Panel

What Comes After: Cities, Art + Recovery, Day 2

Sep 15–Sep 16, 2006

9:30am–5:00pm ET

The New School, Theresa Lang Community and Student Center

An international summit to consider the role of art and culture after crisis in cities across the globe, organized by the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council.

What are the arts of emergency? How can image and text echo in the silence and sound of devastation? What role has culture in the work of reconciliation and rebuilding after violence?

For the second year, Cities, Art + Recovery brings together artists, writers, architects and scholars from Lebanon, Rwanda, South Africa, Vietnam, and other countries around the world as well as from the U.S. in direct conversation with each other to ask and answer these questions.

From Sarajevo to New Orleans, from Kigali to Beirut, artists have commented forcefully on their contemporary political and cultural predicament. As a witness, as a way of mourning, as indictment, as critique, as documentation, as an olive branch, and as a herald of hope, art forms the bedrock of recovery. New York, as a cultural capital, cannot afford to overlook the perspectives of artists in any process of rebuilding.

In a series of public programs, including performances, exhibitions, films, roundtables and a public art competition for downtown New York, Cities, Art and Recovery explores the work of art in the wake of catastrophe.

Saturday, September 16, 2006
9:30 11:00
Artists in Conversation
Antjie Krog (South Africa) and Carmen Boullosa (Mexico/USA)
in conversation with Yvette Christiansë (South Africa/USA)

11:1 5-1:15 pm
Artists in Conversation
Tran Luong (Vietnam), Arahmaiani (Indonesia) and Seiji Shimoda (Japan) in conversation with Yu Yeon Kim (Korea/USA)

3:00 5:00 pm
Unnatural Landscapes: The Future of the City
Raul Cardenas Osuna (Mexico), Ole Bouman(Netherlands) and Dilip da Cunha (India/USA) in conversation with Raymond Gastil (USA)

A project of the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council in partnership with the Vera List Center for Art and Politics. Visit www.lmcc.net/recovery for venues and program information.

Related

Panel

What Comes After: Cities, Art + Recovery, Day 1

Sep 15–Sep 16, 2006