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

FIRST SATURDAY: PRIDE AND AGITPROP!

L. J. Roberts, “Sisters Are Doing It for Themselves,” Jacquard-woven cotton and Lurex, hand-dyed fabric, crank-knit yarn, thread, 2011 (photo by Mario Gallucci)

LJ Roberts, “Sisters Are Doing It for Themselves,” Jacquard-woven cotton and Lurex, hand-dyed fabric, crank-knit yarn, thread, 2011 (photo by Mario Gallucci)

Brooklyn Museum
200 Eastern Parkway at Washington St.
Saturday, June 4, free, 5:00 – 11:00
212-864-5400
www.brooklynmuseum.org

Pride Month is the centerpiece of the Brooklyn Museum’s June edition of its vastly popular free First Saturday program. The evening will feature live performances by New York City Gay Men’s Chorus and DJ Mursi Layne; storytelling by Queer Memoir; screenings of Jake Witzenfeld’s Oriented, followed by a talkback with Tarab NYC, and Asurf Oluseyi’s Hell or High Water, followed by a talkback with activists Kehinde Bademosi, Noni Salma Lawal, Ekene Okuwegbunam, and Adejoke Tugbiyele; a movement workshop inspired by domestic workers, by Studio REV-; pop-up gallery talks on “Disguise: Masks and Global African Art”; a hands-on workshop in which participants can make their own Pride-based iron-on patch; a curator talk by Catherine J. Morris and Stephanie Weissberg on “Agitprop!”; the talk “Women, Art, AIDS, and Activism,” with Joy Episalla, Kia Labeija, Jessica Whitbread, Egyptt Labeija, Sue Schaffner, and Carrie Moyer, hosted by Visual AIDS and moderated by LJ Roberts; a printmaking workshop about immigration and undocumented youth; and outdoor projections by the Illuminator. In addition, you can check out such other exhibitions as “This Place,” “Tom Sachs: Boombox Retrospective, 1999–2016,” and “Stephen Powers: Coney Island Is Still Dreamland (to a Seagull).”

QUEENS INTERNATIONAL 2016 PERFORMANCES

 Janks Archive: Belfast, September 6-7, 2013, Belfast, Northern Ireland (curated by Alissa Kleist as part of FIX Live Art biennale, 2013, photo by Jessica Langley)


Janks Archive: Belfast, September 6-7, 2013, Belfast, Northern Ireland (curated by Alissa Kleist as part of FIX Live Art Biennial, 2013, photo by Jessica Langley)

Who: Janks Archive, Jesus Benavente and Felipe Castelblanco, Trouble (Sam Hillmer and Laura Paris), Patrick Higgins, E.S.P. TV
What: Live performances in conjunction with “Queens International 2016” exhibition
Where: Queens Museum, New York City Building, Flushing Meadows Corona Park
When: Saturday, June 4, free – $8, 12 noon – 5:00 pm
Why: As part of the Queens Museum biennial, there will be a trio of special events held in and around the institution on June 4. From 12 noon to 3:00, Janks Archive, which collects oral insults from around the world, will be in Flushing Meadows Corona Park interviewing passersby about some of their favorite regional snaps, disses, slams, burns, jibes, digs, cut-downs, rippins, and slaggings. From 1:00 to 2:30, Jesus Benavente and Felipe Castelblanco will hold an open rehearsal of “Las Reinas,” their project with two Mariachi bands, one from Queens (Mariachi Real de Mexico), the other from Colombia, in which they collaborate to create a new song, “Las Reinas” (“The Queens”), via online chats and that will be distributed by word of mouth to mariachi bands across North and South America. And from 3:30 to 5:00, artist duo Trouble (Sam Hillmer and Laura Paris) will present “The Stood Maze” in the museum atrium as part of Trans-Pecos’s “Action Fortress” installation; “The Stood Maze” is an interactive pop-up labyrinth held up by thirty-three performers while experimental guitarist Patrick Higgins plays a sonic composition and E.S.P. TV supplies live visuals. In addition to “Queens International 2016,” the museum also currently has on view “Hey! Ho! Let’s Go: Ramones and the Birth of Punk,” “Bearing Witness: Drawings by William Gropper,” and “Nonstop Metropolis: The Remix” in addition to long-term exhibitions.

