twi-ny recommended events

KARA WALKER AT DOMINO: A SUBTLETY

(photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Kara Walker’s massive public art project features a sphinxlike mammy figure and life-size child slaves (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

KARA WALKER — A SUBTLETY OR THE MARVELOUS SUGAR BABY: AN HOMAGE TO THE UNPAID AND OVERWORKED ARTISANS WHO HAVE REFINED OUR SWEET TASTES FROM THE CANE FIELDS TO THE KITCHENS OF THE NEW WORLD ON THE OCCASION OF THE DEMOLITION OF THE DOMINO SUGAR REFINING PLANT
Domino Sugar Factory
South First St. at Kent Ave.
Saturday, July 5, and Sunday, July 6, free, 11:00 am – 7:00 pm
www.creativetime.org
kara walker at domino slideshow

For more than 150 years, the Domino Sugar Factory has stood tall on the Williamsburg waterfront, the first sugar refinery in Brooklyn and at one time the largest in the world. The pre-Civil War structure was rebuilt in 1882 after a fire, it closed shop in 2004, and the 30,000-square-foot location is slated for demolition in a few months, giving way to luxury housing and commercial space. But it is getting quite a send-off, temporarily home to a spectacular, multilayered public art project that will have people talking for a long time. Forty-four-year-old California-born MacArthur “Genius” Kara Walker, best known for creating black silhouettes that boldly depict the horrors of slavery (“My Complement, My Enemy, My Oppressor, My Love,” “Gone: An Historical Romance of a Civil War as It Occurred between the Dusky Thighs of One Young Negress and Her Heart”), has installed “A Subtlety or the Marvelous Sugar Baby: an Homage to the unpaid and overworked Artisans who have refined our Sweet tastes from the cane fields to the Kitchens of the New World on the Occasion of the demolition of the Domino Sugar Refining Plant,” which remains on view through July 6. Upon entering the vast, open space, visitors are greeted by more than a dozen “Sugar Babies,” life-size sculptures in resin and molasses of slave children carrying baskets or bananas; some of the figures have melted, turning into what looks like a bloody mess on the floor, as if beaten to death, while also recalling tar. The objects in the baskets are parts of their bodies that essentially dissolved and fell off, as if their true selves have been eviscerated. Meanwhile, the air is filled with an acrid, rotting smell that falls right in line with the bittersweet nature of the installation.

“Sugar Babies” carry remnants of themselves in baskets at the Domino Sugar Factory (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Melting “Sugar Babies” carry remnants of themselves in baskets at the Domino Sugar Factory (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Glistening at the end of the large hall is an enormous white sphinx, made of foam and refined white sugar, sitting proudly, a highly sexualized mammy figure that evokes Aunt Jemima, serving as an oracle to the past, present, and future of a culture still dominated by racial tension, discrimination, and violence. A kerchief tied around her head, she stares out, her powerful fists outstretched (one in a gesture that alternately means “good luck” and “fuck you” in different countries), her large breasts both taunting and threatening. The curves of her body lead to giant buttocks and an exposed vulva that both shock and delight, laden in contradiction. The sculpture is yellowing at some points, the sugar crystalizing in the summer heat. When the exhibit ends, some of the slave babies will be able to be shown again, but the sphinx will be destroyed, erased from the annals of history, like so many aspects of slavery — but its memory will live on, a reminder of, among other things, that slavery took place right here in New York City. The controversial piece, totem and caricature, paradox and paradigm, uses stereotypes and racist imagery in referencing the refining of brown sugar into a white substance, the association of sugar with luxury desserts for the wealthy (the word “subtlety” refers to sweet banquet desserts), colonialism, and the exploitation of workers (including child labor, once again an issue on family-owned tobacco farms in America and sugar refineries in the Dominican Republic) in a society dominated by commercialism and corporations, offering an unspoken riddle with no answers. In her preliminary sketches, Walker used such phrases as “Sugar Rules the World,” “Natural processes fueled by industry,” “Production, not-consumption,” and “Refining to achieve desired whiteness which is equated in the modern mind — with purity,” lending crucial insight to her thinking. However, Walker has chosen to give no official artist’s statement about her first large-scale public art installation, preferring that people experience it for themselves, although project sponsor Creative Time has supplemented the work with five “Reports” that explore various aspects of “A Subtlety,” which can be found online: Edwidge Danticat’s “The Price of Sugar,” Tracy K. Smith’s “Photo of Sugar Cane Plantation Workers, Jamaica, 1891,” Jean-Euphèle Milcé’s “To Drink My Sweet Body,” Ricardo Cortés’s “The Act of Whitening,” and Shailja Patel’s “Unpour.”

