IMMIGRANT MOVEMENT INTERNATIONAL
During 2011 Tania Bruguera will focus on her long-term project: Immigrant Movement International. The project will be located in Queens, New York, United States. All public events, regardless of their format, will be closely linked to this project.
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A CONVERSATION ON USEFUL ART
23.04.2011 /2:00 – 7:00 p.m.
Immigrant Movement International’s Headquartermore.... Download INVITATION
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VIDEO DOCUMENTATION:
Part 1. Definition of Useful Art and Introduction – Tania Bruguera
Part 2. Not an Alternative: Let It Out
Part 3. Mel Chin: Revival Field
Part 4. Rick Lowe: Project Row Houses
Part 5. Patrick Bernier and Olive Martin: Jurisprudence
Part 6. Pase Usted: Genera
Part 7. Discussion
The event, held in conjunction with the Useful Art Association, featured an introduction by Tania Bruguera, followed by a series of brief presentations with Mel Chin, Beka Economopoulos from Not An Alternative, Rick Lowe, Jorge Munguia from Pase Usted, and Patrick Bernier/Olive Martin followed by responses from Nato Thompson, Chief Curator at Creative Time; Tom Finkelpearl, Executive Director, Queens Museum of Art; Larissa Harris, Curator, Queens Museum of Art; and Gregory Sholette, Chair, MFA Studio Art Program, Queens College CUNY. Claire Bishop, Associate Professor of Art History, CUNY Graduate Center, representatives from local immigrant community organizations Make the Road, New York, and N.I.C.E. (New Immigrant Community Empowerment), and New York City Council Member Julissa Ferreras.
2:00 PM
Definition – Introduction
by Tania Bruguera
2:05 PM
Examples – Presentation of specific works
Mel Chin: Revival Field
Santiago Cirugeda: Recetas Urbanas
Rick Lowe: Project Row Houses
Pase Usted: Genera
Patrick & Olive: Jurisprudence
Not an Alternative: Let It Out (A kleenex intervention organized with Greenpeace.)3:00 PM
Clarification – Responders will ask for a particular aspect on the project presented
Nato Thompson
Tom Finkelpearl
Larissa Harris
Gregory Sholette3:15 PM
Interrogation – Critically Addressing The Projects And The Notion Of Useful ArtClaire Bishop
Make The Road
N.I.C.E. (New Immigrant Community Empowerment)
NYC Council Member Julissa Ferreras3:30 PM
Audience Interaction
Claire Bishop Moderates Q & A With Audience3:50 PM
Breake
4:00 PM
World Café
A style of Discussion that breaks an audience into smaller groups to consider one question at a time with a Presenter and a Responder at each table. Leading a discussion with a small group of audience choose which table they would like to go to.
There will be three questions presented, each question will have 10 minutes for discussion. When time is up on one question, the audience members are free to switch to another table allowing them to have a brief discussion with multiple participants and audience members.
4:40 PM
Responders Report Back
5:00 PM
Drink And Dance
Patrick Bernier & Olive Martin have worked collaboratively for over a decade. Concerned with issues of migration and territory, they recognized an irony in the rapid expansion of copyright and intellectual property law in the digital era as well as the diminishing rights of immigrants and freedom of movement under French and EU laws.
Mel Chin‘s art is both analytical and poetic, and evades easy classification. Alchemy, botany, and ecology are but a few of the disciplines that intersect in his work. He inserts art into unlikely places, including destroyed homes, toxic landfills, and even popular television, investigating how art can provoke greater social
awareness and responsibility. Details of a current project can be seen online at Fundred.org.Santiago Cirugeda is a spanish architect, founder of the office Recetas Urbanas which regularly creates projects playing with legality.
Rick Lowe is an artist, architect, urban designer, developer, businessman, and activist. In 1993, Lowe founded Project Row Houses, which turned 22 “shotgun” houses in the middle of Houston’s poorest neighborhoods into art galleries, workshop spaces, offices, and housing for single mothers.
Pase Usted is a non-profit organization that promotes change and development through ideas and the way we engage with today’s most relevant issues. The project promotes dialogue, discussions and proposals through 3 main platforms: thematic multidisciplinary forums, media, and support to innovative projects based in technology that seek to improve quality of life.
Not an Alternative is a hybrid arts collective and nonprofit organization whose mission aims to integrate art, activism and theory in order to affect popular understandings of events, symbols and history.
Works on display
– Adrian Melis, Vigilia-Nigth Watch
– Cesare Pietroiusti, Money Watching
– Ruben Santiago, Pre-existing condition x-y
– Ghana Think Thank, Give us your problem!
– Judi Werthein, BrincoClaire Bishop, Assoc. Prof of Art History at the CUNY Graduate Center. She is an internationally acknowledged scholar of contemporary art and is widely considered to be an original thinker and creative interpreter of contemporary art.
New York Council Member Julissa Ferreras proudly serves Corona, East Elmhurst and parts of Jackson Heights-an area of Queens that is one of the most diversely populated areas in the country. She was Assistant Director of the Community Conciliation Network in Corona, and shortly thereafter the Beacon Director at P.S. 19, the nation’s most overcrowded school. Elected to the City Council in 2009, currently serves as Chair of the Women’s Issues Committee.
Tom Finkerpearl, Executive Director of The Queens Museum of Art. He has worked as a curator and deputy director at P.S.1, New York, and Director of the Percent for Art Program at the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs. His new book, The Art of Social Cooperation is forthcoming from Duke University Press.
Larissa Harris, Curator at the Queens Museum of Art. She was associate director of the Center for Advanced Visual Studies at MIT from 2004-2008 and is one half of a partnership called The Steins, which produces occasional, extremely brief exhibitions in basements in the Lower East Side.
Make the Road New York promotes economic justice, equity and opportunity for all New Yorkers through community and electoral organizing, strategic policy advocacy, leadership development, youth and adult education, and high quality legal and support services.
New Immigrant Community Empowerment (NICE) is a community-based, non-profit organization that works to ensure that new immigrants can build social, political and economic power in their communities and beyond. NICE envisions a world where all people -regardless of status- live and work with dignity and justice.
Nato Thompson, Chief Curator at Creative Time. He has also worked as the Curator at MASS MoCA. His writings have appeared in numerous publications including Art Journal, tema celeste, Parkett, Cabinet and The Journal of Aesthetics and Protest. The College Art Association awarded him for distinguished writing in Art Journal in 2004.
Gregg Scholette, Chair, MFA Studio Art Program at Queens College, CUNY. He is a New York-based artist, writer, and founding member of Political Art Documentation/Distribution (PAD/D: 1980-1988), and REPOhistory (1989-2000).His recent book Dark Matter: Art and Politics in the Age of Enterprise Culture was just published by Pluto Press.
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RE-CONCEPTUALIZING THE 21ST CENTURY (IM)MIGRANT
04.11.2011 – 05.11.2011 /10:00 a.m.-7:00 p.m.
Immigrant Movement International’s Headquartermore...IM International will be holding a two-day convening, engaging (im)migration experts from both local and international communities, activists and community leaders from social service organizations, elected officials and academics. The event will focus on re-defining what it means to be a (im)migrant in the context of the 21st century, establishing a new framework for analyzing this multifaceted concept.
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We are pleased to have the opportunity to welcome you to Immigrant Movement International‘s two-day convening Re-Conceptualizing the 21st Century (Im)Migrant. We are looking forward to the seeing the creative output generated by our work together and would like to provide you with additional information related to this event.
Our objective is to establish a new framework for analyzing and defining the multifaceted concept of (im)migrant under contemporary legal, political, and economic conditions by engaging a group of experts in the subject from diverse disciplines and fields, including academics, elected officials and community organizers.
On the first day of our convening we will present and discuss the limitations of the term (im)migrant in the 21st century context. While operating in the format of working groups, the tentative goal is to propose a foundation for a new term and vision. The following day we will reconvene to generate a set of practical guidelines that can be utilized as a reference for policy makers and activists.
Prior to the convening we will be initiating the discussion via our online forum, where participants can familiarize with the the topics of the event and posting feedback comments in order to prompt a more dynamic, thorough, and productive discussion once we are all physically in the same room on November 4th and 5th. The online forum will be available only to those directly involved in the project and to access it you need a password. Your username and password are included in your personal welcome letters.
In preparation for the event, we are asking all participants to post their responses to a short question on the online forum as well as a few bill-type articles that would be essential to a declaration of (im)migrants rights.
For your convenience we have included a list of selected works by participants that we think will help provide theoretical and practical basis for our discussion. All information regarding the event including the schedule, the list of participants, and directions, is available on this site. Additionally, you can learn about our ongoing project, IM International and the neighborhood that we are operating out of – Corona, Queens – a multi-national community in the heart of the most ethnically diverse area in the country.
Thank you for being a part of this event, we are looking forward to collaborating with you and seeing the outcome of our collective effort to advance the opportunities and rights of (im)migrants.
If you should have any questions feel free to contact us.
Best Regards,
Tania Bruguera
Prior to the convening, we are asking participants and collaborators to begin the process of re-defining the term (im)migrant in the context of the 21st century by submitting written responses.
Please respond to the following questions in less than 1,500 words:
-In an era of an increasingly interconnected global community, (im)migration and communication have changed radically through advancements in technology and international relations. The social, economic and political context of (im)migration is drastically different from even a decade ago. How then can we define (im)migrants or even the need for such social and legal distinctions in the 21st century? Can such a group be seen as a new “class” or “identity” sharing some experiences and responses that cut across cultural background, economic opportunity and legal status? It is important to have a clear, universal re-definition of the 21st century (im)migrant to see how this term can be implemented for practical use and progressive change.
