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Jesper Just |
Cultural Stimuli in NYC Issue 283: engaged flavor
It's a momentous week here in the concrete jungle: Sunday's NYC Marathon concluded with a dramatic, down-to-the-wire finish on the men's side, while more than 37,000 runners of all kinds streamed through the five boroughs. Meanwhile, it's time to head into the voting booths today, Tuesday, to elect our next mayor. (And the current polls are no reason to slag off.) The calls to action continue with State of Emergency — PEN's all-star reading to oppose the government's detainee treatment policies — and the second week of art agitation at PERFORMA05, which includes pieces from Marina Abramović, Berni Searle, and Spaceman 3 vet Sonic Boom. Comedienne Sarah Silverman challenges common notions of appropriate humor in her new film, the UK's Art Brut bang bang their rock 'n roll, and DJ/producer John Tejada makes a rare appearance at a new Brooklyn venue. Do your civic duty, and spread it.
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flavorpill NYC is an email magazine covering a hand-picked selection of music, art, and cultural events — delivered each Tuesday afternoon.
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The HHR™ is rolling proof that cool can be useful and useful can be cool. Get into the latest form of self-expression for just $15,990.* What are you waiting for? Go to Chevy.com and check it out.
*MSRP. Tax, title, license, dealer fees, and optional equipment extra. ©2005 GM Corp. Buckle up, America!
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Spotlight
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Sarah Is Magic
Brash, charming, and intentionally uncouth, comedienne Sarah Silverman has created a devoted following by taking on unexpected (and often uncomfortable) topics. The film version of her off-Broadway show, Jesus Is Magic, opens this week.
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| READING |
State of Emergency: Readings Against Torture, Arbitrary Detention & Extraordinary Rendition
| when: |
Tue 11.8 (7pm) |
| where: |
Cooper Union's Great Hall (7 E 7th St) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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In the summer of 2004, a line snaked around Cooper Union's Great Hall as the myopic masses queued for PEN's first State of Emergency reading. Those with the good luck to make it in saw the impish Jonathan Safran Foer construct a hilarious prose poem out of Dubya quotations, Russell Banks read Mark Twain's still-relevant objections to US imperialism, and A.M. Homes resurrect Ferlinghetti's "A Coney Island of the Mind" — all in support of the Core Freedoms campaign. This year, Edward Albee, Sandra Cisneros, Don DeLillo, Dave Eggers, Heidi Julavits, Walter Mosley, Grace Paley, and Salman Rushdie, among others, take the stage to voice their opposition to the US' treatment of detainees through policies like extraordinary rendition. If only the late Susan Sontag could be present to say her piece. (JKG)
Note: Doors are at 6:30pm, and based on last year's huge turnout, we strongly recommend you arrive well before then if you want to get in.
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| MUSIC: Jazz |
Joel Harrison
| when: |
Tue 11.8 (10pm) |
| where: |
55 Bar (55 Christopher St, 212.929.9883) map |
| price: |
$10 |
| links: |
Joel Harrison |
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Prolific jazz guitarist and vocalist Joel Harrison explores the music of George Harrison (no relation) with some of the best jazz musicians downtown has to offer, including celebrated sax wizard Dave Binney and mind-boggling drummer Dan Weiss. Harrison's guitar gently dissects the late Beatle's ballads with great sensitivity and enlightened poise. Subdued but soulful, his interpretations filter familiar tunes through the mature lens of millennial country-jazz styles developed by the likes of Bill Frisell and Norah Jones. (JM)
For which Sundance Film Festival-winning HBO film did Harrison compose the score? The second correct answer receives a pair of tickets to this show.
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| PERFORMANCE: Art |
Marina Abramović: Seven Easy Pieces
| when: |
Wed 11.9 - Tue 11.15 (5pm-midnight) |
| where: |
Guggenheim Museum (1071 5th Ave, 212.423.3500) map |
| price: |
$10 / $40 full week pass |
| links: |
Event Info |
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The grandmother of performance art and a pioneer in the use of body-as-canvas,
Marina Abramović has cut herself with a razor blade, taken mind-altering drugs, and
flagellated herself in the name of art.
