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The Occupy with Art blog provides updates on projects in progress, opinion articles about art-related issues and OWS, useful tools built by artists for the movement, new features on the website, and requests for assistance. To submit a post, contact us at occupationalartschool(at)gmail(dot)com .

Entries in art at #ows (16)

Wednesday
May302012

WS2MS: Communique from Co-organizer Fawn Potash

Bravo everybody!  My sincerest gratitude for making Wall Street to Main Street into this most amazing constellation of exhibits, workshops, seminars, performances, tours and cool stuff.  I intend to write each one of you a personal thank-you note with copies of our press clippings, but until then, I want you to know what a meaningful experience this has been for me in meeting and getting to know your work and passions.  It has been a personal and community-wide education.  Like many Occupy events, it has demonstrated many of the principles of the movement in action.  

There are many intangible results.  At the most basic level, WS2MS supports the idea that we, along with people all over the world can speak and act on our own behalf.   If we have not changed any minds, we have at least provoked conversation and offered opportunities for engagement and education at every level and sensibility.  We have worked well with all of Catskill's community stakeholders giving us a successful track record and deeper connection to our neighbors.  Plus Catskill has buzz.  Even if people didn't make it to Main Street in person, there's no way they missed the PR storm.   People know we are here now. 

The tangible results have great import for Catskill too.  This project played a major role in attracting several paying residential and storefront tenants.  The long dormant Civil War era factory building, Union Mills has found a buyer, who sees the historic value of this property and its potential as a cultural linchpin on Main Street.  There's much more, but we can go into more detail as we put together the project archive.  

Your gift to Catskill and the audiences we have engaged is unquantifiably valuable.  I hope we will be able to come up with some creative way to publicly acknowledge your contribution in a lasting way.

Click to read more ...

Thursday
May032012

What Is the "Soul of Occupy?" [Draft/BETA][Pt.3-1, Intermezzo]

By Paul McLean

[Video by Liza Bear]

[Narrative]:

New York City, May 1 2012-- Occupy Guitarmy musicians, led by Tom Morello, play Willie Nile's "One Guitar" before marchikng down Fifth Avenue to Union Square as part of May Day 2012. Filmed by Liza Béar, Squaring Off, Mobile Broadcast News. @owsmusicgroup@nothingofficial

[Morello/Guitarmy photo by Theodore Hamm]

3


I think a lot of the people involved in the globalization movement, myself included, felt this was a continuation of our efforts, because we never really felt the globalization movement had come to an end. We’d smash our heads against the wall every year, saying “Oh yes, this time we’re really back. Oh wait, maybe not.” A lot of us gradually began to lose hope that it was really going to bounce back in the way we always thought we knew it would. And then it happened, as a combination of tactics of trying to create prefigurative models of what a democratic society would be like, as a way of organizing protest or actions that were directed against an obviously undemocratic structure of governance. - "The movement as an end-in-itself?" An interview with David Graeber by Ross Wolfe http://platypus1917.org/2012/01/31/interview-with-david-graeber/

Planning for May 1 in New York began in January in a fourth-floor workspace at 16 Beaver St., about two blocks from Wall Street, [Marisa] Holmes said. The date serves as an international labor day, commemorating a deadly 1886 clash between police and workers in Chicago's Haymarket Square.
- "Banks cooperate to track Occupy protesters" by Max Abelson for Bloomberg [posted at SF Gate, and elsewhere] - http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2012/04/26/BUTK1O9L88.DTL

The worsening of the artificial and coercive debt problem was used as a weapon to attack an entire society. It is proper that we speak here of terms related to the military: we are indeed dealing with a war conducted by means of finance, politics and law, a class war against society as a whole. And the spoils that the financial class wrestles away from the "enemy", are the social benefits and democratic rights, but ultimately it is the very possibility of a human life that is taken. The lives of those who do or do not consume enough in terms of profit maximization strategies, should be no longer be preserved. - Alain Badiou, Jean-Christophe Bailly, Étienne Balibar, Claire Denis, Jean-Luc Nancy, Jacques Ranciere, Avital Ronell. Save the Greeks from their Saviors! February 22, 2012. Translation into English by Drew S. Burk and Anastazia Golemi. http://www.egs.edu/faculty/alain-badiou/articles/save-the-greeks-from-their-saviors/

If so, for the art world to recognize itself as a form of politics is also to recognize itself as something both magical, and a confidence game—a kind of scam. - "The Sadness of Post-Workerism..." by David Graeber


Ethnic Groups of Madagascar



David Graeber in his essay on Post-Workerism develops an argument about art in the section titled "the art world as a form of politics" that every artist associating herself with OWS should read, since Graeber is a self-described "author" and creator of central facets of it, or even the movement itself, if I understood him correctly at a talk I attended at NYU's Hemispheric Institute recently. Graeber's view of art is grim verging on toxic, but also thin as black ice in Madagascar, the island that he made his anthropological bones on, so to speak, and which is always going to be mentioned whenever Graeber talks or writes, it seems.

