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Simon Fujiwara (portrait detail), photographed by Carla Verea
Lecture / Performance

Simon Fujiwara

Wednesday, November 10, 2010 – 6:30 to 8:00 p.m.
The New School, Tishman Auditorium
66 West 12th Street
Admission: $10 for single talk, $20 for full series of three talks, free for all students, as well as Public Art Fund members and New School faculty, staff and alumni with valid ID

This fall, the Public Art Fund Talks series presents three artists who all transform the conventional lecture into a unique work of art.  These hybrid performance-lectures provide a window into each artist’s practice and present viewers with a new way of experiencing their art. In his New York debut, Simon Fujiwara, using live video and dialogue, loosely retells his parents’ life as erotic fiction in Welcome to the Hotel Munber.

Born in 1982 in London, United Kingdom, Simon Fujiwara studied architecture at Cambridge University, Cambridge, UK (2005) and Fine Art at Staedelschule, Frankfurt am Main, Germany (2008). Current and recent exhibitions include 29th Sao Paulo Biennale, San Paulo (2010); Manifesta 8, Murcia (2010); The Collectors, 53rd Venice Biennale, Venice (2009); Art Basel Statements, Basel (2010); and Huckleberry Finn, CCA Wattis Institute, San Francisco (2010). Forthcoming exhibitions include a multi-part performance series curated by Jens Hoffman for Performa 11, New York (2011) and a major solo survey exhibition at TATE St.Ives, UK.  He is this year’s winner of both the prestigious Baloise Prize, Art Basel 41 and the Frieze Cartier Award 2010 and is nominated for the Future Generation Art Prize, Victor Pinchuk Foundation, Kiev. He is represented by Gio Marconi, Milan and Neue Alte Brücke, Frankfurt am Main. Simon Fujiwara lives and works in Berlin and Mexico City.

Posted on October 20, 2010


Score sheet by Cornelius Cardew, “Treatise” (1963-1967), p.183
Colloquium, Film, Workshops, Installations

The Cardew Object

Friday, April 9, Saturday, April 10, and Thursday, April 15, 2010
The New School Campus
Location and admission information for each event is listed below

A three-day event explores the radical oeuvre of British experimental composer Cornelius Cardew and the activities of the Scratch Orchestra (co-founded by him in 1969), and illuminates their significance today as artistic, pedagogical and political tools. Workshops, sound installations, a film screening, and an exhibition bring together historians, musicians, artists, and New School faculty and students, and are presented at The New School. Among the participants are contemporary music ensemble Either/Or, artists Luke Fowler and Robert Sember, and New School faculty members Danielle Goldman, Sarah Montague, Simonetta Moro, Evan Rapport and Ivan Raykoff and their students. Pianist and Cardew biographer John Tilbury is contributing a (pre-recorded) Call-to-Action.

Inspired by The Cardew Object at the ICA London (November 2009), these events are organized by the Vera List Center for Art and Politics as part of its 2009-2010 program theme “Speculating on Change.” Vera List Center Fellow Robert Sember, a member of the sound-art collective Ultra-red and the School of Echoes, leads the colloquium and workshops in collaboration with faculty members from Eugene Lang College The New School for Liberal Arts and The New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music. DAY THREE PROGRAM Exhibition The Skybridge Art & Sound Space Opening Reception: Thursday, April 15, 2010 – 4:00 to 6:00 p.m. Exhibition Dates: Thursday, April 15 to Monday, May 10, 2010 Skybridge Gallery, Eugene Lang College, 65 West 11th Street, 3rd floor (enter at 66 West 12th Street) Admission: Free New School faculty Sarah Montague and Simonetta Moro and their students in the Skybridge Curatorial Project present an exhibition celebrating Cardew’s work and the events above. The Skybridge Art & Sound Space hosts multi-media exhibitions and curriculum-based projects in the arts, showcasing student projects that make the space a vibrant and exciting laboratory for visual, aural, and critical thinking. __________________________________________________________________ Cornelius Cardew (1936-1981) was a seminal figure of the British avant-garde of the 1960s and 1970s. A student of Karl-Heinz Stockhausen and a follower of John Cage, he formed the Scratch Orchestra with Michael Parsons and Howard Skempton in 1969 in London. Based on their experiments, Cardew published the book Scratch Music, now a classic resource for experimental musicians. In the late 1970s, Cardew became increasingly involved in a Marxist-Leninist discourse, eventually rejecting his own compositional work as elitist. Cardew died in an unresolved hit-and-run accident at the age of forty-five, estranged from most of his colleagues and challenged for his political convictions.

