Tumgik
#corrina joseph
aproxm · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media
happy black history, you can celebrate with this
8 notes · View notes
thebetterbear · 2 years
Text
Post Modern Art
Escaping Confines of Museum
Tumblr media
City, Michael Heizer. Located in Garden Valley, a desert valley in rural Lincoln County in the U.S. state of Nevada. land art sculpture. 1970-2022
Collapsing Boundaries Between High and Low
Tumblr media
Curious Kitten watercolor painting is a painting by Svetlana Novikova which was uploaded on February 23rd, 2013.
Rejecting Originality
Tumblr media
Andy Warhol 1928–1987. Silkscreen ink and acrylic paint on 2 canvases. 1982
Jouissance
Tumblr media
Fred Tomaselli, 2014, 60″ x 84″, photo-collage, leaves, acrylic and resin on wood panel, © 2014, courtesy of James Cohan Gallery and the artist
Working Collaboratively
Tumblr media
Meow Wolf. Sept. 13, 2021.
Adam Christopher
Andi Todaro
Ashley Frazier, Michael Sperandeo
Brandan Styles "Bzurk”, Ellie Rusinova
Brian Corrigan
Cal Duran, David Ocelotl Garcia
Cami Galofre
Chris Bagley
Christopher Owen Nelson
Christopher Short
Collin Parson
Corrina Espinosa
Dan Taro
David Farquharson
Dice 51
Douglas A. Schenck “DAS”
Dylan Gebbia-Richards
Frankie Toan
Ian McKenna
Jaime Molina, Pedro Barrios
Jennifer Pettus
Jess Webb
Jodi Stuart, Libby Barbee
Joseph Lamar
Joshua Goss
JUHB.
Justin Camilli
Justin Gitlin aka Cacheflowe
Kalyn Heffernan, Gregg Ziemba
Katy Zimmerman, Erika Wurth
Kia Neill
Kristin Stransky
Laaiaim Mayer
Lauri Lynnxe Murphy
LORDSCIENCE UNIVERSAL
Lumonics
Marjorie Lair, Kyle Vincent Singer
Maya Linke
Myah Sarles
Nicole Banowetz
Nolan Tredway
Ramón Bonilla
Reed Fox, Ben Weirich
Sabin Aell, Randy Rushton
Scott Hildebrandt
Sean Peuquet
Shayna Cohn
Sigrid Sarda
Sofie Birkin
Thomas Scharfenberg
Viviane Le Courtois
Wanderweird
Wynn Earl Buzzell Jr.
Andrew Novick, Pamela Webb, Robert Ayala
bearwarp
Chad Colby, Lexis Loeb, Hayley Kirkman
Charles Kern, Ty Holter, Ben Jackson, Rachel Bilys, Brett Sasine
Demiurge LLC: Joe Riche and Wynn Buzzell
Eriko Tsogo, Jennifer Tsogo, Tsogo Mijid, Batochir Batkhishig
F. Ria Khan, Armon Naein, Blake Gambel, Calvin Logan, Charles Candon, Harrison Bolin, Luke Collier, Maria Deslis, Sky Johnson, Sofia Rubio-Topete
Ladies Fancywork Society
Merhia Wiese, Annabelle Wiese, Maggie Wiese, Eunseo Zoey Kim, Dan Griner
Mike Lustig, Mitch Hoffman, Tim Omspach, Nathan Koral, Evan Beloni, Ryan Elmendorf, Scott Wilson, Charlis Robbins
Molina Speaks, Stevon Lucero, DJ Icewater, Felix "Fast4ward" Ayodele, Diles, Emily Swank
Oren Lomena, Alaine "Skeena" Rodriguez, Alius Hu
Peniel Apantenco, Kim Shively, Colin Richard Ferguson Ward,  (In memoriam)
Sam Caudill, Sean Louis Rove, Juancristobal Hernández
Secret Love Collective: Katy Batsel, Lares Feliciano, Colby Graham, Piper Rose, Frankie Toan, Katy Zimmerman, Lauren Zwicky, Genevieve Waller
The Church of Many: Andrea Thurber, Elsa Carenbauer, Anna Goss, Maddi Waneka and Emily Merlin
Waffle Cone Club: Kyle Vincent Singer, Scott Kreider, Marjorie Lair
Everything is Terrible!
Kevin Bourland
Michael Lujan
Moment Factory
Nina Mastrangelo
Scott Geary, Wayne Geary, Gary Ashkin
Appropriating
Tumblr media
Paneel "Rehearsal for an Icon 2001 - Mona Lisa" von Olbinski, Grafikdruck. Digital Print
Hybridizing
Tumblr media
Untitled (Studio)2014
Kerry James Marshall
Simulating
Tumblr media
Andy Warhol (American, 1928–1987) 1962. Synthetic polymer paint on thirty-two canvases, Each canvas 20 x 16" (50.8 x 40.6 cm). Overall installation with 3" between each panel is 97" high x 163" wide
Mixing Media
Tumblr media
Mama, Mummy and Mamma (Predecessors #2)
Njideka Akunyili Crosby. 2014
Layering
Tumblr media
Zephyrus Rising, 2022. Acrylic on Acrylic. 32 × 16 × 22 in Duncan McDaniel
Mixing Codes
Recontextualizing
Tumblr media
 Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa, 1503-6; On Winnie: Denis Colomb stoles (worn as a headdress, top and sleeves) 
Confronting the Gaze
Tumblr media
Harley Quinn in Suicide Squad David Ayer 2016 (left), Harley Quinn in Birds of Prey Cathy Yann 2021 (right)
Facing Abject
Tumblr media
Jane Alexander, Butcher Boys, 1985/86, mixed media (Iziko South African National Gallery, Cape Town, photo: Goggins World, CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
Constructing Identities
Creating Metaphors
Tumblr media
Martin Puryear. Ladder for Booker T. Washington, detail, 1996. Installation view at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Texas. 2003
Using Narratives
Tumblr media
Damien Hirst The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living, 2013 Lentikulardruck80 x 120 cm
Irony, Parody, Parody Dissonance
Tumblr media
A Subtlety, or the Marvelous Sugar Baby (2014). Kara Walker Photo: Andrew Burton/Getty Images
17 notes · View notes
randomvarious · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Today’s compilation:
Off-Centre: A Riot On Old Street 2000 Broken Beat / Future Jazz / Soul / Drum n Bass
BBE really is just one of the greatest labels to ever do it, folks. The London-based outfit has always kept it eclectic since its mid-90s inception, reaching across every continent besides Antarctica to deliver all kinds of music that's tangentially rooted in either jazz, soul, funk, or R&B. And there have been countless genres that have manifested themselves over the years from those genres, from neo-soul, to future jazz, to broken beat, to disco, to hip hop, to downtempo, to house, to drum n bass, to breakbeat, to trip hop, to electro, and more. BBE releases all of it. They are one of the premier labels for crate diggers, founded by a pair of crate diggers themselves.
And this triple-12-inch comp from the label is nothing short of excellent. It's co-compiled by popular UK club and radio DJ Patrick Forge and someone named Ross Clarke. And much to my surprise, it's actually not a label sampler, even though all of these songs would fit right in in BBE’s catalog. A handful of them were exclusives at the time of this comp's release, but the rest of them are licensed from other labels. It's basically Forge and Clarke supplying some of their contemporary favorites along with a couple phenomenal tracks from the 70s as well. 
Primarily, this is a broken beat comp, a genre of music that was hugely popular in the underground at the turn of the millennium and that's similar to future jazz or nu-jazz, but uses complex drum beats or breaks. But this is so much more than broken beat too. We've got a couple drum n bass tunes, an outstanding funky breaks and turntablism remix of Shirley Bassey's cover of Blood, Sweat & Tears' late 60s classic hit, "Spinning Wheel," by the great DJ Spinna, some wild contemporary jazz fusion from Japanese group Sleep Walker, and I mentioned those two 70s songs prior: sweet disco-mambo from a short-lived group called Inner City Jam Band and a piece of psychedelic pop-soul from Shuggie Otis called "Strawberry Letter 23," whose much more famous cover by The Brothers Johnson appears in Pulp Fiction.
Such an awesome and diverse collection of tunes here. BBE as a label really just defines cool to me. They're like if Red Bull Music Academy had been a record label; pushing the envelope, cherishing and showcasing the contemporary underground, and paying a deep respect to underappreciated nuggets from the past. Such terrific stuff.
I don't have links to some of these highlights as standalone tracks, but the whole comp is up on YouTube as a single video 😋.
Highlights:
Corrina Joseph Featuring Daniel Thomas - "Baby I'm Scared of You (Radio Edit)" Inner City Jam Band - "Inner City Jam (Mambonique)" Phoojun - "Rainbow (Exclusive)" Da Lata - "Binti (Off-Centre Mix)" The Amalgamation Of Soundz - "Freedom Suite (Exclusive)" Shirley Bassey - "Spinning Wheel (DJ Spinna Mix)" Shuggie Otis - "Strawberry Letter 23" Sleep Walker - "Ai-No-Kawa"
9 notes · View notes
randomontheinternet · 4 years
Text
Our Life Voiced Names A-Z
I heard some people wanted a list of the voiced names so far, so I took the time to copy down all of the names from A to Z. The names are under the cut to not clutter.
