this week in lectures, signings, panel discussions, workshops, and Q&As

FANFAIRE NYC

fanfaire nyc

The High School of Art and Design
245 East 56th St.
Saturday, February 8, and Sunday, February 9, $5-$15 per day, $10-$20 two-day pass, 10:00 am – 6:00 pm
www.fanfairenyc.com

Fanfaire NYC takes place this weekend, a two-day festival celebrating cartooning, animation, graphic design, architecture, and fashion. An annual benefit for the High School of Art and Design, the multidimensional fest features more than 125 artists and vendors, talks and panels, workshops, costume contests, video games, movie screenings, and portfolio reviews. This year’s guests range from artists and professors to cosplayers and editors, from character designers and executives to writers and high school alum, including Neal Adams, Abe Audish, Bob Camp, Klaus Janson, Chip Kidd, Geoff Spear, and David Mazzucchelli. Founded in 1936, the High School of Art and Design, which is a public school, has boasted such graduates as Adams, Tony Bennett, Calvin Klein, Marc Jacobs, Art Spiegelman, Amy Heckerling, and Steven Meisel. Below are only some of the highlights:

Saturday, February 8
Graphic Design & Illustration Portfolio Review, with Joann Hill and Cryssy Cheung, Library, sixth floor, advance registration required, 10:00 am

Careers in Animation, with Bob Camp, Sachio Cook, Chrissy Fellmeth, and Abe Audish, moderated by Kiara Arias and Jaydan Hyman, Black Box, LL2, 10:30

Tracing Is Not a Crime, with Neal Adams, moderated by Josh Adams, Classroom 1, sixth floor, 10:30

My Life in Ink, with tattoo artist Keith “BANG BANG” McCurdy, Black Box, LL2, 12:00

Breaking into Comics and Other Tales, with Klaus Janson, moderated by Chris Allo, Black Box, LL2, 1:30

Storytelling in Comics with David Mazzucchelli, Classroom 1, sixth floor, 3:00

Mythconceptions — Behind the Scenes of George O’Connor’s Olympians, with George O’Connor, Black Box, LL2, 4:30

Sunday, February 9
Ink Flow: Learning to Ink Like Neal Adams, with Neal Adams, moderated by Josh Adams, Classroom 1, sixth floor, 10:00 am

Freelance isn’t Free — How to Build Yourself as an Artist and Run a Business, with Lucinda Lewis, Chrissy Fellmeth, Nik Virella, and Cristian S. Aluas, moderated by Miss Kill Joy, Auditorium, LL2, 12:00

Cosplay Competition: People’s Choice Masquerade, Auditorium, LL2, 2:00 – 5:00

Inside the Art of Sequential Visual Storytelling, with Carl Potts, Black Box, LL2, 2:30

Children’s Books: More than Drawing Cute Bunnies, with Joann Hill, Classroom 3, sixth floor, 3:00

DYNAMIC DUO: The art of last impressions, slide presentation, discussion, and book signing, with Chip Kidd, Geoff Spear, and Charles Kochman, Black Box, LL2, 4:00 – 6:00

NY INDIE THEATRE FILM FESTIVAL

Attending the NY Indie Theatre Film Festival wont be as traumatic as Natalie Johnsons The Taxidermist

Attending the NY Indie Theatre Film Festival won’t be as traumatic as visiting Natalie Johnson’s The Taxidermist, which screens on February 8

New Ohio Theatre
154 Christopher St.
February 6-9, individual events free – $10, day/fest passes $15-$30
866-811-4111
newohiotheatre.org

New Ohio Theatre’s fourth annual NY Indie Theatre Film Festival finishes in a big way on February 9 with a special screening of Charles Busch’s 2006 coming-of-age tale A Very Serious Person, in which the writer-director stars as a gay male nurse taking care of an ailing woman portrayed by Polly Bergen. Busch, whose work includes The Tale of the Allergist’s Wife, The Tribute Artist, and the current Primary Stages production The Confession of Lily Dare at the Cherry Lane, will participate in a talkback after the screening. The festival begins February 6 at 7:00 with a screenplay reading of Brooke Berman’s Polly Freed with Annie Parisse, Paul Sparks, Sadie Seelert, Alysia Reiner, Jamie Harrold, Austin Ku, Sebastian Martinez, Clara Young, Becca Lish, Erin Gann, and Julienne Kim and a free opening-night party at 9:00. There will be five screening blocks of short films and web series episodes February 7-8, including works written and/or directed by Victoria Clark, David Zayas Jr., Wendy MacLeod, Caroline V. McGraw, and Alyssa May Gold. On February 9 at 2:00, the competitive Film Race will take place, a benefit for F*It Club in which teams present movies they made only after getting required script elements on February 5; at 4:00, the panel discussion “What Makes a Pitch Sizzle?” brings together Thom Woodley, Sarah Donnelly, and Gideon Evans. “Our mission is to support indie theatre artists wherever their inspiration takes them. If it takes them into new mediums, we want to be there to help,” New Ohio artistic director Robert Lyons said in a statement. Individual events are $5 to $10, with day or festival passes ranging from $15 to $30.