-On the second day of the convening, using the definition of the 21st century (im)migrant, we will be developing a document in the form of a bill of rights or a declaration or any alternative document that would be effective in advancing sustainable social change. Although this concept is similar to previous initiatives, such as the International Migrant Bill of Rights, the NY Domestic Workers Bill of Rights, the UN Declaration on Human Rights, the UN Convention of the Rights of Migrants, NY State Dream Act, the eventual goal of the document proposed by IM International is slightly different. Once we have established a set of guidelines on advancing the rights and opportunities of (im)migrants, the document will be distributed to community organizers and politicians on a local, domestic and international level for practical use. The next step of our project will be an international call to action on artists and immigrants to stand up and act in response to theUnited Nations’ International Migrants Day using the document. Please list two elements that would be essential to such a document.
*Written responses can be directly posted to our private forum
*If you are trouble posting please see our instructions or feel free to email your responses to people@immigrant-movement.us
Dr. Jason Drucker
Dr. Jorge BustamanteDr. Victoria Hattam
* collaboratorsFACILITATOR
Abel Valenzuela Jr., Nik Theodore, Edwin Meléndez, Ana Luz Gonzalez On the Corner: Day Labor in the United States
Carlos Yescas Indigenous Routes A Framework for Understanding Indigenous Migration
David Bacon We Need Better Alternative
Dorian Warren and Kate Bronfenbrenner Race, Gender and the Rebirth of Trade Unionism
Giovanni Peri Immigration, Labor Markets and Productivity
Jorge Bustamante Extreme Vulnerability of Migrants: The Cases of the United States and Mexico
Kitty Calavita U.S. Immigration Policy- Contradictions and Projections for the Future
Michael Piore Birds of Passage – Comment
Nandita Sharma Anti-Trafficking Rhetoric in the Making of Global Apartheid
Ron Hayduk Democracy for All?: The Case for Restoring Immigrant Voting in the United States
Saskia Sassen Citizenship Destabilized
Tarry Hum New York City’s Asian Immigrant Economies
Victoria Hattam and Carlos Yescas From Immigration and Race to Sex and Faith: Reimagining the Politics of Opposition
*To submit a reading, please send a link or PDF file to people@immigrant-movement.us
Friday, November 4
10:00 – 10:15 a.m.
Arrive at Immigrant Movement International
Coffee and Light Breakfast Served
Receive Welcome Bag and Information Packet
10:15 – 10:30 a.m.
Welcome, Immigrant Movement Mission and Event Introduction by Tania Bruguera
10:30 – 10:45 a.m.
Guidelines and Goals
10:45 – 11:00 a.m.
Personal Introductions
11:00 – 11:40 a.m.
Timeline of Role of Immigrant, Victories and Obstacles
11:40 – 12:00 m.
December 18 Day of the International Migrant Open Call for Artist Actions (introduction presented by Tom Finkelpearl and selected artist actions presented by Nato Thompson)
12:00 – 1:00 p.m.
Re-conceptualizing the Term (Im)migrant for the 21st Century
1:00 – 2:00 p.m.
Catered Peruvian Lunch
2:00 – 2:30 p.m.
Working Groups Part 1
2:30 – 3:15 p.m.
Reportback – Concrete Proposals
3:15 – 3:30 p.m.
Coffee/Tea Break
3:30 – 4:00 p.m.
Working Groups Part 2
4:00 – 4:45 p.m.
Reportback – Concrete Proposals
4:45 – 5:00 p.m.
Mojito Break
5:00 – 6:15 p.m.
Synthesizing Thoughts into New Term: (Im)migrant in the 21st Century
6:15 – 6:30 p.m.
Conclusion/Next Steps
6:30 – 6:45 p.m.
Fill out Evaluation
6:45 p.m.
Leave for Indian Dinner at the Queens Museum of Art
Saturday, November 5
10:00 – 10:15 a.m.
Arrive at Immigrant Movement International
Coffee and Light Breakfast Served
10:15 – 10:30 a.m.
Review of Guidelines and Goals & Introduce New Participants
10:30 – 10:45 a.m.
Summarize of Previous Day and Introduce New Concept of (Im)Migrant
10:45 – 11:00 a.m.
Revisit Timeline
11:00 – 11:45 a.m.
Discussing Victories & Obstacles: Prior Documents – Why Don’t They Work?
11:45 – 12:00 m.
Clothesline Debates
12:00 – 12:45 m.
Group Discussion: Key Debates
12:45 – 1:45 p.m.
Catered Korean-Japanese Lunch
1:45 – 2:00 p.m.
Introduce Idea of Document, Explain how it will be used
2:00 – 2:30 p.m.
Working Group 1
2:30 – 3:00 p.m.
Working Group 2
3:00 – 3:15 p.m.
Empanada Break
3:15 – 4:15 p.m.
Report Backs, Draw Out Key Themes
4:15 – 4:30 p.m.
December 18 Day of the International Migrant Open Call for Artist Actions (selected artist actions presented by Anne Pasternak)
4:30 – 5:45 p.m.
Composing the Document
5:45 – 6:15 p.m.
Forthcoming Vision/Next Steps
6:15 p.m.
Dinner at Turkish Grill Restaurant
. IM INTERNATIONAL PUBLIC READINGS OF THE MIGRANT MANIFESTO
OWS Immigrant March in NYC
December 18
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United Nations’ Student Conference on Human Rights (UNSCHR)
December 12
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Immigrant Movement International (IM International), an ongoing project initiated by artist Tania Bruguera and co-presented by Creative Time and the Queens Museum of Art, today issued its Migrant Manifesto, a document of 10 points that can be used to help redefine the concept of the 21st century migrant, at the United Nations’ Student Conference on Human Rights (UNSCHR).
Today’s reading of the Manifesto, the first time it has been presented to the public, was introduced by Bruguera, and then read in Spanish, Arabic, Farsi, French, Mandarin and English by immigrants from Mexico, Iran, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Egypt and Taiwan, respectively.
The Migrant Manifesto, created in collaboration with immigration academics, community organizers, social service activists, elected officials, and community members at a convening at the IM International headquarters in Corona, Queens on November 4-5, 2011, is intended to draw attention to establishing a new framework for analyzing multifaceted concept of migration., with the intention of elevating political representation and awareness.
“Migration is an undeniably central element of contemporary existence, and by issuing the Migrant Manifesto to the leaders of tomorrow at this United Nations Students Human Rights Conference, we are emboldening a new generation to take action,” said Bruguera. “While we celebrate International Migrants Day each year on December 18, it is crucial that we acknowledge the rights, contributions and sacrifices of immigrants every day of the year.”
Bruguera’s issuance of the Manifesto is the first in a series of worldwide artistic actions focused on immigration to take place on December 18, 2011, designated “International Migrants Day” by the United Nations. Bruguera and IM International have put forth an open call to artists, immigrants, activists, and interested members of the public to stage an action on December 18, 2011 at 2pm local time in recognition of the concept of transnational migrants as a “global class” united across continents and cultures by common political and social conditions, as well as by the human experience of being a migrant. By engaging participants across the globe in a UN-endorsed project, the organizers hope to promote understanding of the specificity of local migration issues and the political interconnectedness across nations and regions that migration engenders.
In December 1998, the United Nations Department of Public Information invited students from around the world to a conference at UN Headquarters in New York to help celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and to draft the Youth Declaration of Human Rights. This program was so successful that students lobbied to make the conference an annual event that would be scheduled to coincide closely with Human Rights Day (December 10th). The annual UN Student Conference on Human Rights has taken place every year since.
While the theme of the conference changes each year, the goals of this annual event remain the same: to promote awareness and learning and to prompt action among student leaders about human rights in general, as well as the specific rights issues related to the current year’s theme. The conference is also an opportunity for student leaders to network and develop important leadership skills such as public speaking, team and consensus building, negotiating, and research and drafting. Finally, the conference provides participants with first-hand experience in using information technologies such as video-conferencing and web-casting.
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18.12.2011 /2:00 p.m.
The December 18th Call for Actions is supported by the United Nations.
Download OFFICIAL LETTER of UNITED NATIONS Supportmore.... Access MIGRANT MANIFESTO
. Access PUBLIC SPEECH
On December 18, designated “International Migrants Day” by the United Nations, we are mobilizing artists and cultural producers across the world to develop projects related to the issues and experience of migration. Through artistic actions, we want to help highlight the fact that human migration is an increasingly central phenomena of contemporary global existence, and to assert and promote the fundamental human rights, freedoms, and dignity of migrants and their families.
. Access map of December 18 with Global Actions
. Download First Note from IM International about December 18th
. Press Release at IM International, ARTINFO and QMA
. Open Call for Submissions at CALL FOR….., e-flux and amp
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Awareness ribbon for immigrant respect
27/09/2011 /Corona, Queens Immigrant Movement International Awareness Ribbon for Immigrant Respect by Tania Bruguera Creation of the Awareness Ribbon for Immigrant Respect Inspired by the success of previous awareness ribbon campaigns and after talking to various community organizations, Immigrant Movement International found that there was no campaign for immigrant causes. We then decided to create … Read more
more...27/09/2011
/Corona, Queens
Awareness Ribbon for Immigrant Respect
by Tania Bruguera
Creation of the Awareness Ribbon for Immigrant Respect
Inspired by the success of previous awareness ribbon campaigns and after talking to various community organizations, Immigrant Movement International found that there was no campaign for immigrant causes. We then decided to create the Awareness Ribbon for Immigrant Respect. The immigrant condition can be a very isolating and stigmatizing social experience. We hope that the ribbon can signal unspoken solidarity while calling for respect between people and facilitating an expanding conversation about immigration.
Why Immigrant Respect?