With Seven Easy Pieces, she presents an ambitious
retrospective of performance art from the '60s and '70s. For seven
consecutive evenings, she inhabits the Guggenheim's rotunda, recreating and
reinterpreting a selection of groundbreaking works, including Joseph Beuys'
How to Explain Pictures to a Dead Hare, Valie Export's anatomically
correct Action Pants: Genital Panic and Vito Acconci's masturbating
experiment, Seedbed. To round out the tribute, Abramović unveils a
new work. (MB)
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| ALSO ON WED |
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FILM
Pulse Opens Wed 11.9 IFC Center (323 6th Ave, 212.924.7771) map $10.75
IFC Center |
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About a rash of suicides inspired by a webcam that connects viewers to the
dead, Pulse indicts the crushing loneliness of modernity. This is
J-horror at its existentialist best. (LR)
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READING
Trinie Dalton Wed 11.9 (7pm) Barnes & Noble Court St (106 Court St, Bklyn, 718.246.4996) map 
Event Info |
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LA-based writer Trinie Dalton pens beautifully strange stories about a psychedelic California that's rarely seen in the light of day. Her new short-story collection, Wide Eyed, is dirty, freaky, and fantastic. (DRC)
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MUSIC: Avant-Garde
Dominic Frasca feat. Bang on a Can All-Stars Wed 11.9 (8pm) Tonic (107 Norfolk St, 212.358.7501) map $10
Event Info |
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One-man acoustic-guitar sensation Dominic Frasca sounds like a Steve Reich-inspired band playing at 45 RPM: massive. Bang on a Can All-Stars follow in the second
set. (JM)
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| ART: Opening |
Glenn Kaino: of passed pawns and communicating rooks
| when: |
Thur 11.10 (6-8pm) |
| where: |
Projectile Gallery (37 W 57 St, 3rd Fl, 212.688.1585) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info | Glenn Kaino |
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Conceptual artist Glenn Kaino has previously mocked corporate culture's
appropriation of Japanese "zen" gardens and created a video game, with
collaborator Mark Bradford, based on Bruce Lee's Game of Death.
Ratcheting up his thematic threshold, Kaino's latest work incorporates the
logic of chess to critique the formation of social structures and systems of
validation. Here, a large-format custom chess set sculpted from vintage
ammunition boxes and food crates borrows vernacular street imagery, while a
suite of black-and-white portraits of chess champions in action reflects the
time pressure of speed matches and a group of wax chess-board drawings serve as artifacts from candle-lit competition. (AM)
Note: This exhibition continues through Tue 11.22 (Tue-Sat: 10am-6pm).
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| ALSO ON THUR |
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MUSIC: Pop Noir
Broadcast w/ Gravenhurst and Tralala Thur 11.10 (8:30pm) Webster Hall (125 E 11th St, 212.353.1600) map $20 / $18 advance
Event Info |
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Broadcast return as a duo, playing their trademark evocative, lo-fi
electronic pop in support of the gorgeously spare and haunting Tender Buttons. Gravenhurst — whose recent work leavens their dark, Drake-ian folk with dreamy psych guitars — opens. (MG)
Note: Check the Flavorwire, our daily NYC blog, on Wed 11.9 for a ticket giveaway to this show.
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MUSIC: Bluegrass
Del McCoury w/ Abigail Washburn Thur 11.10 (9:30pm) Joe's Pub (425 Lafayette St, 212.539.8778) map $30
Event Info |
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Abigail Washburn, who lived for a time in Sichuan Province, blends Chinese
and American traditions seamlessly in her soulful, old-time folk songs.
Tonight, she opens for bluegrass legend Del McCoury before embarking on a
Chinese tour. (GM)
Note: Advance tickets highly recommended, as tonight's 7pm show is already sold out.
