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"Slow Lab Dialogue" Platform 21 - Amsterdam, Holland. (06. 08)
"Conspiracy of Progress" Leo Kesting Gallery - New York City. (05.08)
"Slow Lab Dialogue" New York City. (02,08)
"Engage Artists and Designers in the City" Parsons
School of Design (11.07)
"Conspiracy of Progress" Art Directors Club (11.10.07)
"Conspiracy of Progress" Baryshnikov Arts Center
(07.07)
"Points
and Conjunctions" Joyce SoHo (01.06)
"Urban Performance" Fabrica, Italy
(11.05)
"Apparel and Identity in the City"
Parsons School of Design (11.05)
“Performing the City” Amherst
College (11.05)
Whitney Museum of American Art (01.05)
Parsons/New School (11.04)
Pratt Institute (07.04)
Rhode Island School of Design (03.04)
Rhode Island Arts Council (new genre jury)
Columbia University (architecture jury)
Rhode Island School of Design (fashion jury)
Pratt Institute (architecture jury)
Nurture Art Gallery (performance biennale jury)
ENGAGE ARTISTS AND DESIGNERS IN THE CITY
November 2007
Parsons School of Design
Panelists Julia Mandle, Maggie Norris, and moderator Gwynne
Keathly will discuss the interpretation of fashion typologies
and how they affect the urban environment of New York, defining
and addressing unique identities or subcultures within the
city. The purpose of the panel discussion is to explore
the perspective of a cross section of careers and professionals
in the art and design community whose work has touched upon
the subject of fashion and the concept of identity within
the city.
POINTS
AND CONJUNCTIONS
Monday, January 9, 2006 at Joyce SoHo, 155 Mercer Street
As part of Joyce SoHo’s “Dance Talks: Conversations
between Artists and Audiences,” artist Julia Mandle,
composer Michael Gordon, and writer Brian McCormick will
discuss Emio Greco/PC’s “Conjunto di NERO.”
The video-illustrated interdisciplinary talk will be lead
by Stephen Greco, Editor-at-Large of Trace Magazine
URBAN PERFORMANCE
Friday, November 25, 2005 at Fabrica, Treviso, Italy
Julia Mandle will speak about her recent urban projects
“Hustle” and “Variable City” at
Fabrica, the Benetton research center on communication designed
by architect Tadao Ando. Each year a group of young artists
invited from all over the world come to the center to explore
photography, design, music, video, writing, interactive
and visual communication and to uncover the future. An interview
will be published with Mandle in a future issue of Fab Magazine,
Fabrica's publication of short stories and interviews with
visiting artists.
APPAREL AND IDENTITY IN THE CITY
Friday November 11, 2005
from 1:00-2:00pm
Parsons School of Design
Panelists Julia Mandle, Maggie Norris, and moderator Gwynne
Keathly will discuss the interpretation of fashion typologies
and how they affect the urban environment of New York, defining
and addressing unique identities or subcultures within the
city. The purpose of the panel discussion is to explore
the perspective of a cross section of careers and professionals
in the art and design community whose work has touched upon
the subject of fashion and the concept of identity within
the city.
PERFORMING THE CITY
Monday November 7, 2005 at 4:30pm
Amherst College, Pruyne Auditorium
Julia Mandle, founder and director of a Brooklyn-based visual
performance company, will speak and lead a discussion on
how performance art can lead us toward understanding cities,
and our relationship to the environment, built and otherwise.
In an illustrated presentation, she will discuss her company's
intellectual and performative philosophy, and explain some
of her creations, including the well-known KALCH, which
drew a street-side audience of 5,000 when it was performed
in Lower Manhattan.
Her visit is part of the President's Initiative on the Urban
Imagination, and is integral to our continuing effort to
bring an urban-studies concentration to the curriculum.
ODD LOTS EXHIBITION
Thursday November 10, 2005
from 2:00-4:00pm
WPS1, Radio Network of PS1
Artists Julia Mandle, Mierle Ukeles, and Jane South will
discuss the recent exhibition with the curators and Cabinet
magazine editors Jeffrey Kastner, Sina Najaf, Frances Richard,
plus Queens Museum Executive Director Tom Finkelpearl and
PS1 Deputy Director Brett Littman.
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