The Scratch Orchestra was a collaborative group of musically trained and untrained participants engaged in radical modes of improvisatory and cross-disciplinary art-making. In an effort to liberate performers from the constraints of traditional music notation as well, Cardew developed elaborate forms of graphic notation – all part of an explicit agenda of political consciousness and social action. These larger “ways of organizing,” including interpretations of two sections from Cardew’s The Great Learning (1968-71), are presented during The New School events in a structured environment that invites creative engagement and collaboration. __________________________________________________________________

Posted on March 31, 2010


Score sheet by Cornelius Cardew, “Treatise” (1963-1967), p.29
Colloquium, Film, Workshops, Installations

The Cardew Object

Friday, April 9, Saturday, April 10, and Thursday, April 15, 2010
The New School Campus
Location and admission information for each event is listed below

A three-day event explores the radical oeuvre of British experimental composer Cornelius Cardew and the activities of the Scratch Orchestra (co-founded by him in 1969), and illuminates their significance today as artistic, pedagogical and political tools. Workshops, sound installations, a film screening, and an exhibition bring together historians, musicians, artists, and New School faculty and students, and are presented at The New School. Among the participants are contemporary music ensemble Either/Or, artists Luke Fowler and Robert Sember, and New School faculty members Danielle Goldman, Sarah Montague, Simonetta Moro, Evan Rapport and Ivan Raykoff and their students. Pianist and Cardew biographer John Tilbury is contributing a (pre-recorded) Call-to-Action.

Inspired by The Cardew Object at the ICA London (November 2009), these events are organized by the Vera List Center for Art and Politics as part of its 2009-2010 program theme “Speculating on Change.” Vera List Center Fellow Robert Sember, a member of the sound-art collective Ultra-red and the School of Echoes, leads the colloquium and workshops in collaboration with faculty members from Eugene Lang College The New School for Liberal Arts and The New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music.

DAY TWO PROGRAM

Workshop
How Can We Organize Collective Listening?
Saturday, April 10, 2010 – 12:00 to 6:00 p.m.
The New School, Theresa Lang Community and Student Center
55 West 13th Street, 2nd floor
Admission: Free, advance reservations recommended at vlc@newschool.edu

New School faculty members Evan Rapport and Ivan Raykoff host a public workshop developed in collaboration with Lang College classes New Ears for New Music (Raykoff), Punk & Noise (Rapport), Politics of Improvisation (Danielle Goldman), Image/Text (Simonetta Moro), and The New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music class Cross-Cultural Improvisation (Rapport). Workshop participants are asked to collect sounds in response to a specific question relating to local and current social or political concerns, then explore procedures for collective listening and organized action following some of Cardew’s models. Public participation encouraged – sound tools provided. __________________________________________________________________

Cornelius Cardew (1936-1981) was a seminal figure of the British avant-garde of the 1960s and 1970s. A student of Karl-Heinz Stockhausen and a follower of John Cage, he formed the Scratch Orchestra with Michael Parsons and Howard Skempton in 1969 in London. Based on their experiments, Cardew published the book Scratch Music, now a classic resource for experimental musicians. In the late 1970s, Cardew became increasingly involved in a Marxist-Leninist discourse, eventually rejecting his own compositional work as elitist. Cardew died in an unresolved hit-and-run accident at the age of forty-five, estranged from most of his colleagues and challenged for his political convictions.

The Scratch Orchestra was a collaborative group of musically trained and untrained participants engaged in radical modes of improvisatory and cross-disciplinary art-making. In an effort to liberate performers from the constraints of traditional music notation as well, Cardew developed elaborate forms of graphic notation – all part of an explicit agenda of political consciousness and social action. These larger “ways of organizing,” including interpretations of two sections from Cardew’s The Great Learning (1968-71), are presented during The New School events in a structured environment that invites creative engagement and collaboration. __________________________________________________________________


Score sheet by Cornelius Cardew, “Treatise” (1963-1967), p. 134
Colloquium, Film, Workshops, Installations

The Cardew Object

Friday, April 9, Saturday, April 10, and Thursday, April 15, 2010
The New School Campus
Location and admission information for each event is listed below

A three-day event explores the radical oeuvre of British experimental composer Cornelius Cardew and the activities of the Scratch Orchestra (co-founded by him in 1969), and illuminates their significance today as artistic, pedagogical and political tools. Workshops, sound installations, a film screening, and an exhibition bring together historians, musicians, artists, and New School faculty and students, and are presented at The New School. Among the participants are contemporary music ensemble Either/Or, artists Luke Fowler and Robert Sember, and New School faculty members Danielle Goldman, Sarah Montague, Simonetta Moro, Evan Rapport and Ivan Raykoff and their students. Pianist and Cardew biographer John Tilbury is contributing a (pre-recorded) Call-to-Action.

Inspired by The Cardew Object at the ICA London (November 2009), these events are organized by the Vera List Center for Art and Politics as part of its 2009-2010 program theme “Speculating on Change.” Vera List Center Fellow Robert Sember, a member of the sound-art collective Ultra-red and the School of Echoes, leads the colloquium and workshops in collaboration with faculty members from Eugene Lang College The New School for Liberal Arts and The New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music.

