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DTSTART:20200308T070000
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200501T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200501T180000
DTSTAMP:20260530T075126
CREATED:20200424T182034Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200728T193358Z
UID:10000811-1588352400-1588356000@parrishart.org
SUMMARY:Alicia Longwell presents "Anne Porter: A Poet Among Us"
DESCRIPTION:The life and work of American poet Anne Porter will be revealed though her own writings\, paintings by her husband Fairfield Porter and other artists\, excerpts from a 1953 art film by Rudy Burckhardt\, and excerpts from a never-before-seen 2011 interview with Alicia G. Longwell\, Ph.D.\, The Lewis B. and Dorothy Cullman Chief Curator at the Museum. The public is invited to join the live stream talk and take part in a live chat following the presentation. \n“Anne Porter was such a frequent subject in Fairfield’s paintings that we may feel we already know her intimately\,” said Longwell. “Yet it is in her poetry that we gain an appreciation for her love of nature\, family\, and humanity.” \nDiscussing her late arrival on the poetry scene\, Porter is quoted as saying\, “People don’t use their creativity as they get older. They think this is supposed to be the end of this and the end of that. But you can’t always be so sure that it is the end.” This sentiment seems more pertinent than ever in these times of crisis. \nLongwell will read short selections of Porter’s poetry\, as well as excerpts of work by her friends John Ashbery\, Barbara Guest\, Frank O’Hara\, Kenneth Koch\, James Schuyler—members of the witty\, urbane New York School of Poets. The presentation will include paintings and drawings by Fairfield Porter and other artists\, as well as excerpts from Longwell’s 2011 interview with Anne at her home just before her death. \nDuring the program\, Longwell will also present an excerpt from A Day in the Life of a Cleaning Woman\, a 13-minute\, black and white silent film made by photographer Rudy Burckhardt in 1953\, with a storyline conceived by Anne. Burckhardt gave comic and surreal treatment to Anne’s plight—raising five children in a busy household—in the film\, which features the poet in the starring role of Mrs. Rocker. Made during several weeks when Burckhardt\, his wife Edith Schloss\, and their young son were houseguests in the Porters’ home\, the film tells the story of a down-and-out cleaning woman who buys an enchanted dishmop that magically cleans the entire house. With a supporting cast of Schloss\, Larry Rivers\, and Fairfield Porter as handyman Elmer Turnip\, the film offers a rare and intimate look at the creative chaos of the Porter home. \nAnne Porter (1911 to 2011) wrote poetry from childhood\, but it wasn’t until after Fairfield Porter’s death in 1975 that she began to dedicate herself to her work\, publishing her first volume\, The Birds of Passage\, in 1989. Her collection An Altogether Different Language: Poems 1934-1994\, published in 1994 when she was 83\, was named a finalist for the National Book Award. Living Things: Collected Poems was published in 2006. \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \nFriday Nights at the Parrish are made possible\, in part\, by Presenting Sponsor:Additional support provided by The Corcoran Group and Sandy and Stephen Perlbinder.