A
Aaron
Aayria
Abby
Ace
Adrienne
Aeon
Aeriie
Aesilng
Aga
Aine
Aisha
Aisling
AJ
Aki
Akira
Akua
Alaina
Alex
Alexis
Alfonzo
Ali
Alice
Alijah
Alison
Alvis
Alyssa
Amanda
Amber
Amelia
Amy
Anaïs
Andra
Andre
Andrew
Andri
Angel
Angela
Angie
Anima
Anita
Anna
Anna-Maria
Anne
Annie
Annika
Anthony
Antoine
Aoife
Arabella
Aram
Ari
Arielle
Arrow
Arthur
Arturo
Arty
Ash
Asher
Ashla
Ashleigh
Ashlyn
Aspen
Asteria
Astrid
Athena
Atticus
Audrey
Aura
Aurora
Austin
Autumn
Ayanna
B
Barbie
Basil
Beach
Beata
Bec
Becky
Bee
Belen
Ben
Bethany
Bia
Blue
Bobbi
Bonnie
Boyd
Braden
Brian
Briana
Brielle
Brittany
Brooke
Brooklyn
Bryony
Bunni
C
Cadence
Cai
Cam
Cami
Cara
Carmine
Casey
Cassidy
Cato
Cecilia
Cecily
Celestia
Cerise
Chance
Chantal
Chara
Charlie
Charmaine
Chelle
Chris
Christie
Christina
Chuck
Ciara
Ciaran
Cillian
Claire
Cléo
Coco
Col
Conny
Cookie
Cora
Cori
Corrina
Cristal
Cristina
Crystal
Cygnus
Cyina
D
Dan
Dani
Dante
Daphne
Dara
Dayton
December
Denny
Deremy
Desiree
Desmond
Destiny
Devyn
Dexter
Diamond
Diana
Diane
Dorothy
Duane
E
Eddie
Eden
Elaine
Elda
Eleanor
Elegance
Elena
Elenus
Elissa
Eliza
Elle
Ellie
Eluned
Elysa
Ember
Emilith
Emily
Emma
Emmy
Enjel
Ennae
Eric
Erica
Erii
Erin
Ester
Eve
Evren
Ezekiel
Ezra
F
Felicia
Felicity
Felix
Fianna
Finist
Finn
Flynn
Francesco
Franklin
G
Gabrielle
Gaby
Gail
Garnet
Gavin
Gemma
Genevieve
Gerry
Gigi
Gin
Giulia
Glen
Grace
Gray
Gwen
H
Haley
Halima
Hana
Hannah
Hanni
Haru
Hazel
Heather
Helena
Héloïse
Hime
Hiyori
Hollis
Holly
Hon
Hunter
I
Ian
Iga
Illidan
Imani
Irene
Iris
Isabel
Ishan
Isla
Isolde
Issa-Kabeer
Ivy
J
J.R.
Jacob
Jade
Jaden
Jaiet
Jake
Jan
Janice
Jas
Jasmine
Jasper
Jatin
Javi
Jax
Jay
Jaycie
Jazz
Jeannie
Jeff
Jemma
Jen
Jennifer
Jenny
Jess
Jesse
Jessica
Jessinia
Jill
Jinx
Joanie
Joanna
Joelle
Johanna
Jordan
Jordanna
Joseph
Josh
Josie
Joy
Juleyma
Juli
Julia
Julianne
Julien
June
Jupiter
Justina
K
Kaden
Kai
Kala
Kaleton
Kalina
Karat
Karen
Kat
Kate
Katelyn
Katrina
Kay
Kel
Kellie
Ken
Kendi
Kenton
Kevin
Kia
Kiara
Kiba
Kie
Kien
Kim
Kimberly
Kimory
Kira
Kirsty
Kisa
Kit
Knox
Kodie
Kozmo
Kra
Kristen
Kyan
L
Laëtitia
Lanz
Laura
Lauren
Lavender
Leaf
Leann
Leina
Leo
Leon
Leslie
Letty
Levi
Lex
Lexi
Lia
Libbi
Lidia
Lilith
Lillian
Lily
Lindsay
Lindt
Linley
Lisette
Liss
Livia
Lotus
Lucy
Luke
Luna
Lyla
Lyric
Lvsander
Lysella
M
Maddy
Madeline
Mae
Maggy
Mahari
Mai
Maia
Mali
Mallory
Malyia
Mandy
Marcel
Marcella
Marcia
Marco
Margaret
Mari
Maria
Marianne
Mariposa
Maris
Marissa
Marlene
Martina
Mary
Mary-Elizabeth
Mason
Matina
Matthew
Maus
Max
Maya
McKenzie
Megan
Mel
Melanie
Melissa
Melly
Melody
Merlin
Mia
Mich
Michael
Michelle
Michiko
Mickie
Mikaela
Mikey
Mimi
Mina
Minette
Mini
Mira
Miranda
Mishal
Missy
Mizuki
Molly
Monica
Mordaine
Morgan
Morgana
Moriah
Morina
Muriel
Mykaela
N
Nakira
Nancie
Natalie
Natasha
Nathaniel
Neelam
Nessa
Nessi
Niamh
Nicole
Nier
Night
Nikki
Nina
Noah
Noe
Noel
Nui
O
Oda
Oliver
Olivia
Ollie
Omar
Onyx
Opal
Ori
Osmond
Oumou
P
Paige
Parvati
Patience
Patrice
Patricia
Patrick
Peter
Philippe
Phoebe
Phoenix
Polly
Priya
Q
Querriana
Quinn
Quinniece
R
Rachel
Rain
Rainie
Ran
Randi
Raphaël
Raven
Rayne-Beau
Rayraye
Rebecca
Reed
Rei
Reina
Rémi
Ren
Revan
Rhiannon
Rhi-Rhi
Rhyne
Rika
Riley
Rini
Riona
Risa
Riven
Riza
Robyn
Rory
Rosa
Rose
Rosetta
Rosie
Rowan
Runa-Lucienne
Ruth
Ryan
Rye
S
Sabrina
Sage
Salem
Sam
Samantha
Sammi
Sandy
Sara
Saro
Sasha
Savannah
Season
Selena
Selkie
Serena
Shaelei
Shakyra
Shay
Shayla
Sheena
Shelbie
Sid
Sienna
Silvia
Simmy
Simon
Sinead
Skye
Skyla
Skylar
Soffia
Soleil
Sonja
Sora
Soraya
Stacey
Star
Stefan
Stevie
Stella
Steph
Stephanie
Stephen
Story
Susan
Suzy
Sydney
T
Tama
Tammy
Tanisha
Tanya
Taylor
Ted
Teddy
Terra
Terrence
Terry
Thomas
Thorgunna
Tiago
Tida
Tobias
Toki
Tokiko
Tom
Tommy
Tomoko
Trey
Tricia
Tristan
Twila
Tye
U
Uma
Undyne
V
V
Vaeril
Van
Vandy
Vaughn
Vaylin
Velise
Venla
Vera
Verly
Verv
Vesper
Vi
Vicky
Victor
Vina
Vincent
Violette
Vivi
Vivienne
W
Wendy
Westley
Whispthera
Winnie
Wonder
X
Xander
Xavier
Xiri
Y
Yasmin
Ylthin
Yon
Yoonie
Yuki
Yukino
Yuli
Yvette
Yvonne
Z
Zachary
Zack
Zae
Zariyah
Zayla
Zen
Ziya
Zo
Zoey
65 notes · View notes
milliondollarbaby87 · 4 years
Text
MOTION PICTURES
Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture Parasite
HYAE JIN CHANG / Chung Sook YEO JEONG CHO / Yeon Kyo WOO SHIK CHOI / Ki Woo HYEON JUN JUNG / Da Song ZISO JUNG / Da Hye JUNG EUN LEE / Moon Gwang SUN KYUN LEE / Dong Ik MYUNG HOON PARK / Geun Se SO DAM PARK / Ki Jung KANG HO SONG / Ki Taek
Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role Joaquin Phoenix, Joker
Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role Renee Zellweger, Judy
Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role Brad Pitt, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood
Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role Laura Dern, Marriage Story
TELEVISION Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series The Crown
MARION BAILEY / Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother HELENA BONHAM CARTER / Princess Margaret OLIVIA COLMAN / Queen Elizabeth II CHARLES DANCE / Lord Mountbatten BEN DANIELS / Lord Snowdon ERIN DOHERTY / Princess Anne CHARLES EDWARDS / Martin Charteris TOBIAS MENZIES / Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh JOSH O’CONNOR / Prince Charles SAM PHILLIPS / Equerry DAVID RINTOUL / Michael Adeane JASON WATKINS / Harold Wilson
Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
CAROLINE AARON / Shirley Maisel ALEX BORSTEIN / Susie Myerson RACHEL BROSNAHAN / Midge Maisel MARIN HINKLE / Rose Weissman STEPHANIE HSU / Mei JOEL JOHNSTONE / Archie Cleary JANE LYNCH / Sophie Lennon LEROY McCLAIN / Shy Baldwin KEVIN POLLAK / Moishe Maisel TONY SHALHOUB / Abe Weissman MATILDA SZYDAGIS / Zelda BRIAN TARANTINA / Jackie MICHAEL ZEGEN / Joel Maisel
Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Drama Series Peter Dinklage, Game of Thrones
Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Drama Series Jennifer Aniston, The Morning Show
Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Comedy Series Tony Shalhoub, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Comedy Series Phoebe Waller-Bridge, Fleabag
Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Television Movie or Limited Series Sam Rockwell, Fosse/Verdon
Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Television Movie or Limited Series Michelle Williams, Fosse/Verdon
STUNT ENSEMBLES Outstanding Action Performance by a Stunt Ensemble in a Motion Picture
AVENGERS: ENDGAME Marija Juliette Abney Janeshia Adams-Ginyard George “Gee” Alexander Derek Alfonso Nate Andrade Christopher Antonucci Randy Archer Brandon Arnold Steven S. Atkinson Ben Aycrigg Jennifer Badger Christopher Balualua Danya Bateman Loyd Bateman Kelly Bellini Joanna Bennett Carrie Bernans Felix Betancourt Gianni Biasetti, Jr. Mike Bishop Tamiko Brownlee Troy Butler Jwaundace Candece Marc Canonizado Janene Carleton Elisabeth Carpenter Sean Christopher Carter Kevin Cassidy Hymnson Chan Courtney Chen Anis Cheurfa Fernando Chien Alvin Chon Tye Claybrook, Jr. Marcelle Coletti David Conk John A. Cooper Brandon Cornell Thomas Joseph Culler Jahnel Curfman Gui Da Silva-Greene Chris Daniels Keith Davis Martin De Boer Robbert de Groot Isabella Shai DeBroux Holland Diaz Josh Diogo Jackson Dobies Justin Dobies Cory Dunson Jessica Durham Justin Eaton Jared Eddo Katie Eischen Kiante Elam Jazzy Ellis David Elson Jason Elwood Hanna Tony Falcon Guy Fernandez Mark Fisher Alessandro Folchitto Colin Follenweider Glenn Foster Simeon Freeman Shauna Galligan Monique Ganderton Johnny Gao Jomahl Gildersleve Denisha Gillespie Daniel Graham Ryan Green Carlos Guity Califf Guzman Dante Ha Akihiro