RAIN: ELEVATOR TO THE GALLOWS

Julien Tavernier (Maurice Ronet) finds himself in a tight squeeze in French Nouvelle Vague noir classic

Julien Tavernier (Maurice Ronet) finds himself in a tight squeeze in noir classic on cusp of Nouvelle Vague

CABARET CINEMA: ASCENSEUR POUR L’ECHAFAUD (ELEVATOR TO THE GALLOWS) (Louis Malle, 1957)
Rubin Museum of Art
150 West 17th St. at Seventh Ave.
Friday, June 3, $10, 9:30
212-620-5000
www.rubinmuseum.org

Louis Malle’s first feature-length fiction film, following The Silent World (made with Jacques Cousteau), is a classic French noir that comes with all the trimmings — and was recently restored in an excellent 35mm print with new subtitles. Jeanne Moreau stars as Florence Carala, who is married to ruthless business tycoon Simon (Jean Wall) but is carrying on an affair with Simon’s right-hand man, Julien Tavernier (Maurice Ronet). Julien plans the perfect murder — or so he thinks, until he has to go back to retrieve a crucial piece of evidence and gets trapped on the elevator. While he struggles to find a way out and Florence waits for him anxiously at a neighborhood bistro, young couple Louis (Georges Poujouly) and Veronique (Yori Bertin) take off in Julien’s convertible and get into some serious trouble of their own. Mistaken identity, cold-blooded killings, jealousy, and one of the greatest film scores ever — by Miles Davis, recorded in one overnight session — make Elevator to the Gallows a splendid debut from one of the world’s finest filmmakers. The film is screening June as part of the Rubin Museum Cabaret Cinema series “Rain,” being held in conjunction with the “Nepalese Seasons: Rain and Ritual” exhibition, and will be introduced by documentarian Alison Klayman (Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry). The series continues June 10 with Deepa Mehta’s Water, introduced by writer Meera Nair, June 17 with Akira Kurosawa’s Rashômon, and June 24 with Frank Capra’s It Happened One Night.

METFRIDAYS — THE MAXIMUM OUT OF THE MINIMUM: RECONSIDERING NASREEN MOHAMEDI

Nasreen Mohamedi, Untitled, ink and graphite on paper, ca. 1975 (Sikander and Hydari Collection)

Nasreen Mohamedi, Untitled, ink and graphite on paper, ca. 1975 (Sikander and Hydari Collection)

The Met Breuer
945 Madison Ave. at 75th St.
Friday, June 3, free with suggested museum admission, 6:00
Exhibition continues through June 5
212-731-1675
www.metmuseum.org

The Met Breuer instantly established its own identity in March, when it opened in the old Whitney space with an experimental performance residency by jazz great Vijay Iyer and an eye-opening exhibition on little-known Indian artist Nasreen Mohamedi, along with the major show “Unfinished: Thoughts Left Visible,” which more than hinted at further changes to come at this new outpost. On Friday, June 3, the Met Breuer will host the MetFridays lecture “The Maximum Out of the Minimum: Reconsidering Nasreen Mohamedi,” with University of Washington associate professor Sonal Khullar, artist Seher Shah, and Sheena Wagstaff, Met chairman of the Departments of Modern and Contemporary Art. “It’s an odyssey of an artist who, despite all the difficulties, was intent on creating work that really made a difference, and that is both personally very impressive but was artistically, well, you can see for yourself,” Wagstaff says in the exhibition trailer. The Indian artist’s first U.S. museum retrospective features more than 130 drawings, paintings, photographs, and diaries by Mohamedi, who died in 1990 at the age of fifty-three but continued working to the end of her life despite battling a rare neurological disorder. Mohamedi favored sharp horizontal and diagonal lines, polygonal shapes, and grids that explored light and space. The progression of her career took her from abstract ink-and-watercolor works on paper to gelatin silver prints of outdoor locations with unique linear angles to extraordinary ink-and-graphite drawings that eventually took on a scientific, futuristic quality, very different from what her contemporaries were doing in South Asia and beyond.

