Sunday, October 25, 2009

"Film, Music, and Activism in New Orleans and Chicago" Panel Discussion



In this photo: panelists in New Orleans are in the video on the screen to the left; panelists in Chicago included (l-r) Stan West, Arvis Averette, Ashley Johnson, Robin Whatley, Ted Hardin, and George Bailey.

This Fourth Annual Chicago Calling Arts Festival event featured a panel discussion about music, film, and activism in Chicago and New Orleans; the screening of a film trailer; and a musical performance. It happened on Sunday, October 11, 2009 at the Columbia College Concert Hall and Zeitgeist Multi-Disciplinary Arts Center.

“Film, Music, and Activism in New Orleans and Chicago” Panel Discussion (3 p.m.)
It has been more than four years since Hurricane Katrina devastated the Gulf Coast region. Many amazing things have happened in New Orleans and elsewhere in the Gulf Coast region since then, but challenges still face us in terms of rebuilding. This panel discussion involved people in two locations who discussed music, film and activism in New Orleans and Chicago. The panelists in New Orleans included Rene Broussard, Luther Gray, Jonathan Freilich, and Jordan Flaherty. The panelists in Chicago included Stan West, Robin Whatley, George Bailey, Ashley Johnson, Arvis Averette, and Ted Hardin. Panelists at Zeitgeist and Columbia College were connected over the internet, using Skype.

Screening of trailer for Veins in the Gulf (2010 feature documentary directed by Ted Hardin)
Louisiana’s coast is the most threatened in the world -- hurricanes, rising tides, sinking land. 2000 square miles of fertile soil, productive wetlands, and an enormous oil and gas infrastructure -- gone. In 50 years, Louisiana may not extend beyond New Orleans. Who will save Louisiana? The Army Corps of Engineers? Environmentalists? Medicine Men? Veins in the Gulf interviews them all, looking for the answers. The problem is agreeing on the solution.

Telematic Performance with Musicians in New Orleans and Chicago (4:30 p.m.)
Performers include Luther Gray (percussion), Jonathan Freilich (guitar), George Bailey (guitar), Jayve Montgomery (reeds and percussion), and Dan Godston (trumpet).

This event was organized in collaboration with Critical Encounters: Fact & Faith, and it is sponsored by the New Millennium Studies program at Columbia College Chicago.

You can listen to and download an audio recording of this panel discussion by clicking on these links: 1st segment, 2nd segment, 3rd segment, 4th segment, 5th segment, 6th segment, and 7th segment.

BIOS:
Rene Broussard has taught in the Orleans Parish School system for over 8 years. In 1986 he received an artist fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts to teach with Arts Connection. He then went on to teach Creative Dramatics in the ADEPT after-school program from 1987 – 1990. Broussard returned to teaching in 2002 – 2005 when he taught video production and editing in the A.R.M.S. after-school program.
From 1986 to 1990, Rene Broussard produced and directed several extremely successful plays in New Orleans through Zeitgeist including Blood On The Cat’s Neck by Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Shakespeare the Sadist by Wolfgang Bauer, Rocking Back and Forth by Gunter Grass, Let’s Eat Hair by Karl Lazlo and an environmental theatre piece/musical about the Manson Family entitled Commune. The emphasis of the organization gradually changed to that of the city of New Orleans' leading exhibitor of alternative cinema with series and originally curated programs of experimental and underground films being presented in various locations.

Jordan Flaherty is a writer and community organizer based in New Orleans. He was the first journalist with a national audience to write about the Jena Six case, and played an important role in bringing the story to worldwide attention. His post-Katrina writing in ColorLines Magazine shared a journalism award from New America Media for best Katrina-related coverage in the Ethnic press, and millions around the world have seen the television news segments he’s produced for Al-Jazeera, TeleSur, PressTV and Democracy Now.
Jordan is an editor of Left Turn Magazine and has written about politics and culture for the Village Voice, New York Press, Huffington Post, Louisiana Weekly, and in several anthologies, including the South End Press books Live From Palestine and What Lies Beneath: Katrina, Race and the State of the Nation, the University of Georgia Press book What is a City, and the AK Press book Red State Rebels. He has appeared as a guest on a wide range of television and radio shows, including CNN Morning, Anderson Cooper 360, CNN Headline News, Grit TV, and both local and nationally-syndicated shows on National Public Radio. He has been a regular correspondent or frequent guest on Democracy Now, Radio Nation on Air America, News and Notes, and Keep Hope Alive With Reverend Jesse Jackson. He is also a staffer with the Louisiana Justice Institute, a civil rights legal advocacy organization that has been on the front lines of the struggle for a just rebuilding of the Gulf Coast.