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SCREENING
Chengwin and Chunk Video Release Party Thur 11.10 (9pm) Northsix (66 N 6th St, Wburg, 718.599.5103) map $5
Event Info |
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Tonight, catch a documentary on streetfighting poultry hybrids Chengwin and Chunk, have heartthrob Chabio sign a book, and drink with the friendly mischief-makers that bring these beloved mascots to life. (CEH)
Note: As above, check the Flavorwire, on Wed 11.9 for a ticket giveaway to this event.
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| FILM |
Sarah Silverman: Jesus Is Magic
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"I don't care if you think I'm racist. I just want you to think I'm thin,"
Sarah Silverman affably admits in the film adaptation of her hit
off-Broadway one-woman show, Sarah Silverman: Jesus Is Magic. One of the most original and edgy stand-up comics on the scene today, Silverman unabashedly bobs and weaves through subject matter that other comics wouldn't touch with a ten-foot pole, such as the Holocaust and 9/11. We fondly think of her as a sexy, angelic, curvy Lenny Bruce. A bit more dynamic than the usual concert film, Jesus has Liam Lynch, the director behind Tenacious D's quirky videos, supplementing the stage work with comic sketches and pumping up Silverman's musical indulgences. (MB)
Note: Galapagos Art Space offers a free Jesus preview screening on Wed 11.9 (8pm).
Which talk show king's name did Silverman drag through the mud in a dirty, nasty 2005 improv film? The first two correct answers each win a pair of tickets to this screening.
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| MULTIMEDIA: Opening |
Bill Viola
| when: |
Fri 11.11 (6-8pm) |
| where: |
James Cohan Gallery (533 W 26th St, 212.714.9500) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info | Bill Viola |
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An undisputed master of a still-developing medium, Bill Viola uses video and
installation to explore a rich array of references, incorporating art
history, world religious philosophy, and the simple pleasures of human
sensuality. His latest work is inspired in part by a commission for the Los
Angeles Philharmonic's staging of the Wagner opera Tristan und
Isolde, now touring. Becoming Light is an erotic descent into
the depths of sublime passion, recalling through its imagery the charged
humanism of baroque sculpture; Night Journey pits man and woman
against desire and reflection; and The Darker Side of Dawn is an
hour-long study of an oak tree as it passes from day to night and day again.
(AM)
Note: This exhibition continues through Thur 12.22 (Tue-Sat: 10am-6pm).
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| MUSIC: Eclectic |
The Brooklyn Shuffle feat. Brazilian Girls and Wiley
| when: |
Fri 11.11 & Sat 11.12 (8pm) |
| where: |
Southpaw (125 5th Ave, Park Slope, 718.230.0236) map |
| price: |
Fri: $23 / $20 advance Sat: $15 / $12 advance |
| links: |
Event Info | Brazilian Girls |
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The Brooklyn Shuffle's two-night festival presents artists who borrow from eclectic genres, capturing the open-mindedness and funky diversity that Brooklyn has grown to embrace. The Brazilian Girls headline tonight with a smooth, multilingual mix of Latin/Carribean-accented electronica and downtempo pop perfect for small clubs like Southpaw. Their seductive grooves are preceded by Beans' throbbing, electro-tinged beats and rhymes. On Saturday, London grime MC/producer Wiley projects his post-2-step rap and dancehall hybrid, following eclectic Brooklyn reggae ensemble the Noble Society. (AAA)
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| MUSIC: Indie/Country-Rock |
Okkervil River w/ Minus Story
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Hailing from teensy-tiny Boonville, MO, Minus Story have done all they can to explode out of their archetypal small-town context. The textures on their new No Rest for Ghosts are too sublime for the small-time, too intimate for the big-time: ice-pick guitars slice through cushy synths, surprising rhythmic shapes crop up at every melodic turn, and Jordan Geiger's Wayne Coyne-esque tenor yowls lovely, terrifying things into the wind. It all sounds like a bunch of creatively restless townies inventing their own surreal fantasy world out of sheer desperation, and it induces shivers on contact. Minus Story open for their beloved Jagjaguwar labelmates, heart-on-sleeve country alchemists Okkervil River. (TG)
What would your surreal small-town fantasy look like? Our favorite response of 50 words or less wins a pair of tickets to this show.
