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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:20210709T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210709T190000
DTSTAMP:20260421T211211
CREATED:20210630T143734Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210630T143920Z
UID:10002914-1625853600-1625857200@parrishart.org
SUMMARY:Recorded Online Talk: Tomashi Jackson\, K-Sue Park\, Kelly Dennis\, and Corinne Erni
DESCRIPTION:Enjoy a recorded conversation with Tomashi Jackson\, before the opening of her new exhibition\, The Land Claim on July 11. The talk also features K-Sue Park\, Associate Professor of Law at Georgetown University Law Center; Kelly Dennis\, a member of the Shinnecock Nation and attorney specializing in Federal American Indian law; and Corinne Erni\, Senior Curator of ArtsReach and Special Projects\, who moderates the discussion. The Land Claim focuses on the historic and contemporary lived experiences of Indigenous\, Black\, and Latinx families on the East End of Long Island. In her work for the exhibition\, Jackson juxtaposes current and historical racial segregation in the region\, similar to her work in the 2019 Whitney Biennial. \nPlease use the link below to register for the online talk. After registering\, you will receive a link to watch the program on the Parrish’s YouTube channel.\nREGISTER  \nAbout the Participants\nKelly Dennis is an attorney specializing in Federal American Indian law. She has represented her tribe\, the Shinnecock Indian Nation\, and other sovereign tribal nations on matters such as land rights\, civil rights\, cultural and natural resources protection\, as well as tribal governance and business development. She continues to represent individual tribe members on education law\, family law\, small business\, and other matters as an Of-Counsel Attorney with The Law Offices of Tela L. Troge\, PLLC located in Southampton\, New York. Dennis integrates her legal background with her passion for the arts through social justice advocacy efforts for the rights and welfare of indigenous peoples. As such\, she has served as the Public Programs & Residency Coordinator at The Watermill Center (WMC)\, an interdisciplinary laboratory for the arts and humanities located in Water Mill\, New York. \nK-Sue Park’s scholarship examines the creation of the American real estate system and the historical connections between property law\, immigration law\, and American Indian law. Prior to Georgetown\, she was the Critical Race Studies Fellow at UCLA School of Law and an Equal Justice Works Fellow and staff attorney in El Paso\, where she investigated predatory mortgage lending schemes. Park earned her B.A. summa cum laude\, Phi Beta Kappa honors from Cornell University\, where she was a College Scholar\, her M.Phil with Distinction in Social and Political Sciences from the University of Cambridge\, her J.D. cum laude from Harvard Law School\, where she was a Presidential Scholar\, and her Ph.D. in Rhetoric from UC Berkeley\, where she was a Javits Fellow. A former Fulbright Scholar\, Park’s writings have appeared in the Harvard Law Review\, Law & Society Review\, and The New York Times. \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)\, Los Angeles \, 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. Her work is represented by Tilton Gallery in New York City and Night Gallery in Los Angeles\, CA. \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/recorded-online-talk-tomashi-jackson-k-sue-park-kelly-dennis-and-corinne-erni/
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/2020/06/Tomashi-Park-Kelly_hires.jpg
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210717T113000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210717T130000
DTSTAMP:20260421T211211
CREATED:20210608T004957Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210610T202528Z
UID:10002899-1626521400-1626526800@parrishart.org
SUMMARY:Contemporaries Circle Tour of Affinities for Abstraction
DESCRIPTION:REGISTER \nJoin Museum Chief Curator Alicia Longwell for an intimate look at the Museum’s newest special exhibition\, Affinities for Abstraction: Women Artists on Eastern Long Island\, 1950-2020 (on view through July 18\, 2021). Afterwards\, unwind in great company on the Museum’s Terrace. \nThis event is for Parrish Contemporaries Circle Members and emerging collectors and art-lovers interested in learning more about PCC Membership.  There is limited space and advanced reservations are required. \nFor more information\, to join or upgrade your Membership\, please contact us at membership@parrishart.org or 631-283-2118. \n\nThis event was organized by the Parrish Contemporaries Circle Committee.  Current Members: \n\nChair Christine Berry\, Berry Campbell\nKurt Carstensen\, AMG Parade\nKelcey Edwards\, Iron Gate East\nElena Frampton\, Frampton Co.\nChelsea Hrynick Browne\, Artist\nJohn S. Kiely\, Blank Rome LLP\nHeidi Lee Komaromi\, HLK Art Group\nJoseph Lesko\, Global Capital Strategies\nSusan Vecsey\, Artist\nKara Winters\, Eric Firestone Gallery
URL:https://parrishart.org/event/pcc-affinities-exhibition-tour/
LOCATION:Parrish Art Museum\, 279 Montauk Highway\, Water Mill\, NY\, 11976\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions,Member Events,Talks,Upcoming
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210718T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210718T120000
DTSTAMP:20260421T211211
CREATED:20210712T155746Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220307T212557Z
UID:10002917-1626606000-1626609600@parrishart.org
SUMMARY:Conversation: Gwen Smith & Beth Coleman with Corinne Erni
DESCRIPTION:Join artist Gwen Smith and research scientist and artist Beth Coleman in a conversation about Smith’s The Black Woman Project and their upcoming collaboration on the creation of The Black Woman Project Foundation\, followed by a book signing. The talk will be introduced by Parrish Director Kelly Taxter and moderated by Senior Curator Corinne Erni. Attend the program in the Lichtenstein Theater or watch the livestream on our YouTube channel. Masks are required throughout the program. \nGwen Smith’s The Black Woman Project (Vol. 1 & 2) is a collection of her painted portraits of renowned Black women. Smith uses selfies to reference each time she entered her studio over a period of two and a half years\, creating a rhythm by merging her identity as a Black woman with her subjects. Some of the women Smith chooses to paint are artists\, scientists\, educators\, politicians\, writers\, poets\, and performers\, and provide the impetus for Smith’s ongoing self-exploration. \nBeth Coleman is a research scientist and artist. She is Associate Professor of Data & Cities at the Institute of Communication\, Culture\, Information and Technology and Faculty of Information\, University of Toronto\, where she directs the City as Platform lab. She is the co-founder of SoundLab Cultural Alchemy\, multimedia art and sound platform. A 2021 Google Artists and Machines Intelligence awardee\, Coleman is currently working on “Speculative AI: Octavia Butler and Other Possible Worlds.” \n  \nREGISTER FOR IN-PERSON \nREGISTER FOR LIVESTREAM \n  \nA book signing will take place after the talk. The Black Woman Project (Vol. 1 & 2)\, Soft Network handkerchiefs\, and new zines will be available for sale in-person at the Museum shop.
URL:https://parrishart.org/event/gwen-smith-in-conversation-and-beth-coleman-with-corinne-erni/
LOCATION:Parrish Art Museum\, 279 Montauk Highway\, Water Mill\, NY\, 11976\, United States
CATEGORIES:Book Signings,Talks
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