Madagascar.

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Apr252012

What Is the "Soul of Occupy?" [Draft/BETA][Pt.1]

[Photos of Magic Mountain & Novad actions courtesy Jez Bold]

What Is the "Soul of Occupy?" [Draft/BETA]
By Paul McLean


Now, I have said that the community by means of organisation of machinery will supply the useful things, and that the beautiful things will be made by the individual.  This is not merely necessary, but it is the only possible way by which we can get either the one or the other.  An individual who has to make things for the use of others, and with reference to their wants and their wishes, does not work with interest, and consequently cannot put into his work what is best in him.  Upon the other hand, whenever a community or a powerful section of a community, or a government of any kind, attempts to dictate to the artist what he is to do, Art either entirely vanishes, or becomes stereotyped, or degenerates into a low and ignoble form of craft.  A work of art is the unique result of a unique temperament.  Its beauty comes from the fact that the author is what he is.  It has nothing to do with the fact that other people want what they want.  Indeed, the moment that an artist takes notice of what other people want, and tries to supply the demand, he ceases to be an artist, and becomes a dull or an amusing craftsman, an honest or a dishonest tradesman.  He has no further claim to be considered as an artist.  Art is the most intense mode of Individualism that the world has known.  I am inclined to say that it is the only real mode of Individualism that the world has known.  Crime, which, under certain conditions, may seem to have created Individualism, must take cognisance of other people and interfere with them.  It belongs to the sphere of action.  But alone, without any reference to his neighbours, without any interference, the artist can fashion a beautiful thing; and if he does not do it solely for his own pleasure, he is not an artist at all. - Oscar Wilde, "The Soul of Man"

As a matter of fact, setting aside strictly academic art, artists never fall entirely prey to aesthetic co-optation. Though they may abdicate their immediate experience for the sake of beautiful appearances, all artists (and anyone who tries to live is an artist) are driven by the desire to increase their tribute of dreams to the objective world of others. In this sense they entrust the thing they create with the mission of completing their personal fulfilment within their social group. And in this sense creativity is revolutionary in its essence. - from "The Revolution Of Everyday Life" by Raoul Vaneigem (a new translation from the French by Donald Nicholson-Smith, The Brooklyn Rail, March 2012

It is the "fact" of the physicality of artworks, their necessary existence as objects with their apparent constancy, that in fact highlights the "inconstant," volatile, and transformative event at the core of art. - Krzysztof Ziarek, The Force of Art



1

What is the Soul of Occupy?



Adbusters, the Canadian anti-Capitalist magazine that by accounts issued the call for action which sparked the Occupy Wall Street movement in September of 2011, on April 12th 2012 [1] released another provocative proclamation on its blog,* titled "Battle for the Soul of Occupy." The text was illustrated with a black, red and white banner graphic depicting the ubiquitous Occupy clenched fist and the text "#DEFENDOCCUPY." The call-to-arms was issued by Culture Jammers HQ and encouraged Occupiers to "Jump, jump, jump over the dead body of the old left!" and warned of co-optation of the movement by MoveOn, The Nation magazine and ice cream producers Ben & Jerry, whose influence threatened, in Adbuster's estimate, to "turn our struggle into a '99% Spring' reelection campaign for President Obama."

I don't know about you, reader, but Adbusters' situating Ben & Jerry in a "cabal of old world thinkers who have blunted the possibility of revolution for decades" seems to me a stretch, and certainly doesn't incite any Robespierresque post-Occupy-revolutionary fervor. I sat next to Ben of Ben & Jerry at an organizational meeting for Mark Read's Illuminator, which B & J's ice cream fortune helped bankroll, and Ben Cohen in my view is not a blunter of revolution. He's a food businessman made good, retired, with cash in the bank, who's making an effort to support Occupy strategically, not steal its "Soul." If anything, the conundrum posed to such individuals who are sympathetic to the movement by the movement's schizophrenic response to efforts by "outsiders" to align with OWS is worth examining. [2, 3]

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Mar212012

Tonight: Art v. OWS

Date + time: March 21, 8pm
Location: Flux Factory, 39-31 29th Street, Long Island City

Flux Factory is pleased to present Flux Death Match, a new initiative that takes online debates into real-space at the Flux gallery. Conceived as lively discussions between influential members of the art, tech, and political communities, panelists will illustrate their points with slides, web references, and other materials in a rapid-fire way that will challenge convictions on critical issues.

