Tag Archives: Ashley Hunt

DO YOU KNOW WHERE THE CHILDREN ARE?

As a native Texan, I have witnessed firsthand the discrimination that immigrants face in the United States. I have heard from friends who visited detention centers, and from lawyers representing those detained. I have heard the stories of those who are separated from their families, and read transcripts from underfunded courtrooms operating far beyond capacity. It is devastating. That all of this occurs in the name of “security” and “safety” is the greatest farce of all. Molly Gochman

DO YOU KNOW WHERE THE CHILDREN ARE (DYKWTCA) is a call to action and exhibition of over 100 unique works of art by 100+ leading visual artists that is organized by the artists and activists Mary Ellen Carroll and Lucas Michael. Each work incorporates, or represents an actual account (in whole or in part) from a child who was separated from their family and detained by the U.S. government. This text may be in the native language of the child or a translation into English. The accounts are taken from the interviews that were conducted by the Flores investigators that included legal, medical and mental health experts who visited the detention facilities six months ago in June of 2019. Upon witnessing the deplorable, inhumane, and illegal conditions they found the children in, they decided it was necessary to act upon their findings. They went public.*

The exhibition—WHEN WE FIRST ARRIVED…,curated by Ruth Noack—will open this weekend in Washington, D.C., and proceeds from artwork sales will benefit and support the Safe Passage Project, Terra Firma, Team Brownsville, and the Innovation Law Lab.

WHEN WE FIRST ARRIVED…*

Through March 29.

Opening night: Saturday, January 25, from 6 pm to 8 pm.

The Corner at Whitman-Walker

1701 14th St. NW, Washington, D.C.

When We First Arrived…, artwork, from top: Spencer Ostrander, Ricci Albenda, Mary Lum, Molly Gochman, Rob Pruitt, Terence Gower, Jesse Presley Jones, When We First Arrived invitation card, Amy Sillman, Beto De Volder and Leon Villagran, Kay Rosen, and Carlos Motta. Artwork courtesy and © the artists, the photographers, DYKWTCA, Mary Ellen Carroll, and Lucas Michael.

ANDREA FRASER AND VANESSA PLACE AT SCHINDLER HOUSE, LOS ANGELES

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Andrea Fraser, Museum Highlights: A Gallery Talk, 1989. Single-channel video (Betacam SP NTSC), color, sound. 30:00 min. (image thehammermuseum.tumblr.com)

New Works by Andrea Fraser, Vanessa Place

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MAK Center: Schindler House
835 N Kings Road
West Hollywood, CA 90069

Andrea Fraser’s work engages the institution of art and its interface with other social fields; Vanessa Place’s work interrogates notions of criminality and poetry. Language and sound figure into both of their practices as key investigative tools. Working from the disciplines of art and writing, respectively, both employ existing tracts of text and reposition them in the context of art and performance. AV presents new works by each artist in two sound installations in the Schindler House. Both works prompt the visitor to reflect on absence, presence, power, individuality, inequity, freedom, privilege, subjection and subjectification.
In the Chace wing of the house, Andrea Fraser has installed Tehachapi at Kings Road, an eight-channel audio installation combining field recordings with live audio fed through prison acoustic model. The audio includes recordings made by Fraser and Scott Benzel at the California Correctional Institution, Tehachapi, April 1, 2014, with additional audio from footage recorded by the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation at five different state prisons. The graph in the Nursery, Index II, juxtaposes data on prison populations, income distribution, the art market, and museum and prison construction. In this installation, Fraser attempts to activate some of the structural relations between museums and prisons as the bookend institutions of increasingly polarized neoliberal social space.
In the Schindler wing of the house, Vanessa Place has installed Last Words, a recording in the artist’s voice of the last statements of all the inmates executed in Texas as recorded by the state since 1982.
Although this is the debut installation of the work, Last Words is an ongoing archival piece, as the executions are slated to continue indefinitely. The statements are published on the Texas Department of Corrections website and updated monthly. The current iteration of the work contains the statements of 510 inmates condemned to death, and will be updated as new statements become available. Inmates who refused to make a statement are represented by 5 seconds of silence. In this work, the sentence of death is performed through the final sentences by the condemned.

Related Programming

April 27, 2014

1:00 pm

Discussions with Andrea Fraser, Ashley Hunt, and representatives from Critical Resistance Los Angeles, Californians United for a Responsible Budget, No More Jails LA, and others.

May 22, 2014

7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Performance by Vanessa Place, followed by a discussion with Place, Michael Eng, and Jamison Webster.

May 28, 2014

7:00 pm

Andrew Fraser talks with Joe Day about his research on museums and prisons.

Andrea Fraser

Major projects by Andrea Fraser include installations, performances, and surveys for an array of international museums, including the Kunstverein Munich; the Venice Biennale (Austrian Pavilion); the Whitney Biennial; the Generali Foundation, Vienna; the Kunsthalle Bern; the Bienal de São Paulo; Tate Modern; the New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York; the Philadelphia Museum of Art; the Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford; the Museum of Modern Art, Vienna; the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Centre Pompidou, Paris; the Belkin Art Gallery, University of British Columbia; the Kunstverein Hamburg; the Carpenter Center, Harvard University; and the Ludwig Museum, Cologne. Her books include Andrea Fraser: Works 1984-2003, Dumont, 2003; Museum Highlights: The Writings of Andrea Fraser, MIT Press, 2005; and Texts, Scripts, Transcripts, Museum Ludwig, 2013. Fraser is a professor of New Genres at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Vanessa Place

The Boston Review called Vanessa Place “the spokesperson for the new cynical avant-garde,” theHuffington Post characterized her work as “ethically odious,” while philosopher and critic Avital Ronell said she is “a leading voice in contemporary thought.” Vanessa Place was the first poet to perform as part of the Whitney Biennial; a content advisory was posted. Other exhibition work has appeared at Denver Museum of Contemporary Art; the Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art; The Power Plant, Toronto; the Broad Museum, East Lansing; and Cage 83 Gallery, New York. Selected recent performance venues include Museum of Modern Art, New York; Detroit Museum of Contemporary Art; Andre Bely Center, St. Petersburg, Russia; Kunstverein, Cologne; Whitechapel Gallery, London; Frye Art Gallery, Seattle; the Sorbonne; and De Young Museum, San Francisco. Recent books includeBoycottStatement of FactsNotes on Conceptualisms, co-authored with Robert Fitterman, and her translation of Guantanamo, by French poet Frank Smith. Place also works as a critic and criminal defense attorney, and is CEO of VanessaPlace Inc, the world’s first poetry corporation.

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Vanessa Place from www.vanessaplace.biz (c) Lawrence Schwartzwald