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| MULTIMEDIA |
Lichens and Soft Circle
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Your favorite Billyburg culinary laboratory and alternative live-art venue
is serving up two fresh courses of solo sound art. Lichens (the nom de plume of Robert Lowe) will get the room humming like a hot beehive, potentially levitating chairs and tables with his wordless vocals and acoustic/electric mix. Hisham Akira Bharoocha is a ubiquitous art/noise rock collaborator — both Lightning Bolt and Black Dice have benefited from his contributions — but has lately been playing a Chelsea gallery tour with his mixed-media 2D collages. Tonight, he returns to the stage to perform as Soft Circle, looping Japanese-inspired measures of drum-kit, guitar, and voice. (JK)
Note: Reservations are highly recommended.
Since the L train doesn't run to/from Brooklyn this weekend, check the MTA for alternate routes.
Bharoocha is currently collaborating in a new band with which other Flavorpill fave DJ/multiple-monikered recording artist? The fourth correct response wins a pair of tickets to either of tonight's shows.
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| MUSIC: Punk |
FIXED presents Art Brut
| when: |
Sat 11.12 (10pm) |
| where: |
Tribeca Grand Hotel, Downstairs (2 Ave of the Americas, 212.519.6677) map |
| price: |
w/ RSVP |
| links: |
Event Info | Art Brut |
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Bang Bang Rock & Roll, the recent debut from brash UK quintet
Art Brut, is a study in contradictions. Initially, the cocky, sloppy, piss
'n vinegar vocals, decidedly unpoetic lyrics, and raw punk guitars lob a gob at the listener, but soon, tight rhythms, deft songcraft, and cleverly skewed perspectives reveal an endearingly unpretentious artiness. "My Little Brother," for instance, is a madly catchy send-up of familial relations,
generational conflict, and obscure indie wonkery. The Bruts blitz the
metro area with three shows this week, but it's a safe bet that tonight's free FIXED party, which also features resident DJs JDH and Dave P, is the highlight. (JL)
Note: Art Brut also perform at Maxwell's on Wed 11.9 and the Mercury Lounge on Thur 11.10.
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| DJ |
Bushwick Art Projects presents the Night Shift feat. John Tejada
| when: |
Sat 11.12 (midnight-8am) |
| where: |
The Factory at Bushwick Industrial Park (304 Boerum St, Bklyn) map |
| price: |
$10 |
| links: |
Event Info | John Tejada |
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When Bushwick Art Projects chose to close their 16-hour, 30-venue festival of visual and performance art with an all-night party, they couldn't have selected a more appropriate headliner. John Tejada, longtime producer of genre- and tempo-jumping music, always has a few tricks up his sleeves — from introspective post-rock and Postal Service remixes to steely minimal techno and vocal house anthems (like his recent clubland monster "Paranoia"). Local techno fanatics/promoters DJ Spinoza and Wolf + Lamb join the duo of Christina Wheeler and David Last to warm up tonight's virgin venue, a giant wood shop transformed by a 12,000 watt sound system, lighting, and projections. (CEH)
Note: BAP events kick off with the multimedia weekly SHARE in a special session at the Factory (4-7pm, free). The Day Shift (7pm-12am, $5 before 10pm / $10 after) follows, featuring experimental electronic performances from the Groove Bros, Khonnor, and others.
Since the L train doesn't run to/from Brooklyn this weekend, check here for alternative routes.
Which drum 'n bass artist on Tejada's recording label is named after a 20th-century art movement? The second and fourth correct answers each win a pair of tickets to this technostravaganza.