Bittersweet Kara Walker installation is layered with meaning that is controversial, complex, and purposefully contradictory (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Bittersweet Kara Walker installation is layered with meaning that is controversial, complex, and purposefully contradictory (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Central to the work are viewers’ reactions. Some are in awe of its beauty and scope, while others pose in front of it for touristy photographs. Some consider the history and mystery that literally surround it, while others smile and pretend to put their arms around one of the slave babies as if they are friends or perform silly acts with the sphinx’s backside and genitalia. Many are so obsessed with taking pictures and video that they never pause, process, and contemplate what they are looking at. Yes, it’s spectacle, but it’s spectacle on a grand order, an unforgettable experience that places a powerful mirror on America’s four-hundred-year history, revealing telling elements that many still refuse to accept.

There are only two days left to see “A Subtlety,” which is open 11:00 am to 7:00 pm on Saturday and Sunday, July 5-6. Admission is free, but you can expect the lines to be a lot longer than the previous twenty minutes or so. After that, the piece, along with the Domino Sugar Factory itself, will meet its demise, though it will live on in the minds of those who had the opportunity to partake in its majesty.

NATHAN’S FAMOUS FOURTH OF JULY INTERNATIONAL HOT DOG EATING CONTEST 2014

Joey Chestnut will defend his hot-dog-eating record on July 4 at Nathans (photo courtesy Nathans Famous)

Joey Chestnut will defend his hot-dog-eating record on July 4 at Nathan’s (photo courtesy Nathan’s Famous)

Sweikert Alley, Nathan’s Famous
1310 Surf Ave. at Stillwell Ave.
Friday, July 4, free, 10:00 am
212-627-5766
www.nathansfamous.com
www.ifoce.com

San Jose’s Joey Chestnut did it again last year, devouring a record sixty-nine hot dogs in ten minutes to win the Nathan’s Famous Fourth of July International Hot Dog Eating Contest for the seventh consecutive year. Sonya Thomas, the number five overall Major League Eater in the world — Chestnut is #1 — took home the women’s belt for the third straight year by consuming 36¾ dogs. Chestnut also currently holds the record for apple pie, asparagus, brain tacos, brats, chicken wings, chili, corned beef sandwiches, eggs, fish tacos, funnel cake, grilled cheese sandwiches, Krystal hamburgers, horseshoe sandwiches, short form ice cream, jalapeno poppers, Kolaches, pastrami, Philly cheesesteaks, Pizza Hut P’Zones, pork ribs, pulled pork, poutine, salt potatoes, shrimp cocktail, shrimp wontons, tacos, tamales, and Twinkies, while Thomas is tops in Armour Vienna sausage, long course baked beans, buffalo chicken tenders, cheesecake, cherrystone clams, chicken nuggets, chili cheese fries, crab cakes, crawfish, deep-fried okra, fruitcake, Big Daddy hamburgers, thickburgers, jambalaya, Maine lobster, meatballs, oysters, quesadillas, sweet potato casserole, toasted ravioli, turducken, and whole turkey. The event will also feature live music by the Brooklyn Community Choir, the Heavenly Chillbillies, the Skyriders, and former competitive eater turned rapper Eric “Badlands” Booker. To make it all a little more palatable, Nathan’s will donate one hundred thousand hot dogs to the Food Bank for New York City. For a different perspective on the event, with a special focus on the Takeru Kobayashi controversy, check out Jeff Cerulli and Barry Rothbart’s documentary Hungry.

