Archive for MorganBoecher

FINAL REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH ACT PHONE BANK OF 2010

MONDAY, JUNE 21st 6:30-8:30 PM

NARAL PRO-CHOICE NEW YORK OFFICES

470 PARK AVENUE SOUTH, 7th FLOOR NYC

Join us as we mobilize NARAL Pro-Choice New York supporters to call
Majority Leader, John Sampson to urge him to bring RHA to the floor
and get it passed in 2010! Training and pizza will be provided to
all.

You can also participate from home as long as you have a computer with
high-speed internet access and a phone.

RSVP TO LHOWARD@PROCHOICENY.ORG OR 646-520-3506

Lalena Howard, MSW
Community Organizer
NARAL Pro-Choice New York
646-520-3506
lhoward@prochoiceny.org
www.prochoiceny.org

Sign the Reproductive Health Act petition on-line!:

http://www.prochoiceny.org/getinvolved/rhapetition.shtml

Femme Total: A Night of Burlesque, Pole Dancing and Juggling!

…all performed to the live music of Molly Does Not Approve!. You have never seen anything like this!

→ Pole By Kyra Johannesen and Michelle Stanek
→ Burlesque by Rhinestone Follies.
-→ Kita St. Cyr (The Cutie with The Bootie)
-→ Hazel Honeysuckle (The Sparkly Sweetie-Pie)
-→ Beelzebabe (Siren of Sodom)
-→ Plus Special Guest Latex Lily!
→ Juggling by Jen Slaw.
→ Live music (Vintage Americana) by Molly Does Not Approve
-→ Molly Mae (Vocals)
-→ Bjorn Roche (Upright Bass)
-→ Michael Rutberg (Guitar+Piano)
-→ Jake Hart (Drums)
→ DJ sets by Tiffany of SixSixSick
→ Hosted by Susie Cosmo

Thursday, June 24, 2010 at 9:30pm

Location:
R Bar
218 Bowery
New York, NY

Check out the Facebook event page for more info.

Admission is $14 and $10 with the flyer shown above. Good for discount admission for 2.

LGBTQ Pride Month Series, Part 1: 5 Great Resources for the Gay Tourist in NYC

In honor of LGBTQ Pride Month, Paradigm Shift is seeking blog, graphic art, and video submissions related to LGBTQ issues and experiences. Please let us know how you would like to be credited (by name or anonymous)- deadline, Sunday, June 27th.

Email submissions to: blog@paradigmshiftnyc.com

New York City is a hotspot for gay travelers. The flourishing gay communities in all boroughs of NYC offer locals and visitors alike a wide range of fun opportunities. There are a variety of great resources to use when planning a trip. Here are just a few of the many excellent online resources for gay travelers heading to NYC.

1) Next Magazine

Next Magazine is a great first stop. Next is a free magazine that’s published four times a month and focuses on subjects like gay life, fashion, sex, LGBTQ culture and news, and entertainment. Its website includes everything published in the magazine, making it a great resource for tourists who don’t have access to the latest paper copy. The website offers an abundance of nightlife and entertainment information on LGBTQ bars, clubs, theaters, restaurants, art, shopping, and local organizations. Arguably its most valuable resource, the “Next Week” section, provides listings of LGBTQ events, with dozens of future-great-memories listed for every day. The listings provide all essential information, including detailed information about the events, locations, and prices.

2) NYC: The Official Guide
NYC: The Official Guide is another excellent source. It’s the website for the city’s Office of Tourism and provides great information for all NYC tourists. This includes listings on what to do, plus where to stay along with maps and transportation information. Focal points include the website’s “Deals” and “Free” sections, which highlight great events for the tourist on a budget. It also provides essential data on Broadway shows listed by both type and location. The NYCGO / GAY part of the website provides more outstanding information, including articles on the LGBTQ history of NYC, gay and super-gay-friendly neighborhoods and shopping areas, plus must-see gay landmarks.

3) TimeOut New York
This magazine and its website is a great reference for general listings on things to do, art, books, clubs, comedy clubs, museums, spas, sports, and more. Articles consist of information on cheap food, great walks, and shopping guides. TimeOut New York: Gay lists gay bars and LGBTQ events for gay tourists with every imaginable interest, and even provides critics’ picks and listings specifically by neighborhood. Like NYC: The Official Guide, this site provides a “Free” section for free entertainment and events, but TimeOut New York: Gay is different in that it provides a “Free” section that lists only LGBTQ events. TimeOut New York also supplies a great kids section for gay tourists traveling with kids.