Jonathan Freilich has been an active part of the New Orleans music scene since his arrival in 1989. Almost immediately, he found himself playing backup to notable locals such as Kermit Ruffins, Michael Ward and The Reward, and Michael Ray and the Kosmik Krewe. Additionally, in 1992 he co-founded the New Orleans Klezmer All-Stars(NOKAS), a pioneering klezmer ensemble that infused that music with the vibrancy and energy of the funk, jazz and brass music of New Orleans.
Although NOKAS was playing some of his compositions, by 1993 he found himself seeking outlets for his compositions in other styles and forms. After playing with a plethora combos and experimenting with many great local musicians he formed Naked On The Floor and eventually the Naked Orchestra.
Throughout this time he has continued to work as a sideman and frontman for a whirlwind of new orleans music projects. He also has an extensive discography. He has music featured in some films and TV shows (Andy Richter conquers the Universe, The Dukes of Hazzard(Warner Home Video).
Currently he is working on a comic-satirical opera about a couple of New Orleans lawyers and their movements through New Orleans class detritus after Hurricane Katrina. Initial performances are expected in Nov. 2009.
He is the subject of the one hour radio documentary Jonathan Freilich’s Freedom Double-O Naked Klezmer Jazz Latin Boogaloo: The Radio Documentary by award winning documentarian, David Kunian. He was the 2008 Governors’ Music Fellowship Award recipient.

After receiving HIS M.A. from Florida State University in German Film Studies and an M.F.A. from the Ohio State University in Film and Video, Ted Hardin worked with a variety of artists at the Wexner Center for the Arts in Ohio and the Banff Centre for the Arts in Canada as director of photography, director, editor, lighting director, and assistant director. He has collaborated with the alternative media collective Paper Tiger Television in New York, and researched and shot the documentary, Dark Near-Death Experiences for German Television. His own experimental narratives and movement-based films have shown at festivals and galleries throughout the U.S. and Europe. For the last decade, he has been collaborating with his partner Elizabeth Coffman on experimental shorts and documentaries. Their past efforts include the feature documentary about Bosnia—One More Mile: a Dialogue on Nation-Building and the short video and installation Long Distance. Currently Elizabeth and Ted have been working on another short, Digital Afrika, and a feature documentary about wetland loss in Louisiana, Veins in the Gulf. In his eleventh year at Columbia College Chicago, he is an Associate Professor in the Film and Video Department.