PIER / PARTY: THE AVENGERS

THE AVENGERS

The Avengers face a powerful enemy in Joss Whedon’s action-adventure superhero blockbuster

THE AVENGERS (Joss Whedon, 2012)
South Street Seaport
Corner of Front & Fulton Sts.
Saturday, July 5, free, 8:00
www.southstreetseaport.com
www.marvel.com

After a spectacular energy device known as the Tesseract opens a wormhole that allows the evil Loki (Tom Hiddleston) to enter present-day Earth and ultimately steal the machine, turning Hawkeye (Jeremy Renner) and Dr. Erik Selvig (Stellan Skarsgård) into unwitting allies in the process, S.H.I.E.L.D. agent Phil Coulson (Clark Gregg) and director Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson) bring back the Avengers Initiative, reuniting Tony Stark / Iron Man (Robert Downey Jr.), Steve Rogers / Captain America (Chris Evans), Natasha Romanoff / Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson), and an extremely tentative Dr. Bruce Banner / Hulk (Mark Ruffalo), who are gathered together to regain the Tesseract and foil Loki’s evil plans to take over Earth. Also entering the fray is Thor (Chris Hemsworth), Loki’s brother, who needs to decide which side of the battle he is on. As egos get in the way and wisecracks fly by like so much machine-gun rattle, particularly from Stark, the Avengers realize they are facing a supremely powerful force, one that will require, well, superhuman effort to defeat. Writer-director Joss Whedon, the genius behind Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, and Firefly, plays things a little loose in this comic-book blockbuster, not worrying too much about gaping plot holes that could have been created by the Tesseract itself and letting the superhero banter and tech-heavy set pieces take center stage. Downey goes over the top as the brash Stark, while Ruffalo, following in the failed footsteps of Edward Norton and Eric Bana (and, of course, the great Bill Bixby), is relegated to a whole lot of brooding. But there’s still lots of fun to be had as the characters team up to save the world. Be sure to stick around through the credits for a pair of bonus scenes. The Avengers is screening July 5 at 8:00, preceded by a Midtown Comics Fan Party at 4:00 in which costumed attendees can win prizes and drink specials, concluding the South Street Seaport’s free July 3-5 “Pier/Party,” which also includes live performances by the Hungry March Band, Dandy Wellington & His Band, Chris Bergson Blues, Mike Verge, Twin Forks ft. Chris Carrabba, and Sam Barnes Bluegrass Review. For a day-by-day listing of free summer movie screenings throughout New York City, go here.

MACY’S FOURTH OF JULY FIREWORKS: LIVE FROM THE BROOKLYN BRIDGE

macys fireworks

Televised live on NBC-TV beginning at 8:00 pm
Broadcast live on WINS 1010
Friday, July 4, free, 9:20 pm (approx.)
212-494-4495
www.macys.com

Macy’s July Fourth extravaganza is on the move again, this year heading downtown on the east side, with barges floating around the historic Brooklyn Bridge. The thirty-eighth annual event will again be hosted by Nick Cannon, with live performances by Lionel Richie, Ariana Grande, Enrique Iglesias, Miranda Lambert, and Hunter Hayes. There will also be two specially recorded songs, the Charlie Daniels Band’s “My Home” and Billy Porter singing “It’s a Patriotic Kind of Day,” in addition to a rousing version of “The Star-Spangled Banner” by Idina Menzel, backed by the DIVA Jazz Orchestra and Judith Clurman’s Essential Voices USA, in honor of the two-hundredth anniversary of the Francis Scott Key song that became America’s official national anthem in 1931. Among the best viewing points are along the elevated portions of the FDR Drive, with access at Montgomery & South Sts., the Brooklyn Bridge entry from St. James Pl., and Broad St. and/or Old Slip at Water St.; the ADA viewing area is at the Murray Bergtraum High School track-and-field facility. Across the river, you can watch the fireworks from Brooklyn Bridge Park and the Brooklyn Bridge Promenade; note that certain sections of Montague, Remsen, Old Fulton, Furman, and Hicks Sts. will be closed to vehicular traffic.