4) NYC LGBT Community Center
NYC’s Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Community Center is a superb resource for tourists hoping to get a general feel for the gay scene. It offers information on the local gay culture, including many articles on advocacy and social justice issues within the city. The center itself hosts many events each day for gay people of all ages and interests, and its listings show events six-months in advance, which is extremely helpful for tourists hoping to plan activities long before they actually make the trip to NYC.

5) MTA
Metropolitan Transportation Authority is an absolutely essential resource, especially for tourists who don’t want to spend a fortune on cab fares. The MTA website provides maps along with subway and bus information, including fees and updates on construction and other such work that may delay services. Its best feature is “Plan & Ride,” which allows travelers to enter from-and-to locations by address, intersection, or landmark and either a “depart at” or “arrive by” time. Plan & Ride plots out transit routes in detail, and provides information such as fares for each subway or bus ride along with walking distances when a short stroll is necessary to catch the next ride.

Louise Baker reviews online Degrees for Zen College Life. She most recently wrote about online engineering degrees.

Shifting the Gaze: Painting and Feminism

Opens at The Jewish Museum on September 12th

Key Works by Judy Chicago, Eva Hesse, Lee Krasner,
Miriam Schapiro, Nicole Eisenman and Others on View

New York, NY – Feminist challenges to creative and institutional limits have been widely influential in art since the 1960s, with the emergence of the women’s art movement in the United States. The Jewish Museum will present Shifting the Gaze: Painting and Feminism, an exhibition exploring the impact of feminism on contemporary painting, from September 12, 2010 through January 30, 2011. Taking the visitor through a half-century of painting, the exhibition focuses on art at the crossroads of societal shift and individual expression. Shifting the Gaze places feminist art in a larger context exploring its roots in Abstract Expressionism, Pop and Minimalism, and extending to the present, when feminist impulses remain vital in recent works targeting the representation of women in popular culture.

The exhibition examines interactions of the politics and theory of feminism with the practices and styles of painting. Feminist ideas and aesthetics transformed art, opening up the field to the full range of women’s experience, history and material culture. Feminism retains its power to inspire new ideas and challenge old ones, shifting the gaze to unexplored perspectives. It remains an active force in contemporary art today.

Shifting the Gaze: Painting and Feminism, with over 30 paintings and several sculptures and decorative objects, is largely drawn from The Jewish Museum’s collection and also includes select loans. Works by 27 artists such as Judy Chicago, Louise Fishman, Leon Golub, Eva Hesse, Deborah Kass, Lee Krasner, Louise Nevelson, Elaine Reichek, Miriam Schapiro, Joan Snyder, Nancy Spero, and Hannah Wilke, among others, are arranged thematically. Nicole Eisenman will create a painting of a family seder specially for the exhibition. Eight works in Shifting the Gaze have been acquired over the last three years.

Gestural and Abstract Expressionist paintings created at the dawn of feminism in postwar America open the show. Next are mostly self-portraits that demythologize the female body and male representations of it. The third group features embroidery, collage and fan painting as examples of the 1970s art movement, Pattern and Decoration, which sought to reinvigorate previously denigrated women’s work. Politics, the Holocaust and war are then examined through feminist interpretations, followed by the use of writing and text in art. A final section devoted to popular culture and satire closes the show.

Jewish painters have played decisive roles in founding and sustaining major feminist art groups and theories while continuing to develop their own avant-garde art. The selected works reveal Jewish and feminist commitments to both social justice and personal freedom. The works on view are animated by the tensions between individual expression and collective politics, and a traditional medium and radical action.

Shifting the Gaze examines the ways that artists (male and female) challenge discrimination, advocate self-expression and invent new forms of beauty, breathing life into the medium and offering fresh visions of the world. Much of the feminist movement aimed to overcome the male-dominated modes of heroic and formalist painting. To this day, artists inspired by feminism take on taboo subjects and stretch techniques in abstraction, decoration, collage, embroidery and representation.