URL:https://parrishart.org/event/curators-talk-alicia-longwell-on-anne-porter-a-poet-among-us/
LOCATION:Parrish Art Museum\, 279 Montauk Highway\, Water Mill\, NY\, 11976\, United States
CATEGORIES:Friday Nights,Talks,Upcoming
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://parrishart.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/2_Alicia-Longwell-interviewing-Anne-Porter-at-age-99-for-East-End-Stories-2011-e1588370959822.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200508T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200508T180000
DTSTAMP:20260530T075126
CREATED:20200428T183238Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200613T002510Z
UID:10000813-1588957200-1588960800@parrishart.org
SUMMARY:Talk: Terrie Sultan in Conversation with peter campus
DESCRIPTION:In a live illustrated talk\, Director Terrie Sultan speaks with the pioneer of new media and video art\, peter campus. \n \nRenowned for his pioneering career that encompasses a wide range of media including early video art\, photography\, and digital video\, campus (b. 1937\, New York\, NY) uses an array of video technologies to explore topics ranging from human psychology to the natural landscape. His recent digital video projects transform footage of landscapes and interiors into painterly scenes through sophisticated digital techniques. campus\, who is represented in the Parrish Art Museum collection\, lives and works in East Patchogue\, NY. Live Q&A follows. Registration encouraged. \nAbout peter campus\nBorn in 1937 in New York City\, peter campus earned a Bachelor of Science in Experimental Psychology from Ohio State University in 1960\, studied at The City College Film Institute\, and participated in the experimental workshops at Boston’s WGBH-TV. In 1975\, campus received the John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship\, and in 1976\, he was awarded the National Endowment for the Art Fellowship. \ncampus is represented in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art\, Whitney Museum of American Art\, and Albright-Knox Art Gallery (NY)\, Parrish Art Museum\, Walker Art Center (MN)\, Weatherspoon Art Museum (NC)\,  Philadelphia Museum of Art\, Centre Georges Pompidou (Paris)\, Hamburger Bahnhof – Museum für Gegenwart (Berlin)\, Museo Nacional de Arte Reina Sofia (Madrid)\, and Tate Modern (London). His work has been exhibited extensively with solo shows at the Centre Georges Pompidou and Jeu de Paume (Paris)\, CAAC (Seville)\, Culturgest (Lisbon)\, Kunsthalle Bremen (Germany)\, The Power Plant (Toronto)\, Antiguo Colegio de San Ildefonso (Mexico City)\, Whitney Museum of American Art and The Bronx Museum of the Arts (NY)\, The High Museum (GA)\, and University of Michigan Museum of Art. \n  \n  \n\nFriday Nights at the Parrish are made possible\, in part\, by Presenting Sponsor:Additional support provided by The Corcoran Group and Sandy and Stephen Perlbinder.
URL:https://parrishart.org/event/terrie-sultan-in-conversation-with-peter-campus/
LOCATION:Parrish Art Museum\, 279 Montauk Highway\, Water Mill\, NY\, 11976\, United States
CATEGORIES:Friday Nights,Talks,Upcoming
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://parrishart.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/peter-campus-St.-Nazaire-France.-Photo_Kathleen-J-Graves-scaled.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200515T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200515T180000
DTSTAMP:20260530T075126
CREATED:20200427T174615Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200728T194154Z
UID:10000812-1589562000-1589565600@parrishart.org
SUMMARY:David Pagel and Terrie Sultan Launch Online Exhibition: Telling Stories
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a live presentation as Parrish Adjunct Curator David Pagel and Museum Director Terrie Sultan launch Telling Stories: Reframing the Narratives –a robust online exhibition of work by eight contemporary artists who transform their unique personal histories into participatory dramas. \nPagel\, who organized the exhibition\, will give an illustrated talk on the themes and concepts explored by the participating artists\, and discuss their work with Sultan. \nBased on the full exhibition initially planned at the Museum for Spring\, 2020\, prior to closures due to the Coronavirus\, Telling Stories highlights the role that narrative plays in understanding the world. Through work that engages memory and history\, fact and fancy\, dreams and nightmares\, the participating artists engage in varied approaches to and styles of stories that change by virtue of who is telling them. The artists—working in a variety of media and ranging in age\, career stage\, geographic location\, and heritage—include: JooYoung Choi (American\, born Korea\, 1983)\, Jeremy Dennis (Shinnecock/American\, born 1990)\, Jeffrey Gibson (Choctaw-Cherokee/American\, born 1972)\, Elliott Hundley (American\, born 1975)\, Candice Lin (American\, born 1979)\, Mary McCleary (American\, born 1951)\, Jim Shaw (American\, born 1952)\, and Devin Troy Strother (American\, born 1986) \nIn upcoming weeks\, related programs will include talks with the participating artists and curators as the online exhibition continues to develop with additional material including video interviews by Pagel with the artists; essays by the artists and art writers; images of 62 paintings\, works on paper\, sculpture\, and installation; and additional video and audio material. \nAbout David Pagel\nParrish Adjunct Curator David Pagel is an art critic who writes regularly for the Los Angeles Times\, and a professor of art theory and history at Claremont Graduate University. Recent publications include Jim Shaw (Lund Humphries\, 2019) and Talking Beauty: A Conversation between Joseph Raffael and David Pagel about Art\, Life\, Death\, and Creativity (Zero+\, 2019). \n  \n  \nFriday Nights at the Parrish are made possible\, in part\, by Presenting Sponsor:Additional support provided by The Corcoran Group and Sandy and Stephen Perlbinder.
