Community Activist, Professor Emerita at Rutgers University, Co-Founder of Aspira Inc. of New Jersey, La Casa de Don Pedro, Puerto Rican Congress, United Community Foundation, Newark Urban League, and United Community Corporation.
Community Activist, Professor Emerita at Rutgers University, Co-Founder of Aspira Inc. of New Jersey, La Casa de Don Pedro, Puerto Rican Congress, United Community Foundation, Newark Urban League, and United Community Corporation.
A conference to member-in the cultural vitality and consequences of the Puerto Rican sector of the Lower East Side into the Downtown scene, past and present.
The Centro Library and Archives at Hunter College holds the archives of several important writers and artists, notably, Clemente Soto Vélez, Pedro Pietri, Marlis Momber and Ed Vega, whose works reflect a supplemental narrative of ‘Loisaida’ to the ethos of the Lower East Side. This event will gather archivists, scholars, photographers, artists and activists who produce scholarship on the history and contributions of Puerto Ricans and Latinos to the revitalization of the Lower East Side, and will integrate connoisseurship with the relevance of the Centro’s collection. This conference falls within the activities celebrating the centennial of poet and community activist Clemente Soto Vélez.
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 18th, 6:00 pm
On Archiving and ‘Lure of the Retro Lens’: the technique and transaction to assemble the present through organizing the past. Historians and cultural critics discuss issues of institutional politics, material culture, artist community affiliations, different types of cultural belongings, and the shadow and situational sphere of peripheral players to the art-world canon.
Panelists:
Gregory Sholette– Artist/writer/founding member of REPOhistory, Assistant Professor of Sculpture at Queens College, CUNY. Urayoán Noel– Poet/ critic/co-founder of ‘Spanic Attack/Assistant Professor of English, University at Albany, SUNY. Marvin J. Taylor– Founder of the Downtown New York Collection, Director of the Fales Library and Special Collections at NYU. Mario H. Ramirez– Project Archivist at Center for Puerto Rican Studies at Hunter College. Carolina Gonzalez– Author, journalist.
Alfredo Irizarry– Former artistic director of El Teatro Ambulante and founder of The Quality of Life Magazine in Loisaida.
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20th, 6:00 pm
Visualizing Loisaida: The panel will compare instances of local cultural practices within the phenomena of cultural appropriation that leads to the re-invention of place identity. Insiders, poets and documenters of everyday life from the 1970’s forward, will trace and re-present the Puerto Rican sway in the Loisaida scene.
Round Table: Luis Aponte-Parés– Architect/urban planner/ Director of Latino Studies at CPCS, UMASS Boston; Ed Morales Author/journalist/documentary filmmaker; Alan W. Moore– Independent Scholar, member of Colab, co-founder ABC No Rio;
Panelists: Edwin Torres– Poet/Performer, Marlise Momber– Photographer, María Dominquez– Muralist/visual artist, Clayton Patterson– Artist/documentarian.
CURATED/CHAIRED BY: Libertad O.Guerra and Yasmin Ramirez. Sponsored by New York City Council Member Rosie Méndez and the Clemente Soto-Vélez Cultural Center.
Conferencias Caribenas 5
Saturday, December 5 at 8:00pm.
Event: Navidad Para el Pueblo: Asalto de Navidad Latino x-mas
What: Concert
Start Time: Saturday, December 5 at 8:00pm
End Time: Saturday, December 5 at 11:00pm
The cult classic film Brincando el charco, a meditation on Puerto Rican identities in the context of mass migration, will screen as part of Columbia University’s Hispanic Film Festival.
Director Frances Negrón-Muntaner will be present to engage in a dialogue with Richard Peña, director of the New York Film Festival, and the general audience.
Despite the director’s original intent as a film for “half a dozen friends” who also shared the pains and joys of migrating to the U.S. over a decade ago, Brincando el charco still seems to have something to say for new audiences.
Wednesday, December 6, 7:30PM
Columbia University
Broadway at 116th Street
Room 517 in Hamilton Hall
Longwood Arts Projects’ 25th Anniversary
December 6, 2006 to March 10, 2006
Gala Reception:
Wednesday, December 6, from 5 pm – 8pm
Longwood Art Gallery @ Hostos Community College/CUNY
450 Grand Concourse at 149th Street
Bronx, NY 10451
Directions
2, 4, 5 subway trains to 149th Street/Grand Concourse
(The Longwood Gallery has a wheelchair ramp in front, visible from the subway exit on the street.)
Gallery Hours
Mon . – Sat. 10 am – 6pm
Closed Sunday & major holidays.
Information
718.518.6728
longwood@bronxarts.org.
South Bronx Contemporary
Longwood Arts Project’s
25th Anniversary
new curatorial projects organized by Fred Wilson, Betti-Sue Hertz,
Eddie Torres, and Edwin Ramoran
SAVE THE DATE | Wednesday, December 6, 2006
Gala Reception and Bronx Culture Trolley!!
Exhibition on view through March 10, 2007
The highly accomplished Antonia Guerrero will discuss her
current multimedia installation on:
Thursday, November 30, 6:30PM – 7:30PM
Free and open to the public
Talk is in English
AT MEDIANOCHE
161 East 106th Street, First Floor
(between Lexington and Third Avenues)
For info: www.medianoche.us
The Center for Puerto Rican Studies
invites you to
Diasporas in Progress: A Celebration of two books
Wednesday, November 29th
6:30 – 8:00 pm
Hunter College
68th Street and Lexington Avenue
Faculty Dining Room, West 8th Floor
Speakers:
Linda Delgado, Board Member, National Association of Ethnic Studies
Carmen Teresa Whalen, Williams College,
Co-editor of
The Puerto Rican Diaspora: Historical Perspectives
Andres Torres, Researcher
Centro de Estudios Puertorriquenos, Editor of
Latinos in New England
For updated information on Centro Events visit us @ www.centropr.org
or call: 212-772-5714
On Friday, October 27, 2006, Hope Community, Inc. will host a press conference and unveiling of an historic mosaic by artist Manny Vega honoring the late Puerto Rican poet, Julia de Burgos. The 11:00 AM ceremony will take place in the heart of East Harlem’s “Cultural Corridor” – in front of a Hope building located on the northeast corner of Lexington Avenue and East 106th Street. The momentous unveiling will be followed by a community reception hosted by El Taller Boricua in the Julia de Burgos Latino Cultural Center at 1680 Lexington Avenue. For more information, call (212) 860-8821, Ext 111.