Haga Garrett Hammond Lydia Hand Daniel Hargrave Kandis Hargrave Sam Hargrave Regis Andrew Harrington III Thayr Harris Zedric Harris Jimmy Hart Alex Hashioka Zachary Henry Danny Hernandez Mark Hicks Maria Hippolyte Bobby Holland Hanton JT Holt Crystal Hooks Niahlah Hope Damita Howard Justin Howell Jacob Hugghins Lindsay Anne Hugghins Michael Hugghins Tony Hugghins Scott Hunter James Hutchison III Pan Iam CC Ice Sarah Irwin Mami Ito Duke Jackson Michael Jamorski Kirk Jenkins Preshas Jenkins Floyd Anthony Johns Jr. Richard M. King Ralf Koch Khalil La’Marr Matt LaBorde Danny Le Boyer Matt Leonard William Leong Bethany Levy James Lew Marcus Lewis Jefferson Lewis III Eric Linden Scott Loeser Rachel Luttrell-Bateman Adam Lytle Tara Macken Dave Macomber Julia Maggio Ruben Maldonado Richard Marrero Rob Mars Andy Martin Aaron Matthews Tim R. McAdams Taylor McDonald Kyle McLean Crystal Michelle Mark Miscione Heidi Moneymaker Renae Moneymaker Chris Moore Tristen Tyler Morts William Billy Morts Marie Mouroum Spencer Mulligan Travor Murray Jachin JJ Myers Anthony Nanakornpanom John Nania Nikolay Nedyalkov Carl Nespoli Paul O’Connor Marque Ohmes Olufemi Olagoke Noon Orsatti Rowbie Orsatti Jane Oshita Leesa Pate Natasha Paul Gary Peebles Nathaniel Perry Josh Petro Lloyd Pitts George Quinones Taraja Ramsess Greg Rementer Antjuan Rhames Meredith Richardson Bayland Rippenkroeger Ryan Robertson Christopher Cody Robinson Donny Rogers Carrington Christopher Eric Romrell Michelle Rose Corrina Roshea Marvin Ross Elena Sanchez Maya Santandrea Matthew Scheib Erik Schultz Jordan Scott Joshua Russel Seifert Brandon Shaw Bruce Shepperson Joseph Singletary III Tim Sitarz Dominique Smith Dena Sodano Robert D. Souris Jackson Spidell Daniel Stevens Jenel Stevens Diandra Stoddard Milliner Granger Summerset Phedra Syndelle Mark Tearle Hamid-Reza Thompson Tyler J. Tiffany Aaron Toney Amy Lynn Tuttle Tony Vo Todd Warren Kevin Waterman Amber Whelan Aaron Wiggins Joseph Williams Matthew M. Williams Thom Williams Zola Williams Mike Wilson Tyler Witte Michael Yahn James Young Marcus Gene Young Woon Young Park Casey Zeller Keil Zeperni
Outstanding Action Performance by a Stunt Ensemble in a Comedy or Drama Series GAME OF THRONES Boian Anev Mark Archer Kristina Baskett Ferenc Berecz Richard Bradshaw Michael Byrch Andrew Burford Yusuf Chaudhri Nick Chooping Jonathan Cohen David Collom Christopher Cox Jacob Cox Matt Crook Matt Da Silva Levan Doran Dom Dumaresq Daniel Euston Bradley Farmer Pete Ford Vladimir Furdik David Grant Lawrence Hansen Richard Hansen Nicklas Hansson Rob Hayns Lyndon Hellewell Jessica Hooker Gergely Horpacsi Paul Howell Rowley Irlam Erol Ismail Troy Kechington Paul Lowe John Macdonald Leigh Maddern Kai Martin Kim Mcgarrity Carly Michaels Nikita Mitchell Chris Newton David Newton Jason Oettle Bela Orsanyi Ivan Orsanyi Radoslav Parvanov Oleg Podobin Josh Ravenscroft Andrej Riabokon Zach Roberts Doug Robson Stanislav Satko Paul Shapcott Mark Slaughter Sam Stefan Jonny Stockwell Ryan Stuart Gyula Toth Marek Toth Andy Wareham Calvin Warrington Heasman Richard Wheeldon Belle Williams Will Willoughby Leo Woodruff Ben Wright Lewis Young
WINS BY STUDIO Disney – 1 Neon – 1 Netflix – 1 Roadside Attractions/LD Entertainment – 1 Sony Pictures – 1 Warner Bros – 1
WINS BY NETWORK Amazon – 3 FX – 2 HBO – 2 Netflix – 1 Apple – 1
SAG Awards 2020 – Winners MOTION PICTURES Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture Parasite HYAE JIN CHANG / Chung Sook…
3 notes · View notes
medullam · 3 years
Text
[1996]
1 note · View note
thebigaupple · 2 years
Text
alejandra castillo
ana huang
angel garcia
antonio castillo
armando licea
corrina porter
damien chen
danica solas
dante
daron burnell
dru monroe
elise samuels
enrique garcia
fernando silva
gabriel taylor
isabel de leon
jade huang
jasper parrish
jimena campos
joseph moon
julissa silva
kelvin harrison
malhari gulati
manfredo garcia
matteo garcia 
mia harper
natalie everett-taylor
nina madeira
nova james
rodrigo garcia
russ luckett
salima carver
satina littlejohn
tarryn carmichael 
terrence harper
vanessa licea
veronica moore
1 note · View note
foryourart · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Image courtesy of Annenberg Space for Photography. 
PLAN ForYourArt: April 19–25
Thursday, April 19
Westside Openings and Events
MFA Exhibition #3, UCLA (Westwood), 5–8pm.
TOURS & TALKS: Stories of Almost Everyone Walk-through: Saloni Mathur, Hammer Museum (Westwood), 6pm.
READINGS: Poetry: Mihaela Moscaliuc and Michael Waters, Hammer Museum (Westwood), 7:30pm.
Miracle Mile and Mid-City Openings and Events
Artist meet and greet, The Loft at Liz’s (Mid-City), 7–9pm.
Film: Free Screening: United Shades of America: The Border, LACMA (Miracle Mile), 7:30pm.
Downtown and Frogtown Openings and Events
Evolution of View Park: The Beginnings, California African American Museum (Downtown), 2–4pm.
Tony Brown + Paul Greeley: It Belongs to His, DAC Gallery + ECF Downtown L.A. Art Center (Downtown), 6–8pm.
MOCA Music: Berhana, Rayana Jay, Linafornia, and Modern Funk Fest DJs, The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA (Downtown), 6:30–9:30pm.
Health/Care Film Series: Unrest (2017), Women’s Center for Creative Work (Frogtown), 7–10pm.
BUILT-IN, NAVEL (Downtown), 7:30–9:30pm.
Kelly Lytle Hernandez: City of Inmates, Main Museum (Downtown), 8–9:30pm.
Chinatown Openings and Events
THE NOW HEAR ENSEMBLE: Storytelling, Automata (Chinatown), 8pm.
Openings and Events Beyond Los Angeles
Yve Laris Cohen: Meeting Ground, Sadie Barnette: Dear 1968,..., and Prospect 2018, Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (San Diego), 11am–5pm.
Lucretia Martel: Two Screenings, CalArts (Valencia), 1pm. Also April 20.
School of Music Visiting Artist Series: Bruce Broughton, CalArts (Valencia), 2–4pm.
Historia Plantarum, The Huntington (San Marino), 4:30–6pm.
Downtown at Sundown, Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (San Diego), 5–8pm.
School of Art Visiting Artist Series: Jeffrey Vallance, CalArts (Valencia), 5pm.
Parallel Stories Lecture: An Education in Seeing: Geoff Dyer on The Street Philosophy of Garry Winogrand, Santa Barbara Museum of Art (Santa Barbara), 5:30pm.
Enter>text: Docent, Pasadena Museum of California Art (Pasadena), 6–8:30pm.
15's - Fifteen Minutes of Spoken Word with A.P. Jackson, Palm Springs Art Museum (Palm Springs), 6:15pm.
Lecture: Abraham Lincoln's Diary, The Huntington (San Marino), 7:30pm.
Materials Collective: Earth Week Celebration, CalArts (Valencia), 8–11pm.
Film screening of Laguna Art Museum at 100, Laguna Art Museum (Laguna Beach).
Friday, April 20
Westside Openings and Events
MUSIC & PERFORMANCE Arts Party: Recreation, Hammer Museum (Westwood), 7–10pm.
Mid-City and Miracle Mile Openings and Events
Course: One-Day Workshop—Twilight at LACMA, LACMA (Miracle Mile), 5–8pm.
DESE ESCOBAR MISS INDEPENDENT, MARLIE MUL, MOTHER CULTURE LOS ANGELES (Mid-City), 6–9pm.
Hollywood Openings and Events
Objects of Affection, Gallery 1988 (Hollywood).
Downtown Openings and Events
Art Buzz with Glenn Phillips, ICA LA (Downtown), 5:30–7pm.
Victor Rosas: Artificial Mask, 356 Mission (Downtown), 7–9pm.
Passing Through, Documentary, LA Poverty Department (Downtown), 7pm.
An Evening with Donika Kelly, Featuring Vanessa Angélica Villarreal and Eloisa Amezcua, Ace Hotel (Downtown), 7–9pm.
Openings and Events Beyond Los Angeles
TINKERTOPIA – ESMoA Kids Engineering Arts Club, ESMoA (El Segundo), 3:30–5pm.
Saturday, April 21
Westside Openings and Events
Family Days at the Villa, Getty Villa (Pacific Palisades), 10am–5pm. Continues April 22.
