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| archive
2001 |
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| Narrative
Removed: Emotional Landscapes
Curated
by Anastasia Hagerstrom
former Director (1990-1995) of The Living
Room, San Francisco

Daniel
Doherty
Felipe Dulzaides
Mitchell Goodman
November
9-December 15
Gallery Hours: WedSat, 1-6pm
Opening Reception: Fri, November 9, 6-9pm Closing
Reception: Saturday December 15 from 6 to 8 PM |
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in
the foyer
gallery:
Sarah
Cain
new
work
November
9-December 15
Gallery Hours: WedSat, 1-6pm
Opening Reception: Fri, November 9, 6-9pm |
INTERCULTURE:
A performance/discussion
Tuesday,
December 4, 7-9 pm FREE
Featuring presentations
by: Ansuman Biswas, Russell Reza-Khaliq
Gonzaga, Dhaia Tribe
The LAB is
pleased to present Interculture a performance/roundtable discussion
led by London-based performance artist Ansuman Biswas. Interculture
will examine how artists define their cultural arenas, and how they
break the boundaries of cultural space to interact and collaborate
across traditions. The event will feature performances and presentations
by Ansuman Biswas, Russell Reza-Khaliq Gonzaga, Dhaia Tribe and
other artists, and an artist-led roundtable discussion.
Biswas will
be completing a residency in December sponsored by the Arts Council
of England's International Artists' Fellowship Program as part of
The LAB's Gateway Project, designed to facilitate international
dialogue and collaboration between artists, cultural and scientific
researchers, and new audiences. The discussion will focus on the
cultural traditions and idioms artists claim and use, the place
these have found in the arena of international art, and the artists'
definition of and interaction with the foreign.
Ansuman Biswas
was born in Calcutta, India. He trained in music and in theatre
in Europe and now bases his international practice in London. His
work ranges across a wide variety of media including poetry, installation,
film, music and performance. The LAB presented the first and second
parts of a trilogy of new work: CAT, in April 2001 and Self/Portrait
in November 2001.
even
the birds were on fire
A performance by Marshall Weber and the Booklyn Artists Alliance
Tuesday,
November 13, memorial rituals from dawn till sunset,
performance at 7 PM
$7-10 sliding scale admission at all times
Even the birds
were on fire is an abject meditation on the bombing and its spoken
and unspoken forces. The title of the performance is borrowed from
the observations of a child who had unknowingly watched people jumping
out of the burning World Trade Center.
Reconstructing
a disparate narrative from elementary school letters, personal email
and street poster texts found in the aftermath of the World Trade
Center bombing, the piece goes beyond the fatalities, casualties
and physical damage of the bombing to evoke the specters and passions
raised by the incursion on the territory and psyche of the United
States of America. Proximity is the shared issue. What can be spoken
and what cannot be spoken of such an event? How does Primo Levi's
proscription, "There is no poetry after Auschwitz." weigh
in here? Is there performance art after the World Trade Center bombing?
Prior to the
evening performance Weber will open The LAB's gallery at dawn for
a sunrise to sunset ritual to contemplate the concept that "all
anger is suffering." Visitors are encouraged to bring memorial
offerings for quiet meditation and engage in preparations for the
evening performance. After the performance, Weber will host
an open dialogue with audience members and special invited guests
to discuss the concepts of peace and revenge, and the question of
whether to honor the dead with either peace or war.
Marshall
Weber is an artist and teacher currently living in New York. He
was a co-founder of Artists Television Access in San Francisco and
recently co-founded the Booklyn Artists Alliance in New York City.
Weber has spent the last decade working on a body of public artworks
that evoke the tensions between theological and political identities.
The Booklyn Artists Alliance is a national artist run, non-profit
organization that publishes, distributes, and curates exhibitions
of artists' books and related installation and performance art work.
Read more about
Weber at booklyn.org.
The
Po' Poets Project
CD Release Party and Benefit for POOR Magazine Saturday,
November 10, 7-11pm
$10 admission, no one turned away
The Po' Poets
Project is a national spoken word project organized by Poor Magazine
because “until low and no income adults and youth get to tell
their stories, written by them, in their own voice--we will not
be able to make change happen.” Come to celebrate the Po Poets
Project's first CD release! The event will feature guest hip
hop artists The Prophets Of Rage and D.J. SAKE ONE. There will be
food, dancing, and Ed-U-Ka-Shun! All ages welcome! All voices heard!
