Archive for the 'Activist Imagination' Category

Where We Are Going: The Future of Activism

March 18, 2008

Kearny Street Workshop presents
Where We Are Going: The Future of Activism
Ron Muriera, Erika Chong Shuch, Pireeni Sundaralingam, and Carlos Villa
Moderated by Wei Ming Dariotis

an Activist Imagination event

Join Kearny Street Workshop and artist, educator, and curator Carlos Villa, poet and writer Pireeni Sundaralingam, choreographer, director, performer and teacher Erika Chong Shuch, and community activist, performing artist, educator, Manilatown Heritage Foundation Executive Director Ron Muriera for a discussion about the future of activism, the arts and community, moderated by writer, academic, and long-time KSW member Wei Ming Dariotis.

The discussion will explore and envision activism for the days and years ahead. Given our history and the current political, social, and environmental climate, what forms of activism will be relevant in the future? How can those who want to effect real change consider technology and global forces in developing strategies? What forms of activism can we imagine that will hold relevance, and power, in the days to come? And what challenges can we identify on the horizon?

Thursday, March 27th, 2008; 7pm
Kearny Street Workshop‘s space180
180 Capp Street, 3rd Floor, @ 17th Street, San Francisco
Free and open to the public.

The Activist Imagination project is made possible in part by a grant from the Creative Work Fund through support from the Walter and Elise Haas Fund, The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, and the James Irvine Foundation. Activist Imagination is also supported in part by a grant from the San Francisco Foundation and from KSW’s members and individual donors.

About the Panelists and Moderator

Wei Ming Dariotis is Assistant Professor of Asian American Studies at San Francisco State University, with emphases on Asians of Mixed Heritage and Asian Pacific American Literature, Arts, and Culture. Wei Ming Dariotis serves on the Board of the Asian American Theater Company and the Advisory Board of iPride, which runs the FUSION Summer Day Camp for Mixed Heritage Youth. Her recent publications include, “Developing a Kin-Aesthetic: Multiraciality and Kinship in Asian and Native North American Literature,” in Mixed Race Literature, ed. by Jonathan Brennan (Stanford University Press), “On Growing Up Queer and Hapa” in The Multiracial Child’s Resource Book, “‘My Race, Too, Is Queer’: Mixed Heritage Chinese Americans Fight For Race and Gender Marriage Equity” in Chinese America: History and Perspectives/Branching Out the Banyan Tree Conference Proceedings, and “Crossing the Racial Frontier: Star Trek and Mixed Heritage Identities,” in A Science Fiction Phenomenon: Investigating the Star Trek Effect.

Erika Chong Shuch
is a choreographer, director, performer, and teacher. Deemed by Robert Avilla in the SF Bay Guardian “among the leaders in the field”, the ESP Project (Erika Shuch Performance Project) is one of only two resident companies at Intersection for the Arts, San Francisco’s oldest alternative arts space. ESP Project’s has premiered 6 full-length performance works, as well as numerous shorter works since 2002. Exploring the inevitable terrain of love and death with vulnerability and humor, Erika’s ruminations coalesce into integrated and imagistic assemblages of music, movement, text, and scenic design. Erika’s work celebrates the extraordinary within ordinary human experience and aims to amplify the role of theater as a tool for inspiring social change. Erika was awarded the prestigious Emerging Choreographers Award by the Gerbode Foundation, SFBG’s GOLDIE Award in Dance (2003), the Dance USA grant from the James Irvine Foundation, was an Artist in Residence at the Headlands Center for the Arts (2006) and at Djerassi (2007), and worked under the mentorship of Joe Goode through CHIME (2003-2004). Erika is a co-founder and faculty member of the Experimental Performance Institute, a BA and MFA program at New College of California.