DIANE KEATON / EDIE FALCO AT 92Y

New York City native Edie Falco will be at the 92nd St. Y on February 6 to talk about her new police drama on CBS

New York City native Edie Falco will be at the 92nd St. Y on February 6 to talk about her new LA-set police drama on CBS

92nd St. Y
1395 Lexington Ave. between 91st & 92nd St.
Diane Keaton: Kauffman Concert Hall, Tuesday, February 4, $50-$65, 7:00
Edie Falco: Buttenwieser Hall, Wednesday, February 5, $35-$40, 7:00
www.92y.org/events

A pair of iconic actresses will be at 92Y this week to discuss their latest projects. On February 4, LA-born Oscar winner Diane Keaton will be in Kauffman Concert Hall in conversation with editor and author David Ebershoff (The Danish Girl), talking about her new book, Brother and Sister: A Memoir, which deals with her relationship with her younger sibling, Randy. Tickets includes a copy of the book. On February 5, Manhattan native Edie Falco will be in Buttenwieser Hall in conversation with CBS This Morning: Saturday cohost Michelle Miller (replacing the previously announced Jane Pauley), chatting about Falco’s new TV series, Tommy, in which the four-time Emmy winner and Tony nominee stars as the first woman police chief of the LAPD, a single mother who is gay. The show is created by the Bronx-born Paul Attanasio, whose other series include Homicide: Life on the Street and Bull.

JOSÉ

José

José (Enrique Salanic) and Luis (Manolo Herrera) look to the stars in Queer Lion award winner

JOSÉ (Li Cheng, 2018)
Quad Cinema
34 West 13th St. between Fifth & Sixth Aves.
Opens Friday, January 31
212-255-2243
quadcinema.com/film/jose
www.outsiderpictures.us

At one point in Li Cheng’s gentle, beautifully sensitive José, the title character (Enrique Salanic) is consoling his friend and coworker, Monica (Jhakelyn Waleska Gonzalez), as an airplane passes far off in the distance and José catches a glimpse of it just before it disappears from view. In the very next scene, José is walking determinedly toward the camera as a flock of birds wheels in the sky behind him. The meaning is clear: José is trapped in his situation, unable to fly; he’s barely scraping by at an unfulfilling, low-paying job, taking care of his mother (Ana Cecilia Mota), and unable to live his life in Guatemala — or anywhere else — as a nineteen-year-old gay man out in the open. In a bizarre turn, Salanic has been denied a visa to come to America to support the US theatrical release of the film, which begins January 31 at the Quad. He has traveled all over the world with José, which won the Queer Lion at the seventy-fifth annual Venice Film Festival, but the US embassy explained, “You have not demonstrated that you have the ties that will compel you to return to your home country after your travel to the United States.” The rejection is doubly strange given that Salanic went to school in Missouri and Canada, and, in the film, his character feels like he cannot leave his religious mother to pursue his own hopes and dreams.

José

José (Enrique Salanic) comforts Monica (Jhakelyn Waleska Gonzalez) in Li Cheng’s José

Gorgeously photographed by cinematographer Paolo Giron with a sharp sense of place and pace and compassionately written by Cheng and fellow producer George F Roberson, the film follows José as he explores first love with Luis (Manolo Herrera). José works at a dobladas restaurant, trying to lure in cars that are driving by a busy corner. He works with Monica and her boyfriend, Carlos (Esteban Lopez Ramirez), carefully overseen by their manager (Cesar Lorenzo Yojcom Candido). José doesn’t say much; he just goes about his daily business, taking walks, riding the bus, and sneaking away to spend time with other men, primarily Luis. There are numerous graphic sex scenes in the film, tinged with both sweetness and sadness. In only his second film and first as a lead, Salanic, who is of Mayan descent, is softly riveting, commanding the camera like a pro.

The plot rings true every step of the way: The film often has a cinéma-vérité feel; all the actors are nonprofessionals, evoking Italian neo-Realism and the work of Hou Hsiao-hsien, using natural light and sound whenever possible. The Chinese-born Cheng and American native Roberson, both of whom have PhDs and previously collaborated on 2014’s Joshua Tree, lived in Guatemala for two years researching and making the film, which they funded themselves; they interviewed hundreds of young people in the twenty largest Latin American cities across twelve countries, asking three main questions: “Which person are you closest to in your life? What’s your most unforgettable memory? Have you been in love?” The result is a film that is a stark portrait of today’s youth in a troubled, difficult world with limited options, whether gay or straight, where refugees are treated like villains and turned away at borders and children are ripped away from their parents. But the film has hope; we have faith that José will ultimately find his path, although the search is likely to be long and arduous. Cheng will be at the Quad for several Q&As January 31 to February 2, moderated by Before Stonewall codirector Robert Rosenberg or NewFest’s Nick McCarthy, but, alas, no Salanic.