Open mike to speak back to all "wars" on communities of
color and low and no-income folks locally and globally. All proceeds
go to support POOR Magazine, a non-profit grassroots arts organization
providing media access, creative arts and vocational education to
low and no income communities. Check them out on-line at www.poornewsnetwork.org
The Po' Poets
are low-income mothers and children, elders, hip hop artists, poor
youth and youth of color speaking back to race and class oppression
through poetry and spoken word, including: George Tirado, Tiger
Walshe, Jewnbug, Mari, Tanyica, Simmons, Ananda, Leroy Moore, Dharma,
Tiny, A. Faye Hicks, Anna Morrow, Leroy Moore, Belen, Joseph Perryman,
Joseph Bolden, Dani Montgomery, Aldo Della Magiorra, Taisol Lopez,
Marlene Sanchez, Helen Campbell, "Tita," and special guests
from The Homeless Prenatal Program, Coalition on Homelessness, Center
for Young Women’s Development, Youth Speaks, 3rd Eye, and
more.
The
Gateway Project
Ansuman Biswas
Self/Portrait
Wed, Oct 31stSat, Nov 3rd
Gallery hours, Wed-Sat, 1-6 PM
Culminating Performance on Sat, Nov 3rd, 6:30 PM
In
the Foyer Gallery Oct 527:
site-specific installation by Amy
Rathbone Wed's
- Fridays, 1-6 PM
(and Saturdays by apt)
Opening reception: Friday, October 5, 6-8 PM
After creating a vocabulary through a series of drawings,
Amy Rathbone does a concentrated study of The LABs Foyer Gallery.
Responding to the play of light, inconsistencies of walls and structural
surfaces, she extends their inherent qualities by accentuating or
mimicking them. Emphasizing humor, line, and extremes of scale,
her installations utilize a range of materials, from medium-gauge
wire and paper napkins to sandbags and drilled holes to create a
self-contained universe. Rathbone describes her recent work as an
attempt at manipulating light using weight. Her site-specific
installation at The LAB will encourage similar conceptualization
on the part of the viewer, alternately bending one's focus in as
close as the shadow of a hair, and extending it up to a high architectural
detail. See her work at http://www.yamrathbone.org.

Stop
Making Sense A
Sonic Performance Series curated by Randy Nordschow
This series features experimental music and interdisciplinary performances
in a format that pairs two unrelated artists in single evening events
in an aim to create a dialogue between the work, to reveal affinities,
and provoke unexpected associations. Featuring:
Compomicro-Dexall, Cenk Ergun & Alvin Curran, Kattt Sammon
with Peggy DeCoursey & Andrew Harkins, Blevin Blectum (aka D84)
The
Salon Series
An
ongoing series of mid-week salons featuring artists working in all
disciplines and designed to inspire provocative dialogue in unusual
contexts. more...
Featuring:
Los Cybrids: La Raza Techno-CrÌtica, Miya Masaoka & Randy
Nordschow, "Rethinking Live Art: Collaborative Processes and
Improvisational Strategies"
HERE
TODAY: Performances From the Past, Present & Future of The Inter
Arts Center
Friday & Saturday, October 5th & 6th, 9 PM
$5-$100 sliding scale admission The
LAB hosts two nights of scintillating performance art, kick-butt
spoken word, and other sinful artistic pleasures, featuring students,
alumni and faculty of San Francisco State University's Inter Arts
Center. Tucked away in the bowels of the San Francisco State University
is a small program called the Inter Arts Center. In 1983, The LAB
was founded by students of the Inter Arts Center. For more than
twenty years, the Inter Arts Center has produced and nurtured the
burgeoning talents of many cutting-edge and visionary artists. In
her 1995 commencement address, Senator Hillary Rodham-Clinton, then
First Lady, singled out the Inter Arts Center for its exemplary
program. It is the oldest and most prestigious interdisciplinary
arts program in the United States and currently offers two MAs:
one in Interdisciplinary Arts practice, the other in Creativity
and Arts Education. Recently, with budget cuts and university restructuring,
the program has been marked for extinction.
These two nights of performance and protest are part of a series
of events that is a rallying call to save the Inter Arts Center
and all that it stands for, and to assure a place for emerging artists
in the future of the San Francisco arts scene. Featured Artists
include: Carolyn Cooley, Susan Greene, Dale Hoyt, Scott Macleod,
Shelly Smith, Matthew Perfiano, Maureen Futtner, Robert Glick, Trey
Jackson, Eva Koenig and many others.