URL:https://parrishart.org/event/telling-stories-david-pagel-terrie-sultan/
LOCATION:Parrish Art Museum\, 279 Montauk Highway\, Water Mill\, NY\, 11976\, United States
CATEGORIES:Friday Nights,Talks,Upcoming
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://parrishart.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/Telling-Stories_cover4ƒƒ_TRIFOLIO-003.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200522T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200522T180000
DTSTAMP:20260530T075126
CREATED:20200508T195528Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200728T195324Z
UID:10002708-1590166800-1590170400@parrishart.org
SUMMARY:TALK: Saul Steinberg with Alicia Longwell\, Andreea Mihalache\, Daniela Roman
DESCRIPTION:Alicia G. Longwell\, Ph.D.\, The Lewis B. and Dorothy Cullman Chief Curator at the Museum\, will give a livestream illustrated talk on Saul Steinberg\, joined by Steinberg scholar Andreea Mihalache\, Ph.D.\, Assistant Professor\, School of Architecture\, Clemson University\, and the artist’s niece Director Daniela Roman. As a special feature\, the live program will include excerpts from the 26-minute film Saul Steinberg’s Line\, directed by Daniela Roman and Thierry Fontaine. The film is a portrait and tribute by French cartoonists\, intercut with Steinberg drawings as well as footage of Steinberg in the process of drawing and creating masks.  \nSteinberg\, who lived and worked in Springs\, East Hampton\, for nearly half-century\, is acclaimed worldwide for giving graphic definition to the postwar age through the works exhibited nationally and internationally in museums and galleries\, and six decades of covers and drawings published in The New Yorker. The artist reveals his unique perception of the world in whimsical depictions of birds\, and cats and other real and imagined creatures\, quirky abstract portraits\, offbeat scenes of quotidian life\, and animated architectural drawings. \nLast fall\, The Saul Steinberg Foundation gifted 64 works to the Parrish Art Museum. The acquisition spans 45 years (1945-1990) and features the artist’s signature drawings in watercolor\, pen and ink\, pencil\, crayon\, and other media—plus rarely shown work: wooden assemblages\, wallpaper\, and fabric. Forty-nine works by Steinberg are featured in the exhibition Saul Steinberg: Modernist Without Portfolio\, part of the Museum’s 2019-2020 overarching exhibition What We See\, How We See. \nAbout Saul Steinberg\nSaul Steinberg (1914–1999) crafted a rich and ever-evolving idiom that found full expression through his parallel yet integrated careers. In subject matter and styles\, he made no distinction between fine and commercial art\, which he freely conflated in an oeuvre that is stylistically diverse yet consistent in depth and visual imagination. The son of a manufacturer of decorative boxes\, Steinberg grew up in Bucharest. In 1933 he moved to Milan to study architecture and in 1936 began contributing to the Italian humor newspaper Bertoldo. The promulgation of anti-Semitic racial laws in 1938 led him to seek refuge elsewhere\, finally arriving in the U.S. in 1942. Through an agent in New York\, his drawings had already begun to appear in U.S. periodicals; his first drawing in The New Yorker was published in October 1941.In 1946\, Steinberg was included in the critically acclaimed Fourteen Americans show at The Museum of Modern Art\, exhibiting with Arshile Gorky\, Isamu Noguchi\, and Robert Motherwell. In 1959 he purchased a house in Springs\, near Amagansett\, where he began to spend more time after the mid-1960s. He was embraced by the artistic community and the house became a refuge from his busy New York City life. \n  \n  \nFriday Nights at the Parrish are made possible\, in part\, by Presenting Sponsor:Additional support provided by The Corcoran Group and Sandy and Stephen Perlbinder.