FIRST SATURDAYS: BROOKLYN SUMMER

David Hammons, “The Door (Admissions Office),” wood, acrylic sheet, and pigment construction, 1969 (California African American Museum, Los Angeles, Collection of Friends, the Foundation of the California African American Museum / © David Hammons)

David Hammons, “The Door (Admissions Office),” wood, acrylic sheet, and pigment construction, 1969 (California African American Museum, Los Angeles, Collection of Friends, the Foundation of the California African American Museum / © David Hammons)

Brooklyn Museum
200 Eastern Parkway at Washington St.
Saturday, July 5, free, 5:00 – 11:00 ($10 discounted admission to “Ai Weiwei: According to What?”)
212-864-5400
www.brooklynmuseum.org

The Brooklyn Museum is throwing a summer party for its July free First Saturdays program, centered by a twenty-fifth-anniversary screening of Spike Lee’s Bed-Stuy classic, Do the Right Thing. In addition, there will be music from Matuto, Blitz the Ambassador, DJ Uhuru, and Nina Sky, a female comedy showcase hosted by Erica Watson, a talk and fashion show led by Afros: A Celebration of Natural Hair author Michael July, a sidewalk chalk drawing project organized by the City Kids, a hula hoop demonstration with Hula Nation, an art workshop in which participants will learn figure drawing with a live model, and an interactive talk with “Brooklyn in 3000 Stills” creators Paul Trillo and Landon Van Soest. In addition, you can check out the current quartet of exhibitions, all of which deal with activism through art: “Ai Weiwei: According to What?,” “Swoon: Submerged Motherlands,” “Chicago in L.A.: Judy Chicago’s Early Works, 1963–74,” and “Witness: Art and Civil Rights in the Sixties.”

Moneta Sleet Jr., “Selma Marchers on road to Montgomery,” gelatin silver photograph, 1965 (courtesy Brooklyn Museum)

Moneta Sleet Jr., “Selma Marchers on road to Montgomery,” gelatin silver photograph, 1965 (courtesy Brooklyn Museum)

The powerful, wide-ranging “Witness,” which has just been extended through July 13 (the other three exhibits continue into August or September), is a traveling show being held in conjunction with the fiftieth anniversary of the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. More than one hundred paintings, sculptures, photographs, and installations are on view, divided into eight thematic categories: “Integrate Educate,” “American Nightmare,” “Presenting Evidence,” “Politicizing Pop,” “Black Is Beautiful,” “Sisterhood,” “Global Liberation,” and “Beloved Community.” In Bruce Davidson’s “USA. Montgomery, Alabama. 1961,” a black Freedom Rider sits by a window on a bus being escorted by the National Guard. David Hammons’s “The Door (Admissions Office)” is not exactly a welcoming sight. Norman Rockwell’s “New Kids in the Neighborhood (Negro in the Suburbs)” depicts three white children and two black children stopped on a sidewalk, curiously looking at each other. Melvin Edwards’s “Chaino” evokes slavery and lynchings. A trio of cartoonish KKK members drive into town in Philip Guston’s “City Limits.” There are also works by Romare Bearden, Jacob Lawrence, Norman Lewis, Jack Whitten, Faith Ringgold, Ben Shahn, Betye Saar, Gordon Parks, Jim Dine, Yoko Ono, Barkley Hendricks, Robert Indiana, Richard Avedon, and others that examine the civil rights movement from multiple angles, displaying America’s continuing shame.