FIRST SATURDAYS: FUTURA NOIR

Common will sit down for a fireside chat as part of Brooklyn Museum First Saturday program this week

Common will sit down for a fireside chat as part of Brooklyn Museum First Saturday program this week

Brooklyn Museum
200 Eastern Parkway at Washington St.
Saturday, February 1, free (some events require advance tickets), 5:00 – 11:00
212-864-5400
www.brooklynmuseum.org

The Brooklyn Museum has a wide-ranging program with several surprises for its annual Black History Month edition of its free First Saturday gathering. There will be live performances by Topaz Jones, Niles Luther, NVR Sleep (Rodney Hazard, Mikey, Fab Roc, and ClassicNewWave), and Bri Blvck; an Ancestral Healing sound bath from HealHaus, with intention-setting by Omar Davis and a sound bath facilitated by Phyllicia Bonanno; a screening of Billy Gerard Frank’s 2019 short film Second Eulogy: Mind the Gap, followed by a talkback with artist and activist Renee Cox, artist Christopher Udemezue, and Frank, moderated by writer and curator Ebony L. Haynes; a Scholar Talk with Niama Safia Sandy on race, power, nationalism, and imperialism; a curator tour of “Jacques-Louis David Meets Kehinde Wiley” led by Lisa Small and Eugenie Tsai; teen apprentice pop-up gallery talks focusing on works by Black artists in the American Art galleries; a hands-on art workshop where participants can make an urban garden, inspired by Kehinde Wiley; a poetry reading with Osyris Antham, Chanice Hughes-Greenberg, and Cyrée Jarelle Johnson; and “Real People: A Fireside Chat with Common,” a conversation with artist, actor, and activist Common (Lonnie Rashid Lynn), moderated by Peloton cycling instructor Tunde Oyeneyin. In addition, the galleries will be open late so you can check out “Jacques-Louis David Meets Kehinde Wiley,” “Out of Place: A Feminist Look at the Collection,” “One: Xu Bing,” “JR: Chronicles,” and more.

ANTONY GORMLEY AT PARSONS SCHOOL OF DESIGN

Antony Gormley

Antony Gormley, rendering of New York Clearing (© the artist)

Who: Antony Gormley
What: Artist talk at Parsons School of Design addressing the question “What is sculpture good for?”
Where: The New School, the Auditorium, Alvin Johnson/J.M. Kaplan Hall, 66 West Twelfth St.
When: Tuesday, February 4, free with advance registration, 6:00
Why: On February 4, British sculptor Antony Gormley will be at Parsons School of Design to discuss his latest work, New York Clearing, which will be on view in Brooklyn Bridge Park’s Pier 3 from February 5 to March 27. The “drawing in space,” consisting of eighteen kilometers of looping and coiling square aluminum tubing, is part of the global project CONNECT, BTS, organized by K-pop sensation BTS. “It’s a truth universally acknowledged that creativity can transcend the boundaries of language, culture, and history,” the superstar boy group explains on the official website. “Art embodies a will to respond to the world, and to communicate that response to others; it is always there, no matter what the era, moving with or despite the times. . . . CONNECT, BTS reaches for a collective experience that might be only the beginning of new communication between art, music, and people.” Curated by Daehyung Lee, CONNECT, BTS also includes Danish artist Jakob Kudsk Steensen’s Catharsis in London, the performance series Rituals of Care curated by Stephanie Rosenthal and Noémie Solomon in Berlin, and Argentine artist Tomás Saraceno’s Aerocene Pacha in Buenos Aires, as well as a yet-to-be-named work in Seoul. “Art only becomes art when it is shared,” the London-born Gormley, whose Event Horizon dazzled and frightened people in Madison Square Park nearly ten years ago, has said. Admission to the February 4 discussion is free with advance registration.

member: POPE.L, 1978-2001

Pope. L. Eating the Wall Street Journal (3rd Version). Sculpture Center, New York, NY. 2000, Digital c-print on gold fiber silk paper. 6 by 9 in. 15.24 by 22.86 cm. © Pope. L. Courtesy of the artist and Mitchell – Innes  &  Nash, New York.

