9本のエピソード

X-TRA’s Artists and Rights is a conversation series exploring the intersection of artistic practice and Los Angeles's most urgent issues. Each session brings together a group of artists around a table. They share how they reach across the boundaries of their disciplines, build bridges, and develop strategies to collectively create supportive conditions and opportunities.

Artists and Rights xtrapodcasts

    • アート

X-TRA’s Artists and Rights is a conversation series exploring the intersection of artistic practice and Los Angeles's most urgent issues. Each session brings together a group of artists around a table. They share how they reach across the boundaries of their disciplines, build bridges, and develop strategies to collectively create supportive conditions and opportunities.

    Committing to Showing Up and Shifting Frameworks

    Committing to Showing Up and Shifting Frameworks

    with Zackary Drucker, Ahree Lee, Sandra de la Loza, Jaklin Romine. Moderated by Mario Ontiveros.

    In this episode, the artists continue their conversation about visibility and access. Woven through their talk are issues of vulnerability, generosity, and accountability, as well as intolerance, privilege, and art-washing.

    This conversation was recorded in February 2020, before the global pandemic and mass uprising in the name of racial justice and against police brutality.
    Find more information about the series and the artists at https://www.x-traonline.org/online/artists-and-rights-podcast

    • 53分
    Becoming Visible, Being a Thorn, and Seeking Justice

    Becoming Visible, Being a Thorn, and Seeking Justice

    with Zackary Drucker, Ahree Lee, Sandra de la Loza, and Jaklin Romine. Moderated by Mario Ontiveros. In this episode, the artists discuss the ethical pitfalls and radical possibilities of visibility. On the flip side of “becoming visible,” they also talk about erasure and invisibility. Access is not universal, and even the most ethically-minded efforts can still be exclusionary. For example, to the disabled body: Jaklin Romine reminds us that many progressive institutions and centers often they lack awareness that disabled bodies are denied entry to their spaces: “Any space that is not physically accessible to the disabled body is not radical.”

    • 43分
    Behind the Closed Door: Intimacy, Collaboration, and Access

    Behind the Closed Door: Intimacy, Collaboration, and Access

    with Arshia Haq, Marcus Kuiland-Nazario, Latipa, and Mario Ybarra Jr.. Moderated by Mario Ontiveros. In the second part of their discussion, the artists delve more deeply into the importance of both intimacy AND engagement. They talk about how to theorize, act, and create from a place of intimacy—whether it be the nightclub or grandmother’s pillowcase.

    • 1 時間1分
    The Brown Ceiling and Possible Futures

    The Brown Ceiling and Possible Futures

    with Arshia Haq, Marcus Kuiland-Nazario, Latipa, and Mario Ybarra Jr. Moderated by Mario Ontiveros. The artists gathered around the table today take up the artist’s role in relation to institutions; and how they are shaped by these institutions and they work to re-shape institutions. The talk about alternative pedagogical structures, and what is lost and gained as they operate within or outside of different kinds of spaces.

    • 54分
    What Solidarity Feels Like: Unlearning, Finding Alignment, and Being Uncomfortable

    What Solidarity Feels Like: Unlearning, Finding Alignment, and Being Uncomfortable

    With Cog•nate Collective, Vishal Jugdeo, Patrick Staff, and Elana Mann. Moderated by Mario Ontiveros. 
    In today’s episode, the group picks up their conversation and works to define and reframe the idea of the artist. 
    This session was recorded back in February 2020. Before COVID-19 had a name, and before the murders of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor sparked a global movement for racial justice. And yet, this conversation addresses the present in so many ways. They discuss what solidarity looks like and the complexities of collaboration. Assessing different levels of need across groups, and understanding the time and work to achieve transformation. They acknowledge that it very well might be necessary to be uncomfortable. 
    The stories they share span working with women vendors in a market in Tijuana, collaborating across continents with a trans person in India, partnering with non-artist tech startups, and maintaining and activating criticality towards art institutions while working within them. They talk more about the need to re-imagine art history and to look beyond art institutions to find guidance. 
    They also grapple with the need to un-do and un-learn what they were taught in school. This is a key step in the decolonization of the mind, a concept introduced in the first episode by Todd Gray. One take away from this episode is that the future must be built on a foundation of solidarity, that careful collaboration and reciprocity require dialogue and risk. And, importantly, it will take time.Learn more about the artists and X-TRA at www.X-TRAOnline.org

    • 47分
    Weaving Tight Enough: Forming Solidarities and “Fixing” the Situation

    Weaving Tight Enough: Forming Solidarities and “Fixing” the Situation

    With Cog•nate Collective, Vishal Jugdeo, Patrick Staff, and Elana Mann. Moderated by Mario Ontiveros. One of the underlying concerns of this conversation is identified by Amy of Cog•nate Collective when she says, “How can we knit together our capacities? Can we stitch together, or weave tight enough so that we can catch the people who are falling through?”

    • 45分

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