We decided on Immigrant Respect after learning that the language of ‘Immigrant Rights’ can be politically polarizing. Demanding Immigrant Respect, on the other hand, humanizes the issue. It communicates that it is not simply about money or laws, it is about people who deserve as much respect as anyone else.
The ribbon as symbol
The colors brown and blue, represent common entry points of immigrants traveling to a new country, over land, through the air, or via waterway. The bottom of the ribbon’s edges are in the shape of an arrow signaling movement, arrival, and transformation. The words Immigrant Respect convey the goal of the campaign.
JOIN IMMIGRANT MOVEMENT INTERNATIONAL’S IMMIGRANT RESPECT AWARENESS CAMPAIGN
. Add a badge to your social media profile, click here
. Order a ribbon pin, click here
. Make your own and send us a photo, click here
RESPECT FOR ALL IMMIGRANTS REGARDLESS OF LEGAL STATUS!
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.April
03.04.2011 /2:00 p.m.
Immigrant Movement International’s Headquarter
OPEN HOUSE and SLOGAN WRITING WORKSHOPmore.... Access IMAGES
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Come to the first Open House of the newly created IMMIGRANT MOVEMENT INTERNATIONAL.
At 2pm, participate in an hour-long Slogan Writing Workshop about immigration with political artist Tania Bruguera. Help create short, positive phrases that could change the image the immigrants like “No human is illegal” your slogan could end up in posters or a t-shirt!!!
Join the path to advance the identity of all people who live outside their place of origin, despite language, class, culture, or race. Between 3pm and 5pm we’ll have an Open House and will ‘meet-and-greet’ with the artist. We will provide light refreshments, music, and conversation. So come to the workshop and stay for the rest of the fun!! The Corona Youth Music Project (El Sistema) bucket ensemble will do a short performance at 3 pm to kick off the festivities.
**The event is free to the public and open to all ages, but please RSVP to united@immigrant-movement.us**
.May
1st. May /from 10:30 a.m. – 3:00 p.m.
Immigrant Movement’s Headquarter
MAY DAY INMIGRANT MOBILE WORKSHOPmore.... Scrolldown for SCHEDULE
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Immigrant Movement International and Make the Road NY invite you to ‘Make A Movement’
Sunday – May 1
Immigrant Movement International along with Make The Road New York’s Youth Power Program gathered at the IM headquarters to prepare signs, buttons, t-shirts and stickers with immigrant rights slogans. We then rode the 7 train to the Rally for Immigrant and Labor Rights in Manhattan’s Foley Square while interacting with train riders about the topic of immigration.
JOIN US ON SUNDAY!
SCHEDULE
10:30 AM
Gather at Immigrant Movement International in Corona, Queens: Join members of Make the Road NY’s Youth Power Project, who will exhibit a selection of creative work, banners, and photography from past actions.
Make your own buttons and signs, and silkscreen your own t-shirts. DON’T FORGET TO BRING YOUR OWN T-SHIRTS!
11:30 AM
Lunch and water will be provided.
12:00 PM
Board the 7 train at 111th Street towards Manhattan: Artist Tania Bruguera will lead a ***Mobile Workshop in Public Space *** and distribute stickers with pro-immigrant slogans made by immigrants and members of the Queens Museum New New Yorkers program in a previous workshop.
1:00 PM
Arrive at Foley Square and join the Rally for Immigrant and Labor Rights: Workshop participants will distribute stickers to rally-goers.
RSVP to united@immigrant-movement.us or call 718 424 6502.
The event is free and open to the public.
Make a Movement Sundays is a community-oriented event series by Immigrant Movement Internationalwhich takes place the first Sunday of every month. Immigrant Movement International, initiated by Tania Bruguera, is presented by Creative Time and the Queens Mu seum of Art.
.June
05.06.2011 /from 2:00 – 5:00 p.m.
Queens, Corona, NY.
GHANA THINK TANKmore.... Access IMAGES
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The Ghana ThinkTank Project collects problems in the United States and sends them to our think tanks in Ghana, Cuba, El Salvador, Mexico, Serbia, Iran, Afghanistan, and others… They send us back solutions, and we put those solutions into action!
On June 5, the Immigrant Movement International and the Queens Museum of Art hosted a special session of the Ghana ThinkTank to focus on Corona,Queens. Using techniques from the project, new immigrants and more established residents talked openly about issues facing the community and how to address them.
They also signed up to be members of a new Corona ThinkTank. Ghana Think tank project is run by John Ewing, Carmen Montoya and Christopher Robbins. To know more about the Ghana ThinkTank go to:http://www.GhanaThinkTank.org
.July
03.07.2011 /from 2:00 – 5:00 p.m.
Outside of IM International’s Headquarter
BBQmore.... Access IMAGES
Immigrant Movement International hosted a “Make a Movement” Sunday: United Immigrants of America BBQ in celebration of Independence Day.
The event was held at the Immigrant Movement International Headquarters.
Drinks and hot dogs were provided as well as various foods brought in from different cultures, like grilled corn.
.September
11.09.2011 /from 10:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Elizabeth Detention Center
9/11 (THE WAR ON IMMIGRANTS)more.... Access IMAGES
The attacks of September 11, 2001 and the emergence of The War on Terrorism have produced aggressive networks of punishment, mass warehousing, and criminalization that deploy an unjust system of detention and deportation. Recent reports and academic research indicate that the U.S. government’s trend has been to increase the privatization of the detention center system as a way to increase national security measures. With the help of scholars, activists and legal advocates, awareness about the conditions and treatment of detained immigrants help in pressuring government officials to adopt reformative detention guidelines. To address this current reality, ‘Make a Movement’ Sundays: 9/11 (The War on Immigrants)” collaborated with IRATE/First Friends to train people to participate in a visitor program to visit immigrants detained at the Elizabeth Detention Center in Elizabeth, NJ. After the training the participants traveled to the detention center to visit immigrants who have been converted into prisoners of the ”nation of immigrants.” After the visitation, the participants made a drawing of an officer based on the descriptions given by the detainees of the officer who arrested them.
.November
27.11.2011 /from 2:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Immigrant Movement international
Immigrant Respect Awareness Campaignmore.... Access LETTERS TO ELECTED OFFICIALS
. Access IMAGES
We invited community members and allies to the launch of the Immigrant Respect awareness campaign. This campaign intends to signal unspoken solidarity while calling for respect between people to facilitate an expanding conversation about immigration.
As part of the launch party, each participant was asked to write a letter to their elected officials asking for Immigrant Respect. The letters were then sent to President Obama, the participant’s respective senator and representative.
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/IM International
7.03.2011 – 11.03.2011 /from 4:00 p.m. – 7:30 p.m.
Swedish Dance Group at IM International. Corona, Queens
organized by Marten Spangberg
workshopmore...The Bachelor program in Dance Pedagogy
DOCH educates dance pedagogues and dance teachers with an artistic and pedagogical profile relating to dance and choreography in a contemporary context. The courses and programs relates to new social structures by using relevant methods and interactive processes. This requires a development of the pedagogical and artistic methods that is used to train and communicate within and through dance. In new media, dance is communicated both as an art-form, as entertainment and as a field of knowledge. The teaching of dance has many levels and is becoming more and more interdisciplinary. An important prerequisite for contemporary artistic education in dance pedagogy is a close connection to other programs in education in the arts as well as the artistic work in dance.
/Like the Real Thing.
10.03.2011 /7:30 p.m.
LACAP. Toronto, Canada
organized by Tamara Toledo
Lecturemore...Latin American Speakers Series
Tania Bruguera will presented a lecture titled “Like the real thing” regarding her last Long Term Project Immigrant Movement International, her presentation will be moderated by Alberto Guevara.
The Latin American Speakers Series will not only contextualize Latin American art within Canada, but will also be an opportunity to present meaningful cultural exchange. International guest speakers are paired with local Latin American moderators. The series objective is to enrich Canadian understanding of Latin American art from both the continent and the Diaspora.
A wide range of visual artists, curators, designers, educators, and academics share and discuss projects creating a forum for dialogue, collaboration and provide an educational vehicle for change and exchange. The series is presented by Latin American Canadian Art Projects and is curated by Tamara Toledo.
/Tatlin’s Whisper #6 (Havana verson).
16.03. – 5.06.2011 /from 10:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.
Museo del Palacio de Bellas Artes, Mexico
Curated by Gerardo Mosquera
Exhibitionmore...Crisisss, América Latina Arte y Confrontación. 1910 – 2010
This exhibition will travel to the following venues:
• Museo arte del Banco de la República / Museo de Arte Moderno de Medellín, Colombia
(10.07.2011 – 30.10.11)
• Museo Arocena, Colombia
(15.11.2011 – 15.02.2012)
Crisisss… was not a strictly historical show, nor an exhaustive survey, and it did not pursue a country-by-country presentation. Instead, its curatorial vision sought to construct discourse through the show itself, with the artworks—and not curatorial generalizations—as the starting point. It addressed Latin America in all its complexities and conflicts, and emphasized contemporary problems and positions. Confronting hierarchies and totalizations, the exhibition articulated multiple narratives, drives and cross-sectional dialogues through the relationship the works created among themselves and within the context of the Palacio de Bellas Artes’ and the Ex Teresa’s spaces. In addition to six exhibition galleries at the Palacio, additional interior spaces, the building’s façade, and outdoor spaces came into play and incorporated interventions involving the building. Other areas of the show integrated the museum’s famed murals by Orozco, Rivera and Siqueiros by interrelating them with contemporary artworks. A creative, playful education space was open to all audiences at the Bellas Artes venue.
/The Right to Speak.
13.03.2011 /from 2:30 p.m. – 2:50 p.m.