The
LAB presents
The Mysterious Underwater World
an exhibition of children's art produced by The Imagine Bus Project
Exhibition
runs Saturday, September 8 Saturday,
September 29, 2001
Gallery Hours: Wednesday-Saturday, 1-6 PM (free admission)
Opening Reception: Saturday, September 8, 1-3 PM (free admission)
The
LAB is pleased to collaborate with The Imagine Bus Project in presenting
The Mysterious Underwater World, featuring original artwork
by children from nine urban neighborhoods in San Francisco. The
body of work was produced by the children with the assistance of
art instructor Marie Rogers over six weeks, culminating with a three-week
residency and installation period in The LAB's gallery space. Most
of the works in the exhibition will be for sale.
The Imagine
bus is a retired airporter van equipped with tables and art supplies.
It follows a route each week to nine neighborhoods where kids go
aboard to draw, paint, sculpt, create collages and jewelry, put
on puppet shows, or just play with the staff and volunteers. The
Imagine Bus Project helps to break the isolation many inner-city
children face by introducing them to the wonders of art, culture
and nature in a way which makes these things accessible to them
now, and desirable in their futures.
For further
information visit http://www.imaginebusproject.org.
|
The
Third Annual
Altoids Curiously Strong Collection |
|
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| May 4 - June 2
Gallery Hours: Wednesdays-Saturdays, 1-6 PM
Opening Reception: Friday, May 4th , 6-9 PM
Curious,
strong and original artwork by 25 of America's most
talented emerging artists, including paintings, photography,
sculpture, works on paper, videos and digital media. |
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Cabinet
of Curiosities
An evening of sound art featuring vintage electronics with Eric Glick
Rieman and Mickey T's Drum Machine Museum
Wednesday, May 30th at 9 PM
$5-$10 sliding scale admission Eric
Glick Rieman plays momentarily structured improvisations on a 70's
vintage Rhodes electric piano that's been added to with plastic, metal,
wood, and wire. He attacks this instrument with mallets, rocks, and
tools, creating a fog of electro-acoustic texture. Tokyo native and
ambient experimental musician Mickey T is the founding guru of San
Francisco's Drum Machine Museum, home to his massive collection of
analog synthesizers and drum machines. He is a member of Gone Postal,
whose first full-length album "Shotguns & Sedatives"
is due out this summer on the label Mode 3X. |
Short
Cuts
An evening of high-voltage performance with Beth Custer, Alexander
Kort and Beth Lisick
Wednesday, May 16th at 9 PM
$5-$10 sliding scale admission Join
three Bay Area virtuoso performers for an evening of short solo
sets and an extended collaborative improvisation. Beth Custer is
the band leader of Beth Custer Doña Luz 30 Besos and the
composer for the Joe Goode Performance Group. Past ensembles include
Club Foot Orchestra, Trance Mission and Eighty Mile Beach. Custer
proudly composes for a myriad of local low-budget theater and film
productions including the works of Campo Santos, Camera Obscura,
Melinda Stone, and Craig Baldwin. A North Carolina native, Alexander
Kort relocated to the Bay Area in 1996. He plays cello, electric
cello, and double bass, performing regularly in both experimental
and more traditional idioms. Writer/performer Beth Lisick is also
a gossip columnist and sometimes backup singer. She is the author
of Monkey Girl and the forthcoming short story collection This Too
Can Be Yours. Her first short film will screen at the Roxie on May
31st if she finishes editing it in time.
| The
Gateway Project
London to San Francisco: Phase One
|
5
Exhibitions:
DNA.CORN
| The Sound of
Naked Men
| CAT
| WEBOPTICON
| Living
Together
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| The
LAB launches The
Gateway Project, designed to facilitate international
dialogue and collaboration between artists, cultural and scientific
researchers, and new audiences in view of a rapidly changing
global consciousness. London to San Francisco: Phase
One, entails an open-ended and process-based exchange
and presentation of collaborative work by artists residing
in San Francisco and London and working at the conceptual
frontier of the new millennial culture. London and San Francisco
are "gateway cities' with an extensive history of cultural
interactivity. Both cities are located at crucial crossroads
between continents, and as such they share a complex and extraordinarily
diverse cultural make-up and artistic heritage. The featured
artists explore issues pertaining to current DNA research,
wireless culture, and the quintessential nature of human experience
within the context of cyberspace, as well as incorporating
concepts and practical research techniques stemming from quantum
mechanics, medical science and cultural anthropology. Addressing
matters of universal interest, the artists often utilize new
technologies in producing their work, while retaining an artistic
method of inquiry that is ultimately organic. I t is our hope
that The Gateway Project: London to San Francisco: Phase
One , will inspire a provocative dialogue about the future
of art and global culture.