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| ALSO ON SAT |
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FESTIVAL: Machinima
Machinima Film Festival Sat 11.12 (11am-6:30pm) Museum of the Moving Image (35th Ave at 36th St, Astoria, 718.784.0077) map $10
Event Info |
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This all-day event devoted to the art of satirically hacked video-game cinema includes screenings, workshops, demos, panels, and live performances, as well as a showing of the first season of the genre's classic Red vs. Blue. (SP)
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DJ
Basic NYC presents Mazi Sat 11.12 (9pm-5am) Sullivan Room (218 Sullivan St, 212.252.2151) map $15 / $10 w/ RSVP
Event Info |
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One of Chicago's strongest producer/DJs drops his tech-inflected, chunky take on house. Don't sleep on this one — Mazi has blown away dedicated fans and fickle trainspotters alike during recent visits. (CEH)
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| MUSIC: Wisened Slack-Folk |
Mt. Egypt
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Professional skateboarder and singer/songwriter, Travis Graves is good at making things look easy. Like grinding a 30-foot rail, the key to great music is not just pulling it off, but maintaining an effortless appearance. Recording under the moniker Mt. Egypt, Graves constructs songs that are heartbreaking not because they're mopey, but because they're ineffably positive. Graves' odes to love, depression, and the healing powers of nature penetrate with little more than a clear, silvery voice, a shuffling acoustic guitar, and plain-spoken lyrics like, "Everybody gets hungry / Everyone needs a way to believe that what they do has meaning." Mt. Egypt's sound is so delicate and honest, so subtly melodic, that it leaves you slack-jawed, wondering "How'd he do that?" (JCF/TG)
Note: This is the second installment of Mt. Egypt's Sunday-night residency at Pianos this month. Graves plays again on Sun 11.20 and Sun 11.27.
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| MUSIC: Electro-Spazz |
Quintron & Miss Pussycat
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Rock has a history of married acts — Sonny and Cher, Ike and Tina, the White Stripes (supposedly) — but what distinguishes Quintron & Miss Pussycat is Miss Pussycat's marionette show (eat your red-and-white hearts out, Jack and Meg). While Miss Pussycat does double duty as maraca-rocker and backup vocalist, her outsized personality is the pilot of the puppet show. There's also Quintron's Drum Buddy, a patented, oscillating light show/synthesizer that he manipulates like a DJ scratching vinyl. However, the soul of the Quintron sound lies in the percolating chords and throbbing boom-box beats of a custom Hammond organ, which, teamed with falsetto invocations from all sides, creates a high-impact soul-train wreck. (QH)
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| ALSO ON SUN |
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MUSIC: Indie Folk-Pop
Andrew Bird w/ Head of Femur Sun 11.13 (8:30pm) Bowery Ballroom (6 Delancey St, 212.533.2111) map $16
Event Info |
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Tonight, indie troubadour Andrew Bird partners with Anticon's Dosh to create loopy, on-the-fly arrangements of violin, guitar, keys, drums, and of course, virtuosic whistling. (JL)
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| MULTIMEDIA |
Berni Searle
| when: |
Mon 11.14 (7-10pm) |
| where: |
Angel Orensanz Foundation Center for the Arts (172 Norfolk St, 212.529.7194) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info | Berni Searle |
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Upholding art as a catalyst for social discussion, Cape Town-based artist Berni Searle uses the human body to anchor her performance videos, two of which are showing at the Angel Orensanz Foundation during PERFORMA05. Home and Away links the body and history, juxtaposing views of the Moroccan sea, over which immigrant boats cross from North Africa to Spain, with images of Searle's own body being carried by the coastal tide. About to Forget, a three-channel installation, points at collective memory and identity; color itself threatens destruction as it dissolves from paper silhouettes of Searle's family members and permeates the water in which they float, leaving barely a ghost of their original forms. (JG)
Note: Following the event, Paul D. Miller, aka DJ Spooky, recreates a 1971 Nam Jun Paik work.