Stan West taught a "Post-Katrina curriculum" several semesters with Columbia's "Saturday Scholars/Art Up," a college-readiness program that meets weekly on campus. In Spring of 2009, his students sent students at New Orleans Charter School for Math and Science, Frederick Douglass High School and Brother Martin High School hand-made books prepared with donations by Columbia's Center for Book and Paper Arts. West also traveled with dozens of Chicago Public High School students to New Orleans in '07 to shoot "Life After Katrina," a documentary directed by Kevin Caldwell that West co-produced. It showcased volunteerism among Chicago's college and high school youth in the 6th, 7th, 9th Wards and Violet, St. Bernard Parish of New Orleans. Spike Lee sent a two-minute promo praising this effort that also resulted in "Post-Katrina Stories," a 15-minute short on civic engagement and service learning West co-produced with Saturday Scholars that features musicians Luther Gray and Amman West playing African drums in Fauberg Treme's historic Congo Square. He presented this film and a paper in Baton Rouge at the Association of African-American Scholars Conference in 2009, in New Orleans at the Crossroads Conference at Xavier University in 2008 with Gray, and at the Oak Park International Film Festival, where that same year, West moderated a panel that included Ashley Johnson, Jordan West, and other teens connected with Saturday Scholars. Additionally, West taught at New Orleans Charter School of Math and Science in a one-day seminar on arts integration in the physical and cultural geography of New Orleans. West and his students insist the physical and cultural geography of the Gulf must be restored immediately at whatever costs in America's most-treasured historical community. In 2008, West advised Columbia's student group "Reach Out" and its film crew during a week-long shoot in the Gulf that included student Krissy Anderson's crowd-pleasing poetry performance during the Tennessee Williams Literary Festival at the French Quarter's "Gold Mine"club. He's produced several radio programs for WNUA 95.5 FM on the same subject, including one featuring HBP Def Poet Shelton "Shakespear" Alexander. Gray and several Columbia faculty and a high school students play instruments or do background vocals on Shakespear's newest hit CD, "I Feel Like Dying." Shakespear lectured to West's students in New Orleans and Chicago. "Post Katrina Stories" is dedicated to his late mother, Lorraine "Mama Shake" Alexander, who died of post-Katrina stress. In sum, West, who holds an MFA from University of New Orleans, argues that his biggest accomplishment was Katrina Weekend "successfully rescueing the godmother" of his teen twins, Mrs. Lucinda Reid, from her Lower 9th Ward home during Katrina Weekend that then was located at 1704 Deslonde. It's now the headquarters for the Black-led Common Ground relief organization.

Robin Whatley is an Assistant Professor in the Science and Mathematics Department at Columbia College Chicago, and a Research Associate in the Geology Department at The Field Museum. After receiving a B.F.A. in Sculpture from the Kansas City Art Institute, she worked at The Field Museum as an exhibit preparator and designer on the Animal Kingdom exhibits. Robin’s interest in paleontology and interactions with scientists at the Field Museum led her to pursue a Ph.D. in the Geological Sciences Department at the University of California, Santa Barbara. As a Smithsonian Institution Postdoctoral Research Fellow she began her current research program on the emergence and diversification of the earliest mammals. Robin has recently begun a field research program in the Petrified National Park in Arizona where she studies small terrestrial animal communities living during the beginning of the age of the dinosaurs. She has taught the Natural Disasters course each semester since coming to Columbia, and she chaperoned Columbia’s ReachOut Student Volunteers on a trip to New Orleans in 2008.


in this photo: Stan West, Arvis Averette, and Ashley Johnson



in this photo: Robin Whatley and Ted Hardin



in this photo: Ashley Johnson and Robin Whatley




More photos of this event can be viewed by clicking here.

“The Arts in New Orleans and Chicago” Panel Discussion

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Claudia Cassidy Theater
Chicago Cultural Center, 2nd floor
78 E. Washington St.
Chicago, IL 60605

New Orleans Photo Alliance
1111 St. Mary Street
New Orleans, LA 70130

This Fourth Annual Chicago Calling Arts Festival event featured a panel discussion about the arts in New Orleans and Chicago and a large ensemble performance of Gino Robair’s “Divination.”

“The Arts in New Orleans and Chicago” Panel Discussion
This panel discussion involved people in New Orleans and Chicago discussing the arts, curation, and the roles of the arts in society. The panelists in New Orleans included Diane Grams, Elizabeth Underwood, Natalie Sciortino-Rinehart, and Keith Calhoun, with Cynthia Scott moderating. The panelists in Chicago included Barbara Koenen, Alpha Bruton, and Annie Heckman, and Matthew Golombisky, with Dan Godston moderating. The panelists in both cities were connected over the internet, using Skype.