Conversation: Oaxacan Ball Games and Mexican Indigenous Migration, Fowler Museum (Westwood), 2–4pm.
The Plato Conversations: Dialogues in LA, Getty Villa (Pacific Palisades), 4–6:30pm.
David McDonald: COMMON KNOWLEDGE artist talk, Five Car Garage (Santa Monica), 4pm.
An artist talk by Brighton Smith And exhibition closing reception for Flowers Paintings, Skidmore Contemporary Art (Santa Monica), 4pm.
Sally Jacobs: Sundays at the Farmers Market, Jenny Revitz Soper: Twisted Visions, Ernie Marjoram: Selected Paintings, Toni Reinis: Looking But Not Seeing, TAG Gallery (Santa Monica), 5–8pm.
CONSTRUCTION: A GROUP SHOW ABOUT MEMORY AND FABRICATION, Arena1 Gallery (Santa Monica), 6–9pm.
MURDER MAGAZINE ISSUE #2, Del Vaz Projects (West L.A.), 8pm.
Culver City Openings and Events
Gallery Hop: Culver City, Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects (Culver City), 11am–12:30pm. $35.
Not an Ostrich: And Other Images from America’s Library, Annenberg Space for Photography (Century City), 11am–6pm. 
Jessica Antola: Circadian Landscape, Arcana: Books on the Arts (Culver City), 4–6pm.
Miracle Mile Openings and Events
Talk: Exhibition Tour: A Universal History of Infamy—Those of This America, LACMA (Miracle Mile), 1:30pm.
Culver City High School Student Art Exhibition & Reception, Craft and Folk Art Museum (Miracle Mile), 2–5pm.
Mary Little: The Shape of Cloth, Craft in America Center (Miracle Mile), 4–6pm.
DLJU, Iskar, Binho Ribiero, Erre, Lesivo, and Toxicomano Callejero, Gabba Gallery (Koreatown), 7–11pm.
Koreatown and Mid-City Openings and Events
Closing reception: Corrina Peipon and Pangaea, Household (Mid-City), 4–6pm.
Ladyscumbag's World Premiere (and Closing) Party, Visitor Welcome Center (Koreatown), 6–9pm.
West Hollywood Openings and Events
Michael Mahalchick and SOFT CORNERS, Richard Telles Fine Art (Fairfax), 5–7pm.
Daniel Arsham: Character Study, Morán Morán (West Hollywood), 6–8pm.
Hollywood Openings and Events
Tom Burr in conversation with William J. Simmons, Hannah Hoffman Gallery (Hollywood), 4pm.
Community Healing Sound Bath, Various Small Fires (Hollywood), 5pm.
Downtown Openings and Events
WALK THE TALK, LA Poverty Department (Downtown), 11am–3pm.
Artist Walk-through: Rigo 23, Main Museum (Downtown), 2–3:30pm.
Girl on Wire: Redux, Institute of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (Downtown), 4–6pm.
Michael Ned Holte and Dave Hullfish Bailey in Conversation, REDCAT (Downtown), 4pm.
JOAN Benefit Party, JOAN (Downtown), 7–11pm.
Bodies of a Different Mass, Tiger Strikes Asteroid Los Angeles (Downtown), 7–10pm.
PARALLEL STORMS: Works by Janie Geiser and TOO MANY DAYS: Works by Laura Heit, Track 16 (Downtown), 7–10pm.
Ron Linden: Em_ty, PØST (Downtown), 7–10pm.
Andy Woll, Brie Ruais, Night Gallery (Downtown), 7–10pm.
Philip Newcombe: ODEON, Monte Vista Projects (Downtown), 7–10pm.
Michael Webster and Breath Control Orchestra - Nice Day for the Races, The Box (Downtown), 8pm.
David Rosenboom and Lewis Klahr: Battle Hymn for Insurgent Arts, REDCAT (Downtown), 8:30pm. $12–25.
Chinatown Openings and Events
Sol Variations — A New Sound Installation by Richard Chartier, Human Resources (Chinatown), 7–10pm.
Closing Reception and Artist Walkthroughs for Lars Jan -  Luminaries and Rachel Mason - Star Death and the Pain Body, Charlie James Gallery (Chinatown), 4–7pm.
Lincoln Heights Openings and Events
Taste of Art: At Home with The Huntingtons, The Huntington (San Marino), 9am. Sold out.
Workshop: Resistance, Delay, Accumulation and Mobilization with Luis Lara Malvacias, Pieter (Lincoln Heights), 12–3pm. $30.
Me, An Idiot, Pieter (Lincoln Heights), 8:30pm.
Openings and Events Beyond Los Angeles
Family Event - Earth Day Saturday, The Huntington (San Marino), 11am–3pm.
Skill share: Safety & Justice, Side Street Projects (Pasadena), 1–4pm.
Chinatown: The Movie, Glendale Central Library (Glendale), 2–4pm.
FILM SCREENING: SEARCHING FOR SIMÓN BOLÍVAR: ONE POET’S JOURNEY, MOLAA (Laguna Beach), 2–5pm.
Movie Matinee - Coco, ESMoA (El Segundo), 2:30–4:30pm.
Sunday, April 22
Westside Openings and Events
SCREENINGS KIDS Family Flicks Film Series: FernGully: The Last Rainforest, Hammer Museum (Westwood), 11am.
CONVERSATIONS: Architecture for the Ages: The New Acropolis Museum of Athens with Dimitrios Pandermalis, Hammer Museum (Westwood), 3:30pm.
Artist Talk: Robert Polidori, Getty Center (Brentwood), 4pm.
Culver City Openings and Events
Historical Witness Project, Wende Museum (Culver City), 3pm.
Miracle Mile Openings and Events
On Clay: Melting Point Panel Discussion, Moderated by Exhibition Co-Curator Andres Payan & Michael Jones McKean, Craft and Folk Art Museum (Miracle Mile), 2pm.
Film: Documentary Film: Hockney—A Day on the Grand Canal, LACMA (Miracle Mile), 2pm.
Hollywood Openings and Events
WxW: For Women. By Women, Barnsdall Art Park (East Hollywood), 12–4pm.
Frogtown Openings and Events
LA For Choice Clinic Defense Volunteer Training, Women’s Center for Creative Work (Frogtown), 11am–1:30pm.
Downtown Openings and Events
Open House with Rafa Esparza, Jackie Clay, Ayanna U'Dongo, and Muñeka, ICA LA (Downtown), 11am–6pm.
Happy Earth Day! Youth Workshop with Sharif Farrag, 356 Mission (Downtown), 1–4pm.
Light and Color, California African American Museum (Downtown), 1–3pm.
SoulCollage 101, Main Museum (Downtown), 1–3pm.
CAAM Reads! Respect, The Life of Aretha Franklin, California African American Museum (Downtown), 3–4:30pm.
QueerWise/QueerWOKE, ONE Archives (Downtown), 4pm.
Chinatown Openings and Events
Christine Tavolacci and Ted Byrnes perform John Cage's Ryoanji, Human Resources (Chinatown), 8–11pm.
Openings and Events Beyond Los Angeles
Wasted! The Story of Food Waste, The Huntington (San Marino), 1pm.
CalArts Open Studios, CalArts (Valencia), 1–6pm.
14th Annual Art Auction, Center for the Arts Eagle Rock (Eagle Rock), 1–5pm.
EXHIBITION WALKTHROUGH WITH SHAY BREDIMUS, Long Beach Museum of Art (Long Beach), 3–4pm.
GUNS: LOADED CONVERSATIONS, San Jose Quilt Museum (San Jose), 3–5pm.
PATRICIA L. BOYD: GOOD GRAMMAR, POTTS (Alhambra), 6–8pm.
Monday, April 23
Miracle Mile Openings and Events
Talk: Space Odyssey: Stanley Kubrick, Arthur C. Clarke, and the Making of a Masterpiece, LACMA (Miracle Mile), 7:30pm.
Downtown Openings and Events
Chantal? A performance conceived by Sonia Wieder-Atherton
 and Renaud Bouchard-Gonzalez, REDCAT (Downtown), 8:30pm. $6–12.
Openings and Events Beyond Los Angeles
Families: On-Site: North Hollywood—Art and Social Justice, North Hollywood Amelia Earhart Regional Library (North Hollywood), 2pm.
A Tale of Asteroid Families - Dr. Joseph Masiero, The Huntington (San Marino), 7pm.
Tuesday, April 24
Westside Openings and Events
Discussions in Israeli Art: Prof. Dalia Manor, American Jewish University (Bel Air), 10:30am.
MAKE ART NOT WALLS, ROSEGALLERY (Santa Monica), 6:30–8:30pm.
Culver City Openings and Events
Panel: Power, Politics & the Art World, Blum & Poe (Culver City), 7:20pm.
Miracle Mile Openings and Events
Film: The Haunting, LACMA (Miracle Mile), 1pm.
Wednesday, April 25
Hollywood Openings and Events
Frame Rate: Norberto Rodriguez, Hollywood Improv (Hollywood), 5–7pm.
Sense: A Silent Auction to Benefit Multiple Sclerosis, FLOOD Gallery (Larchmont), 6:30–9:30pm.
Leimert Park Openings and Events
Artist Talk: Ulysses Jenkins, Art + Practice (Leimert Park), 7pm.
Frogtown Openings and Events
Remarkable: Artists With Chronic Illness & Disability, Women’s Center for Creative Work (Frogtown), 7:30–9:30pm.
Downtown Openings and Events
Screening: Civic Art: Four Stories from South Los Angeles, California African American Museum (Downtown), 7–9pm.
Openings and Events Beyond Los Angeles
Distinguished Fellow Lecture - Every Picture Tells a Story, The Huntington (San Marino), 7:30pm.
Crows of the Desert, Alex Theatre (Glendale), 7:30pm.
