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Making More Room: CIVA Making Blog

November 4th, 2016
foodbank

The food bank warehouse where Liza worked, and Liza running a food drive at a local grocery store.

I recently interviewed the artist Liza Cucco for an October posting on CIVA’s “Making” blog.

We talked at length about making more room in our art practice for skepticism, accessibility, representation, change, rest, and dialogue, but it was a challenge to get that into a mere 1700 words.

For me, there was a strong connection between what I was hearing in our conversation and my experience at the recent Creative Time Summit in DC, Occupying the Future. There, artist Tania Bruguera announced that she will be running for President of Cuba. I witnessed the premiere of her announcement, and also observed presentations by Peter Svarzbein about his creative projects as an elected city councilman of El Paso, Pedro Reyes, Carrie Mae Weems, and, quite notably, Alicia Garza who is the co-creator of the Black Lives Matter movement, among others.

Ultimately, I hope that in sharing Liza’s words, readers might also be inspired to continue to push the limits of what art can “do” in their communities.

Here is the exclusive, full interview transcript from our Skype conversation on August 16, 2016:

MAKING MORE ROOM IN OUR ART

EXPAND POST

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Valerie’s Long March 6/10

May 7th, 2014

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Liu Danhua’s Thumbtacks

In this “chapter” of our current series on Chinese contemporary art by Zhang “Valerie” Fang, we can observe that one step in China’s Long March is an exploratory one. The attached article is a case study of artist working sculpturally who both mimic mundane materials, and create with materials most immediately found around them.

Please enjoy this sixth of Valerie’s ten, “China’s Long March: Ten essays on Chinese contemporary art,” originally published in a Spanish lifestyle magazine, and shared with us by the permission of the author.

 

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Valerie’s Long March 3/10

April 10th, 2014

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We are in the third week of our series on the development of Chinese contemporary art. We continue with another installment by Zhang “Valerie” Fang. In this editorial, she recalls a saying that illustrates some of the tensions of Chinese re-emergence into contemporary society… It references innovations which originated in China, but that the Chinese did not fully benefit from.

“Westerners used gun powder in guns while the Chinese used it to make fireworks. Westerners used the compass for navigation while the Chinese used it to determine the location of new houses or tombs. Westerners used printing and paper to publish new books on science while the Chinese used them for printing exams.”

Here (linked) is the third of Valerie’s ten, “China’s Long March: Ten essays on Chinese contemporary art,” with the English and Spanish translation side by side.

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Valerie’s Long March 2/10

April 2nd, 2014

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Han BingWalking the Cabbage in Tiananmen Square 2, 2006

This is the second installment (in as many weeks) of Zhang “Valerie” Fang’s series on Chinese contemporary art. Valerie is an art critic and historian, based in Beijing. She has lectured in New York and Switzerland on the topic of Chinese contemporary art, and shares the story of China’s Long March with us in this thread of articles – originally commissioned by art.es, published with permission from the author on SftPwr.

“Artists like […] Han Bing […] risked violating national laws to stage performances in TAM, […]  directed at returning the site to the people for fun and freedom.”

Here (linked) is the second of Valerie’s ten, “China’s Long March: Ten essays on Chinese contemporary art,” with the English and Spanish translation side by side.

Please follow along, and look for the rest of Valerie’s writings on future Women Wednesdays!

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Valerie’s Long March 1/10

March 26th, 2014

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Zhang (Valerie) Fang presenting on the work of Wang Quingsong at NYCAMS in 2013

I first met Valerie at a studio visit in Cao Changdi village, Beijing. The tour of her husband’s studio was lead by curator and gallerist, James Elaine. Acting as Wang Quingsong’s translator and theoretical representative, she was articulate and expressive of his ideas as well as her own. I soon discovered how much her critical voice is truly valuable in the overall landscape of Chinese contemporary art.

In the following series of posts, Valerie shares with us a string of 10 articles that she has written on the contemporary artwork of China. Each was originally published in a Spanish magazine, and is published on our site with the author’s permission.