BIOS:
Alpha Bruton completed her studies in Art Education and the Teachers Credential Program in 1990, at California State University of Sacramento. Upon moving to Illinois, she completed her studies in the Masters of Art in Administration Program at the School of the Art Institute in May of 2001. Formal training in studio art, art education, dance production, theater arts, and art gallery management gives Bruton the foundation to manage art education programs. Currently she is an artist and art consultant, for AAC LP, An Art Consulting Limited Partnership. She is the chief curator of the Phantom Gallery Chicago, where she coordinates exhibitions in alternative venues for installation artists, environmental artists, and conceptual artists to connect the arts with commerce. She is listed as a teaching artist with the Illinois Arts Council, Arts Education Roster, and Shanti Foundation for Peace.

Dan Godston teaches and lives in Chicago. His writings have appeared in Chase Park, After Hours, Versal, Drunken Boat, 580 Split, Kyoto Journal, Eratica, The Smoking Poet, Horse Less Review, Apparatus Magazine, and other print publications and online journals. His poem “Mask to Skin to Blood to Heart to Bone and Back” was nominated by the editors of 580 Split for the Pushcart Prize. He also composes and performs music, and he works with the Borderbend Arts Collective to organize the annual Chicago Calling Arts Festival.

Matthew Golombisky is an active bassist, composer, conductor, improviser, radio DJ (WNUR 89.3FM) and presenter. He currently lives in Buenos Aires, Argentina, but has been active in music, festival, and film scenes in Chicago, New Orleans, Asheville, North Carolina as well as touring the USA and Europe. His undergraduate studies at the University of North Carolina at Asheville led to a B.A. in Jazz Studies/Bass Performance, graduating with Distinction in Music, and graduate studies to a M.M. in Composition from the University of New Orleans after a brief stint at Northwestern University after Hurricane Katrina swept through New Orleans in August 2005. His composition style is wide ranging, steeped in jazz, classical, experimental, electronic, sound design, rock and pop genres. He continues to dedicate much energy to presenting original and creative music through several groups including his 30 piece jazz/classical/rock ensemble, Tomorrow Music Orchestra. He directs the community collective known as “ears&eyes”, which “represents” bands such as Silences Sumire, Maurice, Pedway, James Davis Quintet, Algernon, among others and curates an annual music/arts/film festival under the same name. He also frequently performs with electric jazz-rock quintet, Zing!, acoustic free improv trio, Pedway, drums and bass duo, GKduo with long time collaborator, Quin Kirchner, and jazz septet led by trombonists Jeb Bishop and Jeff Albert, Lucky 7s. As a bassist, he’s also performed with NOMO, Simon Lott, WATIV, Ed Petersen, Dave Rempis, Jason Marsalis, Dr. Jimbo Walsh, and more. Currently he is working on a concerto, with bassist Larry Grenadier, to be performed by his Tomorrow Music Orchestra. Among loving all of the above, he also loves to drink slow drip, iced coffee with soy milk from PJ’s, but they’re only in New Orleans. In addition, he loves; life, friends, music, live things, people, traveling, experiencing, creating, listening, reading, looking, capturing, sleeping, running, eating, breathing, laughing, making others laugh, seeing, and being.

Diane Grams is an artist and academic. An assistant professor of sociology at Tulane University in New Orleans, she teaches sociology of culture, research methods, and visual sociology while conducting research on urban culture. Prior to her appointment at Tulane she was a researcher and associate director of the Cultural Policy Center at the University of Chicago where she taught graduate courses in cultural policy and research methods at The Irving B. Harris Graduate School of Public Policy Studies. Among her publications, Entering Cultural Communities: Diversity and Change in the Nonprofit Arts (Grams and Farrell 2007), is an in-depth investigation of efforts by leading arts organizations throughout the United States to expand and diversify participation in the arts; Producing Local Color: Ethnic Art Networks in Chicago (Grams, forthcoming University of Chicago Press), a study of arts producers in three Chicago communities, Bronzeville, Pilsen and Rogers Park. Other recent research includes a 2005 study of “Executive Compensation in the Nonprofit Arts”, a study commissioned by the Illinois Arts Alliance Foundation. She was a principal investigator for Leveraging Assets: How Small Budget Arts Activities Benefit Neighborhoods, a 2003 report funded by the Richard H. Driehaus Foundation and the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. She was co-author of ArtsAlive: The 2001 Report on the State of Arts Education in Michigan for Art Serve Michigan and the Michigan Board of Education. She was awarded a Schmitt Fellowship in 2002 and given the 1989 Civil Liberties Award from the Roger Baldwin Foundation of the American Civil Liberties Union of Chicago for her work in support of artistic expression. She was the Executive Director of The Peace Museum, Chicago 1992-1998. Her paintings have been in more than 40 exhibitions in the United States and in South America.