Born and raised in Sri Lanka, Pireeni Sundaralingam currently lives in San Francisco. She is a PEN USA Rosenthal Fellow and editor of Writing the Lines of Our Hands, the first anthology of South Asian American poetry (forthcoming). Her poetry has appeared in national newspapers and political journals such as The Guardian (UK) and The Progressive (USA), university teaching texts including Three Genres (Prentice-Hall, 8th Edition, 2006), and anthologies such as Masala (Macmillan, 2005) and Contemporary Voices from the East (Norton, 2008). Having given readings on national radio in Sweden, Ireland, the UK and America, Pireeni’s work has also been featured in such venues as the United Nations headquarters, the International Museum of Women and the National Theatre (UK). Working with her partner (violinist Colm O’Riain), Pireeni’s latest album Bridge Across the Blue brings together 23 musicians and poets to tell the immigration stories of America. Awarded the Californian Potrero Nuevo Fund Prize for Social Justice through the Arts, the album has been described as “a triumph of transformative collaboration, and a blueprint for cultural sanity” while the editors of About.com have selected it as “one of the best recordings of poetry and music ever recorded”.

For nearly fifty years Carlos Villa has explored the meaning of cultural diversity in his art and in doing so has expanded our awareness of what we consider as “multicultural.” What began in his early career as an attempt to understand his own heritage–a complexity of Filipino traditions with its layered strains of Asian, African, Indian and Oceanic cultures, along with influences of a Western artistic tradition–became over time an exercise in creating his own visual anthropology to represent his personal background, and, in a broader sense, the dynamics of intercultural weaving. – Preston Fletcher. For more information visit http://carlos-villa.com/

Activist Imagination opened!

March 1, 2008

seeing red

Thanks to everyone who made it out to the Activist Imagination opening last night!

If you didn’t make it but are interested, the show runs through May 24, and there are related events throughout, including a closing and catalog release.

In the meantime, check out pics of my works on my site.

Installation Morning 10.

February 28, 2008

Activist Imagination window installation, preview image, detail

Another sneak peek at Activist Imagination: here, a site-specific intervention overlooks Capp Street and Mission District rooftops.

I’m 90% done with my installation, and correspondingly 90% less stressed out than 10 days ago. I’m really happy with my contributions and am really impressed with the quality of the show. Everyone’s stepping up with their A-game. The artists’ work is very diverse. Rest assured, the exhibition will cover a lot of ground thematically and formally.

I hope you can join us Friday at the opening.

Activist Imagination opening reception
Friday, Feb. 29, 6:30-9 pm
Kearny Street Workshop
180 Capp Street (at 17th Street, very close to 16th St. BART)
San Francisco

Installation Morning 9 of 10.

February 27, 2008

“Early morning is the new late night.”

The Best Person I Can Be (preview image)
A sneak peek at part of my contributions to Activist Imagination.

Installation Day 8 of 10. Hopefully 10.

February 26, 2008

Last week: endorphins. Then ibuprofen.

This week: vitamin c and intensive moisturizer to keep my hands from cracking more. Home stretch!

While I can’t wait for the Activist Imagination opening on Friday, I’m exhausted. At this point I just need something to look forward to.

Andy Richie’s review of Dark into Light (at Swarm Gallery through March 9) certainly brightened my day.

Installation Day 3 of 10. Hopefully 9.

February 21, 2008

So tired I can’t blog coherently. Snapshots of the past three days of installing Activist Imagination at Kearny Street Workshop:

Norman’s delightful personality and generous assistance in wall construction.
Norman’s awesome chop saw with red laser guides (one for each edge of the blade!).
M’s help; more importantly, the chance for me to show him what installation is like.
Spending more than I’d like to think about at the lumber yard.
Hauling sheetrock up two flights of stairs.
Ibuprofen.
Stopping by Intersection for the Arts’ opening for the show on prisons; the tight community between KSW and Intersection. My favorite piece in the show: a prisoner’s folk-art award-winning model of a motorcycle, complete with high handlebars and flaring exhaust pipes, constructed of mouse bones, bits of shell and stone.
A scary short circuit.
Using corner beads for the first time.
Listening to Derek’s tasteful, random iTunes mix.
Pulling my back lifting a 5-gal. jug of joint compound.
Finishing walls takes ages, but the new joint compound is buttery smooth.
Goggies and a dust mask.
Entangled in headphones.
People’s delighted response to Jon Sueda’s sticker-sheet show announcement.
Pork Store’s pulled pork sandwich.