In this first Flux Death Match, art critics Paddy Johnson of Art Fag City and Hrag Vartanian of Hyperallergic and artists John Powers and William Powhida will face off in a heated debate. The panelists will argue over the strategies artists use to engage with the Occupy Wall Street movement and confront the concentration of wealth and power within the art world. Johnson and Powers have a history of online skirmishes, most recently a Twitter debate that resulted in an 18 part discussion posted to YouTube on the merits of the recent ArtPrize city-wide competition in Grand Rapids, MI. Vartanian and Powhida have traded barbs publicly, both in person and through various online platforms; their epic disagreements have undoubtedly shaped the discourse surrounding the NYC art scene.

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Mar212012

Radical Ice Cream Social

Sunday
Feb052012

Occupy and the Arts: Curating by Consensus in Lower Manhattan

By Katherine Gressel

Originally published at Createquity, January 25, 2012

[LINK]

"Die-in" at Zuccotti Park, January 14, 2012

[EXCERPT]:

The OWS movement’s inception resulted from a poster call to action by the alternative media organization Adbusters, and as many other writers have noted, arts and culture were nearly inseparable from the core actions of the movement as the encampment at Zuccotti Park grew. Early on, critics like Martha Schwendener in the Village Voice were quick to describe the park occupation itself as “a kind of art object: a living installation or social sculpture,” blurring the lines between art and life. Richard Kim in The Nation described in detail the symbiotic relationship of an Arts and Culture (A&C) working group to various life-sustaining activities in a “culture rich” Liberty Plaza during the occupation’s heyday. A&C subgroups like the Puppetry Guild added a critical visible dimension to rallies and marches, including bringing OWS to the Halloween Parade. Powerful graphic images have helped spread OWS’s message over the social media airwaves.

Thursday
Jan122012

Art Is My Occupation Launches!

 

ABOUT [From the AMO website (click image to visit)]

WHAT WE DO
Artismyoccupation.org (AMO) offers direct support to artists and cultural workers dedicated to advancing the stories, struggles and ideas of the 99%. Directly engaged with occupy and other grassroots movements, AMO provides support to cultural workers who seek to impact the national conversation on the Economy, including production grants, distribution, and PR support. AMO aims to support artists across a diverse spectrum of artforms, from visual art to music to public interventions to videos to street theatre and more, while creating a national network of artists focused on exposing the real costs of the current crisis and envisioning a future that puts people before profits.

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Dec202011

Storefront for Art and Architecture: Strategies for Public Occupation


Storefrotn LOGO 500 dpi5
Follow our other facades on Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, and Vimeo      
JOIN US TODAY FOR 
Strategies for Public Occupation DAY 5  
 
Tuesday, December 20th, 12 PM - 6 PM: Mediums: Images, Newspapers, Blogs,...
  
Today the exhibition will showcase films, projections, posters and protester signs. A series of conversations and workshops will address different mediums and design strategies to exercise different acts of protest and communication.

  

Films 12pm-3pm: Gearoid Dolan's 99% is a series of 4 black and white stop motion films on the ongoing Occupy Wall St. movement in NYC. 
 
Guerrilla Media 3pm-5pm: Urban video projections activated by personal mobile messaging are able to construct urban pieces that bring individual voices into the collective. Ken Farmer will showcase a series of open software, platforms and strategies to act in the city through the use of light and the urban landscape.
 
Performance 12pm-6pm:  Signs by  Alexandra Lerman. Parade of Protests: Visitors will be able to participate in an individual performance by grasping some of the signs created by Alexandra Lerman and performing an individual action around the neighborhood. 

  

Conversation 5pm-6pmKeller Easterling and Benedict Clouette. 
 
Check images, videos and documents of DAY 1, DAY2, DAY3 and DAY 4 at www.storefrontnews.org and follow us live at  http://www.ustream.tv/user/StorefrontArtArch
 
strategies opening 2 
DAY 1 / OPENING MANIFESTOS

strategies day 2
 DAY 2 / URBAN ACTION / WHOWNSPACE

strategies day 4
DAY 4 / LAWS&MAPS

 

THIS WEEK: 
 
Wednesday, December 21st, 12 PM - 6 PM: Architecture

 

Thursday, December 22nd, 12 PM - 6 PM: Occupy Presents
 

 

FOR MORE INFORMATION, VISIT 97 KENMARE STREET AND PARTICIPATE or

 

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Strategies for Public Occupation is an exhibition and a 7-day marathon of talks, workshops and events that bring together a creative force of experts, artists, architects and citizens at large to discuss the current state of affairs in relation to the Occupy movement. 

  

The exhibition, understood as a space of confluence and flow is a space for gathering, conversations and informal discussions that is continuously broadcasted at http://www.ustream.tv/user/StorefrontArtArch

 

Everyday, throughout the duration of the exhibition, the gallery displays different works in relation to the different themes of exploration, the conversations, performances and workshops.
 