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| ART |
Hypnogoogia
| when: |
Now through Sat 12.24 (Tue-Sat: 12-6pm) |
| where: |
Deitch Projects: Wooster (18 Wooster St, 212.343.7300) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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Hypnogoogia sounds like a rare psychological disorder, and indeed, this exhibit does wreak havoc on the brain. Reflective discs cast light onto pinwheels and gigantic rotating geodesic-dome-shaped paintings dot the main space like monumental altars resurrected from a psychedelic civilization. Hidden at the back of the room is a monochromatic video piece amplified into a flashing space warp by triangular mirrors, while a secret ladder leads down to a kaleidoscopic vista spanning the length of the basement-level gallery. But the sheer overload of hypnotic imagery by artists Jim Drain and Ara Peterson also has a calming, shamanic effect, offering escape from the tedium of the earthly dimension. (JK)
Note: For performance art biennial PERFORMA05 former Spacemen 3er Sonic Boom contributes live space rockedelia to Hypnogoogia's trippy dreamscapes on Wed 11.9 (8pm).
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| ART |
Frequency
| when: |
Now through Sun 3.12.06 (Wed-Fri & Sun: 12-6pm / Sat: 10am-6pm) |
| where: |
The Studio Museum in Harlem (144 W 125 St, 212.864.4500) map |
| price: |
$7 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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Sandwiched between such hits as this year's Greater New
York at P.S.1 and next year's Whitney Biennial, Frequency culls together
the best emerging black artists in America. Touted as a snapshot of the
moment, it's a fresh look at 35 young artists whose interests are as varied as
a Kinder Surprise. Included this year are Wayne Hodge's macabre video suite
featuring Paul Robeson, Robert Pruitt's 19th-century African American found
objects, and Mickalene Thomas's rhinestone paintings. Freestyle, the
Studio Museum's first curatorial effort in this direction, was trumpeted as
the most exciting show of 2001. Poised for a repeat performance, Frequency is a measure of the current within contemporary black culture. (PJ)
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| FILM |
Ellie Parker
| when: |
Opens Fri 11.11 |
| where: |
Angelika Film Center (18 W Houston St, 212.995.2000) map |
| price: |
$10.75 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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Ellie Parker works where so many other recent Hollywood
self-critiques have failed not only because of its snapdragon script and
supporting cast, but because Naomi Watts may be the most physically gifted,
and least vain, actress working today. As Parker, an LA actress zooming
woozily between auditions and liaisons with narcissistic men, she is lit up
and apple-cheeked one moment, and hollowed, dark-eyed, and puke-smeared the
next. Few actors have so aptly captured the chief occupational hazard of
their trade — the elimination of one's self to fully embody another
— and few films have made such good use of DV, with its grainy shadows highlighting Watts' many contrasts beautifully. (LR)
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FOOD FOR THOUGHT: CANSTRUCTION |
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Legos hardly hold a candle to cans as building blocks. That's the starting
point for the super-sized, fanciful CANSTRUCTIONs on display in showrooms
throughout the New York Design Center. This whimsical, highly competitive
annual event — with sculptures created by 34 teams representing the city's top design firms, and a jury of peers selecting winners — not
only makes us focus on world hunger, but will also donate the cans themselves to
local food banks in time for the holidays. In the meantime, marvel at feats
of engineering and ingenuity that transform cans of tuna into the Tower of
Pisa, okra into an octopus, or tomato sauce into a taxi. Bring a can of
food of your own to donate — and your camera. (CM)
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CD REVIEW: Matias Aguayo, Are You Really Lost |
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Kompakt
Released October 2005
$14.50 (Forced Exposure)
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Closer Musik, Matias Aguayo's former group, made some of the darkest music ever released on Kompakt — itself hardly known for its sunny disposition — so it's no surprise that Aguayo's solo debut is as somber as it is. Minor-key melodies and sullen arpeggios sketch out the album's brooding arc, while spindly drum programming turns wide-open empty space into claustrophobic shoeboxes. But there's euphoria here, too, in the unhinged whoops of "Drums & Feathers"; in the accidental grime accents of the title track; and in Max Turner's sultry declamations on "De Papel." "So in Love," which spirals forever downward, is the most quietly exhilarating brood since Ricardo Villalobos' "Dexter," while the robotic bump and squelch of "Radiotaxi," imagining what would happen if the house Jack built were haunted, cries out for a single release. (PS)
Note: This review is courtesy of Earplug, a twice-monthly email magazine about electronic music.