2 notes · View notes
pcwpolwrestling · 5 years
Text
The Fallout Begins: PCW Newsline
3/29/2019 PCW NEWSLINE -Last Week’s Extreme Political TV Review -Nicholas Tarkowski- not in a good place -Trump’s Security Emergency Stands -Updated Loose Cannons Unleashed Card
CURRENT CHAMPIONS OF THE POLITICAL UNIVERSE: Champion of the Political Universe: ‘Red Solo Cup’ Ray McAvay (Independent/Les Miserables) Tag Team Champions of the Political Universe: Jill Berg Enterprises: P.M.C. Banks and Kirk Walstreit (American Patriots) Women’s Champion of the Political Universe: Christa Carmondy (American Patriots)
PWF Red Brand Champion: Kirk Walstreit- the Wall Street Market Analyst with the Man Crush on ESPN’s Kirk Herbstreit PWF Blue Brand Champion: ‘Mr. Hollywood’ Kevin Daniels
PWF Red Brand Tag Team Champions: Jill Berg Enterprises: P.M.C. Banks and Kirk Walstreit PWF Blue Brand Tag Team Champions: Big Labor: Union Jack Taylor and James the Auto Worker
===
LAST WEEK ON EXTREME POLITICAL TV: -Jerrold Nadler (NY-Progressive Alliance) intern Nicholas Tarkowski returns for a third straight week to bring ‘oversight’ to PCW. Tarkowski tells McGill he has to ‘find dirt’ or else he loses his internship.
-PCW Owner Dawn McGill announces that ‘American Citizen’ Kevin Scott will get another shot at PCW Champion Stone Chism at Loose Cannons Unleashed.
-McGill then announces that the winner of the Dork Dynasty vs. SEC match tonight will face Rah and Halitosis for the PCW Tag Team title at Loose Cannons Unleashed.
-McGill then reveals that the winner of ‘Queen of the Trailer Park’ Lani Harlot vs. former Hooter’s waitress turned pro wrestler C.J. Lewis next week will face PCW Women’s Champion Yosemite Samantha.
-After the Russian Collusion investigation yields no more indictments, McGill drops the news that Russian referee Corrina Romanov would return to full time duty in PCW and promoted to senior referee- (‘Low Level New York Times Reporter Trying to Make a Name for Herself’ Colleen Crowder not pleased.
-Buzz Aldrin destroys Conspiracy Theory Guy
-CNN’s Jim Acosta gets royally pissed that CEO of the Political Universe Donald Trump won’t pay any attention to him.
-The Champion of the Political Universe #1 contender’s match between the Red Brand’s Charlie Blackwell from Main Street USA and the Blue Brand’s The Ultimate Social Justice Warrior ends in controversy when Dawn McGill kicks California’s Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals out of the ringside area and the USJW walks out of the match.
-TAG TEAM #1 CONTENDER’S MATCH-The Sports Entertainment Coalition (‘Dastardly’ Dave Miller and ‘Dangerous’ Dan Williams) defeats The Dork Dynasty (Leonard and Sheldon Robertson). They will face Rah and Halitosis at Loose Cannons Unleashed for the PCW Tag Team title
-Looking through McGill’s black bag inside her office, Tarkowski finally finds something. He calls Nadler.
-Executive Committee President Nancy Pelosi stops in to talk about the Blackwell vs. Ultimate Social Justice Warrior match (why did McGill kick the Ninth Circuit away from ringside), Yosemite Samantha’s path of rage (why won’t McGill put a stop to her), and the 2020 election (the Progressive Alliance candidates don’t want to wrestle for themselves). Pelosi does not get satisfaction and storms out.
-PCW TELEVISION TITLE: Big Oil from Jill Berg Enterprises defeats Jack Fraiser © via DQ when the SEC attacks Big Oil and JBE.
===
PCW RANKINGS
PCW Title Champion: The One Man Anti-Hollywood A-List’ Stone Chism #1 Contender: ‘American Citizen’ Kevin Scott Contenders ‘Prairie Populist’ William Daniels Bryan (Les Miserables) ‘Redneck’ Bill Dickinson (SEC) Ken Worth-American Trucker (Truckin’ Average Company)
PCW Women’s Title Champion: Yosemite Samantha #1 Contender: ‘Queen of the Trailer Park’ Lani Harlot Contenders ‘Former Hooter’s Waitress’ C.J. Lewis ‘Queen Cool’ Leah Iris Ninja Kitty
PCW Tag Team Title Champion: Island of Misfit Wrestlers: Rah and Halitosis #1 Contender: The Sports Entertainment Coalition: ‘Dastardly’ Dave Miller and ‘Dangerous’ Dan Williams Contenders The Dork Dynasty: Leonard and Sheldon Robertson Weapons of Mass Destruction II: Frank Bomb and Newt Tron Bomb Bi-Partisan Dream Team: RINO-The Wonk Machine and Blue Dog D
PCW Television Title Champion: Jack Fraiser #1 Contender: SNAFU Contenders Big Oil (Jill Berg Enterprises) Average Joe Ultratron-Five ‘The New Age Cybertronic Criminally Insane Rogue Sentient Robot Wrestling Machine’
===
WHAT HAPPENS AT THE END OF LAST WEEK’S SHOW?
McGill and Romanov cast quick glances at each other. Then McGill steps forward.
Dawn McGill: it’s not Russian Collusion, you dolt. It’s a makeover.
Adam Schiff: A what?
Dawn McGill: Both Corrina and myself got makeovers.
Jerry Nadler (sputtering): But…but…the letter?
McGill holds up the ‘letter demanding money.’
Dawn McGill: This is a ‘past due’ letter from the spa because…oops…I forgot to pay the bill on time. Oh…and it has Corrina’s name referenced on it too.
Jerry Nadler: And the compromising photos?
McGill holds up one of the photos.
Dawn McGill: And this is a photo from a recent photoshoot I had taken to celebrate the fact that I’ve lost over thirty pounds…
McGill strikes a couple poses to show off her new figure.
Dawn McGill: …and the fact I’m in the best shape of my life.
McGill grins.
The Guild are in a state of shock.
Colleen Crowder (stunned): Balls.
Schiff slithers out of the ring and tries to become invisible.
Nadler wants to strangle Tarkowski…but not before going full Delores Umbridge as he leaves.
Jerry Nadler: THERE WILL BE OVERSIGHT! I WILL HAVE OVERSIGHT!
Well? Nicholas Tarkowski was basically left to fend for himself after PCW owner Dawn McGill shot down his Russian Collusion claim against her.
Now next Monday, he may have to pay a steep price.
TRUMP’S UPGRADED SECURITY PLAN SURVIVES The Progressive Alliance-led House Group failed to override CEO of the Political Universe Donald Trump’s (NY-American Patriots) veto of their legislation to overturn Trump’s security emergency declaration.  The security emergency stands and will be implemented at both the Red Brand and Blue Brand shows
PROGRESSIVE ALLIANCE WANTS OTHERS TO WRESTLE FOR THEM Executive Committee President Nancy Pelosi broached the subject last week with PCW Owner Dawn McGill. Pelosi wants to return to the pre-2016 rules where candidates for CEO designated a wrestler to represent them. McGill turned Pelosi down flat stating that the candidates need to fight their own battles.
How will this shake out? Who knows. PCW’s Drama in Des Moines is less than ten months away.
BLACKWELL-ULTIMATE SOCIAL JUSTICE WARRIOR CONTROVERSY Following the fiasco last weekend where the Ultimate Social Justice Warrior (Progressive Alliance) walked out of a number one contender’s match against Main Street USA’s Charlie Blackwell, the USJW now claims a victory over Blackwell in a match that ‘took place’ at the Blue Brand’s Political Shakedown show last Tuesday under California’s Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals rules.
In the match, which was announced mere minutes before showtime (meaning Charlie Blackwell had no chance whatsoever to make the show if he desired), USJW won via countout and the ruling was ratified by the Ninth Circuit. Ultimate Social Justice Warrior now claims that he is the number one contender.
How will this be resolved? Stay tuned.
LOOSE CANNONS UNLEASHED CARD (as of now)
MAIN EVENT: Champion of the Political Universe Title Match ‘Red Solo Cup’ Ray McAvay © (Les Miserables/Independent) vs. Charlie Blackwell (American Patriots/Main Street USA)
Women’s Champion of the Political Universe Title Match Christa Carmondy © (American Patriots) vs. ‘Canadian Cyborg’ Sheline Carrigan (Progressive Alliance)
Tag Team Champions of the Political Universe Title Match P.M.C. Banks and Kirk Walstreit © (American Patriots/Jill Berg Enterprises) vs. Big Labor: Union Jack Taylor and James the Auto Worker (Progressive Alliance)
PCW Title Match ‘The One Man Anti-Hollywood A-List’ Stone Chism © vs. ‘American Citizen’ Kevin Scott
PCW Women’s Title Match Yosemite Samantha © vs. The winner of the ‘Queen of the Trailer Park’ Lani Harlot vs. ‘former Hooter’s waitress’ C.J. Lewis
PCW Tag Team Title Match The Island of Misfit Wrestler: Rah and Halitosis © vs. The Sports Entertainment Coalition: ‘Dastardly’ Dave Miller and ‘Dangerous’ Dan Williams ===
PCW ON THE ROAD March 30th – Taft Coliseum / Columbus, OH March 31st – Mayo Civic Center / Rochester, MN April 6th – Loose Cannons Unleashed PPV @ the D.C. Armory / Washington, D.C. April 12th – Buccaneer Arena / Urbandale, IA April 13th – McLeod Center / Cedar Rapids, IA April 14th – McElroy Auditorium / Waterloo, IA April 19th – Owensboro Sportscenter / Owensburo, KY April 20th – SIU Arena / Carbondale, IL April 21st – Gibson Arena / Rolla, MO April 27th – Berry Events Center / Marquette, MI May 3rd – BMO Harris Bank Center / Rockford, IL May 4th – MVWA 90 Joseph Gentile Center / Chicago, IL May 5th – Grossinger Motors Arena / Bloomington, IL
THIS MONDAY NIGHT ON PCW EXTREME POLITICAL TV -It’s the last show before Loose Cannons Unleashed -What will Nicholas Tarkowski’s fate be? -Women’s #1 Contender Match: ‘Queen of the Trailer Park’ Lani Harlot vs. ‘former Hooter’s waitress’ C.J. Lewis
Tumblr media
0 notes
stubfeeddance-blog · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Corrina Sephora and Joseph Guay explore gu... New publication in StubFeed.com/dance from artsatl.org Come to see more... stubfeed.com • #stubfeed #stubfeeddance #dance #dancing * stubfeed.com/artsatl.org http://bit.ly/2FYEgB7
0 notes
blackkudos · 7 years
Text
Big Joe Turner
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Joseph Vernon "Joe" Turner, Jr. (May 18, 1911 – November 24, 1985), best known as Big Joe Turner, was an American blues shouter from Kansas City, Missouri, United States. According to the songwriter Doc Pomus, "Rock and roll would have never happened without him." While he had his greatest fame during the 1950s with his rock and roll recordings, particularly "Shake, Rattle and Roll", Turner's career as a performer endured from the 1920s into the 1980s. Turner was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987, with the Hall lauding him as "the brawny voiced 'Boss of the Blues'".