Nasreen Mohamedi, Untitled, gelatin silver print, ca. 1972 (Kiran Nadar Museum of Art, New Delhi)

Nasreen Mohamedi, Untitled, gelatin silver print, ca. 1972 (Kiran Nadar Museum of Art, New Delhi)

All of the works are untitled, allowing viewers to supply labels in their own thought processes if they choose. Mohamedi’s creativity and imagination are so compelling, you’re likely to wonder why you’re hearing about her only now, more than a quarter century after her death, although a critical reevaluation has been building over the last ten years. She was inspired by the writings of Rainer Maria Wilke and Albert Camus and the architectural work of Le Corbusier as well as by Kasimir Malevich and Wassily Kandinsky and fellow Indian artists M. F. Husain, Tyeb Mehta, and V. S. Gaitonde but amassed an oeuvre that was uniquely her own. In her 2014 poetic essay “Elegy for an Unclaimed Beloved,” the artist’s friend Geeta Kapur wrote, in conjunction with a show at the Tate, “Remember Nasreen’s frail limbs, ascetic face, ungendered artist persona. Remember her calling as an unrequited beloved, her narcissistic engagement with her body and the stigmata she barely cared to hide. And always her departing gesture, her return, her masochism and its reward of absurdity and grace. Her continual tracking of a mirage.” You can experience all this more at this beautiful exhibition, with the June 3 panel discussion a happy bonus. “A precise specularity, the flight of an angel shearing space. Then, in the dark night of the soul, where the ejected body persists, Nasreen was content to work with a poverty of means,” Kapur, an influential art critic, adds. “To counter the spectacle of love and of spiritual ambition, she was willing to break apart. She would simply survive, and let the calligraph, the graphic sign, speak.”

DanceAfrica — SENEGAL: DOORS OF ANCIENT FUTURES

WAATO SiITA will be celebrating its native Senegal at DanceAfrica at BAM this weekend (photo courtesy of the artist)

WAATO SiiTA will be celebrating its native Senegal at DanceAfrica at BAM this weekend (photo courtesy of the artist)

Brooklyn Academy of Music
BAM Howard Gilman Opera House, BAMcafé, BAM Rose Cinemas
30 Lafayette Ave. between Ashland Pl. & St. Felix St.
May 27-30, free – $60
718-636-4100
www.bam.org

For its thirty-ninth season, BAM’s extraordinary DanceAfrica program takes audiences to Senegal, celebrating “Doors of Ancient Futures.” The Memorial Day weekend festivities, under the leadership of new artistic director Abdel R. Salaam (from Forces of Nature) and beloved artistic director emeritus Chuck Davis, feature performances in the Howard Gilman Opera House by the Senegalese troupes Les Ballets de la Renaissance Africaine “WAATO SiiTA” and Compagnie Tenane, Senegalese legend Germaine Acogny (“the Mother of Contemporary African Dance”), and Brooklyn’s own BAM/Restoration DanceAfrica Ensemble, joined by Forces of Nature founding member Dyane Harvey-Salaam and Reverend Nafisa Sharriff. Be on the lookout for both traditional and contemporary movement, including krumping, popping, and breakdancing. There will also be a late-night dance party May 28 in the BAMcafé with DJ Tony Humphries, workshops on May 30 with WAATO SiiTA choreographer Pape Moussa Sonko, a FilmAfrica series consisting of ten films screening in BAM Rose Cinemas (including Nicolas Cissé’s Le Terreau de L’Espoir, Yared Zeleke’s Lamb, and Jason Silverman and Samba Gadjigo’s Sembene!), and the oh-so-fab outdoor DanceAfrica Bazaar (May 28-30), chock-full of vendors selling African products, from clothing and music to jewelry and food.