MOLAA. Los Angeles, California
Conceived by Cecilia Fajardo-Hill
Coordinated by Idurre Alonso
Lecture and Video Screeningmore.... Access PROGRAM
. Access VIDEO (Day 3, Session VI, Part 1)
Between Theory and Practice: Rethinking Latin American Art in the 21st Century.
SESSION VI
Curatorial Models: Emblematic Contemporary Cases
This session will focus on the analysis of emblematic contemporary art exhibitions. Papers will explore the differences between art historical curatorial practice and contemporary curatorial art practice, given that a historical approach requires a specialized and contextualized practice, whereas contemporary curating calls for an international context.
2:00 – 2:15 p.m.Video Screening: Tania Bruguera, Tatlin Whisper # 6 (Havana version), 2009, 15 min excerpt from 40:30 min video
Courtesy of Studio Bruguera2:15 – 2:30 p.m.Introduction, Moderator: Taiyana Pimentel, Sala de Arte Público Siqueiros, Mexico City
2:30 – 2:50 p.m.The Right to SpeakTania Bruguera, IM International
4:15 – 5:00 p.m.
Conversation, Moderator: Taiyana Pimentel. Respondent: Michael Krichman. Participants: Tania Bruguera, Magali Arriola and Arturo Duclos.
An international group of scholars, curators, museum directors and artists discuss new approaches to the study and presentation of Latin American art in the 21st century. This symposium focuses on three key areas: the role of the museum in the collection, contextualization and representation of Latin American art; the production of revisionist art histories through innovative research methodologies, new interpretative frameworks and archive-based scholarship; and experimental curatorial models ranging from historic to contemporary case studies for the interpretation and presentation of art from Latin America. This symposium is organized by the Museum of Latin American Art in Long Beach in collaboration with the Getty Research Institute and is funded with support from the Getty Foundation.
/Tania Bruguera receives an AICAA/USA Award
14.03.2011 /from 6:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.
Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art. New York
organized by AICA/USA
Reception of an awardmore...Tania Bruguera awarded at Annual Arts Awards to Honor Artists, Museum & Curators
Tania Bruguera, whose exhibition at Neuberger Museum of Art won one Best Show prize in a University Gallery, commented on the award’s significance for her ongoing work: “Receiving the AICA Award encourages me to continue with great enthusiasm a new project, Immigrant Movement International, which will last a whole year.”The awards ceremony, which has been held annually for more than 25 years, will take place at the Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art on March 14 2011 at 6 PM./ENSBA visits Immigrant Movement International
15.03.2011 /from 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
New York, United States
organized by Tania Bruguera
Workshopmore...ENSBA visits Immigrant Movement International
For 5 days Tania Bruguera engages ENSBA’s students from Paris on her Long Term Project IM International visiting and having meetings also with Creative Time and QMA’s team.
/Where are the artists?
26.03.2011 /from 8:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m.
Rijksakademie van beeldende kunsten, Amsterdam, Netherlands
organized by Rijsakademie
Panel Discussionmore.... Access to the Panel:
–PART 5 – FROM 4:55 TANIA’S INTERVENTION BEGIN
–PART 6 – TANIA’S INTERVENTION
Rijksakademie LIVE 2!: Where are the artists?
A debate with Elena Filipova, Rosella Biscotti, Tania Bruguera, Moshekwa Langa, Pavel Büchler moderated by Philippe Pirotte
Rijksakademie LIVE 2! Will address these questions in a public conversation taking as a starting point two texts by Daniel Buren: “Exhibition of an exhibition” and “Where are the artists?”
/Tania Bruguera presenting her Long Term Project
14.04.2011 /from 10:45 a.m. to 11:45 a.m.
NYU. New York University
organized by RoseLee Goldberg
Lecturemore...Contemporary Art and New Media’s class
Tania Bruguera will present her Long Term Project Immigrant Movement International
/Visiting Faculty
25.04.2011 – 27.04.2011 /evening
Rijksakademie. Amsterdam, Netherlands
organized by Rijksakademie
Lecture and Studio Visitmore...Studio Visit
Contacts between resident artists and advisors mainly take the form of individual studio visits at the resident artist’s invitation. The make-up of the advisor group shows great diversity as to views of the arts, generation, nationality and one’s position in the art world. At the initiative of residents and advisors, discussions, seminars, excursions and workshops are held on current shared themes arising from one’s own work or one’s fascinations outside of this.
/Dream of Reason
21.05. – 26.06.2011 /from 8:30 p.m. – 9:30 p.m.
Appel Arts Centre
curated by Appel Curatorial Programme 2010/11: Marie Frampier, Natasha Ginwala, Jacob Korczynski, Javier Villa, Rieke Vos, Vivian Ziher.
Perfomancemore...You whistle – and ask, am I alone in here?
Appel Jongensschool
A whistle emanates from the gut, proceeding to circulate beyond the body, as an absent presence that is felt rather than seen. Whistling in the dark — a nonchalant gesture set within an anxious environment; to summon your courage in the face of projected danger.
In the Netherlands, we find ourselves placed at a critical juncture. Much has been said on the rise of nationalist sentiments and populism, the economic down-turn, Islamophobia and an entrenched identity crisis. Yet the mental impact of this social upheaval remains concealed beneath a rationalist impulse.
We seem to be moving from a post-9/11 culture of fear toward an ambit of collective paranoia. As the known grows unfamiliar, allegations and accusations masquerade as reason. Anxieties give way to perpetual vigilance. Unlike fear, paranoia becomes a destructive plot that turns against itself. It remains diffused, conflated and replicated – under the skin.
We talk compulsively to hide uneasy silences, we whistle to posture ourselves whilst facing an all-encompassing darkness – an everyday that is a minefield of paradoxes . Fluiten in het Donker sets out to confront these phantoms of uncertainty, to give bodies to the voices in our heads – a Beckettian struggle – to see the inability to see.
Fluiten in het Donker is an exhibition ‘out of sync.’ Rather than creating a narrative trajectory, de Appel Boys School emerges as a total occupation – disturbed and disturbing. The exhibition explores the materiality of paranoia through art works that draw upon vocabularies of aggression and potentiality – playing upon the suspicions of visitors. Internal struggles are made present by way of labyrinths that disorient and proceed to build an inescapable void. Acts of obsession and sabotage become means of resistance in a time of societal impasse.
Artists
Absalon, Samuel Beckett, Pierre Bismuth, Maze de Boer, Tania Bruguera, Jasper Coppes, León Ferrari, Sara van der Heide, Jenny Holzer, Geert Jan Jansen, Luciana Lamothe, Monika SosnowskaCurators
de Appel Curatorial Programme 2010/11: Marie Frampier, Natasha Ginwala, Jacob Korczynski, Javier Villa, Rieke Vos, Vivian Ziherl/Immigrant Movement International: An Event by Tania Bruguera
07.06.2011 /7:00 p.m.
The Kitchen
Curated by Jennifer Burris, Sofía Olascoaga, Sadia Shirazi and Gaia Tedone. Helena Rubinstein Curatorial Fellows of the Whitney Museum of American Art Independent Study Program.
Public Performancemore.... Download the CONTRACT presented at this Event
In conjunction with Foreclosed. Between Crisis and Possibility
Immigrant Movement International: An Event by Tania BrugueraTania Bruguera’s Immigrant Movement International (IM International) presents a public performance that will bring together the project’s multiple audiences and participants. Through this performance, Bruguera seeks to address the foreclosure of immigrants from political representation.
IM International is an ongoing long-term project that takes the form of a socio-political movement currently headquartered in the neighborhood of Corona, Queens. IM International engages with local immigrant community groups and political organizations through a series of public workshops, events, and actions./City as Stage
11.06.2011 /3:00 p.m.
The Kitchen
organized by Sofía Olascoaga
Conversationmore...Photo credit ©Jennifer Burris.
Foreclosed: Between Crisis and Possibility
As part of the exhibition Foreclosed: Between Crisis and Possibility, this discussion explores urban space as a site of contestation and possibility. It will begin with a screening of Yto Barrada’s video Beau Geste(2009), followed by a conversation between Tania Bruguera (Artist), Peter Marcuse (Columbia University),Damon Rich (Architect), and Radhika Subramaniam(Parsons The New School for Design).
How does the current economic crisis reconfigure urban space, specifically in New York City? How do contemporary artistic and urban practices engage with and impact the social imaginary of the city? Bringing together the disciplines of urban planning and design with artistic and curatorial practices, this platform considers the city as a stage of conflict, desire, and imagination. This program is free of charge and open to the public, based on a first-come, first-serve basis. Capacity is limited, we kindly suggest an early arrival. This event in organized in conjunction with Foreclosed: Between Crisis and Possibility.
Please note that Foreclosed does not take place at the Museum. The Kitchen is the primary site of the exhibition. Please consult individual calendar listings for details. All events are free and open to the public.
Studio Visits
18.06.2011 /3:00 p.m.
Rijksakademie van beeldende kunsten, Amsterdam, Netherlands
organized by Rijksakademie
Visting Faculty / Advisormore...Studio Visits
Residents are in dialogue with one another and with advisors (internationally active artists, art critics, exhibition makers and others). Contacts between resident artists and advisors mainly take the form of individual studio visits at the resident artist’s invitation.
/Speech
13.08.2011 /1:00 p.m.
Römer, Frankfurt, Germany
curated by Matthias Ulrich
Public Performancemore.... Access SPEECH
. Access VIDEO
PLAYING THE CITY 3
In the summer of 2011 “Playing the City” will take place for the third time. This final edition will again be focused on public space as a venue for artistic activities involving the city and its inhabitants in a variety of ways. New actions, performances, and other participatory projects will be presented in Frankfurt day by day. The program will continue the controversial discussion on collective, free and malleable spaces, their boundaries, and the inhabitants’ involvement.