Career
Early days
Known variously as The Boss of the Blues, and Big Joe Turner (due to his 6'2", 300+ lbs stature), Turner was born in Kansas City. His father was killed in a train accident when Joe was only four years old. He first discovered a love of music in his involvement at church. He began singing on street corners for money, quitting school at age fourteen to work in Kansas City's nightclubs, first as a cook, and later as a singing bartender. He became known eventually as The Singing Barman, and worked in such venues as The Kingfish Club and The Sunset, where he and his piano playing partner Pete Johnson became resident performers. The Sunset was managed by Piney Brown. It featured "separate but equal" facilities for caucasian patrons. Turner wrote "Piney Brown Blues" in his honor and sang it throughout his entire career.
At that time Kansas City nightclubs were subject to frequent raids by the police, but as Turner recounts, "The Boss man would have his bondsmen down at the police station before we got there. We'd walk in, sign our names and walk right out. Then we would cabaret until morning."
His partnership with boogie-woogie pianist Pete Johnson proved fruitful. Together they went to New York City in 1936, where they appeared on a playbill with Benny Goodman, but as Turner recounts, "After our show with Goodman, we auditioned at several places, but New York wasn't ready for us yet, so we headed back to K.C.". Eventually they were witnessed by the talent scout, John H. Hammond in 1938, who invited them back to New York to appear in one of his "From Spirituals to Swing" concerts at Carnegie Hall, which were instrumental in introducing jazz and blues to a wider American audience.
Due in part to their appearance at Carnegie Hall, Turner and Johnson had a major success with the song "Roll 'Em Pete". The track, basically a collection of traditional blues lyrics featured one of the earliest recorded examples of a back beat. It was a song that Turner recorded many times, with various combinations of musicians, over the ensuing years.
1939 to 1950
In 1939, along with boogie players Albert Ammons and Meade Lux Lewis, they began a residency at Café Society, a nightclub in New York City, where they appeared on the same playbill as Billie Holiday and Frank Newton's band. Besides "Roll 'Em, Pete", Turner's best-known recordings from this period are probably "Cherry Red", "I Want A Little Girl" and "Wee Baby Blues". "Cherry Red" was recorded in 1939 for the Vocalion label, with Hot Lips Page on trumpet and a full band in attendance. The next year Turner contracted with Decca and recorded "Piney Brown Blues", with Johnson on piano.
In 1941, he went to Los Angeles and performed in Duke Ellington's revue Jump for Joy in Hollywood. He appeared as a singing policeman in a comedy sketch called "He's on the Beat". Los Angeles was his home for a time, and during 1944 he worked in Meade Lux Lewis's Soundies musical movies. Although he sang on the soundtrack recordings, he was not present for filming, and his vocals were mouthed by comedian Dudley Dickerson for the camera. In 1945 Turner and Pete Johnson established their bar in Los Angeles, The Blue Moon Club.
That same year he contracted with National Records company, and recorded under Herb Abramson's supervision. His first hit single was a cover of Saunders King's "S.K. Blues" (1945). He recorded the songs "My Gal's A Jockey" and the risqué "Around The Clock" the same year, and the Aladdin company released "Battle of the Blues", a duet with Wynonie Harris. Turner stayed with National until 1947, but none of his recordings were great sellers. In 1950, he released the song "Still in the Dark" on Freedom Records.
Turner made many albums with Johnson, Art Tatum, Sammy Price, and other jazz groups. He recorded with several recording companies and also performed with the Count Basie Orchestra. During his career, Turner was part of the transition from big bands to jump blues to rhythm and blues, and finally to rock and roll. Turner was a master of traditional blues verses and at Kansas City jam sessions he could swap choruses with instrumental soloists for hours.
Success during the 1950s
In 1951, while performing with the Count Basie Orchestra at Harlem's Apollo Theater as a replacement for Jimmy Rushing, he was spotted by Ahmet and Nesuhi Ertegün, who contracted him to their new recording company, Atlantic Records. Turner recorded a number of successes for them, including the blues standards, "Chains of Love" and "Sweet Sixteen". Many of his vocals are punctuated with shouts to the band members, as for the songs "Boogie Woogie Country Girl" ("That's a good rockin' band!", "Go ahead, man! Ow! That's just what I need!" ) and "Honey Hush" (he repeatedly sings "Hi-yo, Silver!", probably in reference to The Treniers singing the phrase for their Lone Ranger parody "Ride, Red, Ride"). Turner's records scored at the top of the rhythm-and-blues charts; although they were sometimes so risqué that some radio stations would not play them, the songs received much play on jukeboxes and records.
Turner had a great success during 1954 with "Shake, Rattle and Roll", which seriously enhanced his career, turning him into a teenage favorite, and also helped to transform popular music. During the song, Turner yells at his woman to "get outa that bed, wash yo' face an' hands" and comments that she's "wearin' those dresses, the sun comes shinin' through!, I can't believe my eyes, all that mess belongs to you." He sang the number on film for the 1955 theatrical feature Rhythm and Blues Revue.
Although the cover version of the song by Bill Haley & His Comets, with the risqué lyrics partially omitted, was a greater sales success, many listeners sought out Turner's version and were introduced thereby to rhythm and blues. Elvis Presley's version of "Shake, Rattle and Roll" combined Turner's lyrics with Haley's arrangement, but was not a successful single.
"The Chicken and the Hawk", "Flip, Flop and Fly", "Hide and Seek", "Morning, Noon and Night", and "Well All Right" were successful recordings from this period. He performed on the television program Showtime at the Apollo and in the movie Shake Rattle & Rock!(1956).
The song "Corrine, Corrina" was another great seller during 1956. In addition to the rock music songs, he released Boss of the Bluesalbum in 1956. "(I’m Gonna) Jump for Joy", his last hit, reached the US R&B record chart on May 26, 1958.
Returning to the blues
After a number of successes in this vein, Turner quit popular music and resumed singing with small jazz combos, recording numerous albums in that style during the 1960s and 1970s. During 1966, Bill Haley helped revive Turner's career by lending the Comets for a series of popular recordings in Mexico. In 1977 he recorded a cover version of Guitar Slim's song, "The Things That I Used to Do".
During the 1960s and 1970s he resumed performing jazz and blues music, performing at many music festivals and recording for Norman Granz's company Pablo Records. He also worked with Axel Zwingenberger. Turner also participated in a 'Battle of the Blues' with Wynonie Harris and T-Bone Walker.
During 1965 he toured in England with trumpeter Buck Clayton and trombonist Vic Dickenson, accompanied by Humphrey Lyttelton and his Band. Part of a studio concert was televised by the BBC and later issued on DVD. A sound recording of a club appearance made during this tour is not thought of sufficient sound quality to justify commercial issue. He also toured Europe with Count Basie and his Orchestra.
He won the Esquire magazine award for male vocalist in 1945, the Melody Maker award for best 'new' vocalist during 1956, and the British Jazz Journal award as top male singer during 1965. In 1977, Turner recorded "I'm Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter" for Spivey Records, featuring Lloyd Glenn on piano. Turner's career endured from the bar rooms of Kansas City in the 1920s (when at the age of twelve he performed with a pencilled moustache and his father's hat), to European jazz music festivals of the 1980s.
In 1983, only two years before his death, Turner was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame. That same year, the album Blues Train was released by Mute Records company; the album had Turner paired with the team Roomful of Blues. Turner received top billing with Count Basie in the Kansas City jazz reunion movie The Last of the Blue Devils (1979) featuring Jay McShann, Jimmy Forrest, and other players from the city.
Death
Big Joe Turner died in Inglewood, California, in November 1985, at the age of 74 of heart failure, having suffered the earlier effects of arthritis, a stroke and diabetes. He was buried at Roosevelt Memorial Park, in Gardena, California.
Big Joe Turner was posthumously inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987.
Tributes
The New York Times music critic Robert Palmer said: "...his voice, pushing like a Count Basie solo, rich and grainy as a section of saxophones, which dominated the room with the sheer sumptuousness of its sound."
In announcing Turner's death in their December 1985 edition, the British music magazine, NME, described Turner as "the grandfather of rock and roll."
Bob Dylan referenced Turner in the song "High Water (For Charley Patton)", from his 2001 album Love and Theft. Songwriter Dave Alvin wrote a song about an evening he spent with Turner titled "Boss Of The Blues". It was on his 2009 release, Dave Alvin & The Guilty Women. Alvin discussed the song in Issue 59 of The Blasters Newsletter.
Dave Alvin would later collaborate on a second reunion album released in 2015 with his former Blaster's brother Phil Alvin featuring four Big Joe covers. Lost Time covers songs such as "Cherry Red", "Wee Baby Blues" and "Hide and Seek". The brothers met Big Joe Turner in Los Angeles while he was playing the clubs on Central Ave. and living in the Adams district between tours in the 1960s. Phil Alvin even opened for Turner a few times with his first band, Delta Pacific and Turner continued mentoring the Alvin brothers till his death in 1985. Big Joe Turner is pictured on the back cover of Lost Time.