“I hope to present a holistic picture of the development of Chinese contemporary art from my own viewpoint, and I look forward to critical feedback from colleagues world-wide.” – Zhang Fang

Here (linked) is the first of the ten, “China’s Long March: Ten essays on Chinese contemporary art,” with the English and Spanish translation side by side.

Please follow along, and look for the rest of Valerie’s writings on future Women Wednesdays!

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Alternative Narratives of Place w/ Rebecca Locke

August 28th, 2013

Meanderings on interdisciplinary work, Goldsmiths, Magnum Photography, and creating alternative narratives of place with Artist and curator Rebecca Locke

May 30-Locke ArticleIf the mark of a life well lived is a perpetual sense of adventure, then Rebecca lives well. If the mark of a talented artist is a propelling force towards new projects, and interesting forums in which to present such work, then yet again, she fits the bill.

An enthusiasm towards life and its potential for renewal characterizes and informs both her life and her work.

British-born, having moved to New York in the days when Williamsburg wasn’t so … ”Williamsburg”, Locke played drums in a Puerto Rican country music band, chased taxis on roller skates through Times Square in the night’s middle, sang in Sufjan Steven’s Michigan Militia in its early days, and, of course, took part in the flamboyant New York night scene of the early 2000’s: Electroclash! When I met her at an exhibit she’d curated last year, what appeared to be a zany core of her warm but no-nonsense demeanor struck me as intriguing. She was back from London, she’d said, after several years away pursuing an MFA in Photography at Goldsmiths, was making her own work, and involved with, among other things, a collaborative workshop project with City to Sea (for which she is curator), Goldsmiths, University of London, and Magnum Photo’s Peter Marlow. We have since become friends.

Recently, on one of the first of those days last month in which the whimsy gusts hinted at summer, we sat under an umbrella at Bryant Park to talk life and art, and to consider some of Rebecca’s recent projects. Here are snippets from our conversation. EXPAND POST

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Liz tells you all you need to know about the ARMORY

March 7th, 2013

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Liz Magic Laser was selected for the 2013 Armory Artist Commission. As it turns out, the powers-that-be may be uncomfortable with her treatment of this “honor”. However, the work of the artist within any structure is to push against the inherent constraints, isn’t it? (Perhaps this is what makes the Capitalist structure for these commodities so fascinatingly ironic?)

She treats the project in such a way that frames the whole experience of the fair as a numbers campaign,  which is at once surprisingly refreshing in it’s honesty, as well as a bit disturbing. Her “products” contain transparent information about finances, and audience – which one can not help but read in tandem with the Centennial focus of the Armory Show on “America.” The use of this data may also evoke the history of artists working outside such structures who took it upon themselves to discover and publish similar information at Frieze, or the MET.

For a preview of her centerpiece video for the Armory Show, check out Liz Magic Laser’s trailer – produced by Various Small Fries. A longer version of the documentation is on view in a small gallery space with a one way mirror, bowls of snacks, framed prints of “stock” in the Armory, and the other products designed for the event.

(The Village Voice also reported on the commission.)

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Welcome!

January 21st, 2013

 

Thank you for visiting SftPwr!

We hope you will engage with our content by commenting on articles you find interesting, RT’ing the issues on Twitter, and sharing information on Facebook! Through all of these paths, we hope to increase the visibility of women’s work in the arts, keep each other apprised of social issues, and educated about our female forerunners.

Take a look around!

We are collecting interviews with women working in the Arts, and sharing some of our own stories as well. Engage with us on Twitter – particularly on #WW – Women Wednesdays, where we appreciate women in our network, and share the names of those that inspire us.

www.sftpwr.com is a cultural digest – amplifying women’s work in the arts + magnifying cultural issues.

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Young Curatorial Assistant: Alli Peller

November 25th, 2012

Her name may not appear on the press release, but Allison Peller has been critical to the organization of the New.New York exhibit (curated by Artist / Photographer / Curator / Educator, John Silvis) at the Essel Museum in Vienna. With the exhibit (open NOW, since November 23rd) quickly approaching, I wanted to get a few words from Allison on the experience of assisting with this exhibition, and her path as a worker in the cultural field. EXPAND POST

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