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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Parrish Art Museum
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DTSTART:20210314T070000
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DTSTART:20211107T060000
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210205T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210205T180000
DTSTAMP:20260426T023807
CREATED:20210114T133618Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210205T232355Z
UID:10001476-1612544400-1612548000@parrishart.org
SUMMARY:Talk: Tomashi Jackson\, Minerva Perez\, Corinne Erni
DESCRIPTION:Join a live-stream talk featuring Tomashi Jackson\, the Museum’s 2021 Platform artist\, and Minerva Perez\, Executive Director of OLA\, moderated by Corinne Erni\, Senior Curator of ArtsReach and Special Projects as they focus on the historical and current lived experiences of Latin American communities on the East End. \nTomashi Jackson’s Platform exhibition\, The Land Claim\, will take place at the Parrish in the summer of 2021 with new paintings and site-specific installations. The new work focuses on the historic and contemporary lived experiences of Indigenous\, Black\, and Latinx families on the East End of Long Island\, linked through issues of housing\, transportation\, livelihood migration\, and agriculture. For her research\, Jackson has interviewed community leaders\, historians\, and archivists. \nAbout Tomashi Jackson\nDrawing centrally from Josef Albers’s research on the relativity of color and the unconscious processes by which the brain organizes and reconciles information\, Jackson’s work bridges gaps between geometric experimentation and the systematization of injustice\, incorporating images printed and hand painted from photographs and materials chosen for their relevance into formalist compositions. She uses properties of color perception as an aesthetic strategy to investigate the value of human life in public space. Jackson’s research driven projects and visual interrogation of shared language around societal and chromatic color offers a narrative framework from which she constructs her own language of abstraction. \nTomashi Jackson was born in Houston and raised in Los Angeles. She earned her MFA in Painting and Printmaking from Yale University School of Art in 2016; a Master of Science in Art\, Culture and Technology from the MIT School of Architecture and Planning in 2012\, and a BFA from Cooper Union in 2010. Her solo exhibitions include Forever My Lady at Night Gallery\, Los Angeles (2020); Time Out of Mind at Tilton Gallery (2019)\, New York; Interstate Love Song at the Zuckerman Museum of Art\, Kennesaw\, Georgia (2018); and The Subliminal is Now at Tilton Gallery (2016). Her work was included in the 2019 Whitney Biennial and additional group exhibitions at The Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art (LACMA)\, Mass MoCA\, The Bakalar & Paine Galleries at the Massachusetts College of Art\, Boston\, and the Contemporary Art Center\, New Orleans\, as well as in the public collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art\, LACMA\, and the Baltimore Museum of Art. \nJackson was a 2019 Resident Artist at the Skowhegan School of Painting & Sculpture and the 2019 Resident Artist at the ARCAthens Residency Program\, Athens\, Greece. She has taught at the Rhode Island School of Design\, the Massachusetts College of Art\, Boston\, and The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art\, NY\, and she has been a visiting artist lecturer at Boston University\, New York University\, Yale University\, and School of Visual Arts\, NY. She lives and works in Cambridge and New York City. \nAbout Minerva Perez\nExecutive Director of OLA of Eastern Long Island since 2016\, Perez centers her work on the protection\, empowerment\, and celebration of the Latino community. She has worked with Suffolk County to establish a coordinated response for the homebound and hungry across all 10 Suffolk County Towns; to secure more Spanish speaking DA Victim Advocates to serve the East End; and to offer free Covid 19 testing via a mobile unit brought to eastern Suffolk where communities of color have a harder time accessing transportation. She created and rolled out the first ever regional study to learn middle and high school mental and emotional health challenges directly from the students. She has secured the FEMA funded New York State initiative Project Hope NY\, which has allowed OLA to hire 18 fulltime staff to lead a crisis counselling effort that will serve the full East End in English\, Spanish\, and Portuguese. \nBefore joining OLA\, Perez was the Director of Residential and Transitional Services for six years at The Retreat\, where she ran a 24-hour crisis shelter for women and children fleeing domestic abuse. \nPerez has curated the annual OLA Latino Film Festivals since 2016\, of which the Parrish Art Museum is a regular partner. She has led the creation of the OLA Media Lab which brings visual storytelling workshops to area public schools\, producing student shorts that have been screened at the Festival. Perez holds a theater arts degree from New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts and founded and ran a nonprofit theater company in New York City. She has appeared in several films\, co-produced an award-winning short\, Home\, and wrote\, directed\, and produced Soy María\, an original series of monologues in Spanish focused on domestic violence. Perez was named in NBCLatino20 of 2019\, a listing of 20 notable US Latino leaders and advocates. She lives in Sag Harbor\, NY. \n\nFriday Nights are made possible\, in part\, by Presenting Sponsor:\nAdditional support provided by Sandy and Stephen Perlbinder.