UNLOCKING THE CAGE

Steven Wise

Steven Wise fights to bring personhood to chimpanzees in UNLOCKING THE CAGE

UNLOCKING THE CAGE (Chris Hegedus & D. A. Pennebaker, 2016)
Film Forum
209 West Houston St.
Opens Wednesday, May 25
212-727-8110
www.unlockingthecagethefilm.com
filmforum.org

Award-winning husband-and-wife documentarians D. A. Pennebaker and Chris Hegedus have been collaborating for forty-five years, working on films about such subjects as Bill Clinton’s presidential campaign (The War Room), Carol Burnett (Moon over Broadway), soul music (Only the Strong Survive), pastry chefs (Kings of Pastry), and Elaine Stritch (Elaine Stritch at Liberty). For their latest film, Unlocking the Cage, they spent three years following animal rights lawyer Steven M. Wise, the president and founder of the Nonhuman Rights Project, as he sought to establish “personhood” for several chimpanzees in order to free them from their caged existence and move them to more acceptable animal sanctuaries. Wise and his team, Natalie Prosin and attorneys Elizabeth “Liddy” Stein and Monica Miller, scour the internet searching for chimpanzees to represent as well as sanctuaries where the animals can be released. (The Nonhuman Rights Project focuses on great apes, elephants, and such cetaceans as dolphins and whales because of their autonomy, intelligence, and emotional capacity.) The concept is fascinating, and the film hits its high points when Pennebaker and Hegedus show some of the chimpanzees interacting with humans in compelling ways, watching television or figuring something out on a computer. Unfortunately, far too much of Unlocking the Cage deals with often murky legal discussions and courtroom arguments that drag on and on.

While some people believe the animals must be freed, others think it’s a slippery slope and that the species are already protected by animal welfare laws. Also, although Wise certainly means well, he is so obsessed with finding clients (including Merlin, Kiko, Hercules, Leo, and Tommy) and changing their legal status via the writ of Habeas Corpus that he doesn’t necessarily fully consider the animals’ current situations and relationships with their owners, instead assuming that what he wants for the chimpanzees is the only option, which doesn’t always appear to be the case. Wise, who was inspired by Peter Singer’s 1975 book Animal Liberation: A New Ethics for Our Treatment of Animals, meets with primatologists, visits zoos and sanctuaries, gives talks and lectures, is interviewed by the media, and makes his stand in court, and while he raises some genuinely important questions, the answers are too often bogged down in legalese and repetition. A presentation of Pennebaker Hegedus Films, First Run Features, and HBO Documentary Films, Unlocking the Cage opens at Film Forum on May 25, with Hegedus, Pennebaker, and Wise on hand for Q&As following the 7:00 shows on May 25, 26, and 27 and the 4:40 show on May 28.

CALLY SPOONER: A LECTURE ON FALSE TEARS AND OUTSOURCING

Cally Spooner will deliver a performance lecture on her site-specific installation at the New Museum on May 25 (photo courtesy the New Museum)

Cally Spooner will deliver a performance lecture on her site-specific installation at the New Museum on May 25 (photo courtesy the New Museum)

Who: Cally Spooner
What: Performance lecture
Where: New Museum of Contemporary Art, 235 Bowery at Prince St., 212-219-1222
When: Wednesday, May 25, $15, 7:00
Why: In her New Museum Lobby Gallery installation “On False Tears and Outsourcing,” her first solo institutional presentation in the United States, British multidisciplinary artist Cally Spooner explores issues of communication, power, and the human body, inspired by the scene in Gustave Flaubert’s Madame Bovary in which Emma receives a farewell letter from Rodolphe signed with a fake tear. The site-specific piece is choreographed with and performed by Holly Curran, Maja Ho, Emily McDaniel, Ashton Muniz, José Rivera Jr., Maggie Segale, and Jennifer Tchiakpe in different configurations. Spooner, who has previously staged “He’s in a Great Place! (A film trailer for And You Were Wonderful, On Stage)” at the Tate Modern, “And You Were Wonderful, On Stage” at the National Academy, and “It’s About You” on the High Line, will be at the New Museum on May 25 to deliver a performance lecture in conjunction with the installation.