URL:https://parrishart.org/event/conversation-about-saul-steinberg/
LOCATION:Parrish Art Museum\, 279 Montauk Highway\, Water Mill\, NY\, 11976\, United States
CATEGORIES:Friday Nights,Talks,Upcoming
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://parrishart.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/2019.6.49.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200529T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200529T180000
DTSTAMP:20260530T075126
CREATED:20200515T194934Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200728T200325Z
UID:10002709-1590771600-1590775200@parrishart.org
SUMMARY:Curator's Talk: Corinne Erni in Conversation with Jeremy Dennis on Telling Stories: Reframing the Narratives
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a livesteam presentation and conversation with Corinne Erni\, Senior Curator of ArtsReach and Special Projects and artist Jeremy Dennis\, Parrish collection artist/Shinnecock Nation member who explores indigenous identity\, assimilation\, and tradition\, as he discusses his work featured in the online exhibition\, Telling Stories: Reframing the Narratives\, a robust online exhibition of work by eight contemporary artists who transform their unique personal histories into participatory dramas. \nBased on the full exhibition initially planned at the Museum for Spring\, 2020\, prior to closures due to the Coronavirus\, Telling Stories highlights the role that narrative plays in understanding the world. Through work that engages memory and history\, fact and fancy\, dreams and nightmares\, the participating artists engage in varied approaches to and styles of stories that change by virtue of who is telling them. \nAbout Jeremy Dennis:\nJeremy Dennis (b. 1990) is a contemporary fine art photographer and a tribal member of the Shinnecock Indian Nation in Southampton\, NY. In his work\, he explores indigenous identity\, culture\, and assimilation. \nDennis was one of 10 recipients of a 2016 Dreamstarter Grant from the national non-profit organization Running Strong for American Indian Youth. He was awarded $10\,000 to pursue his project\, On This Site\, which uses photography and an interactive online map to showcase culturally significant Native American sites on Long Island\, a topic of special meaning for Dennis\, who was raised on the Shinnecock Nation Reservation. He also created a book and exhibition from this project. Most recently\, Dennis received the Creative Bursar Award from Getty Images in 2018 to continue his series Stories. \nIn 2013\, Dennis began working on the series\, Stories—Indigenous Oral Stories\, Dreams and Myths. Inspired by North American indigenous stories\, the artist staged supernatural images that transform these myths and legends to depictions of an actual experience in a photograph. \nResidencies: Yaddo (2019)\, Byrdcliffe Artist Colony (2017)\, North Mountain Residency\, Shanghai\, WV (2018)\, MDOC Storytellers’ Institute\, Saratoga Springs\, NY (2018). Eyes on Main Street Residency & Festival\, Wilson\, NC (2018)\, Watermill Center\, Watermill\, NY (2017) and the Vermont Studio Center hosted by the Harpo Foundation (2016). \nHe has been part of several group and solo exhibitions\, including Stories—Dreams\, Myths\, and Experiences\, for The Parrish Art Museum’s Road Show (2018)\, Stories\, From Where We Came\, The Department of Art Gallery\, Stony Brook University (2018); Trees Also Speak\, Amelie A. Wallace Gallery\, SUNY College at Old Westbury\, NY (2018); Nothing Happened Here\, Flecker Gallery at Suffolk County Community College\, Selden\, NY (2018); On This Site: Indigenous People of Suffolk County\, Suffolk County Historical Society\, Riverhead\, NY (2017); Pauppukkeewis\, Zoller Gallery\, State College\, PA (2016); and Dreams\, Tabler Gallery\, Stony Brook\, NY (2012). \nDennis holds an MFA from Pennsylvania State University\, State College\, PA\, and a BA in Studio Art from Stony Brook University\, NY. He currently lives and works in Southampton on the Shinnecock Indian Reservation. \n  \n  \nFriday Nights at the Parrish are made possible\, in part\, by Presenting Sponsor:Additional support provided by The Corcoran Group and Sandy and Stephen Perlbinder.
URL:https://parrishart.org/event/artist-talk-telling-stories-reframing-the-narratives/
LOCATION:Parrish Art Museum\, 279 Montauk Highway\, Water Mill\, NY\, 11976\, United States
CATEGORIES:Friday Nights,Talks,Upcoming
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://parrishart.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/Dennis_Beach-Trip_2018-scaled.jpg
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