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General support for Storefront is provided by the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts through the Warhol Initiative; the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature; public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council; The Peter T. Joseph Foundation; by its Board of Directors, members and by individuals.

 

NYSCA logo   DCA logo
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Storefront for Art and Architecture
97 Kenmare Street
10012 New York, NY

 

 



Monday
Dec192011

Occupy Sculpture Faces Uncertain Future After Eviction

[As reported in the Huffington Post]

On Monday morning, the last remnant of Occupy Calgary was lifted onto the back bed of a truck and moved to an undisclosed location. The Occupy sculpture, "Heart of the Beast," provided the Calgary Occupy protesters with a lasting symbol of hope, but after an eviction from Olympic Plaza last Friday, it was only a matter of time before the sculpture too, was dismissed from the space.

Created by an anonymous artist known only as "D.H.," the nearly ten-foot high sculpture was placed in Olympic Plaza in the middle of the night, hours before bylaw officers moved in to clear the encampment altogether. Now, the city is faced with what to do with the symbolic sculpture.



Wednesday
Dec142011

Information Flow (Proposal)

http://artsandculture.nycga.net/files/2011/12/AC-DataNetwork.gif

Arts & Culture is working to streamline the flow of data between the A&C network and the NYC General Assembly. Below is a link to the proposal which will be presented at today’s 6pm meeting @ 60 Wall St.

 

Tuesday
Nov152011

NYCGA ARTS & CULTURE IN ACTION

THIS IS WHAT A 1% POLICE STATE LOOKS LIKE!

See more images HERE at the Facing Change blog.

Tuesday
Nov152011

REMEMBER LIBERTY!!

Painting by Katherine Gressel

Monday
Nov072011

Live Painting at Liberty Square, with Katherine Gressel!

Hello all, just a heads up that I will be attempting some small plein-air acrylic paintings onsite at the park this afternoon. Was a last-minute realization that I'm able to do it today (due to some schedule changes) which is why I didn't promote it or anything. So it's a bit of an experiment to see what happens when I go there, how people react, etc. Will try to be post some pics later...I should be there between 12:30-5:30 or whenever it gets dark. I welcome comments/suggestions...hopefully i can find at least one more day besides today to go down there and do this before it gets too cold!

Katherine

Tuesday
Nov012011

“L’histoire du Soldat” At Zuccotti, Nov. 3rd, 5-6pm

Stravinsky’s timeless and haunting “L’histoire du Soldat” (“The Soldier’s Tale”), a parable for three actors and seven musicians, will be performed for Occupy Wall Street at Zuccotti Park by Broadway actors and New York musicians on Nov. 3rd from 5-6pm, with a possible additional performance on Nov. 4th.


*(NOTE: Nov. 4th is our back-up rain delay date!  We’ll keep you posted!)*

Stravinsky and C.F. Ramuz’s hour-long tale/ballet/oratorio tells the story of a Soldier on leave to see his sweetheart.  Nearly home, he is sidetracked by the Devil.  In an infernal insider-trading scheme, the Soldier gains a magic book that tells the future of the economy, but, in return, must give up his precious violin.   Imprisoned - by the Devil, his newfound wealth, and his own delusions - this veteran is separated from his loved ones and true happiness.  This fairy tale, spoken in sparkling verse to some of Stravinsky’s most charming and memorable music, is about the complex nature of greed, and the meaning and price of freedom. Its themes resonate effortlessly with the aims and ideals of the Occupy Wall Street movement.

Starring famed New York actors Erik Liberman (Broadway, “LoveMusik,” Helen Hayes-Award Winner for “Merrily We Roll Along”), Elizabeth Stanley (Broadway, “Company,” “Cry-Baby,”), and Nick Choksi (“Invasion” at The Flea, “Twelfth Night” with Sonnet Rep, regular on “One Life to Live”), and with some of New York’s finest contemporary music performers conducted by Ryan McAdams, this one-time-only performance explores the relationships between money, love, and happiness through a fairy tale that is, like all great fairy tales, beautiful, terrifying, funny, and deeply moving. 

Saturday
Oct152011

Paintings by Alex Powers

Occupy Wall Street,
 
Attached are 5 JPegs of paintings that express what OWS is doing politically. Use the JPegs in any way that is helpful.  Maybe post them on your website. I will donate the original paintings if you can sell/auction them.  I do not want anything for myself. I am not looking for publicity.  I want to help. There are 10 paintings total. I will send them in 3 emails. I have other paintings with similar expressions if you could use more.
 
I admire what you are doing. It is an issue that has been dear to my heart for decades.
 
Alex Powers
Myrtle Beach, SC
Wednesday
Oct052011

Blame Capitalism

"Blame Capitalism" by Evan Wondolowski

"I'm an artist an I'll be down to Liberty Square friday the 15th I've got about 70 screen printed 22 x 28 posters that i will be bringing down."