A headquarters where all projects will be organized, communicated, and documented will be established in the SCHIRN’S exhibition spaces like in recent years. The website www.playingthecity.de will accompany the entire exhibition venture with the latest news, pictures, videos, and a blog.
/Educational Turn
06.09.2011 /7:00 p.m.
Main Tor-Areal
Panel Discussionmore.... ACCESS VIDEO OF THE PANEL
MMK Talks:
.EDUCATIONAL TURN
Mediation has became an essential aspect of museum work. This is a circumstances reflected in various formats in the institutional as well as the non-institutional area. Relevant mediation work is today no longer directed solely towards an educated elite but addresses a substantially wider public. The title ”Educational turn” refers to increasing importance of and changes in education, knowledge production and research in contemporary art. To art ever greater degree, museums and exhibitions have become places of training and research in contemporary art. To an ever greater degree, museums and exhibitions have become places of training and research where current topics are debated and forms of knowledge are negotiated.
The consequences of these developments for artistic practise and new ways of shaping institutional research and mediation worldwide will be discussed by:
Simon Njami (Curator, author and art critic, Paris)
Tania Bruguera (Artist, New York)
Maria Hlavajova (Founder and artistic director of BAK, basis voor actuele kunst, Utrecht)
Moderation: Nikolaus Hirsch (Director, Städelschule/Portikus).MUSEUM PUBLIC
Recent changes in society, globalization, and the increasing significance of the media are a mix that presents the museum of the twenty-first century with new challenges. The museum’s role as a public space demands redefinition. In this context, more and more importance is being attached to communication and mediation. The impact of these developments on the museum of contemporary art is the subject of a new series of MMK talks: MUSEUM PUBLIC.
/MIROSLAW BALKA + TANIA BRUGUERA
13.09.2011 – 28.10.2011 /from 10:30 a.m. – 2:00 p.m. and 4:30 p.m. – 8:30 p.m.
Galeria Juana de Aizpuru, Madrid, Spain
curated by Juana de Aizpuru
Exhibitionmore.../Agency in Action
16.09.2011 /12:00 m
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York
Organized by David Joselit, Carnegie Professor, Yale University and Alexandra Munroe, Samsung Senior Curator of Asian Art
Discussion Panelmore...States of Emergency: Objects as Agency circa 1970
Gathering together art historians, artists, and curators, this daylong symposium asks how the proclamation of the “end” of the art object, a statement that was made in a startling number of locations around the world ca. 1970, demonstrated the end of both aesthetic and political modernity, and the advent of a decentered globalism characterized more by crisis than by revolution. Speakers include Stefano Chiodi, Romy Golan, Nicolas Guagnini, Amelia G. Jones, Branden Joseph, Lee Ufan, and Mika Yoshitake. Reception immediately follows.
/Arte de Conducta [Behaviour Art]
24.10.2011 /from 2:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.
SESC Belenzinho’s Theatre, Sao Paulo
organized by Marcio Harum
Debatemore...17th International Contemporary Art Festival SESC_Videobrasil
Panel 1: Art as Terrain for Citizen Formation
The superimposition of artistic and curatorial practices in projects that turn art into a platform for citizenship formation.
Mediation: Valquíria Prates | Virtual guest: Luis Camnitzer
Case study #1: Cátedra Arte de Conducta, Tania Bruguera
Case study #2: Casa M at the 8th Mercosur Biennial, Paola Santoscoy | Debater: Janaina Melo
Sept. 24, from 2:00 to 6:00 p.m. | Openings: 392 | SESC Belenzinho | Theatre/The Autonomy Project Symposium
07.10.2011 /6:30 p.m.
Van Abbemuseum’s auditorium, Eindhoven, Netherlands.
organized by Charles Esche and Nikos Papastergiadis
Lecturemore...Photo credit ©Emilio Moreno
. Access TANIA’S PRESENTATION
Autonomy Project Symposium
With contributions by a.o. Thomas Hirschhorn, Tania Bruguera, Peter Osborne and Jacques Rancière.
The Autonomy Project Symposium addresses the position of art in society today. The notion of autonomy, once designed to specify art’s place within society, has become a means of occluding its public relevance. This has become very clear when recently Dutch neoliberals and populists proposed large cuts on culture, arguing that art is primarily a private affair and has no real public function. The inability of the Dutch art world to mount an effective counter campaign has thereby made explicit the fact that the confusion concerning the public nature of an autonomous art comes not only from without but also from within.
The symposium wishes to address the current situation through the work of the French philosopher Jacques Rancière. He has been committed to describing the function of art’s autonomy within public life today. Through a mixture of lectures and workshops the symposium explores Rancière’s valuable contribution both from theoretical and practical perspectives.
Webcasting: Those who are unable to join the programme in the Van Abbemuseum can follow the auditorium lectures via the internet (stream.vanabbemuseum.nl). To follow events beyond the auditorium, it is necessary to be in the Van Abbemuseum.
/Mirada y crisis. Más allá del arte
19.10.2011 /from 5:45 p.m. – 7:30 p.m.
Argentine Embassy Auditorium
organized by AICA Paraguay
Open Sessions and Debatemore.... Access PROGRAM
XLIV AICA Congress in Asunción, Paraguay
Art and criticism in Time of Crisis
Special guest: Tania Bruguera.
Lecturers: Montserrat Albores Gleason, Paul Ardenne, Marek Bartelik, Franck Hermann Ekra, Ticio Escobar, Alicia Haber, Chus Martinez, Jure Mikuz, Aloyse Ndiaye, Elena Oliveras, Suely Rolnik.
Speakers: Emily Baierl, Maria Amelia Bulhões, Emma Dwan O’Reilly, Niilofur Farrukh, Miguel Angel Fernández, Therese Hadchity, Samuel Herzog, Cinque Hicks, Liam Kelly, Klara Kemp-Welch, lecollege, Alban Martínez Gueyraud, Hiroshi Minamishima, Lisbeth Rebollo, Tineke Reijnders, Alessandra Simões Paiva, Royce W. Smith.
Artistic practice and the theoretical debate surrounding it reflect the unprecedented social, political, cultural and technological complexities and changes at the beginning of the second decade of the 21st century.
This Congress will focus on the present state of art in both a local and an international context and pose the following questions:
What kind of perspective and axes of communication should be adopted, in response to the changing relations between art, criticism, and society?
What is the critic’s role and responsibility vis-à-vis the society s/he lives and works in today?
1. The axes of crisis
• Political and Ethical
• Social and Economic
• Cultural and Artistic
• Art Criticism and the Media2. Spaces of Interaction and Fields of Tension
• Cultural Institutions (foundations, museums, galleries, biennials, etc.)
• Press and Other Media
• Public Debates
• Alternative Forms of Interaction3. Art and Criticism in Virtual Space
• New Languages
• New Tools
• New Kinds of Behaviour/Tania Bruguera, Immigrant Movement International
23.10.2011 /12:00 m.
Occupy Boston, Dewey Square
organized by Free School University, IM International, Experience Economies and Artists in context
Speechmore.... Access and download the Speech
Experience economies and artist in context present: Tania Bruguera, Immigrant Movement International
As part of the Free School University Immigration Forum at Occupy Boston, Dewey Square
About The Free School University Forum at Occupy Boston
The Free School University at Occupy Boston hosts an Immigration Forum to address immigrant representation in the 99% and to host other conversations around immigration-related concerns. Please click HERE to view or download a call to participate in the Immigration Forum, circulated on behalf of Free School University. Please contact obimmigrationforum@gmail.com.
About Immigrant Movement International
Born from Bruguera’s interest in Arte Útil (Useful Art) and her concerns for the political representation and conditions facing immigrants, Immigrant Movement International is an artist-initiated socio-political movement. Currently operating form a flexible storefront community space in Queens, New York, IM International is a five-year project with a global scope. Its mission is to help define the immigrant as a unique, new global citizen in a post-national world. This is a multi-year project encompassing art and organizing efforts in cities all over the world.
/Common
29.10.2011 /from 11 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Toynbee Studios Theatre, London, England.
organized by Performance Matters (a collaboration between the Live Art Development Agency, Goldsmiths, University of London, and the University of Roehampton.)
Lecturemore.... Access TRASHING PERFORMANCE FLYER
Trashing Performance.
Day 4 Talks: Common
One often hears the word ‘common’ invoked pejoratively in snobbish dismissals of the values of the people, sometimes echoed in the negative assumptions about popular cultural pleasures in academic art history and performance studies. During this final day of talks contributors will think more positively about the values of commonality in contemporary performance and culture. With Franco Bifo Berardi, Tania Bruguera, Ingo Cando, Simon Casson (of Duckie), Common Culture, and Tavia Nyong’o.
Trashing Performance explores the power of creative expressions that wilfully debunk or ignore cultural ideals and hierarchies of critical value. This programme of events provide a space to think again about the value of irreverent and sometimes overlooked performance practices in public exchanges between different performance audiences and artists, academics, activists, and curators.Trashing Performance is second themed year of Performance Matters, a collaboration between the Live Art Development Agency, Goldsmiths, University of London, and the University of Roehampton. Funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council.
/Re-conceptualizing the 21st Century (IM)MIGRANT
04.11.2011 – 05.11.2011 /from 10:00 a.m.-7:00 p.m.
IM International’s Headquarter
organized by IM International
Two-day convening Re-Conceptualizing the 21st Century (Im)Migrant.more.... More info at ACTION #2
IM International will be holding a two-day convening, engaging (im)migration experts from both local and international communities, activists and community leaders from social service organizations, elected officials and academics. The event will focus on re-defining what it means to be a (im)migrant in the context of the 21st century, establishing a new framework for analyzing this multifaceted concept.