The exhibition has been organized by Daniel Belasco, Henry J. Leir Assistant Curator at The Jewish Museum. He specializes in postwar and contemporary art and design, and is currently completing a book on feminist consciousness in New School art. Daniel Belasco is also co-curator of SITE Santa Fe’s Eighth International Biennial exhibition (June 2010-January 2011). He holds a PhD and MA from the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University.

Shifting the Gaze: Painting and Feminism is made possible, in part, by the Melva Bucksbaum Fund for Contemporary Art.

Website

As part of the Shifting the Gaze exhibition section on The Jewish Museum’s website (www.thejewishmuseum.org), a list of over 550 woman artists who have been shown in special exhibitions at the Museum since 1947 will be made available.

About The Jewish Museum

Widely admired for its exhibitions and educational programs that inspire people of all backgrounds, The Jewish Museum is the preeminent United States institution exploring the intersection of 4,000 years of art and Jewish culture. The Jewish Museum was established in 1904, when Judge Mayer Sulzberger donated 26 ceremonial art objects to The Jewish Theological Seminary of America as the core of a museum collection. Today, the Museum maintains an important collection of 26,000 objects—paintings, sculpture, works on paper, photographs, archaeological artifacts, ceremonial objects, and broadcast media.

General Information

Museum hours are Saturday, Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday, 11am to 5:45pm; Thursday, 11am to 8pm; and Friday, 11am to 4pm. Museum admission is $12.00 for adults, $10.00 for senior citizens, $7.50 for students, free for children under 12 and Jewish Museum members. Admission is free on Saturdays. For general information on The Jewish Museum, the public may visit the Museum’s website at http://www.thejewishmuseum.org or call 212.423.3200. The Jewish Museum is located at 1109 Fifth Avenue at 92nd Street, Manhattan.

Artists Represented in the Exhibition

Ida Applebroog, American, b. 1929
Judy Chicago, American, b. 1939
Rosalyn Drexler, b. 1926
Nicole Eisenman, American, b. 1965
Louise Fishman, American, b. 1939
Audrey Flack, American, b. 1931
Dana Frankfort, American, b. 1971
Leon Golub, American, 1922-2004
Eva Hesse, American, b. Germany, 1936-1970
Deborah Kass, American, b. 1952
Vivienne Koorland, American, b. South Africa, 1957
Joyce Kozloff, American, b. 1942
Lee Krasner, American, 1908-1984
Robert Kushner, American, b. 1949
Cary Leibowitz, American, b. 1963
Lee Lozano, American, 1930- 1999
Melissa Meyer, American, b. 1947
Louise Nevelson, American, b. Russia, 1899-1988
Elaine Reichek, American, b. 1943
Miriam Schapiro, American, b. Canada, 1923
Mira Schor, American, b. 1950
Dana Schutz, American, b. 1976
Joan Semmel, American, b. 1932
Amy Sillman, American, b. 1954
Joan Snyder, American, b. 1940
Nancy Spero, American, b. 1926
Hannah Wilke, American, 1940-1993

Philosophize about Hedwig and the Angry Inch on Friday 25!

Philm: Philosophy and Film at the East Side Institute
with Chris Helm and Rafael Mendez

Friday, June 25, 6:30pm
920 Broadway, 14th floor (betw. 20 & 21 Streets)
Suggested Donation, $12.00
Reserve your seat now!

It’s Friday-night-at-the-movies with a philosophical and methodological twist! Enjoy a favorite film, followed by some playful, philosophical conversation.


Hedwig and the Angry Inch (2001)… The subversive spirit of rock lives on in this merry satire and powerful drama. When gender is up for grabs, where do we look for identity?

Christine Helm earned an M.A. in Anthropology and Education and an M.Ed. in Applied Anthropology at Teachers College, Columbia University. She is director of the Enterprise Center at the Fashion Institute of Technology/SUNY and teaches at both the undergraduate and graduate level. Chris is a faculty member for the Institute’s International Class and Therapist Training Program.

Rafael Mendez is an associate professor and coordinator of psychology at Bronx Community College, his alma mater. He earned his doctorate in Clinical-Community Psychology at Boston University in 1983 and was a Clinical Fellow at Harvard Medical School at Children’s Hospital in Boston. He’s a trained social therapist practicing at the Brooklyn Social Therapy Group and is on the faculty of the East Side Institute where he assists in leading Fred Newman’s Developmental Philosophy Group.