Annie Heckman is a visual artist based in Chicago. Her work explores mortality and afterlife ideologies through sculptural animation installations and works on paper. She graduated with a BFA from the University of Illinois at Chicago and an MFA from New York University, both in Studio Art. Annie has exhibited her projects in numerous spaces, including exhibitions in Chicago, New York City, Budapest, and BiaƂystok, Poland. Her recent projects include animation installations using phosphorescence and moving parts. She is the founder of StepSister Press and works as a museum educator with the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago.

Barbara Koenen is an artist, curator and cultural planner with the Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs. She developed the Chicago Artists Resource and other policies and programs for artists, including Artist at Work and Musicians at Work Forums, Creative Chicago Expo, artist housing and creative industry policies. Koenen is also an artist who has exhibited paintings and installations internationally. Her recent work includes spice installations of afghan war rugs for the Museum of Contemporary Art.

Natalie Sciortino-Rinehart, a native New Orleanian, works as a full time artist, teacher, and writer in the city. After earning her MFA in 2008 from the University of New Orleans, Sciortino-Rinehart has participated in numerous exhibitions, as well as curating several shows around New Orleans. Recent exhibitions of her work include Barrister's Gallery (New Orleans), Winkleman Gallery (New York) and Galerie Im Andechof (Innsbruck, Austria). She is a founding member of the Front artist collective, located in the rapidly emerging St. Claude Arts District in New Orleans. Sciortino-Rinehart often works as a collaborative team with her partner Jeffrey. Her writings have been published in a variety of journals including ArtForum online, Afterall, Wynwood, and the New Orleans Art Review.

Cynthia Scott followed a BFA in sculpture from Rhode Island School of Design with stints as an actress (Aliens) and singer (Red Flame/Virgin 10 Records) in New York, London and Los Angeles – eventually completing the circle by establishing a home and sculpture studio in New Orleans.
Scott is the recipient of several public art commissions, an Artist Fellowship, and numerous grants from the Louisiana Division of the Arts, the Louisiana Cultural Economy Foundation, the Contemporary Arts Center’s SweetArts Fund, and Transforma Projects. She has exhibited in London, Edinburgh, New York, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Providence, Baton Rouge, Lafayette, New Orleans, Alexandria (Louisiana), Cedar Rapids (Iowa), Minneapolis, and cities in Alabama, Texas, and Northern California. Her studio was all but destroyed by Katrina's winds, causing her to devise pieces she could carry with her and work on easily in unfamiliar spaces and less than ideal conditions during evacuation. She returned to New Orleans to rebuild and received her MFA from Tulane University in May 2008. She is currently the coordinator of Current:NOLA, a discussion group/think tank of artists and writers engaged in raising the national and international profile of contemporary New Orleans visual art through dialogue, promotion, and critical writing.

Multi-media artist Elizabeth Underwood responded to losing everything in New Orleans’ Federal levee breaks of 2005 by creating AORTA Projects, a community-based grass-roots art project. Believing the creative process to be a powerful tool for affecting social change and healing from trauma, the core mission of AORTA Projects is to intimately participate in a “liminal animation” of post-disaster landscapes. AORTA’s process-oriented and collective act of making and experiencing art can serve as a symbol of hope for post-disaster communities and to those concerned with the artist’s role in our ever-challenging world. By galvanizing a wide variety of contemporary artists to build direct relationships with these communities, AORTA supports ongoing efforts at renewal and participates in the dialog concerning the conceptual and social responsibilities of contemporary art. AORTA has initiated 36 installations in 3 years with the support of the Joan Mitchell Foundation.