/La Revolución indignada
from 11-13.11.2011 /from 11:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.
Centro Cultural Universitario Tlatelolco, UNAM, Mexico.
curated by Pip Day and Sooner Workshop
Workshopmore...Not I: Spatial Practices in Revolution
– Six Workshops , September 30 through December 11 of 2011
In times of Revolutionof the indignant(Spain), using the Useful Artand prolonging itsinvolvement in the design and project organizationOccupyWallStreet(EUA), Tania Bruguerais proposingto meet tostart thinking aboutways and create databasesfor “outrage” against theviolencethat grips Mexico.
Spatial Practices in Revolution is the second series of public events in the ongoing research project Not I: The Performative Speech Act and the Sovereign Subject. The performances and workshops are organized by el instituto and will take place at CCU Tlatelolco, UNAM and Casa del Lago Juan José Arreola .
Module 4
November 11 – 13
La Revolución IndignadaTania BrugueraLanguage: Spanish
Friday 17:00 – 20:00 hrs Saturday 11:00 – 18:00 hrs Sunday 12:00 – 17:00 hrs /Tatlin Whisper #5
16.11.2011 /from 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 m.
The Cankarjev dom Culture and Congress Centre, Ljubjlana, Slovenia
Curated by Beti Zerovc
Performancemore...The 29th Biennial of Graphic Arts: VIOLENCE
The art event – the central theme of the 29th Biennial of Graphic Arts in Ljubljana – experienced a remarkable development in the twentieth century and today appears as a privileged medium. It is employed by a broad range of different figures from the world of contemporary visual art in a broad spectrum of forms. At the exhibition, which seeks above all to present as fully as possible the energy and vitality of this trend, a selection of art events is presented in four different categories, based on typical themes in contemporary art: generosity, violence, the search for the sacred and the ritualistic, and emptiness. These themes were selected, among other reasons, because the events that address them also meet the requirement of not being anything novel, either in the iconographic motifs of art or in actual human or social practice. Events that allow us to partake in violence with impunity, in the artist’s “shamanic” violence to himself, in Dionysian or absurdist rituals, or in the creation of an idyllic communitas for the sharing of a common meal – these represent practices that humans have been doing, and even depicting, for millennia.
In the exhibition, as well as in an extensive programme of artistic and theoretical events, the Biennial asks the questions: Why and how has the event in particular become a suitable vehicle for such a great variety of artistic aims, aesthetics, and content? Is the choice of this medium a response to specific impulses and voids in our “desacralized” everyday existence? Also, what are the potential dangers of such a development, given that it is happening more and more in the completely formalized framework of art institutions, which in recent decades not only house and exhibit contemporary art, but also commission and produce it, thus becoming commissioners of contemporary art of a type and scope as only the aristocracy and the church had been before them?
/Useful Art
18.11.2011 /from 10:00 a.m. – 12:00 m.
Geneva University of Art and Design (HEAD-Geneva), Switzerland
organized by Ingrid Wildi Merino
Lecture (via skype)more.... Access PROGRAM
Cultural Clash
Tania will present her Art Useful Concept to the Master Cultural students of Geneva University.
/Adriana Camarena and Tania Bruguera
30.11.2011 /from 7:00 p.m to 9:00 p.m.
Kadist Foundation
Presented by Headlands Center for the Arts in conjunction with Kadist Foundation and California College of the Arts.
Conferencemore.... Access TANIA BRUGUERA’S PRESENTATION
Recent Human Movements @ Kadist Foundation: A Conversation with Adriana Camarena and Tania Bruguera
Tania Bruguera and Adriana Camarena bring into dialogue two independent projects centered on contemporary immigrant experiences in the urban settings of New York and San Francisco’s Mission district.
Headlands Artist in Resident Alumn Tania Bruguera will share aspects of her five-year long project Immigrant Movement International and will be joined by Adriana Camarena author of the essay “The Geography of the Unseen” in Rebecca Solnit’s recent collection of essays Infinite City: An Atlas of San Francisco. The two artists will offer glimpses into their work and discuss the joys and complications in representing individuals’ living histories.
/Arte Útil (Useful Art)
12.12.2011 /from 2:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Crossing Art Gallery
Organized by Hector Canonge
Forummore...Ad -Lab Forum: ARTE ÚTIL
This month’s forum centers around the works of artists whose practice involves social and political engagement. Through actions, performances, situations, and in may instances the reference to the object(s) , participating artists explore possible ways to bridge the gap between audiences and art experience. Taking as departure the notion of Arte Útil (Useful Art), first introduced in the 1960’s , the forum will open the dialogue to offer a possible re-formulation of ideas behind artistic creation, aesthetics, alternative narratives, and public participation. Selected artists were invited to present their work and share their approach, ideas and experimentation with art that can found in the streets outside the white box of a gallery or museum setting.
Participating Artists: Suzane Broughel, Tania Bruguera, Aisha Cousins, John Hawke and Shani Peters.
/Migrant Manifesto
2.12.2011 /11:30 a.m.
United Nations
organized by IM International
Public Readingmore...Students meet in the UN assembly hall, New York City
. Access MIGRANT MANIFESTO
United Nations’ Student Conference on Human Rights (UNSCHR)
Immigrant Movement International (IM International), an ongoing project initiated by artist Tania Bruguera and co-presented by Creative Time and the Queens Museum of Art, today issued its Migrant Manifesto, a document of 10 points that can be used to help redefine the concept of the 21st century migrant, at the United Nations’ Student Conference on Human Rights (UNSCHR).
Today’s reading of the Manifesto, the first time it has been presented to the public, was introduced by Bruguera, and then read in Spanish, Arabic, Farsi, French, Mandarin and English by immigrants from Mexico, Iran, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Egypt and Taiwan, respectively.
The Migrant Manifesto, created in collaboration with immigration academics, community organizers, social service activists, elected officials, and community members at a convening at the IM International headquarters in Corona, Queens on November 4-5, 2011, is intended to draw attention to establishing a new framework for analyzing multifaceted concept of migration., with the intention of elevating political representation and awareness.
“Migration is an undeniably central element of contemporary existence, and by issuing the Migrant Manifesto to the leaders of tomorrow at this United Nations Students Human Rights Conference, we are emboldening a new generation to take action,” said Bruguera. “While we celebrate International Migrants Day each year on December 18, it is crucial that we acknowledge the rights, contributions and sacrifices of immigrants every day of the year.”
Bruguera’s issuance of the Manifesto is the first in a series of worldwide artistic actions focused on immigration to take place on December 18, 2011, designated “International Migrants Day” by the United Nations. Bruguera and IM International have put forth an open call to artists, immigrants, activists, and interested members of the public to stage an action on December 18, 2011 at 2pm local time in recognition of the concept of transnational migrants as a “global class” united across continents and cultures by common political and social conditions, as well as by the human experience of being a migrant. By engaging participants across the globe in a UN-endorsed project, the organizers hope to promote understanding of the specificity of local migration issues and the political interconnectedness across nations and regions that migration engenders.
In December 1998, the United Nations Department of Public Information invited students from around the world to a conference at UN Headquarters in New York to help celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and to draft the Youth Declaration of Human Rights. This program was so successful that students lobbied to make the conference an annual event that would be scheduled to coincide closely with Human Rights Day (December 10th). The annual UN Student Conference on Human Rights has taken place every year since.
While the theme of the conference changes each year, the goals of this annual event remain the same: to promote awareness and learning and to prompt action among student leaders about human rights in general, as well as the specific rights issues related to the current year’s theme. The conference is also an opportunity for student leaders to network and develop important leadership skills such as public speaking, team and consensus building, negotiating, and research and drafting. Finally, the conference provides participants with first-hand experience in using information technologies such as video-conferencing and web-casting.
/The Visiting Artist Lecture Series
15.12.2011 /from 11:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m.
NYU Steinhardt MFA, New York
organized by NYU University
Studio Visitmore...Studio Visit MFA Program
/ For Immigrant Movement’s Calendar of Events with the Community click HERE
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01.01.2011 – 23.01.2011
/Paris, France (e-mail, skype and conference) – Havana, Cuba (e-mail)
-Finalizing details for the project with Creative Time and Queens Museum of Art
-Search interviews for project coordinator
-Searching for an apartment
-Creating Blog for the project
23.01.2011 – 31.01.2011
/Corona, Queens
-Arrival to the future headquaters of Immigrant Movement International
-Meeting with Creative Time
-Meeting with first round of finalist for project coordinator position
-Meeting with Queens Museum of Art
-Meeting with various NY Universities
-Meeting with lawyersmore...– Search interviews for project coordinator
organized by Creative Time and Tania Bruguera
. More info at: http://www.creativetime.org/about/artistassistant.html
– Searching for an apartment
organized by José Serrano of Queens Museum of Art
. Tania Bruguera’s first demand was to live at a public shelters in NY for new arrival immigrants. It was not found.
. Tania Bruguera requested to take some of the street announcements for rent around the Immigrant Movement International’s headquarters.
– Creating Blog for the project
writing by Tania Bruguera
– Meeting with Creative Time
organized by Nato Thompson
. Informal presentation about the project to Creative Time’s staff during their weekly staff meeting.
. Briefings about artistic practice in the public sphere that deals with questions of social justice. Analyzing Tania’s work as an artist that has been committed to social change throughout her career. Studying all the requirements presented by the artist the previous year to make this work possible.
– Meeting with first round of finalist project coordinator position
organized by Creative Time and Tania Bruguera
– Meeting with Queens Museum of Art
organized by Tom Finkelpearl
. Briefings about the collaboration between Tania and Queens Museum through Tania’s artwork Arte Útil as her first Useful Art action in the community before her Long Term Project runs.