To register go to: http://www.acteva.com/booking.cfm?bevaid=195843 or contact Melissa Meyer 212.941.8906, ext 304 or mmeyer@eastsideinstitute.org

Help Get “How to Lose Your Virginity” Out There!

Our new trailer! “How To Lose Your Virginity” from Trixie Films on Vimeo.

Hi! My name is Therese Shechter and I’ve spent the last three years working on the documentary “How To Lose Your Virginity,”. I’m not really going to tell you how to have sex for the first time, but I do want to know why, in our hyper-sexualized American culture, we’re so obsessed with virginity.

It’s a quest to dig beneath the damned-if-you-do, damned-if-you-don’t double-speak of a culture that cynically encourages both virginity and promiscuity. How can young women wade through these mixed messages–like a reality show that auctions off virgins to the highest bidder or Disney starlets flashing purity rings while writhing on stripper poles–and act instead on their own needs and desires? What’s behind this strange moment in American culture?

The road to understanding our obsession with virginity takes me to places I never thought I’d go–from the set of a Barely Legal porn movie shoot in the San Fernando Valley to a Love & Fidelity Abstinence Conference at Harvard to the fitting rooms of David’s Bridal.

Along the way, I expose and decode a landscape of conflicting messages to young women. The goal? A non-judgemental conversation about real-world sexuality, whether you choose to have sex or not.

I couldn’t wait for the documentary to get finished to tackle these issues, so two years ago I started a blog called The American Virgin. Check it out!

WE’RE RAISING MONEY FOR OUR ROUGH CUT

So far, I’ve funded the film almost entirely out of my own pocket, with help from an amazing group of cinematographers, producers, interns and friends who have given their time and talent for little more than pans of baked goods. I’ve gone a long way on this kind of support from people who really believe in the project, but eventually I need to, you know, pay people.

Our trailer is already being used in Human Sexuality classes because there’s such a demand for this kind of information. We need to hire a full-time editor to finish our rough cut this summer. We’ll use that rough cut to pitch the film to theatrical distributors and TV programmers, and to develop curriculum for college screenings. To that end, we need to raise $10,000 by pre-selling DVDs at $25 a piece, and offering really cool rewards and incentives if you want to donate more.

If we exceed our Kickstarter goal (how awesome would that be?) the money will go to covering future post-production costs: editing to fine cut, sound edit/mix, music rights…and we’d really love to pay our interns!
My last doc was funded using this model, so I know it works. Thanks to supporters like you, “I Was A Teenage Feminist,” has screened all over the world, from Stockholm to Karachi to Seoul. We even showed it at Serbia’s first-ever women’s film festival!

WE’RE FEELING YOUR PASSION – HERE’S HOW TO HELP

I am passionate about this subject and will finish this film no matter what, but without your support, it will be a longer, harder road. Since we debuted the film’s first trailer on Vimeo, we’ve had well over 10,000 views, hundreds of blog posts and an overwhelming number of people telling us how psyched they are to see this film. So we know you’re passionate about it too!!

Please help support independent women’s media by backing “How to Lose Your Virginity” at any level. Thanks to our fiscal sponsor Women Make Movies, pledges of $100 or more are tax deductible.

You can also help by spreading the word. Every single dollar, Facebook post, blog entry and tweet gets us that much closer to our goal. Check out our blog, become our Facebook friend or follow us on Twitter.

To pledge or just get more information, click here: http://kck.st/9Hm93b

Click here to view a previous post on Paradigm Shift regarding “How to Lose Your Virginity”

Unlabeled – a poem by Cristina Dominguez

Lesbian and gay man,
sold in bulk now
but still costly,
costing me a lot of
my personality
and sexuality

Even when
I got the clerk
to help me,
to climb that
step stool
with that long arm tool
and get the
high end
top of the
hierarchy blend–
when it comes down,
comes over me,
it smothers me
and tries to hide
the queer that’s underneath

The tight stereotype
I’ve been
type-casted with,
the kind where,
here and there,
I stick out,
I tear at the seams
where you can see
the queer that’s underneath

At the register
they asked me to register,
to review the
exchange policy
and exchange
my fluidity
for the rigidity of,
for the stiffness
of distinction.
The subtraction and
extraction
of the part that
threatens them.
The extinction of
the queer that’s underneath