The biographical film The Buddy Holly Story refers to Turner as well as contemporaries Little Richard and Fats Domino as major influences on Buddy Holly, with Holly collecting their vinyls.
Mississippi John Hurt wrote and recorded various versions of a song called "Joe Turner Blues." On a 1963 recording Hurt did for The Library of Congress, he is quoted as saying "best blues I ever heard was Joe Turner" before playing a version of the song.
Most famous recordings
"Roll 'Em Pete" (1938) (available in many versions over the years. Used for the million-dollar first scene in Spike Lee's film, Malcolm X)
"Chains of Love" (1951) * (this was Turner's first million seller. The song was written by Ahmet Ertegun using the pseudonym Nugetre, (words) and Van "Piano Man" Walls (music), and the disc reached the million sales mark by 1954.)
"Honey Hush" (1953) * (Turner's second million-seller; written by Turner, it was credited to Lou Willie Turner.)
"Shake, Rattle and Roll" (1954)
"Flip, Flop and Fly" (1955) * (Has sold a million over the years. The song was written by Charles Calhoun and Turner, but was credited to Lou Willie Turner.)
"Cherry Red" (1956)
"Corrine, Corrina" (1956) * (his fourth million seller; with adaption by J. Mayo Williams, Mitchell Parish and Bo Chatmon in 1932. This disc reached No. 41, and spent 10 weeks in the Billboard record chart)
"Wee Baby Blues" (1956) (a song Turner had been singing since his Kingfish Club days)
"Love Roller Coaster" (1956), with new lyrics to the Kansas City classic, "Morning Glory".
"Midnight Special" (1957)
Tracks marked as * were million selling discs.
Discography
SinglesStudio albums
The Boss of the Blues (1956)
Joe Turner (1958)
Rockin' The Blues (1958)
Big Joe is Here (1959)
Big Joe Rides Again (1960)
Singing The Blues (1967)
Texas Style (1971)
Life Ain't Easy (1974)
The Midnight Special (1976)
Things That I Used to Do (1977)
In the Evening (1977)
Kansas City Here I Come (1984)
Collaborations
The Bosses (1973, with Count Basie)
The Trumpet Kings Meet Joe Turner (1974, with Dizzy Gillespie, Roy Eldridge, Harry "Sweets" Edison and Clark Terry)
Everyday I Have the Blues (1975, with Pee Wee Crayton and Sonny Stitt)
Kansas City Shout (1980, with Count Basie)
Nobody in Mind (1982, with Milt Jackson and Roy Eldridge)
Blues Train (1983, with Roomful of Blues)
Shake, Rattle & Blues (2011, with Mike Bloomfield)
Compilations
Boogie Woogie (1941), Columbia Records C44
Rock & Roll (1957)
Have No Fear, Joe Turner is Here (1978)
Wikipedia
1 note · View note
belfasttimes · 7 years
Text
7 things to do in Belfast (January 30 – February 5)
7 things to do in Belfast (January 30 – February 5)
Looking for theatre and music events in Belfast from 30 Jan – 5 Feb? Check out our top 7 things to do. I’ll tell my ma, The Mac Until 4 Feb Brought to you by Joseph Rea Productions and starring Christina Nelson (Handbag Positive), this is the hilarious one-woman show charting the misadventures of one West Belfast family. Davina Corrina is a highly intelligent 16-year-old with a penchant for…
View On WordPress
1 note · View note
randomvarious · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Today’s mix:
DJ-Kicks by Nightmares On Wax 2000 Trip Hop / Downtempo / Hip Hop / Funk
Listen to the full mix here.
Favorite tracks:
Type - “Slow Process” Only Child - “Breakneck” Saukrates - “Ay, Ay Studder” DJ Paul Nice - “Break It Down” Nightmares On Wax - “Ease Jimi” Jerry Beeks - “Flash $” D.I.T.C. - “Thick” Nightmares On Wax Feat. Corrina Joseph - “Play On” Kenny Dope - “Get On Down” Kenny Dope - “Superkat” A Tribe Called Quest - “Award Tour” John Cameron - “Swamp Fever” Blackalicious - “Alphabet Aerobics” DJ Trax - “This Place” Freddy Fresh - “It’s A Latin Thing” Aim - “Underground Crownholders” Martin Brew - “Sand Steppin” Smokers Blend - “Dance Of The Revolutionaries” Deadbeats - “I Can Break It Down” Syrup - “Chocolate”
25 notes · View notes
stupidpianist · 6 years
Text
6 november 2018
15:34: Today has been stupid stressful, and it’s only partially my fault this time. This has been my first moment to, like, “breathe,” so I’m like, “okay, just use this time to get down your thoughts, ‘let off some steam,’ just breathe and it’ll be okay.” I’m feeling myself calming down, listening to some black metal. Feeling a little angry, a little upset, which I haven’t felt in a while. Or, no, I’m going to rephrase that, I feel angry towards myself almost constantly, and when I was younger I was extremely angry towards the world as a whole, but recently I’ve been feeling non-hostiley to external structures/people for a really long time. But, especially now that I’m getting, like, in-touch with myself more (haha I fricken suck lmao), and certain events are piling up, I’m feeling a little aggressive, like, a little like I have to “show my fangs” again. Don’t want to get into any details, it has nothing to do with my personal life whatsoever, my friendships are all amazing, it has to do with other parts of my life; I’ve been pretty accommodating and more than willing to always bend, or at the very least conform myself to other people’s/situation’s needs for the past year, but I think today it just hit a threshold and I’m like, “yeah, u want the old me back?? Is that what you really want??? you don’t want this, you want me to come out of my shell? u wanna push me to this point??? i’ll crush you, the psyches i’ve laid waste to line the mausoleums of hell, the catacombs of paris, the stones of the great wall three times over, don’t get me started, i will ruin u.” Hahahahah
Slept through my alarms this morning. That was the first thing that really threw this day in a loop. I shouldn’t have done that. But I’m making the most of the remaining hours; I have some time now to practice before a meeting with my piano organization, and then after that meeting I’m going to play Dungeon World, that dungeons-and-dragons-esque fantasy tabletop roleplaying game I mentioned playing a bit back, with the ol’ Dungeon World crew, Jasleen Astoria Phoebe Michael Joseph. Oh, by the way, I’ve been calling Phoebe the wrong thing since I met her, her actual name is Corrina, but because I’m terrible with names I’ve just been saying Phoebe. Going to rectify that now, okay people, PHOEBE IS CORRINA. Phoebe is the name of Corrina’s cat, and I’m an idiot.
Time to head up to the practice rooms and let off some steam, going to crush my way through these pieces. Talk way later today when I get home from Dungeon World.
OH OH also, been making my way through Foucault’s Discipline and Punish I bought the other day, his rhetoric is extremely effective, it’s really hard not to get enraptured in all of it, finding myself really liking it so far.
Don’t really have time to spare today so I’m going to practice now. Apologies for the curtness of this update.
“Which when Beelzebub perceiv'd, then whom, Satan except, none higher sat, with grave Aspect he rose, and in his rising seem'd A Pillar of State; deep on his Front engraven Deliberation sat and public care; And Princely counsel in his face yet shon, Majestic though in ruin: sage he stood With Atlantean shoulders fit to bear The weight of mightiest Monarchies; his look Drew audience and attention still as Night Or Summers Noon-tide air, while thus he spake.”
-john milton, paradise lost, book ii, 299-309
0 notes
Text
Audio & Playlist for Transistor Sister Show #13 August 23 2018
Tumblr media
This week’s episode was a birthday show for my mom, so there’s nothing too weird or annoying in there! Happy birthday mom! Next week will be my last show before I take a couple of weeks off and come back in a brand new time slot! Stay tuned for details! You can hear the show below or on WPPM in Philly Tuesday night at midnight EST, or Valley Free Radio Wednesday night at 11pm right after Poison Ivy of the Mind!
link to audio Playlist: Freddy Cannon - Transistor Sister Lotte Lenya - Seerauber Jenny
DJ speaks over Neu - E-Musik
Pro Music Symphony Vienna - Mahler Symphony No. 1 "Titan" 3rd Movement
Creedence Clearwater Revivial - Commotion Elizabeth Cotten and Brenda Evans - Shake Sugaree The Ikettes - Camel Walk The Beatles - Wait Yiddish Glory - A Shturmevind - A Storm Wind Chumbwamba - The Diggers' Song
Tom Waits - Jockey Full of Bourbon Irma Thomas - It's Raining Cleoma Breaux and Joseph Falcon - La Vieux Solard et Sa Femme Roky Erickson - Starry Eyes Screamin' Jay Hawkins - I Put a Spell on You
Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys - Corrine, Corrina Danny Kaye - Jenny The Klezmorim - A Glezele Vayn Woody Guthrie - What Did the Deep Sea Say? Melina Mercouri - Ta Paidia Tou Piraia (Never On Sunday) Rose Marie Jun - Sing Me a Song With Social Significance They Might Be Giants - She's an Angel
Jimmie Rodgers - Blue Yodel #1 (T for Texas) Kelly Harrell - Charles Giteault Talking Heads - Life During Wartime John Prine - No Ordinary Blue Mike and Peggy Seeger - All Around the Kitchen Bessie Smith - St. Louis Blues
DJ speaks over Cuasares - Cuasares
The Carter Family - Wildwood Flower Billie and De De Pierce - Eh La Bas Wendy Rene - Love at First Sight Leadbelly - Irene Goodnight
The Fugs - Seize the Day
0 notes
nofomoartworld · 7 years
Text
Hyperallergic: Art Movements
(courtesy LaBeouf, Rönkkö & Turner)
Art Movements is a weekly collection of news, developments, and stirrings in the art world.