DAY ONE PROGRAM

Colloquium with Sound Installation and Film Screening

An Introduction to Cardew Friday, April 9, 2010 65 West 11th Street (enter at 66 West 12th Street) Admission: $8, free for all students as well as New School faculty, staff and alumni with valid ID Sound samples installation by New School students – 6:00 to 6:30 p.m. Introduction by Robert Sember – 6:30 to 7:00 p.m. Film screening, followed by discussion – 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. Cornelius Cardew’s music and ideas – and their significance today as an artistic as well as pedagogical and political project – are introduced by Vera List Center Fellow Robert Sember. A screening follows of Glasgow-based artist Luke Fowler’s Pilgrimage from Scattered Points (2006, 45”), a film that explores the internal contradictions and struggles of Cardew’s Scratch Orchestra through first person interviews, recent and archival footage and original recordings.

“Filmmaker Luke Fowler depicts the Scratch Orchestra’s composer Cornelius Cardew in action, resonating in a brilliant, impressionistic visual landscape. Sound and image unite to form a hypnotic and freely associating current, which reaches far into the subjective sphere of experimental film.” (hotdocs.com)

Robert Sember and Luke Fowler are then joined by art historian Claire MacDonald, New School faculty members Ivan Raykoff and Evan Rapport in a closing discussion.

Sound samples culled from previous workshops are installed in the lecture hall and ring in the evening’s events; pianist John Tilbury (via recording), Cardew’s biographer and one of his closest associates, provides a call-to-action. __________________________________________________________________

Cornelius Cardew (1936-1981) was a seminal figure of the British avant-garde of the 1960s and 1970s. A student of Karl-Heinz Stockhausen and a follower of John Cage, he formed the Scratch Orchestra with Michael Parsons and Howard Skempton in 1969 in London. Based on their experiments, Cardew published the book Scratch Music, now a classic resource for experimental musicians. In the late 1970s, Cardew became increasingly involved in a Marxist-Leninist discourse, eventually rejecting his own compositional work as elitist. Cardew died in an unresolved hit-and-run accident at the age of forty-five, estranged from most of his colleagues and challenged for his political convictions.

The Scratch Orchestra was a collaborative group of musically trained and untrained participants engaged in radical modes of improvisatory and cross-disciplinary art-making. In an effort to liberate performers from the constraints of traditional music notation as well, Cardew developed elaborate forms of graphic notation – all part of an explicit agenda of political consciousness and social action. These larger “ways of organizing,” including interpretations of two sections from Cardew’s The Great Learning (1968-71), are presented during The New School events in a structured environment that invites creative engagement and collaboration. __________________________________________________________________


Vintage film poster for The Birth of a Nation, 1915, courtesy of Photofest (detail)
Screening and colloquium

Birth and Rebirth of a Nation

Saturday, September 26, 2009
The New School, Tishman Auditorium
66 West 12th Street
New York City
Admission: Free, reservations recommended at vlc@newschool.edu, or 212.229.2436.

Where do we stand on issues of race and representation? Can today’s racial imagination be reconciled with that of hardly a century ago, when D.W. Griffith’s notorious film, The Birth of a Nation, became the first blockbuster in American film? The Vera List Center presents a screening and colloquium around Griffith’s notorious white supremacist manifesto, reconsidered in the context of the Obama call for change.

The speakers hail from different backgrounds including history, film, music, journalism, and photography. Presenting analyses of some of the most recent scholarship on slavery and racism, particularly as manifested during the conception, production and distribution of The Birth of a Nation, they examine the film’s legacy and reverberations today.

PROGRAM

Screening I – 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. D.W. Griffith, The Birth of a Nation, 1915, silent, 180 minutes Original sound score and live accompaniment by Michael Stein (Graduate of The New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music), introduced by faculty member Sonny Kompanek

Colloquium – 2:00 to 4:00 p.m.

Introduction

Bill Gaskins Photographer, essayist and Professor of Photography and Art History, Parsons The New School for Design

Presentations

Douglas A. Blackmon Atlanta Bureau Chief, The Wall Street Journal, Social historian of the Civil War, and Pulitzer-prize winning author of Slavery by Another Name

David W. Blight Class of 1954 Professor of American History and Director of the Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance and Abolition, Yale University; author of Race and Reunion and numerous other studies and books

Michelle Materre Assistant Professor, Media Studies and Film, The New School for General Studies

Miriam J. Petty Assistant Professor of Film and Media Studies, Rutgers University-Newark

Michele Wallace Professor of English, City University of New York

Roundtable – 4:00 to 5:00 p.m.

All participants, moderated by Margo Jefferson Associate Professor of Writing, Eugene Lang College The New School for Liberal Arts

Screening II – 5:30 to 7:00 p.m.

DJ Spooky, Rebirth of a Nation, 2008, color, sound, 90 minutes Followed by Q & A with filmmaker Paul D. Miller (a k a DJ Spooky That Subliminal Kid)

Presented on occasion of the Vera List Center’s 2009/2010 program theme “Speculating on Change,” with support of The New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music and The Andy Warhol Foundation of the Visual Arts.

Upcoming