New York Live Arts Schedule of Events Listings April 23 – 27

    When:
    April 23, 2014 – April 28, 2014 all-day
    Click to view map
    Where:
    219 West 19th Street
    New York, NY 10011
    USA
    New York Live Arts Schedule of Events Listings April 23 - 27 @ New York | New York | United States

    New York Live Arts Schedule of Events Listings

    April 23 – 27

    New York Live Arts
    New York Live Arts Theater
    219 W 19th Street, New York, NY 10011

    OVERVIEW OF EVENTS

    VISUAL ART INSTALLATIONS


    HANK WILLIS THOMAS
    (Video installation)
    This innovative video installation, A person is more important than anything else…, will be driven by the cadence and intonation of James Baldwin’s voice, for Baldwin was also an orator whose delivery was almost as forceful as his ideas. Artist Hank Willis Thomas will weave audio, images, and video together in a fluid-moving, digital stream of consciousness that connects Baldwin’s 20th century discourse with the concerns and urgencies of the 21st. In recent years Thomas’s career has been surging throughout the world; in New York City he is represented by Jack Shainman Gallery.

    Dates:  Ongoing throughout the festival
    Times:  Ongoing throughout the festival
    Tickets: FREE

    WALL MURAL OF NEW YORKER  “LETTER FROM A REGION OF MY MIND”
    The November 1962 issue of The New Yorker magazine (in which the piece Letter From a Region of My Mind first appeared later to become the basis for Baldwin’s great book The Fire Next Time) will be reproduced as a mural by visual artist Samantha Holmes: the text, often a single streaming column, is flanked on all sides by advertisements incongruously hawking all manner of luxury goods.

    Dates:
    Ongoing throughout the festival
    Tickets: FREE

    READINGS, LECTURES, PANELS & CONVERSATIONS

    “JIMMY AT HIGH NOON” (A Series of Five Daily Readings)
    Presented in partnership with Columbia University School of the Arts, this noon-time series features poets, actors, musicians, essayists and scholars reading from a range of James Baldwin’s classics, as well as discussing his impact on their lives and thinking. Speakers include poet Nikky Finney; writer Darryl Pinckney; actors Jesse L. Martin and André De Shields; musician Vijay Iyer; and playwrights Suzan-Lori Parks and Marcus Gardley, among others to be announced at a later date. “Jimmy at High Noon” will be overseen by director Patricia McGregor, with dramaturgy by Columbia faculty member and Baldwin scholar Rich Blint.

    Dates: Every day, Wednesday April 23 – Sunday, April 27
    Time: 12:00pm
    Tickets: FREE
    Location: New York Live Arts Studios

    BALDWIN’S CAPACIOUS IMAGINATION & INFLUENCE
    MacArthur Award winning playwright Suzan-Lori Parks (Topdog/Underdog and The Death of the Last Black Man in the Entire World) discusses her years as Baldwin’s student with Roberta Uno, former artistic director of New WORLD Theater which staged a ground-breaking Baldwin production. This conversation, moderated by Live Ideas curator Lawrence Weschler, will also feature playwright John Guare (Six Degrees of Separation and A Free Man of Color).

    Date: Wednesday, April 23
    Time: 2:30pm
    Tickets: $15
    Location: New York Live Arts Studios

    OPENING KEYNOTE CONVERSATION
    Featuring Bill T. Jones, renowned choreographer and Executive Artistic Director of New York Live Arts in conversation with visual artist and MacArthur Fellow, Carrie Mae Weems and celebrated novelist and essayist, Jamaica Kincaid (Autobiography of My Mother, Lucy, A Small Place). Approaching Baldwin from a range of disciplines, these highly accomplished cultural figures share Baldwin’s commitment to the necessary excavation of the dense, complex and contradictory history of the nation. From the stunning visual imagery of Weems, to the startlingly honest and demanding prose of Kincaid, this conversation reaches across genres to address issues of importance to Baldwin, but crucial for our own transformation–this time!

