Tag Archives: Ooga Booga

PRACTICE X WIND BOOK LAUNCH

PRACTICE x WIND is the first publication to record all the activities that unfolded around PRACTICE collective’s artist-run space from 2015 to 2017.

“Composed of informal images of artists who have passed through the space-where leisure and work, direction and chaos have become indistinguishable-a separate catalogue includes documentation of all the exhibitions that took place at PRACTICE. More than just an archival document, the book is a rhizomatic propagation of the unruly yet generative energy that has earned PRACTICE its unique place.”*

 

PRACTICE x WIND BOOK LAUNCH, Sunday, February 4, from 2 pm to 5 pm.

OOGA BOOGA, 943 North Broadway, Suite 203, Chinatown, Los Angeles.

*See: instagram.com/p/B

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MALIK GAINES BOOK PARTY

“Years ago, in an interview, my collaborator and longtime lover Alexandro Segade described the work of our performance group, My Barbarian—which is made up of us and Jade Gordon, our collaborator, whom we love—as that of ‘dedicated amateurs.’ But that was a slip, I think, or he was just trying something out. An amateur move? We’ve had some difficulty with a set of terms that developed around the time our work began to circulate, in the 2000s…

“There has always been a calculated provisional quality to our work, which has as much to do with strategies for dispelling the illusionist illusions of theater and critiquing the mythic masteries of visual art as it does with understanding our positions within these fields… Much of our work has pointed to class status and enacted class anxieties, and the position of the artist has sometimes appeared to us as an amateur elite class, given the provisional access one has to travel, to refined locations, to food, high-end discourse, and actual wealthy people. But as performers we find our publics to be rather broad, and these may include children, nurses, criminals, schoolteachers, assistant curators, and the homeless.

“Our intentional dismantling of hierarchical orders—even in the very act of collaboration, which diminishes genius status—may sometimes read as a kind of amateurism.” — Malik Gaines*

The publication of BLACK PERFORMANCE ON THE OUTSKIRTS OF THE LEFT—the new book by writer, performance artist, and assistant professor Malik Gaines—will be celebrated at Ooga Booga this week.

MALIK GAINES BOOK PARTY

Thursday, November 2, from 6 pm to 8 pm.

Ooga Booga, 943 North Broadway, #203, Chinatown, Los Angeles.

 

See Malik Gaines, “We Are Orlando,” Bomb, June 28, 2016.

See Jesi Khadivi, “Inspirational Critique” (Gaines–Segade interview), The Fanzine, February 15, 2010.

Top: Malik Gaines. Image courtesy Gaines and NYU.

Above image credit: New York University Press.

Below: My Barbarian (Alexandro Segade, Gaines, and Jade Gordon), The Mother and Other Plays, adapted from Brecht, 2014, New York City. Photograph © Ian Douglas.

NO SESSO AT 356 MISSION

Join OOGA BOOGA and 356 Mission tonight, September 2, for the NO SESSO Fall/Winter 2017-18 runway show, and the unveiling of a special NO SESSO installation in Twooga Booga. Free, everyone welcome.

NO SESSO FASHION SHOW, Saturday, September 2, at 7 pm.

356 and TWOOGA BOOGA are both at 356 South Mission Road, Los Angeles.

nosesso.net

356mission.com

From the No Sesso New York Summer 2017 Capsule collection. Image credit: No Sesso.

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SUR AND ESTHER McCOY

The third volume of SUR—an annual arts and culture journal out of Mexico City—takes a look at “the life and work of writer and architectural critic Esther McCoy (1904–1989)….In 1945, the writer and her husband [left Los Angeles and] took up residence in the city of Cuernavaca for eight months, during which they found an interest in popular crafts and pre-Columbian architecture. Yet little has been written and researched about McCoy’s relationship with Mexico. SUR 3 takes as its starting point the connections between McCoy and Mexico: moments from her personal life, her political and artistic acquaintances, her writings while in Mexico, and the relationships the writer started with some of the most emblematic figures of modern Mexican history.”*

(Included in the issue: BLESS N°56 Worker’s Delight and N°57 Daycation Lookbook; concept and graphic design by Studio Manuel Raeder; photography by Ludger Paffrath and Bert Houbrechts, BLESS.)

SUR, Volume 3, ESTHER McCOY: THE MEXICAN YEARS is available at:

OOGA BOOGA, 943 North Broadway, Chinatown, Los Angeles.

OOGA TWOOGA, 356 South Mission Road, Los Angeles.

Also see:

PIECING TOGETHER LOS ANGELES: AN ESTHER McCOY READER, Susan Morgan, ed. (Los Angeles: East of Borneo, 2012).

tmagazine.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/09/28/mother-modern/

*bomdiabooks.de/product/sur-volume-iii/

Image courtesy Ooga Booga.

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SETH BOGART AT OOGA BOOGA

This Thursday, join Seth Bogart and Wendy Yao at Ooga Booga for a ceramics sale and book launch party for SETH BOGART CERAMICS.

 

SETH BOGART CERAMICS BOOK LAUNCH AND CERAMICS SALE, Thursday, April 20, from 6 to 8 pm.

OOGA BOOGA, 943 North Broadway, #203, Chinatown, Los Angeles

sethbogart.com

twitter.com/oogaboogastore?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor

https://www.instagram.com/p/BS4KCRJB3Ly/

Seth Bogart Ceramics Image credit: Seth Bogart and Ooga Booga

Seth Bogart Ceramics
Image credit: Seth Bogart and Ooga Booga