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STREAMS: Dirty |
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Week in and week out, our friends at Dirty offer up an impressive range of music and assorted media content. From Tigersushi, check out Joakim's best-kept music secrets, including bootlegs from CAN founder Holger Czukay, Silicon Teens tracks, and everything right on down to Patty Duke. Codek Records' In Flagranti hold things down on the techno and electro tip, and the Dirty crew itself shares its current top 28 tracks. If that weren't enough, be sure to treat yourself to the site's staggering storehouse of archived videos and interviews. (CJN)
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Joakim: Versatile mix (Electronic classics)
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In Flagranti: Dirty mix (Techno/electro)
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Dirty Sound System 28: Dirty mix (Rare grooves/funk)
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| Header Design: |
| Putting hipsters first | Jesper Just |
| |
| Editors: |
| Pick Flick! | Jocelyn K. Glei | | Nixon's the one | Jake Lancaster | | It takes a village idiot | Doug Levy | | Hegel: he's got the spirit | Sascha Lewis | | Leave no billionaire behind | Andrew Maerkle | | This time, elect us! | Mark Mangan | | Not just peanuts | Kristin Miller | | Compassionate colonialism | Colin J. Nagy | | Dewey or don't we | Stephan Paschalides |
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| ABOUT US |
| flavorpill NYC is a free weekly email magazine covering music, arts, and cultural events in New York City. All listings are pure editorial, never paid advertisements — no money is accepted from venues, artists, or promoters. Read more about us, and spread it... |
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| FEEDBACK |
| Please let us know what's on your mind, any and all feedback — comments, questions, ideas, or rants. |
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| EVENT & DESIGN SUBMISSIONS |
To let us know about an upcoming event that you think belongs here, please email us at events at least two weeks prior to the date.
To find out more about submitting cover art to run at the top of Flavorpill publications, go to flavorpill.net/design. |
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| Every week, flavorpill NYC presents one exclusive media partner. Click for more information about advertising opportunities on all Flavorpill publications. |
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| Contributors: |
| Tax! Cackle! Pop! | Atossa A. Abrahamian | | Just tax it | Mindy Bond | | Unique, you need! | Daniel R. Chamberlin | | Be gnarly, vote Carly | Josh C. Forbes | | Workers of the world unite! | Mystery Girl | | Vote Brentos get free Mentos! | Todd Goldstein | | Choose the chicks! | Carl E. Hagen | | Kinder, gentler nation | Jessica Kraft | | Keep cool with Coolidge | Gerry Mak | | Pedro for President | S. Akiko Moorman | | Ross for boss | Quanah Humphreys | | Workers power! | Paddy Johnson | | Paul Power | Chris MacLeod | | Love ya Dubya | John McCormick | | Leave no bush behind | Lisa Rosman | | Fourteen or fight | Philip Sherburne |
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Production: |
| Prosperity and progress | Anjuli Ayer | | 54-40 or fight | Jessica Bauer-Greene | | Transformer with results | Morgan Croney | | A chicken in every pot | Jules Gaffney | | A leader, for a change | Pilar Gallego | | Where's the beef? | Mia Kim | | Vote yourself a farm | Sander-Martijn Milks | | I like Ike | David Morrow | | Return to normalcy | Leah Taylor | | Tippecanoe and Tyler Too | Judah Wiedre |
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MORE FILTERED CULTURE |
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A monthly review focusing on smart, readable works of fiction and nonfiction, from current titles to past gems
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Global fashion trends
A twice-monthly, insider view on fashion trends breaking in Paris, London, New York, and around the world
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International art
A twice-monthly email magazine covering art, design, and architecture with profiles, news, and reviews of inter- national shows
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