    Date: Wednesday, April 23
    Time: 8:00pm
    Tickets: $60
    Location: New York Live Arts Theater

    BALDWIN & DELANEY
    Rachel Cohen, whose critically acclaimed A Chance Meeting braids a sequence of seminal encounters across American cultural history, including Baldwin’s with both Richard Avedon and Norman Mailer, will read from a third chapter, focusing on the young writer’s life-transforming encounter with the sublime painter Beauford Delaney, at the latter’s Greenwich Village apartment. Following her reading, Cohen will engage Diedra Harris-Kelley, Co-Director of the Romare Bearden Foundation and Baldwin and Delaney biographer David Leeming, in a conversation about Delaney’s enduring importance in Baldwin’s life.

    Date: Thursday, April 24
    Time: 2:00pm
    Tickets: $10
    Location: New York Live Arts Theater

    JAMES BALDWIN THIS TIME
    Newly appointed Counsel to Mayor DeBlasio, Maya Wiley moderates a conversation on what Baldwin might have made of everything from the burgeoning prison-industrial complex and the recent gutting of the Voter Rights Bill through the Barack Obama presidency. Distinguished panelists include Lawrence Weschler, The Grio’s Managing Editor Joy-Ann Reid, Civil Rights Activist Five Mualimm-ak, and Brooklyn City Councilman Jumaane Williams.

    Date: Thursday, April 24
    Time: 5:30pm
    Tickets: $15
    Location: New York Live Arts Studios

    AFTER GIOVANNI’S ROOM: BALDWIN and QUEER FUTURITY
    This multi-disciplinary conversation examines James Baldwin’s mid-twentieth century novel as an opportunity to consider the possibilities for a liberating “queer” future on the horizon, but not yet in sight. The importance of Giovanni’s Room does not simply stem from its status as Baldwin’s sole novel on homosexuality but, also its subterranean yet searing indictment of the dangers of an enduring American innocence. Taking its cue from the late thinker and theorist José Esteban Muñoz, this panel seeks to envision “the then and there” of a not-yet-realized progressive future as one way to negotiate the often devastating realities of the “here and now.” Panelists include Kyle Abraham, Rich Blint, Matthew Brim, Laura Flanders and Bill T. Jones.

    Date: Friday, April 25
    Time: 2:00pm
    Tickets: $10
    Location: New York Live Arts Theater

    BALDWIN’S NEW YORK
    Author, educator and niece of James Baldwin, Aisha Karefa-Smart discusses her Uncle Jimmy’s New York roots in conversation with Thelma Golden, Director and Chief Curator of The Studio Museum in Harlem; Patricia Cruz ,Executive Director of Harlem Stage; author, editor and curator Steven G. Fullwood; and authors Michele Wallace (Black Macho and The Myth of The Superwoman) and Sharifa Rhodes-Pitts (Harlem is Nowhere).

    Date: Friday, April 25
    Time: 5:30pm
    Tickets: $15
    Location: New York Live Arts Studios

    JIMMY’S BLUES: DISCUSSING THE POETRY OF JAMES BALDWIN
    Co-presented with The Poetry Society of America, this poetry event will feature conversations about and readings from Jimmy’s Blues by renowned American poets Nikky Finney, Edward Hirsch, Yusef Komunyakaa, Ed Pavlić, Meghan O’Rourke and Nathalie Handal.

    Date: Saturday, April 26
    Time: 5:30pm
    Tickets: $15
    Location: New York Live Arts Studios

    A CONCLUDING CONVERSATION: LEBOWITZ & TÓIBÍN
    Writer, sardonic provocateur and New Jersey émigré Fran Lebowitz (Metropolitan Life, Social Studies, etc.) and award-winning Irish novelist and essayist, Columbia Professor Colm Tóibín (The Master; The Testament of Mary; New Ways to Kill Your Mother, among many others) discuss Baldwin’s legacy and his remarkable and enduring impact on their own lives and vantages. Bill T. Jones joins the conversation as moderator.

