installation art, clothing & furniture design, architecture, film, writing and more – rearranging multiple intersections by applying conceptual tools and research-based methods with interests in history, environment, design, craft, and collaboration. Morgan’s early work forged new territory by intervening into the fashion system; and since innovative in the realm of social engagement, founding Mildred's Lane. She continues to explore genres, citing that being is profoundly a social and political practice. Most recently, Puett received The John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Award and The Pollock- Krasner Foundation Award, both in 2016. She is the co-director of Mildred's Lane and The Mildred Complex(ity). www.mildredslane.com,www.jmorganpuett.com
Shelley Spector is a multidisciplinary artist based in Philadelphia. In her practice, she responds to available resources, often discarded, in combination with a changeable work environment. She produces specific bodies of work in search of universal themes. Currently, she is working on several long-term projects through which her work is intended to generate rather than deplete resources. Her work is part of many public and private collections including the Philadelphia Museum of Art, which presented her solo exhibition “Keep The Home Fires Burning” in 2015, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, and Human Rights Campaign in Washington, DC. Spector has received grants from the Independence Foundation Fellowship in the Arts, Pennsylvania Council on the Arts and Leeway Foundation. www.shelleyspector.com
Amy Lou Stein is a fiber artist who works with natural dyes, eco-printing, textiles, and crochet. She is the founder of Craftwork Somerville, a makerspace that since 2015 has aimed to build community through craft by curating workshops and classes for makers of all ages. Her passion for plants and botanicals grows out of a commitment to sustainably interact with nature and to find creative fulfillment for herself and other by repurposing and reusing. She has taught at Squam Art Workshops and Lakeside Fiber Retreat; and received a technical scholarship to develop her craft and assist teaching at Haystack. Amy Lou draws inspiration from fashion, music, film, and other media: as a principal of Ozma Designs in Los Angeles, she has worked as a costume designer and wardrobe consultant for Beck, Beth Orton, Mercury Rev, and the Eels. www.amyloustein.com
Daria Dorosh, Ph.D. is a co-founder of A.I.R. Gallery, NY, and adjunct faculty at SMARTlab, University College Dublin, Ireland. She was a keynote speaker at VSMM 2017, a conference on Virtual Systems and MultiMedia at UCD and has given many presentations including The Future is History: feminist legacies in contemporary art, at the Brooklyn Museum. Dorosh studied at the Fashion Institute of Technology and the Cooper Union School of Art and Architecture, NY. She taught fashion design at FIT and fine art at Parsons School of Design, NY. Her Fashion Lab in Process, LLC, is a research platform to identify new economic models for artists. www.dariadorosh.com
Social Saturday - An Evening With ESTAR(SER)
Social Saturday, August 5
An Evening With ESTAR(SER)
Social Saturday - Cancelled
Social Saturday with Petra Lange Berndt has been cancelled due to family illness.
Social Saturday - Pablo Helguera and friends
The Arlington Heights Suite
(A staged reading)
Social Saturday, July 22, 2017
The Arlington Heights Suite is a series of collages started by artist Pablo Helguera in 2007, using found text and textbook images. Now reaching more than a thousand works, this is one of his most extensive ongoing projects. “The Arlington Heights suite is like a very long lecture or dialogue”, Helguera writes, “similar to an inner monologue that one is having in a dream. Only recently l thought that a logical and eventual outcome of these series would be a play. These are the first steps toward piecing it together, with the hopes that this long configuration of images and words might yield new meanings.” Pablo Helguera will conduct a staged reading of “The Arlington Heights Suite” with performers Brian Linden and Candace Thompson, along with special guests from Mildred’s Lane.
Pablo Helguera (Mexico City, 1971) is a visual artist living in New York. His work involves performance, drawing, installation, theater and other literary strategies. He is often considered a pioneering figure in the field of socially engaged art. His work has been featured at many international biennials including Manifesta, Havana and Liverpool Biennial, and Performa. He has received the Guggenheim and Creative Capital Fellowships as well as the first International Award of Participatory Art in Bologna, Italy. His current projects include a two-person exhibition with artist Suzanne Lacy at the UC Santa Barbara Museum and the 8th Floor in NYC and a mid-career survey of his work at the Jumex Museum in Mexico City. He is the author of many books including Education for Socially Engaged Art (2011) and The Parable Conference (2014).
Candace Thompson is a performer and interdisciplinary media maker fascinated with the feedback loops generated by place, culture, identity, climate, economics, and daily human interaction. She makes video, audio, web projects, and ritualistic installations– both IRL and online—that examine and challenge the truths we purportedly hold to be self-evident. Perhaps they aren’t so self-evident after all. She has performed in Pablo Helguera's The Juvenal Players, On the Future of Art, and The Parable Conference.