Over 30 artists and writers have signed an open letter calling for the removal and destruction of Dana Schutz’s 2016 painting, “Open Casket,” amid protests over its inclusion in the 2017 Whitney Biennial. The abstracted, impasto painting depicts the open casket of African-American teenager Emmett Till, who was savagely beaten, disfigured, and lynched in 1955. Written by artist Hannah Black, the letter accuses Schutz of “transmut[ing] Black suffering into profit and fun.” Several news outlets published a letter, allegedly written by Schutz, in which the artist called for the work’s removal. Stephen Soba, the Whitney Museum’s director of communications, confirmed to Hyperallergic that the letter is a hoax.
California-based artist Karen Fiorito received death threats after unveiling a billboard of Donald Trump emblazoned with dollar signs fashioned as Nazi swastikas.
A man was arrested after attacking Thomas Gainsborough’s “Mr. and Mrs. William Hallett” (1785) with a screwdriver at the National Gallery in London. Keith Gregory, a 63-year-old of no fixed address, left two long gashes on the painting. A preliminary report suggests that the damage can be repaired relatively easily.
Corrina Mehiel, an artist and teacher at the Corcoran School of Art & Design, was found bound and stabbed to death inside a rowhouse in Northeast Washington, DC. Police are currently searching for her missing car, a blue four-door 2004 Toyota Prius with a Kentucky license plate numbered 722RMY.
German police are seeking a man captured on CCTV in connection with the murder of Berlin-based artist Ewa Kowska.
Several Republican lawmakers, including Lisa Murkowski (AK), Susan Collins (ME), Shelley Moore Capito (WV), and Mark Amodei (NV), expressed their support for the National Endowments for the Arts and the Humanities.
Shia LaBeouf, Nastja Säde Rönkkö, and Luke Turner’s participatory work, “He Will Not Divide Us,” was “adopted” by the Foundation for Art and Creative Technology (FACT) in Liverpool. The project will now take the form of a live-streamed flag emblazoned with the project’s title.
Piet Mondrian, “Victory Boogie Woogie” (1942–1944), oil, tape, paper, charcoal, and pencil on canvas, 127.5 x 127.5 cm (Gemeentemuseum Den Haag, Loan Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands)
The Gemeentemuseum will display its entire collection of work by Piet Mondrian — about 300 pieces — as part of its upcoming exhibition, The Discovery of Mondrian.
UNESCO raised $75.5 million as part of a new fund to protect heritage sites from war and terrorism.
Annette Kulenkampff, Documenta’s CEO and managing director, requested additional funds for the quinquennial contemporary art exhibition. Half of the show’s $37-million budget is publicly subsidized, with the remainder raised by the exhibition’s organizers, a model that Kulenkampff described as “not sustainable in the long run.”
David Fitzpatrick, the president of American Federation of Government Employees Local 2058, stated that President Donald Trump’s federal hiring freeze was responsible for the shuttering of seven historic sites in Philadelphia, including Declaration House and Benjamin Franklin’s home and print shop.
Christie’s withdrew a painting by the late Iraqi artist Faeq Hassan from an upcoming auction in Dubai. Iraqi authorities claimed that the work belongs to the state and was smuggled out of the country.
Vincent van Gogh, “View of the Sea at Scheveningen” (1882) (courtesy Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam)
Two paintings stolen from the Van Gogh Museum in 2002 went back on display. Octave Durham, who along with an accomplice stole Vincent van Gogh’s “Sea View at Scheveningen” (1882) and “Congregation Leaving the Reformed Church at Nuenen” (1882–84), told a Dutch documentary crew that the theft took 3 minutes and 40 seconds. “When I was done, the police were there, and I was passing by with my getaway car,” Durham stated. “Took my ski mask off, window down, and I was looking at them. I could hear them on my police scanner. They didn’t know it was me.”
Artist Antonio Lee filed a fabricated report with the US Securities and Exchange Commission’s Edgar Database. The report, which Lee filed on February 1, stated that Google’s parent company, Alphabet Inc., had purchased Lee’s art company in a stock deal that made him richer than Bill Gates, Warren Buffett, and Jeff Bezos combined. According to Bloomberg’s Anders Melin, there is no evidence that Lee profited from the deception, though false filings continue to be an issue for the SEC.
A home movie shot by Lou Henry Hoover is thought to be the earliest known color film of the White House grounds. The footage was discovered by Lynn Smith, the audiovisual archivist at the Herbert Hoover Presidential ­Library and Museum.
Transactions
Carl Fabergé, “Chinchilla” (ca 1907), chalcedony and gold with sapphires (© Victoria and Albert Museum, London)
The Victoria & Albert Museum acquired nine works by Carl Fabergé and two works by the 18th-century goldsmith, Johann Christian Neuber, through the UK’s Cultural Gifts Scheme.
Imperial Oil Limited donated 38 artworks to 14 Canadian museums, including the National Gallery of Canada, Vancouver Art Gallery, and the Art Gallery of Alberta.
The Edmond J. Safra Foundation donated $1 million to the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC. The gift will fund a professor post at the museum’s Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts.
The Mike Kelley Foundation awarded a total of $319,000 in grants to eight Los Angeles–based nonprofits, including La Plaza de Cultura y Artes and the Vincent Price Art Museum.
Industrialist and philanthropist Mark Pigott donated a “major gift” toward the construction of a new Tudor and Stuart gallery and learning space at the National Maritime Museum in London.
The Baltimore Museum of Art acquired works by Mark Bradford, Paul Chan, Norman Lewis, and Ellsworth Kelly.
Mark Bradford, “My Grandmother Felt the Color” (2016), the Baltimore Museum of Art, purchased as the gift of Anonymous Donor (photo by Joshua White, courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth)
Transitions
Lourdes Ramos was appointed president and chief executive of the Museum of Latin American Art — the first Latina appointed to the post.
Gail Andrews announced her retirement as director of the Birmingham Museum of Art.
Cathy Ferree will succeed Tom King as president and CEO of the Indiana State Museum and Historic Sites.
Alex Aldrich will step down as executive director of the Vermont Arts Council next month.
The Institute of Contemporary Arts in London appointed Katharine Stout as deputy director and Richard Birkett as chief curator.
Stephanie D’Alessandro was appointed curator of modern art and curator in charge of the Leonard A. Lauder Research Center for Modern Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Florian Ebner was appointed head of the photography department at the Musée National d’Art Moderne in Paris.
Manuela Paz was appointed director of development and strategic planning at Independent Curators International.
The National YoungArts Foundation appointed Stacey Glassman Mizener as vice president of development and Dejha Carrington as vice president of external relations.
The Barnes Foundation appointed Barbara Wong as director of community engagement.
Postmasters Gallery announced that it will open a second space in Rome.
Pace Gallery announced plans to open a new space in Hong Kong.
The Buckminster Fuller Institute will relocate its headquarters to San Francisco.
Guernica Magazine will open a second office on the campus of Purchase College, SUNY, as part of a new partnership.
The Centre Pompidou is in negotiations to open a satellite space in Shanghai’s West Bund cultural district.
San Diego Comic-Con International plans to open a museum at the site of the out-of-business San Diego Hall of Champions.
The College Art Association launched a revamped website.
Accolades
Susie Lee, “Exposure (Annie)” from Still Lives (2010), video portrait, 30 minutes (courtesy the artist)
The J. Paul Getty Trust will present the 2017 J. Paul Getty Medal to artist Anselm Kiefer and writer Mario Vargas Llosa in November.
Thomas Poulsen (aka FOS) was awarded the 2017 Arken Art Prize.
Romain Mader was awarded the 2017 Foam Paul Huf Award.
Susie Lee received the 26th annual Bonnie Bronson Fellowship Award.
Rachel Corbett was awarded the 2016 Marfield Prize for arts writing.
Two Trees Management Co. announced the recipients of its 2017 Cultural Space Subsidy Program [email announcement].
The Cisneros Fontanals Art Foundation announced the recipients of its Grants & Commissions Program Award. The foundation awarded its 2017 Achievement Award to Daniel Joseph Martinez.
Grayson Perry received the Royal Television Award for best presenter and best arts program for his latest Channel 4 show, Grayson Perry All Man.
Ericka Beckman and Ian Weaver received the inaugural Stone & DeGuire Contemporary Art Awards from Washington University in St. Louis.
Opportunities
The New York City Campaign Finance Board launched a competition for the design of a new “I Voted” sticker. The submission deadline is April 14.
The Soze Agency partnered with artists Russell Craig and Jessie Krimes to establish the Right of Return USA Fellowship, the first fellowship dedicated to supporting formerly incarcerated artists. The application deadline is April 21.
The New York Foundation for the Arts launched the first-ever Canadian Women Artists’ Award. The Award is open to Canadian citizens between the ages of 21 and 35 who are living and working (including students in bachelor’s or master’s degree programs) in New York, New Jersey, or Connecticut.
Obituaries
Trisha Brown (© Lois Greenfield, courtesy Trisha Brown Dance Company)
Chuck Berry (1926–2017), guitarist, singer, and songwriter.
Shane Patrick Boyle (unconfirmed–2017), founder of Zine Fest Houston.
George Braziller (1916–2017), publisher.
Trisha Brown (1936–2017), pioneering dancer and choreographer. Founder of the Trisha Brown Dance Company.
Walt Cessna (1964–2017), artist, author, and curator.
James Cotton (1935–2017), musician and harmonica player.
Colin Dexter (1930–2017), writer and educator. Creator of Inspector Morse.
Hugh Hardy (1932–2017), architect.
Leonard Manasseh (1916–2017), architect.
Ray Rathborne (1943–2017), photographer.
David Rockefeller (1915–2017), arts benefactor, philanthropist, and head of Chase Manhattan Corporation. Grandson of industrialist John. D. Rockefeller.
Robert Silvers (1929–2017), editor of The New York Review of Books.
Richard Wagamese (1955–2017), author and journalist.
Derek Walcott (1930–2017), poet, author, and artist. Awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1992.
Paul Walter (1935–2017), art collector.
Skip Williamson (1944–2017), underground cartoonist.
Bernie Wrightson (1948–2017), comic book artist.
The post Art Movements appeared first on Hyperallergic.
from Hyperallergic http://ift.tt/2nPnso7 via IFTTT
0 notes