. Meeting with Queens Museum of Art’s community organizer and staff.
. Meeting with representatives from local community organizations.
. Site visits to nearby neighborhoods in Queens.
. Talk to people in the neighborhood.
– Meeting with various NY Universities
organized by Shane Brennan of Creative Time
Project’s presentation to various universities as Columbia University, Queens College among others to create interest from students that could be potential interns and collaborators.
– Meeting with lawyers
organized by Creative Time
. Working with the legal team on the status of the proposal in relationship with the american political system and all of the legal aspects of the project.
. Overview of all legal aspects of the project.
01.02.2011 – 28.02.2011
/Corona, Queens
-Final decision for the project’s name.
-Meeting with second round of finalist for project coordinator position.
-Setting up immigrant movement headquarters.
-Creating final Immigrant Movement International’s logo and identity.
-Creating website for the project.
-Working on the press release.
-Meeting with directors of Make the Road.
-Meeting with community organizations leaders.
-Meeting with local elected official.more...-Final decision for the project’s name
created by Tania Bruguera
-Meeting with first round of finalist project coordinator position
organized by Creative Time and Tania Bruguera
-Setting up immigrant movement headquarters
organized by Tania Bruguera
-Creating final Immigrant Movement International’s logo and identity
designed by Tania Bruguera with the support of Creative Time’s Design Team
-Creating website for the project
original idea of Tania Bruguera done by Creative Time’s Design Team
-Working on the press release
organized by Queens Museum of Art, Creative Time and Tania Bruguera
Queens Museum of Art‘s press release
Creative Time‘s project presentation
-Meeting with directors of Make the Road
organized by Queens Museum of Art and Tania Bruguera
-Meeting with community organizations leaders
organized by Tania Bruguera
-Meeting with local elected official
organized by Queens Museum of Art and Tania Bruguera and Julissa Ferreras‘ office
7.03.2011
/Corona, Queens
-First day of project coordinator.
-Creating twitter account.
-Looking for English teachers and lawyers who can work with the project systematically.more...-First day of project coordinator
selected by Tania Bruguera
-Creating twitter account
created by Tania Bruguera
To follow Immigrant Movement International twitter, click HERE
-Looking for English teachers and lawyers who can work with the project systematically
organized by Tania Bruguera
8.03.2011
/Queens, Corona
3:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
-Meeting with Dana Yahalomi.more...9.03.2011
/Queens, Corona
10:15 a.m. – 11:15 a.m.
-Meeting with José Serrano.
1:00 p.m. – 2:00 p.m.
-Skype meeting with IM International’s Website webmastersmore...-Meeting with José Serrano
organized by IM International and QMA
-Skype meeting with IM International’s Website webmasters
organized by IM International
Finalizing details for the IM International website’s Launch.
10.03.2011
/Queens, Corona
10:00 a.m. – 11:15 a.m.
-Conference call with Nato Thompson.more...-Conference call with Nato Thompson
coordinated by IM International
10.03.2011
/Queens, Corona
03:00 p.m. – 04:00 p.m.
-Meeting with Creative Time designermore...-Meeting with Creative Time designer
organized by IM International
Working out the detailsand allpossiblevariantsof IM International Logo
16.03.2011
/Corona, Queens
11:00 a.m. – 12:00 m.
-Meeting with Naila Rosario, Political Strategist
1:00 p.m. – 2:00 p.m.
-Sending information about IM International to Sofía Olascoaga
3:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
-Conference call with Creative Time and QMAmore...-Meeting with Naila Rosario, Political Strategist
organized by Queens Museum of Art
Promotional Strategies
April 2008 – Present (3 years 8 months)•Brand development, web site traffic growth, web site UI and advertising revenue. Developed brand strategy and statistics systems.
•Strategic Consulting, including business plan & sales strategy development.
•Advising new businesses on formation of corporations and business structures, drafting privacy policies and structuring commercial transactions.
•Generated new development deals for a real estate development company that focuses on multi-family residential projects, including real-estate market analysis.-Sending information about IM International to Sofía Olascoaga
organized by Sofía Olascoaga and IM International
Click HERE to access at Sofia Olascoaga’s essay about Immigrant Movemente International
-Conference call with Creative Time and QMA
organized by IM International
17.03.2011
/Corona, Queens
6:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m.
-Meeting with Amado Peralta, President of Dominican Parade Societymore...Meeting with Amado Peralta, President of Dominican Parade Society
organized by Immigrant Movement International
22.03.2011
/Corona, Queens
-Launch Immigrant Movement International’s Facebook Page
4:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
-Useful Art event’s preparationsmore...23.03.2011
/Corona, Queens
-E-Flux Announcement Out
-Launch IM International Website
3:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
-Conference call with Creative Time and QMA
4:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
-Training webmore...-E-Flux Announcement
publicated by E-flux magazine
To access E-Flux Announcement click HERE
-Launch IM International Website
organized by Immigrant Movement International
To access IM International’s website click HERE
-Conference call with Creative Time and QMA
organizedd by IM International
-Training web
organized by Tania Bruguera
Working with webmaster to learn how to manage IM International’s website
23.03.2011 – 24.03.2011
/Corona, Queens
-New York City 2011: What Does Our Democracy Look Like?more...-New York City 2011: What Does Our Democracy Look Like?
organized by ivote
NY Coalition to Expand Voting Rights is a free public forum onnon-citizen voting rights in New York City. “New York City 2011: What Does Our Democracy Look Like?” will be a panel discussion and public dialogue about the history of immigrant voting rights and the state of our democracy in New York City.Come join the conversation about what it means to be a contributing member of society and discuss the implications of bringing the newest New Yorkers into the local decision making process.
24.03.2011
/Corona, Queens
6:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m.
-Meeting with Edgar Moya, Director of Member Emergency Operations
7:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.
-Meeting with Teach 4 America and BHQmore...-Visiting Edgar Moya
coordinated by IM International and Office of City Council
-Meeting with Teach 4 America and BHQF
coordinated by IM International
for more info about Teach 4 America Mission click HERE
25.03.2011
/Corona, Queens
11:00 a.m. – 12:00 m.
-Interview with an intern
6:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m.
-Work on Nolens Volens vol.5more...-Interview with an intern
organized by IM International
-Interview with an intern
organized by IM International
-Work on Nolens Volens vol.5
organized and edited by Tania Bruguera
Acces to the Article HERE, for english version click into the cover.
30.03.2011
/Corona, Queens
11:00 a.m. – 12:00 m.
-Meeting with Naila Rosario, Political Strategistmore...Meeting with Naila Rosario, Political Strategist, Consultant, Outreach and Recruitment
organized by Immigrant Movement International
Naila launched her career in politics and government as a community organizer and immigrant advocate.
As a political strategist and campaign consultant she manages message development campaigns, earned media strategy building and fundraising plans for city and state elected officials. Over the last four election cycles, she has coordinated and directed the successful voter contact operations for Promotional Strategies clientele and has worked one-on-one with various candidates through public policy and field training, candidate call-time and strategy building sessions.
Prior to being a political strategist and consultant, as community organizer at the Queens Museum of Art, Naila spearheaded the Heart of Corona initiative, helping the museum work with community partners on neighborhood beautification, activation of public spaces and health issues. She was able to identify strategic partners and build diverse coalitions resulting in an increased number of organizations participating in the initiative and re-establishing a solid foundation of trust between the museum and the community members.
Naila was born in Cali, Colombia, raised in Brooklyn and a graduate of City College.
31.03.2011
/Corona, Queens
6:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m.
-Town Hallmore...-Town Hall on Overcrowed
organized by Immigrant Movement International
01.04.2011
/Queens, Corona
-Creation and Installation of the Immigrant Movement International’s placard.
11:00 a.m. – 12:00 m.
-Interview with an intern
6:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m.
-Momenta Artmore...-Installation of the Immigrant Movement International’s sign.
organized by Immigrant Movement International
-Interview with an intern
organized by IM International
-Institute of Wishful Thinking. Momenta Art
organized by IM International
Momenta Art is an artist-run charitable institution that works to promote emerging and underrepresented artists. We seek to expand the dialogue of art by showing work that is not well represented in commercial galleries because of its form or content. We promote artists of all ages, races, and ethnicities. In particular, we promote work that explores the nature of aesthetic experience balanced with social engagement.
3.04.2011
/Queens, Corona
2:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
-“Make a Movement” Sundays: Slogan Writing Workshop and Open House.more...-“Make a Movement” Sundays: Slogan Writing Workshop and Open House
organized by Immigrant Movement International
IMAGES of the Event
VIDEO DOCUMENTATION of the Event
5.04.2011
/Queens, New York
-Breaking Ground on QMA
7:30 p.m. – 8:30 p.m.
-Meeting with Creative Time’s staffmore...-Breaking Ground on QMA
organized by Queens Museum of Art
-Meeting with Creative Time’s staff
organized by Immigrant Movement International
6.04.2011
/Corona, Queens
7:00 p.m. – 7:15 p.m.
-Meeting with Naila Rosario, Political Advisomore...-Meeting with Naila Rosario, Political Strategist
organized by Immigrant Movement International
7.04.2011
/Corona, Queens
2:30 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.
-Meeting with Make the Road meeting for Action #2.
4:30 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
-Meeting with the publicist Maria Canela
5:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m.
-Meeting with Havana Film Festivalmore...-Meeting with Make the Road meeting for Action #1
coordinated by Make the Road and Immigrant Movement International
-Meeting with the publicist Maria Canela
organized by Queens Museum of Art
-Meeting with Havana Film Festival
coordinated by Havana Film Festival
11.04.2011
/Corona, Queens
4:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
-Meeting with PHD student from UCLmore...-Meeting with PHD student from UCL
organized by Immigrant Movement International
13.04.2011
/Corona, Queens
11:00 a.m. – 11:15 a.m.
