PAJ Panels

PAJ

PAJ Two Talks in Celebration of PAJ's 100th Issue Tuesday, January 24, 2012 7pm - BELIEF Wednesday, January 25, 2012 7pm - BEING CONTEMPORARY

Location One is proud to host two evenings of talks to celebrate the 100th issue of PAJ: A Journal of Performance and Art, the influential arts publication founded in 1976. This special issue, titled “Performance New York,” features contributions by several generations of artists, curators, critics, and presenters working in the downtown arts community. For two evenings, January 24 and January 25, 2012, several of the contributors to PAJ 100 will present their response to two of the main themes of the issue, “Belief” and “Being Contemporary.” Bonnie Marranca, co-founder and editor of PAJ, will moderate the discussions. January 24: Belief In a world where so many values—social, artistic, political, religious, cultural, economic—have been questioned and contested in this era of great transformation on a global scale, what do you still believe in? Numerous books and essays have clustered around “the end of …” or “post- … perspectives after a century of turmoil in every sphere of life on every continent. Previously sacrosanct beliefs have been turned upside down. Against this background, artists and intellectuals have continued to rethink their relationship to legacies and to the public, to explore new processes and materials, and to find meaning in personal struggle. What are your strongest beliefs in relation to your work in the world? How do these beliefs inform your work? with: Gregory Whitehead, writer and radio producer Alison Knowles, Fluxus artist and performer George Quasha, poet and visual artist Lenora Champagne, performer and writer

January 25: Being Contemporary One of the essential concerns of visual art, performance, and critical thought is the idea of the “contemporary” or the “new.” We are part of an era that had cast forth great themes, and complex ways of organizing society and culture, while also being challenged by many received ideas. How does one take the measure of one’s work in the zeitgeist of the times? What makes a performance, a play, a piece of music, or an essay contemporary? What does the search for the contemporary or the innovative mean to the arts and to the public today? How is it recognized or understood? Consider your own work, or another artist’s work, in this context. with: Joan Jonas, visual artist and performer Linda Weintraub, curator and writer Martha Wilson, visual artist and curator Kenneth Collins, theatre director Claire Bishop, art historian and critic
-->