Now
in its initial stages, The Gateway Project will soon
feature several additional projects involving San Francisco
and London-based artists in collaboration and dialogue. Stay
tuned for continuing programs hosted by The LAB and collaborating
agencies, including an upcoming exhibition at the San Francisco
Arts Commission Gallery in May. Look for new work by participating
artists, including Ansuman Biswas (London) in collaboration
with Miya Masaoka (San Francisco), Paul DeMarinis (San
Francisco) and Anne Bean (London), Moti Roti (London), and
others, upcoming this summer.
Laura
Brun, Curator
The
London Project is generously supported by the National
Endowment for the Arts, The British Council, and the San Francisco
Grants for the Arts Hotel Tax Fund. Additional support for
the project has been provided by The Live Arts Development
Agency and Rob LaFrenenais, curator, Arts Catalyst (London),
Mrs. Ralph I. Dorfman, Alan Millar, Michael Naimark, Steve
Sekiguchi, and The Headlands Center for the Arts in Sausalito,
California.
|
 |
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Join
us for the biggest art bargain in the Bay Area!
ART
SALE V: The LAB's fifth annual fixed price art
sale and live auction.
View Auction
Items or Fixed
price items
Event
and reception is Saturday March 10 from 6:30 to 9pm. |
Exhibition
dates: Friday, February 2 Saturday, February 24, 2001
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Gallery
Hours:
Wednesday-Saturday, 2-7 PM (free admission) |
| |
Opening
Reception:
Friday, February 2, 6-9 PM (free admission) |
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| Salon
events: |
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Transcinema
Wednesday, February 7 |
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Home
Baked, Sliced and Diced Tastee Treats
Wednesday, February 21, 9 PM ($5-$10 sliding scale admission) |
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Moving
Target Series
Saturday, February 24, 9 PM ($7-$10 sliding scale admission) |
All events take
place at The LAB, 2948 16th Street @ Capp, SF
The LAB is
pleased to present an exhibition of video installations by Bay Area-based
Anthony Discenza and New York-based Tony Oursler opening
Friday, February 2 and running through Saturday, February 24, 2001.
Anthony Discenza will premiere Persisting in Some Fashion
as Yet Unknown, new video work composed from the electronic
remnants of commercial television. Tony Oursler's Hole
features a large skull with a video projection of a moving mouth.
The opening reception will take place from 6 to 9 PM on Friday February
2, with gallery hours Wednesdays through Saturdays from 2 to 7 PM.
In conjunction
with the exhibition, The LAB will present several live events. Transcinema,
an evening of audio and visual performances featuring artists using
time-based media in real-time performance, will be featured on Wednesday,
February 7. On Wednesday, February 21, Home Baked, Sliced and
Diced Tastee Treats, an evening of sound art curated by Kyle
Knobel, will feature sound artist Chiara Giovando, film and video
artist and curator Rebecca Barten, and underground hip-hop artists
II Sense and Kaotic Souls. Admission each Wednesday evening is $5
to $10 sliding scale. On Saturday, February 24 The LAB hosts the
latest installment of Moving Target, a roving series of performance,
music, film and movement curated by Margaret Tedesco and David Cook,
featuring performance artists Cliff Hengst and Mads Lynnerup, the
East Bay's musical performers Mono Pause, spoken word artist Beth
Lisick and Austin poet Dale Smith. Admission for Moving Target is
$7 to $10 sliding scale. All performances begin at 9 PM.
The
LAB presents
The RK Corral's GoodGuy/BadGuy
an original interdisciplinary space
western. When:
January 18, 19, 20, 25, 26, and 27th at 9:30 PM, 2001
Where: The LAB, 2948 Sixteenth St., SF, CA 94103
Tickets: $7 - $15 sliding scale
GoodGuy/BadGuy
is a space western which deals with the juxtaposition of the true
grit personality, the mytholigization of old west iconography and
the culture of waste. GoodGuy/BadGuy reigns over a flat earth,
where everyone has television within them selves and an unquestioning
grasp of good and bad. He abandons the town, deprives it of its
notions of good and bad, and unleashes a series of absurdly ominous
events, climaxing in a revolt by mutant cows. GoodGuy/BadGuy
is a live performance/installation comprised of a narrative sequence
of photographic images. It features Rajendra Serber as GoodGuy/BadGuy,
Kristin Lemberg as Slim Virginia, composer Cheryl Leonard as the
Black Band-ita, Bulk Foodveyor (Phil Bonner) as the TownWhore and
animatronic master, and Donald Reynolds of Three Day Stubble as
the Sheriff.
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2000 ] |
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