    Date: Sunday, April 27
    Time: 6:00pm
    Tickets: $15, $40
    Location: New York Live Arts Theater

    DANCE & THEATER EVENTS

     

    “NOTHING PERSONAL”
    Not the least improbable aspect of Baldwin’s life was the fact that he and the photographer Richard Avedon attended high school together at Dewitt Clinton in the Bronx (class of 1942), and were members of the editorial board of the school’s literary magazine, The Magpie. A bit over twenty years later, the two joined forces once again in an exceptionally powerful melding of images and text, the 1964 volume Nothing Personal. Now, in a world premiere production, director Patricia McGregor, working with actor Colman Domingo (Passing Strange and Lee Daniel’s The Butler), brings the Baldwin/Avedon collaboration to life in a wrenchingly original stage adaptation.

    Date: Wednesday, April 23 at 5:00pm, Thursday, April 24 at 8:00pm
    Tickets: $15, $40
    Location: New York Live Arts Theater

    CARL HANCOCK RUX: STRANGER ON EARTH
    A preview of a new work, Stranger on Earth imagines a chance meeting between writer James Baldwin and singer Dinah Washington at a Harlem jazz club in 1963. Drawing from Baldwin’s essays including Notes of a Native Son, Nobody Knows My Name and The Fire Next Time — combined with Rux’s original dialogue and performed by Rux and Marcelle Davies-Lashley — the work addresses issues regarding race, identity, music and the future of a world both artists are struggling to understand. This showing will include a talk back with the artists. (Stranger on Earth will premiere in February 2015 at the Harlem Stage Gatehouse.)

    Date: Saturday, April 26
    Time: 2:00pm
    Tickets: $15, $35
    Location: New York Live Arts Theater

    STEW ON ‘NATIVE SONG’
    In a dynamic and intimate evening, Tony Award (Passing Strange) and Obie Award winning artist Stew will share his creative process and his lifelong journey into the world of Baldwin for his new work Notes of a Native Song. This insightful evening will engage audiences through fragments of work in progress: songs, poems, sermons and projections, using the work of James Baldwin and the locale of Harlem as filters through which to view the role of black artists in America, as well as springboards from which to leap into future questions of black art. Notes of a Native Song investigates, at times interrogates, the relationship between art and the black community, and asks what exactly a black American artist owes to this notion of community. (Notes of a Native Song will premiere in June 2015 at the Harlem Stage Gatehouse.)

    Date: Friday, April 25
    Time: 8:00pm
    Tickets: $15, $35
    Location: New York Live Arts Theater


    BALDWIN THROUGH DANCE:  Charles O. Anderson and Dianne McIntyre

    New York Live Arts presents the New York City Premiere of Charles O. Anderson’s Restless Natives. Infused with a stunning sound score and original texts by poet Ursula Rucker, this work has been inspired by James Baldwin’s seminal work Another Country. Set in a fictional speakeasy called “Home,” the piece is a physical manifestation of a kinetic story about emotional and spiritual longing, saturated with rhythm and blues.

    Dianne McIntyre’s new work, Time is Time, commissioned for the Live Ideas Festival, James Baldwin: This Time! explores the emotional soul of Baldwin’s poem “Song (for Skip).” With the foundation of Baldwin’s language, and “Time is Time,” a recurring theme in the poem, choreographer McIntyre weaves a tapestry of dance, song, instrumental sounds and contemplation. Ms. McIntyre will be performing in this celebratory offering joined by four fellow artists including a live score composed by legendary pianist Onaje Allan Gumbs. The movement, vocals and music will be propelled by Mr. Baldwin’s words – which are at times like a whip, at times like a lullaby – never holding back the “truth” of the times.

    Apr 26 Stay Late Discussion: Translating James Baldwin into Dance, Charles O. Anderson and Dianne McIntyre in conversation with Nadine George-Graves, President of the Congress on Research in Dance (CORD), and Professor of Theater and Dance at the University of California, San Diego.

    Date:  Saturday, April 26 at 8:00pm; Sunday, April 27 at 2:00pm
    Tickets: $15, $40
    Location: New York Live Arts Theater