-Meeting with Naila Rosario, Political Strategist
6:30 p.m. – 7:30 p.m.
-Meeting with staff of Not an Alternativemore...Meeting with Naila Rosario, Political Strategist
organized by Immigrant Movement International
Meeting with staff of Not an Alternative
organized by Immigrant Movement International
21.04.2011
/Corona, Queens
7:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.
-Poetas en Nueva York at IM International.more...-Poetas en Nueva York at IM International
organized by CUNY, Colective Poetas en Nueva York and Immigrant Movement International
For further information contact:
Nicolás Linares: 3476827488
Madeline Millán: 6462891286
e-mail: poetasenny@gmail.com
IM International: 7184246502
e-mail: united@immigrant-movement.us
22.04.2011
/Immigrant Movement International’s headquarters
11:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.
-interview with NY Timesmore...23.04.2011
/Corona, Queens
2:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m.
-A Conversation on Useful Artmore...-A Conversation on Useful Art
organized by Immigrant Movement International
More information at ACTION #1 at Events 2011
30.04.2011
7:00 p.m
-LAIA Tertuliamore...-LAIA Tertulia
Immigrant Movement International
1.05.2011
/New York
10:30 a.m. – 3:00 p.m.
-Make a Movement Sunday: May Day Immigrant Mobile Demonstrationmore...-Make a Movement Sunday: May Day Immigrant Mobile Demonstration
organized by Immigrant Movement International
More info at MAKE A MOVEMENT at Events 2011
3.05.2011
/Corona, Queens
11:00 a.m. – 12:00 m.
-Interview Artlog
/Soho, New York
6:30 p.m. – 9:30 p.m.
-Skowhegan Benefit Galamore...-Interview Artlog
organized by Laura González from ARTLOG
You can acces to this Interview and video HERE
-Skowhegan Benefit Gala
organized by Sofia Hernandez Chong Cuy and SKOWHEGAN SCHOOL of Painting and Sculpture
5.05.2011
/Corona, Queens
11:00 a.m. – 12:00 m.
-Meeting with Ana María Bazan Law Firm P.C.more...-Meeting with Ana María Bazan Law Firm P.C.
organized by Immigrant Movement International
For more info about this meeting click HERE
9.05.2011
/Corona, Queens
10:00 a.m. – 11:00 a.m.
-Meeting with Ghana Think Tankmore...-Meeting with Ghana Think Tank
organized by Immigrant movement International
10.05.2011
/Corona, Elmhurst
10:00 a.m. – 11:00 a.m.
-Meeting with Council member Julissa Ferreras
11:00 a.m. – 12:00 m.
-Meeting with Council member Daniel Drommmore...-Meeting with New York City council member Julissa Ferreras
organized by IM International and New York Council, 21st district of Queens office
The only child of immigrants from the Dominican Republic, Council Member Ferreras is committed to the rights of New York’s large and growing immigrant community. To help people with questions about their immigration status or a pending case, she hosts CUNY School of Law Community Legal Resource Network attorneys who provide free legal assistance at her office in Queens and free citizenship drives with CUNY Citizenship Now! Outraged about the Department of Corrections practice of funneling undocumented Rikers Island prisoners to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement for deportation processing, Julissa participated in a June 2010 civil disobedience action to protest this unjust policy.
-Meeting with New York City council member Daniel Dromm
organized by IM International and New York Council, District office 25
Daniel Dromm is an educator, community organizer, union leader, and political activist.In 1992, Dromm courageously came out as an openly gay teacher. The story became front-page news in daily newspapers throughout the city. The ensuing battle tested Dromm’s resolve as a fighter who is unafraid to take on the powers that be. Dromm defeated several unsuccessful attempts to remove him from his job and became a role model for equality in the workplace.
11.05.2011
/Broadway, New York
9:00 a.m. – 10:00 a.m.
-Meeting with Julissa Ferreras
/Corona, Queens
11:00 a.m. – 11:15 a.m.
-Meeting with Naila Rosario, Political Strategist
3:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
-Conference call with Creative Time and QMAmore...-Meeting with Julissa Ferreras
organized by Julissa Ferreras’s office and IM International
-Meeting with Naila Rosario, Political Strategist
organized by IM International
-Conference call with Creative Time and QMA
organized by IM International
Weekly project’s conference call
14.10.2011 – 16.10.2011
/Cooper Union, New York
10:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
-Conferencemore...– Communism: Ways and Means of the reconstruction
organized by New School
A new conference with leading thinkers to discuss the continued relevance of the communist idea.
“The long night of the left is coming to a close” wrote Slavoj Zizek and Costas Douzinas in their introduction to THE IDEA OF COMMUNISM. The continuing economic crisis, the shift away from a unipolar world defined by American hegemony, and the ecological crisis mean that growing numbers of people are keen to explore an alternative, and to re-discover the idea of communism.
With the advent of the Arab awakening millions have sought new ways to overcome corruption and dictatorship.
Responding to Alain Badiou’s proposition of the ‘communist hypothesis’, the leading thinkers of the left convened in London in 2009 to discuss the perpetual, persistent notion that, in a truly emancipated society, all things should be owned in common. Two years later, the discussion continues-this time in New York.
25.10.11
/Corona, Queens
8:00 a.m. – 12:00 m.
– Research trip at UNmore...- – Research Trip at United Nationsorganized by IM International
28.10.2011
/New York City
8:30 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.
-National Symposiummore...– The Politics of Camouflage in Artistic Practices from the 1970s
organized by Americas Society
Americas Society, in conjunction with Columbia University, hosted on October 28 a day-long symposium exploring the development of artistic practices as a result of political oppression in Latin America and internationally during the 1960s and 1970s. Throughout this era, artists dealt with politically complex issues in their artistic production through a variety of styles and media. These aesthetic explorations include the “New Objectivity,” geometric abstraction, socially-engaged art, media-related and investigative projects, and, finally, conceptual, body, and performance art.
The first half of the symposium will explore ideas around the question: “In what ways were these new modes of expression uniquely suited to address times of political oppression?”
The latter part of the symposium discussion will investigate the question “How did artists camouflage politically salient art to comply with the constraints of an era defined by dictatorships all over Latin America and by the Vietnam War in the United States?”
Speakers:
Irene Small (University of Illinois)
Sergio Bessa (Bronx Museum)
Michael Asbury (Chelsea College of Art and Design, University of the Arts London)
Nicolás Guagnini (Barnard College)
Judith Rodenbeck (Sarah Lawrence College)10.11.2011
/New York City
8:30 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.
-National Symposiummore...- – Legislating the Lives of Immigrants: The Entanglement of State and Local Governments in Immigration Policyorganized by NYU“Legislating the Lives of Immigrants: The Entanglement of State and Local Governments in Immigration Policy” is the inaugural national symposium of the Bickel & Brewer Latino Institute for Human Rights. Legal scholars, experienced practitioners, government officials, human rights leaders, and members of the national news media will discuss how federal, state and local immigration policies impact the country in the areas of labor, housing, law enforcement, and education.
18.05.2011 – 19.05.2011
/Washignton D.C.
-Political Trainingmore...The Midwest Academy advances movements for progressive social change by teaching strategic, rigorous, results-oriented approach to social action and organization building. The Academy provides training (introductory and advanced) and consulting, equipping organizers, leaders, and their organizations to think and act strategically to win justice for all.
/Corona, Queens
2:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
-Meeting with Antoni Abadmore...27.11.2011
/Corona, Queens
10:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.
-Make a Movement Sunday: Immigrant Respect Awareness Campaignmore...–Make a Movement Sunday: Immigrant Respect Awareness Campaign
organized by Immigrant Movement International
More info at MAKE A MOVEMENT at Events 2011
23.12.2011
/Corona, Queens
10:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.
-Work with internsmore...-Work with interns (Camilo Godoy and Elisabeth Ingwersen Ganung)
organized by Tania Bruguera
24.12.2011
/Corona, Queens
10:00 a.m. – 3:30 p.m.
-Work with internmore...-Work with intern (Elisabeth Ingwersen Ganung)
organized by Tania Bruguera
25.12.2011
/Corona, Queens
10:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.
-Upload New Entry at IM International’s Blogmore...27.12.2011
/Corona, Queens
10:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.
-Work with internsmore...-Work with interns (Camilo Godoy and Elisabeth Ingwersen Ganung)
organized by Tania Bruguera
28.12.2011
/Corona, Queens
10:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.
-Work with interns
3:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
-Conference callmore...-Work with interns (Elisabeth and Anya)
organized by Tania Bruguera
-Conference call with Creative Time and QMA
organized by IM International
Weekly project’s conference call
29.12.2011
/Corona, Queens
2:30 p.m. – 9:30 p.m.
-Work with internmore...-Work with intern (Anjall)
organized by Tania Bruguera
30.12.2011
/Corona, Queens
11:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.
-Work with internmore...-Work with intern Camilo Godoy
organized by Tania Bruguera
Access to IM International’s Postcard
Immigrant Movement Headquarters close for re-structuring 2012 back January 7. On Tania’s words “…yesterday great day with all interns and volunteers, I’m the luckiest person in earth I have the best team anyone can dream off brutal honesty, hard work, talent and the biggest hearts ever! I love you all sooooo much! “super” Ali, Alejandra, Anjali, Anya, Camilo, Elisabeth, Jill, Kevin. You guys are my lucky stars! thanks por ser parte de mi vida!…“
• JANUARY
• FEBRUARY
• MARCH
• APRIL
• MAY
• OCTOBER
• NOVEMBER
• DECEMBER