Brian Linden is happy to visit Mildred’s Lane and collaborate with Pablo and Candace again after their work together in The Parable Conference at BAM, The Juvenal Players at The Kitchen, On the Future of Art at the Guggenheim Museum, and The Arlington Heights Suite at the Hunter Easter Harlem Gallery. He is an actor based in New York City and has appeared onstage there and in San Francisco and London and at Shakespeare festivals in Idaho, Pennsylvania, and Nebraska. He is a member of Burning Coal Theatre Company. He portrayed a fallen Trump Tower on Conan. He loves Victoria.
Digestion Choreography:
Rosemary Liss is a chef and artist from Baltimore, MD. She has a Bachelor's in Studio Art from Wheaton College in Massachusetts, but her work has grown increasingly comestible after two years working for a fermentation company and a summer interning at the Nordic Food Lab in Copenhagen. Rosemary spent the spent the last year looking for grounding in other places: making sauerkraut in a container city, cooking soft dinners and catching wild Alaskan salmon. Her practice unfolds each day as she continues to reevaluate what it means to be in her body. Sometimes this recalibration takes the form of deep breathing, a tea infusion, a painting or a meal. No matter the physical manifestation, the resulting experience provides a feeling of autonomy and the hope that self-care really does ripple outwards to alleviate the constant flux between chaos and stagnation.
Limited seating
Request your invitation here
5:00 Tour(by reservation only)
6:00 Swarming around spirits
6:30 Presentations
7:30 Digestion Choreography: Rosemary Liss
Pablo Helguera Collage;
Oh if I could have a whole century
Social Saturday - DAVID WOOD
Transcendental History:
Either Providence or Atoms!
“We review the past with the common sense, but we anticipate the future with transcendental senses,” Henry Thoreau wrote in 1851. The difference between knowledge gained by experience and knowledge gained by other means is at the heart of the transcendentalist worldview. This presentation of images and the spoken word is meant to function as a propadeutic, to bring the audience to a condition wherein a consideration of what a transcendental history might be can be attempted.
David Wood has been curator of the Concord Museum since 1985. He has curated some fifty exhibitions at the Concord Museum, including Early Spring, a collaboration with biologist Richard Primack on the subject of climate change. He is co-curator with Christine Nelson, Drue Heinz Curator of Literary and Historical Manuscripts, The Morgan Library & Museum, of the current exhibition This Ever New Self: Thoreau and his Journal.
David is the author of An Observant Eye; The Thoreau Collection at the Concord Museum, as well as numerous articles on the historic craft community of Concord, Massachusetts, including silversmith Samuel Bartlett (1752-1821) and cabinetmaker William Munroe (1778-1861).
Current:
This Ever New Self: Thoreau and His Journal
Museum exhibition presents Thoreau's journal as a monument to the examined life
Limited seating
Request your invitation here
5:00 Tour (by reservation only)
6:00 Swarming around spirits
6:30 Presentations
7:30 Digestion Choreography
See the ongoing projects produced in MILDRED ARCHAEOLOGY II Session (June 26- July 16) wrapping up this week. This project is a collaboration in discovering the hidden histories of the site we call Mildred’s Lane; and, the historic farmhouse that we now title The Mildred’s Lane Transhistorical Society and Museum; a small, vernacular 1830-1840s homestead with a 1790s hearth in the ground room, a previous structure.
During this session we uncovered histories connecting to the 1755 Connecticut Settlers; the Lillie family, amongst others, came to Cushetunk, on the Delaware River. This first settlement was within the limits of the 18th-century Connecticut Charter, west of the province of New York; (Northhampton County, now divided, and known as Wayne County, Pennsylvania.)
In MILDRED ARCHAEOLOGY II, (ongoing since 1998,) we have made progress digging up the 20th-century dump behind the museum. The everyday jewels of our work will be installed and on show through September at The Mildred Complex(ity) Project Space in Narrowsburg, NY.
Please make a contribution to help protect and SAVE The Mildred House at;
THE MILDRED’S LANE TRANSHISTORICAL SOCIETY AND MUSEUM FUND
Thank you to the people, institutions and their contributions to this unusual vernacular architecture project session at Mildred’s Lane: The Damascus Historical Society, The Wayne County Historical Society, University of Florida, Columbia University, School of Visual Arts New York City, University of Virginia McIntire Department of Art, Mark Dion, J. Morgan Puett, Zoe Crossland, Tracy Molis, Coco Fusco, Aurelio Fusco, Cecilia and Tom Coacci, Andrea Lekberg, Cheryl Edwards, Caroline Woolard, Leigh Claire La Berge, Megan O'Connell, Leander Johnson, Lesley Herzberg, David Wood, Hope Ginsburg, Josh Quarles, Deborah Davidovits, Kevin Mahoney, Duy Hoàng, Amanda Wheat, Zoe Frederick, Michelle K. Rogers, Will Staub, and Sandy Williams and many others.