They were ready to
ring me up
ring me out
get me “over here Miss”
But I couldn’t
fashion myself
to the help
they dealt me.
So I could find
everything
“Okay”

I hesitated and
contemplated.
I felt the
clothes in my hand
close in.
I drop the fabricated
fabric I tried on and,
head to the
opening and
narrow hall
simultaneously.
I embrace my ambiguity,
my embodied feeling–
reeling in the moment
in the frock that
they mock.
Exposing,
Posing,
showing-on
the queer that’s underneath

Born Again in Me – a poem by Cristina Dominguez

In the place where I once drowned
naked and alone and true I found myself.
The pain that showered me,
a rain that empowered me,
cleansed me of the need to lie, to comply with normalcy,
with laws and facts not true to me–
a life so limiting and narrow light could not
impeach their darkness and find my eyes
in that life I died.

Coming out of the spout life bathes me
fresh, new and free like a baby
cut away from the life that failed to sustain me
I can breathe.
Truth blinding but guiding me,
strengthened from discovery I can finally be
reborn, awakened, adored by me
both mother and the other just born.
Noise surrounds me but not a sound of doubt
can abound the power and purity of the self-awareness
that I’ve found.

Uncovered, exposed, liberated,
what had emanated all along all alone in the
darkness of their ignorance
the individuality of myself and sexuality.

This game of shame and blame
of defeating and beating back and
distancing the different,
that began with race
and now is placed on us
is what goes against grace.

My individuality, my humanity
seeing and being my being
is both the source and the course
of the divinity within me.

THE HERETICS – screening at 92Y Tribeca, June 3

It was only a few decades ago that renowned art critic Lucy Lippard, was told “you’re too cute to be an artist!” THE HERETICS, the new film by world-renowned video artist Joan Braderman (JOAN DOES DYNASTY), focuses on a group of feminists, including Lippard and Braderman, who took matters into their own hands: they formed an art collective and put out a magazine, “Heresies,” that was as much about politics as it was about art.

Filmed across the globe, THE HERETICS features interviews and artwork of the artists and critics like Lucy Lippard, Su Friedrich and Ida Applebroog, who grew Heresies into a feminist forum for revolution. Such luminaries as Alice Walker, Adrienne Rich, and Barbara Kruger got their starts in the magazine that spawned ground-breaking photography, poetry, art and ideas.THE HERETICS will screen on June 3 at 92Y Tribeca and Joan will be in attendance for a Q&A. View a trailer here!


THE HERETICS Screening and Q&A
June 3 | 7:30 pm | $12.00
92Y Tribeca | 200 Hudson St., NYC (Map)| Buy tickets

Call for Submissions- LGBTQ Pride Month

It’s time again to wave those rainbow flags in celebration of humanity’s diverse array of gender and sexual orientation! In honor of LGBTQ Pride Month, Paradigm Shift is seeking blog, graphic art, and video submissions related to LGBTQ issues and experiences.  Please let us know how you would like to be credited (by name or anonymous)- deadline, Sunday, June 27th.

Email submissions to: blog@paradigmshiftnyc.com

The modern Pride movement took shape out of the Stonewall riots in 1969, a violent clash where gay people fought back against New York City police and their unconstitutional bar raids. The incident was well publicized and cultivated a sense of community among gay people. The concept of Pride resulted in opposition to shame, which was and remains a social mechanism for oppressing LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgendered, queer) people. The Pride movement has furthered the political struggle for rights by making the LGBTQ community and its issues known.

LGBTQ Pride is a feminist concern because stopping sexist oppression means stopping the systems that create other forms of oppression as well. It would not make sense to focus solely on gender without recognizing the numerous other ways a person would be affected by class, race, sexual orientation, and other forms of diversity. We invite you to voice your ideas and experiences pertaining to Pride in order to increase visibility and awareness of LGBTQ issues as feminist issues.

Some ideas for submissions:

  • Discuss generational shifts within and outside of the LGBTQ community
  • Describe a personal encounter with discrimination and how you dealt with it
  • Reflect on recent LGBTQ-related incidents in the news
  • Create an expression of Pride
  • Recall a fond experience at a Pride celebration
  • Give an example of how LGBTQ issues and feminist issues intersect

Click here for a list of Pride events happening in major cities!

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