Pope.L, Eating the Wall Street Journal (3rd Version), digital c-print on gold fiber silk paper, Sculpture Center, New York, 2000 (© Pope. L. / courtesy of the artist and Mitchell – Innes & Nash, New York)

MoMA, Museum of Modern Art
11 West 53rd St. between Fifth & Sixth Aves.
Through February 1, $14-$25 (sixteen and under free)
212-708-9400
www.moma.org

The first thing you must do when you go to MoMA is check out whether there is a backpack hanging on the wall at the end of the “member: Pope.L 1978–2001” exhibition; if it’s not there, it means that Newark-born Conceptual artist William Pope.L is somewhere in the galleries, either performing on a yellow square near the front, doodling on the walls, or interacting with visitors. Since the late 1970s, Pope.L has been holding interventions and live performances that expose racism, classism, poverty, homelessness, and other societal ills. “I am a fisherman of social absurdity, if you will,” he has said. “I am more provocateur than activist. My focus is to politicize disenfranchisement, to make it neut, to reinvent what’s beneath us, to remind us where we all come from.” The show, which continues through February 1, features photographs, film footage, and paraphernalia from many of his Crawls and acts of resistance, in which he takes to the streets in unusual ways as a form of protest.

(photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Pope.L has been adding doodles to the walls during run of show at MoMA (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

In Thunderbird Immolation, he doused himself with cheap wine and surrounded himself with matches, evoking the Buddhist ritual of self-immolation but here calling into question the marketing of cheap alcohol in poor minority communities. For The Great White Way and Snow Crawl, Pope.L put on a Superman suit. For Member a.k.a. Schlong Journey, he donned business attire and had a long white cardboard tube with a stuffed white bunny on the end protruding from his crotch, as if it were an enormous phallus, as he walked around Harlem, revealing issues of black masculinity and white supremacy. For Sweet Desire a.k.a. Burial Piece, he buried himself in the ground standing up, only his shoulders and head visible, and looked at a melting bowl of ice cream that he could not bend his head over and eat, emphasizing “have-not-ness.” And for Eating the Wall Street Journal, Pope.L built a tall toilet throne which he climbed up to and then, while sitting on the bowl, read, then tore up, chewed, and spat out pages of the newspaper because of its promise of individual wealth.

Pope.L. The Great White Way, 22 miles, 9 years, 1 street. 2000-09. Performance. © Pope. L. Courtesy of the artists and Mitchell – Innes & Nash, New York.

Pope.L, The Great White Way, 22 miles, 9 years, 1 street, 2000-09 (© Pope.L / courtesy of the artists and Mitchell – Innes & Nash, New York)

In a back room, you can watch several of his experimental performances, including Eracism, Aunt Jenny Chronicles, and Egg Eating Contest; be sure to look behind the screen for a bonus. The Black Factory Archive consists of items donated by people from around the country that they consider black objects. “The Black Factory is an industry that runs on our prejudices,” Pope.L wrote of the project. “We harvest all your confusions, questions, and conundrums, and transform them into the greatest gift of all: possibility!” And in ATM Piece, he chained himself to the front door of a midtown bank, wearing only a skirt made out of bills. Throughout the galleries, you’ll also see small rectangles cut out of the wall; “Typically what cannot be seen is what we most like to see,” he says of the work, Hole Theory. On January 26 at 2:00, MoMA’s Creativity Lab will host a discussion on Pope.L with Brooklyn-based artist Steffani Jemison and MoMA curatorial assistant Danielle Jackson that examines Pope.L’s influence.

(photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Pope.L exhibitions at MoMA and the Whitney are filled with hidden surprises (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Member is part of “Pope.L: Instigation, Aspiration, Perspiration,” a collaboration between MoMA, the Public Art Fund, and the Whitney. On September 21, PAF staged Conquest, in which blindfolded volunteers from across the diversity spectrum crawled from the West Village through Washington Square Park and ultimately to Union Square Park. Groups of five, from people in wheelchairs to pregnant women, from the elderly to the blind and deaf and men and women with prosthetic limbs, as well as able-bodied participants, crawled one block each, raising ideas of physical privilege. And Pope.L’s Choir is on view at the Whitney through March 8 in the free main-floor space, a thousand-gallon tank surrounded by microphones that fills up with water sourced from the Hudson after he poured in some water from Flint, Michigan, then empties out via a pipe system as snippets of gospel music and other sounds can be heard. Around the gallery are such phrases as “NGGR WATER,” “HLLOW WTR,” and “NDVSBL WTR,” evoking Jim Crow, segregated drinking fountains, and the lead crisis in Flint. “I think there’s a kind of arrogance in using this kind of material in this quantity,” he says on the audioguide to Choir. ”I think that in some ways, I’m expressing a kind of privilege in being able to do this. There’s a kind of edge to that in the work.” That statement applies directly to member at MoMA and Pope.L’s entire career as well.