Calendar
Upcoming Session: TAXIDERMY, July 16 - July 29
TOWN Friday, July 21, 6-8pm; Joanna Ebenstein and company
Social Saturday, July 22; Pablo Helguera and company
Town Friday, July 27, Robert Marbury
Social Saturday - Caroline Woolard and Leigh Claire Le Berge
Caroline Woolard
Leigh Claire La Berge
Limited seating
Request an invitation here
Capitoline Wolves (2016-2018)
Imperial Forms and the Afterlife of Empire
Social Saturday, July 8, 2017
Caroline Woolard is an artist and organizer whose interdisciplinary work facilitates social imagination at the intersection of art, urbanism, and political economy. After co-founding and co-directing resource sharing networks OurGoods.organd TradeSchool.coop from 2008-2014, Woolard is now focused on her work with BFAMFAPhD.com to raise awareness about the impact of rent, debt, and precarity on culture and on the Study Center for Group Work for collaborative methods developed by artists. Recent group exhibitions include:Crossing Brooklyn, The Brooklyn Museum, New York, NY; Maker Biennial, The Museum of Art and Design, New York, NY; and Artist as Social Agent, Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH. Woolard’s work will be featured in Art21’s New York Close Up documentary series over the next three years.
More info: http://carolinewoolard.com
Leigh Claire La Berge professes at the intersection of arts, literature, visual culture and political economy. She is currently Assistant Professor of English in the Department of English at BMCC CUNY. Her book Scandals and Abstraction: Financial Fiction of the Long 1980s was recently published by Oxford University Press. Read Michelle Chihara's wonderful essay "What We Talk About When We Talk About Finance" in the Los Angeles Review of Books, which not only reviews the book, but asks what the relationship between the humanities and finance should be. Her co-edited volume Reading Capitalist Realism (Iowa, 2014) was released last year in the New American Canon series. In 2012, La Berge co-curated an exhibition on art and debt, "To Have and To Owe" with Laurel Ptak at the Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts in NYC. Her new book on labor and social practice art, Wages Against Artwork: The Social Practice of Decommodification is under contract with Duke University Press.
More info: https://leighclaire-laberge.squarespace.com/
Social Saturday - COCO FUSCO Revolution Declassified
Revolution Declassified
Social Saturday, June 24, 2017
Coco Fusco is an interdisciplinary artist and the Andrew Banks Endowed Professor of Art at the University of Florida. She is a recipient of a 2016 Greenfield Prize, a 2014 Cintas Fellowship, a 2013 Guggenheim Fellowship, a 2013 Absolut Art Writing Award, a 2013 Fulbright Fellowship, a 2012 US Artists Fellowship and a 2003 Herb Alpert Award in the Arts. Fusco's performances and videos have been presented in the 56th Venice Biennale, Frieze Special Projects, two Whitney Biennials (2008 and 1993), BAM’s Next Wave Festival, and The Liverpool Biennial. Her works have also been shown at the The Museum of Modern Art, The Walker Art Center and KW Institute of Contemporary Art. She is represented by Alexander Gray Associates in New York.
Fusco is the author of English is Broken Here: Notes on Cultural Fusion in the Americas (1995); The Bodies that Were Not Ours and Other Writings (2001), and A Field Guide for Female Interrogators (2008). She is also the editor of Corpus Delecti: Performance Art of the Americas (1999) and Only Skin Deep: Changing Visions of the American Self (2003). Her latest book Dangerous Moves: Performance and Politics in Cubawas issued in English by Tate Publications in 2015 and in Spanish by Turner Libros.
Limited seating
Request an invitation here
Social Saturday - Mark Thomann/wHY Studio
City is Nature /
wHY Grounds Recent Works.
Social Saturday, June 24, 2017
Mark Thomann is the director of wHY grounds, an imaginative landscape and urban design studio that collaborates with architects, urban planners, and artists worldwide to cultivate and program future ecologies and open space. The goal is to connect people and lifestyles to a vision of healthy and resilient cities and environments through the seamless integration of building, landscape and urban environments. The workshop enables art, function, nature and structure to beautifully coexist.