VIDEO OF THE DAY: “JUSTICE AFTER ALL” BY BLACK LIPS

Georgia’s Black Lips are one of the truly great live bands of the twenty-first century, playing their garage-surf punk with an infectious wild abandon. Anything can happen at their shows, and often does. At an outdoor concert a few years back, the manic crowd broke down the front barrier, nearly crushing the photographers in the photo pit; without missing a beat, the band helped people onto the stage, keeping the music going, the party never stopping. Later, bassist Jared Swilley floated atop the audience, lifted toward the heavens. Essentially, the quartet feels the same way about music as they do about pizza; “Pizza is a snack for children at birthday parties and sleepovers. Don’t try and make it fancy,” they recently tweeted. Swilley, guitarists Cole Alexander and Ian Saint Pé, and drummer Joe Bradley are currently touring behind their first studio album in three years, the rockin’ Underneath the Rainbow (Vice, March 2014), which features such awesome tunage as “Drive-by Buddy,” “Funny,” “Do the Vibrate,” and “Nightmare Field.” (You can stream the album here.) The Black Lips will be playing Vans House Parties on July 3 with Nightbirds (admission is free with advance RSVP). If you’re lucky enough to get in, you might notice a special aroma as well; the band worked with olfactory scientists to create such scents as ocean, cedar, moon, denim, squid ink, fire, and semen (“if the man only ate fresh plums for about a week”), which are disseminated throughout the show in recognition of “the powerful effect of scent on emotion and memory,” as if their shows aren’t memorable enough already.

OUTDOOR CINEMA: PUSSY RIOT — A PUNK PRAYER

Pussy Riot

Feminist art collective Pussy Riot states its case and faces the consequences in documentary about controversial group

PUSSY RIOT — A PUNK PRAYER (Mike Lerner & Maxim Pozdorovkin, 2012)
Socrates Sculpture Park
32-01 Vernon Blvd.
Rescheduled for Wednesday, August 27, free, 7:00
718-956-1819
www.socratessculpturepark.org
www.hbo.com

The slogan “Free Pussy Riot!” is being shouted around the world — and was even seen on Madonna’s back — ever since the Russian government arrested three members of punk collective Pussy Riot after they staged an anarchic performance of less than one minute of “Mother Mary, Banish Putin!” at Christ the Savior Cathedral in Moscow on February 21, 2012. British documentary producer Mike Lerner and Russian filmmaker Maxim Pozdorovkin follow the sensationalistic trial of Pussy Riot leaders Maria “Masha” Alyokhina, Nadezhda “Nadia” Tolokonnikova, and Yekaterina “Katia” Samutsevich as they each face years in prison for social misconduct and antireligious behavior for what some consider a sacrilegious crime and others view as freedom of speech. The three women do a lot of eye rolling and smiling in court as they are enclosed in a glass booth, proud and unashamed of what they did, continuing to make their points about the separation between church and state, feminism, freedom, and the seemingly unlimited power of Vladimir Putin. Lerner and Pozdorovkin speak with Masha’s mother and Nadia’s and Katia’s fathers, all of whom fully support their daughters’ beliefs and discuss what their children were like growing up. Meanwhile, other members of Pussy Riot and men and women across the globe take to the streets and airwaves to try to help free the incarcerated trio, who are responsible for such songs as “Kill the Sexist,” “Death to Prison, Freedom to Protests,” and “Putin Lights Up the Fires.” Pussy Riot — A Punk Prayer is screening August 27 in Long Island City as part of Socrates Sculpture Park’s free summer Outdoor Cinema series and will be preceded by live music from Tessa Makes Love; Russian food from Pomegranate will be available for purchase as well. The sixteenth annual series continues through August 27 with such other international fare as Moussa Touré’s La Pirogue, Takashi Miike’s 13 Assassins, and Vittorio De Sica’s Umberto D. (The program was originally scheduled for July 2 but was postponed because of the weather.)