URL:https://parrishart.org/event/corinne-erni-in-conversation-with-tomashi-jackson-and-minerva-perez/
LOCATION:Parrish Art Museum\, 279 Montauk Highway\, Water Mill\, NY\, 11976\, United States
CATEGORIES:Friday Nights,Talks,Upcoming
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://parrishart.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Tomashi_Minerva_Picstitch.png
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210212T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210212T180000
DTSTAMP:20260426T023807
CREATED:20210114T183405Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210212T230907Z
UID:10001483-1613149200-1613152800@parrishart.org
SUMMARY:Talk: András Szántó and Corinne Erni on "The Future of the Museum"
DESCRIPTION:Join Senior Curator Corinne Erni and museum strategist and author András Szántó in a live-stream conversation as they discuss his new book\, The Future of the Museum: 28 Dialogues.\n \nHow do museums adapt to new realities around the world today? What are some of the most exciting approaches? As museums worldwide shuttered in 2020 because of the coronavirus\, Szántó conducted a series of interviews with an international group of museum leaders. In a moment when economic\, political\, and cultural shifts are signaling the start of a new era\, the directors speak candidly about the historical limitations and untapped potential of art museums. Each of the 28 conversations in the book explores a particular topic of relevance to art institutions today and tomorrow. What emerges from the in-depth conversations is a composite portrait of a generation of museum leaders working to make institutions more open\, democratic\, inclusive\, experimental and experiential\, technologically savvy\, culturally polyphonic\, attuned to the needs of their visitors and communities\, and concerned with addressing the defining issues of the societies around them. The dialogues offer glimpses of how museums around the globe are undergoing an accelerated phase of reappraisal and reinvention. \nTo purchase the book\, please email booksmomaps1@artbook.com \nAbout András Szántó\nSzántó advises museums\, foundations\, educational institutions\, and leading brands on cultural strategy. His writings on the art world and art market have appeared in The New York Times\, Artforum\, The Art Newspaper\, and many international publications. He has directed the National Arts Journalism Program at Columbia University and has overseen the Global Museum Leaders Colloquium at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. He is based in New York and Brookhaven Hamlet\, Long Island. \n  \nFriday Nights are made possible\, in part\, by Presenting Sponsor:\nAdditional support provided by Sandy and Stephen Perlbinder.
URL:https://parrishart.org/event/live-stream-talk-corinne-erni-and-andras-szanto-on-the-future-of-the-museum/
LOCATION:Parrish Art Museum\, 279 Montauk Highway\, Water Mill\, NY\, 11976\, United States
CATEGORIES:Friday Nights,Talks,Upcoming
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://parrishart.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Szanto_Erni_picstitch_resize.png
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210219T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210219T180000
DTSTAMP:20260426T023807
CREATED:20210202T220105Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210302T153850Z
UID:10002783-1613754000-1613757600@parrishart.org
SUMMARY:Talk: Black History on Eastern Long Island: The Plain Sight Project
DESCRIPTION:Join Senior Curator Corinne Erni with Plain Sight Project Co-Directors Donnamarie Barnes (Curator/Archivist at Sylvester Manor Educational Farm and Plain Sight Project Founder and Chair) and David Rattray (Editor\, East Hampton Star) in a live-stream conversation about Barnes’s and Rattray’s ongoing research for The Plain Sight Project. This project identifies enslaved persons and free Blacks on the East End of Long Island from the 1600s to the mid-19th century and their efforts to project\, locate\, and preserve burial grounds\, habitations\, and work sites in the Hamptons. The Plain Sight Project will serve as a significant resource for Platform artist Tomashi Jackson’s research as she prepares for her upcoming exhibition\, The Land Claim\, on view this summer at the Parrish. \nAbout the Plain Sight Project\nAlong with many northern communities\, East Hampton is disconnected from its slave-owning past. By compiling a comprehensive\, public list of enslaved persons from the Colonial period to the last recorded enslaved person in East Hampton in 1830\, the Plain Sight Project is reconciling with this forgotten history while taking a step to place these people and their stories back into our nation’s founding narrative with in-class outreach to public and private schools. www.plainsightproject.org \nAbout the Speakers\nDonnamarie Barnes began working at Sylvester Manor Educational Farm in 2014 as a volunteer and history docent and in 2016 joined the staff full time as Curator and Archivist. She has curated the exhibitions\, Women of the Manor\, A Place in Pictures\, and All That Has Been: Our Roots Revealed. Her ongoing work of conserving the various collections at the Manor\, researching and uncovering the lives and identities of the enslaved and indigenous people of Sylvester Manor is an integral part of the organization’s mission to Preserve\, Cultivate and Share the stories of all the people of Sylvester Manor. She is also Co-Director of the Plain Sight Project\, which is dedicated to uncovering\, naming and counting the enslaved people of the East End of Long Island. For over thirty years Barnes worked in the editorial photography field as a photographer and photo editor for publications such as People and Essence Magazines and as a Photo Editor at the Gamma Liaison photo agency. A life-long summer and full-time resident of Ninevah Beach in the historic SANS Community in Sag Harbor\, Barnes grew up photographing the community and the beach landscape. In 2015 she curated a highly acclaimed historic tintype photography exhibition at the Eastville Community Historical Society in Sag Harbor entitled\, Collective Identity. She holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in photography from the Cooper Union School of Art. \nDavid Rattray is the owner and editor of The East Hampton Star. He is the fifth member of the Rattray family over three generations to have held the post. He graduated from East Hampton High School and then Dartmouth College. Rattray’s first job was as a busboy at the Sea Wolf restaurant in East Hampton and have included a summer as an East Hampton Town lifeguard\, an assistant caretaker on Gardiner’s Island\, selling fish\, setting up party tents\, making table and glassware deliveries for Bermuda Party Rentals\, staffing the liquor checkout counter at a Cambridge\, Mass.\, grocery store\, as a field archaeologist for the American Museum of Natural History. He was associate producer on the public television documentaries The Hurricane of ’38 and Chicago 1968 for the American Experience and Tabloid Truth for Frontline. He worked for Design Division\, a museum design firm in Manhattan\, before returning to East Hampton in 1998 to work at The Star. He became its editor in 2003\, succeeding his mother\, Helen S. Rattray. \nFriday Nights are made possible\, in part\, by Presenting Sponsor:\nAdditional support provided by Sandy and Stephen Perlbinder.
URL:https://parrishart.org/event/talk-black-history-on-eastern-long-island-the-plain-sight-project/
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/2021/02/David-Rattray-and-Donnamarie-Barnes.jpg
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