5:00 Tour (by reservation only)
6:00 Cocktails
6:30 Lecture
7:30 Digestion Choreography
Also, see the NEW PROJECT at MILDRED’S LANE
SpringHouseIceHouse Session, June 12-25, is wrapping up this week of phase one; a collaboration to design-and-build a small, vernacular SpringHouseIceHouse featuring solar energy, a spring-fed well, and local and site-sourced building material. This project will harness the attributes of sun, water, and earth; intentionally connecting permaculture principles to a longstanding need for sustainable and efficient food storage. We have begun the foundations of this creative exercise in adaptive reuse that conflates the historical vernacular, off-the-shelf technologies and emergent, low-tech methodologies.
Please come meet the team and see the beginnings of this unusual vernacular architecture project at Mildred’s Lane.
Special thanks to Paul Bartow, Cameron Klavsen, Stan Pipkin, Alex Schecter, Gina Siepel, with fellows Elizabeth Pittard, Michelle Kelly Rogers, Shelley Spector, Will Staub, Jeff Tan, Sandy Williams, School of Visual Arts, New York City and University of Virginia McIntire Department of Art.
Limited seating
Request an Invitation
Social Saturday - Elaine Giguere at the Narrowsburg Union
Saturday, June 17
Elaine Giguere at the Narrowsburg Union
Social Saturday - JAMES PROSEK
JAMES PROSEK
Names and Nature, Word and World
Limited seating
Read James Prosek’s article in the New York Times.
Social Saturday, June 10, 2017
James Prosek will talk about how he uses taxidermy in his art to engage ideas about hybridity, mythology and the general friction between the real and imagined. One of Prosek's research interests involves how and why we name and order nature; how we make sense of nature through language – what changes in the mind when we join words to the world. Collecting specimens, preserving them, (i.e. through killing an organism, preparing the tissue in alcohol and stuffing the skin with cotton, as in the case of birds,) is the first step in naming a creature. According to many codes of zoological nomenclature, you must still collect an individual for it to be named a new species.
5:00 Tour (by reservation only)
6:00 Cocktails by Laura Silverman
6:30 Lecture by James Prosek
7:30 Digestion Choreography with Athena Kokoronis
9:00 Fire Project #6 by Amy Yoes and Company
Music throughout the evening by Stovetop
With Jason Merrill, Vibes, Nick Desouza, and Gabby Borges
Limited seating
Request your invitation here
James Prosek is showing his work at
The Mildred Complex(ity)
37b Main Street, Narrowsburg, NY,
May 27 through July 2, 2017
Summer Hours: Thursday through Sunday, 12:00 – 6:00
There will be a reception for the Artist, free and open to the public on
Friday, June 9th, 6:00-8:00
James Prosek is an artist, writer and naturalist who has exhibited his work at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Addison Gallery of American Art, the Smithsonian American Art Museum and the North Carolina Museum of Art among others. He is the author of eleven books including Eels, which was a New York Times Book Review editor’s choice. Prosek has written for the New York Times and National Geographic among other publications and is a co-founder of the conservation group World Trout with Patagonia clothing company. His documentary on the 17th-century angler Izaak Walton won a Peabody Award. He is working on a book with Bloomsbury Publishers about how and why we name and order nature.
Contributing Creative Practitioner Bios
Athena Kokoronis, a long- time involvement at Mildred's Lane, is an artist who incorporates food, cloth, dance and fungi into her collaborative art practice. Her current work, Domestic Performance Agency takes the simultaneous form of an artist-run space, a persona, and an ongoing performance. The Domestic Performance Agency is a hub in Brooklyn; A home-economics hub that looks to motherhood and artisthood in pursuit to create economy based on domestic labor, love, desire, and performance. www.domesticperformanceagency.com
Laura Silverman is a writer, cook, naturalist, forager and wildcrafter who lives in Sullivan County, NY. She believes that fun with flora and fauna is transformative. On her blog, Glutton for Life, and as a contributor to Edible magazine, The River Reporter and WJFF Radio Catskill, she encourages people to experience the healing powers of nature by venturing into the wild and eating mindfully from farm, forest and field.
Amy Yoes and Company: Fire Project #6
The Fire Projects are structures built in the landscape, architectural follies constructed out of scavenged materials. Amy Yoes choreographs their burning by calibrating the burn rates of the wood, cardboard, and paper. These are ephemeral pieces, with a very condensed lifespan; yet the cycle is carried forward, through the drawing charcoal collected from the smoldering ruins.
Amy Yoes was born in 1959 and grew up in Houston, Texas. She has lived in Chicago, San Francisco and, since 1998, in New York. She works in a multi-faceted way, alternately employing installation, photography, video, painting, and sculpture. An interest in decorative language and architectural space permeates all of her work. She responds to formal topologies of ornament and style that have reverberated through time, informing our mutually constructed visual and cultural memory.