Reception for “Let Your Body In” on April 21st!

Let Your Body In

Reception: April 21, 2012, 5-8pm

ONE Archives Gallery & Museum

626 North Robertson Boulevard
West Hollywood, CA 90069

Please join us for the opening reception of Let Your Body In, an exhibition of work by contemporary queer artists alongside artworks and objects from the collections at ONE Archives. Participating artists include EMR (Math Bass & Dylan Mira), Maya Bookbinder, Laurel Frank, Aimee Goguen, Kim Kelly, and Lee Relvas. Additional pieces from the archives include works by Roger Campbell, Harold L. Dittmer, G.N., Olaf Odegaard, Tomata du Plenty, John Quitman, and James Snodgrass. The exhibition explores creative approaches to activating the body and playful ways of engaging with queer histories and culture. As a follow-up to Cruising the Archive, this exhibition looks at artworks outside a strictly historical context, allowing for new interpretations for queerness to emerge between the contemporary and archival.

More information on the exhibition can be found here. Make sure to RSVP on Facebook here!

The ONE Archives Gallery & Museum is located at 626 North Robertson Boulevard, West Hollywood, CA 90069. Enter the gallery on El Tovar Place. Parking is free for the first hour before 6pm at a parking garage located at the end of El Tovar Place. Gallery hours are Friday, 4:30 – 8:30pm, and Saturday & Sunday, 1:00 – 5:00pm.

Image: Tomata du Plenty, The Many Loves of G.I. Joe, c. 1980. Acrylic on board, 27 x 42 inches. ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives

“The Transreal” Book Party at ONE Archives

The Transreal Book Party at ONE Archives

Thursday, April 5, 2012, 6pm-7:30pm

ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives

909 West Adams Boulevard
Los Angeles, CA 90007

 

ONE Archives is pleased to host a celebration for the release of The Transreal: Political Aesthetics of Crossing Realities by Micha Cárdenas. The evening will feature an introduction by Jack Halberstam, followed by a reading from the book by Cárdenas. Wine and light refreshments will be served outside in the garden area. Please come and support this great publication!

The Transreal: Political Aesthetics of Crossing Realities explores the use of multiple simultaneous realities as a medium in contemporary art, including mixed reality, augmented reality and alternate reality approaches. Building on the notion of “trans” from transgender, signifying the crossing of boundaries, the book proposes that transreal aesthetics cross the boundaries created by a proliferation of conceptions of reality that occurred as a result of postmodern theory and emerging technologies.

Proposing three operations for dealing with multiple realities, The Transreal discusses artists and art collectives including Blast Theory, mez breeze, Reza Negarestani, Ricardo Dominguez and Zach Blas. Through these artists’ work and Cárdenas’ own artwork, including Becoming Dragon and collaborations with Elle Mehrmand Becoming Transreal, technésexual and virus.circus, The Transreal demonstrates that transreal aesthetics have broad implications across new media, performance art and electronic literature. The book spans a wide range of genres including theoretical analyses of artworks, poetry, source code, photos of performances and wearable electronics, and discussions with leading thinkers in new media and performance art including Stelarc, Allucquére Rosanne Stone and Ricardo Dominguez.

More information on The Transreal and Cárdenas’ work can be found here.

ONEoff: Don Bachardy in Conversation with Susan Morgan

ONEoff: Don Bachardy in Conversation with Susan Morgan

Tuesday, March 27, 2012, 7-9pm

Doheny Memorial Library, Friends Lecture Hall, Room 240

University of Southern California (University Park Campus)
3550 Trousdale Parkway
Los Angeles, CA 90089-0185

In conjunction with Cruising the Archive, please join us for a discussion with acclaimed portrait artist Don Bachardy and writer Susan Morgan at the USC Doheny Memorial Library.

Don Bachardy was born in Los Angeles in 1934. He studied at the Chouinard Art Institute in Los Angeles and the Slade School of Art in London. His first solo exhibition was held in October 1961 at the Redfern Gallery in London. He has since had many solo exhibitions in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, Houston and New York.

Susan Morgan has written extensively about art, design, and popular culture. Morgan is the author of Joan Jonas: I Want to Live in the Country and Other Romances and editor of Piecing Together Los Angeles: An Esther McCoy Reader, a collection of writing by Esther McCoy (1904-1989), the pre-eminent voice of West Coast modernist architecture, published by East of Borneo in 2012.

Above: Don Bachardy, Self-portrait, 1972. Ink wash on paper, 29 x 23 inches. Courtney of the artist

Walkthrough and Extended Hours at ONE, Sunday, March 4th

In conjunction with the Pacific Standard Time Downtown/Exposition Park Regional Weekend, ONE Archives will host a curators walkthrough of Cruising the Archive: Rare Looks at ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives from 1-2pm on Sunday, March 4th. Additionally, ONE Archives will be open from 11-5pm on Sunday, in addition to regular Saturday hours of 11-5pm. Information on the PST Downtown/Exposition Park Regional Weekend can be found here (links to PDF).

Walk-through with the Curator of Cruising the Archive: Rare Looks

Sunday, March 4, 2012, 1-2pm

ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives
909 West Adams Boulevard
Los Angeles, CA 90007

Join Guest Curator David Frantz for an informal walk-through of the exhibition Cruising the Archive: Rare Looks at ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives.

This Thursday! “Transactivation: Revealing Queer Histories in the Archive”

Transactivation: Revealing Queer Histories in the Archive

Thursday, March 1, 2012, 6-9pm

ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives

909 West Adams Boulevard

Los Angeles, CA 90007

 

Do not miss this amazing event! In conjunction with Cruising the Archive, artists Heather Cassils, Zackary Drucker, Wu Tsang and Chris Vargas will present a series of live performances and video projects inspired by the collections at ONE Archives. These artists explore trans content in their multidisciplinary work and are interested in a discussion about LGBTQ archives and the “Ts” and “Qs” often missing from historical records. The performance will be followed by a discussion moderated by Dean Spade, assistant professor at the Seattle University School of Law.

 

Also come to see Catherine Lord’s To Whom It May Concern, in its last week on view at ONE Archives.

 

Presented by Visions and Voices: The USC Arts & Humanities Initiative

Organized by Onya Hogan-Finlay, David Frantz and Mia Locks. co-sponsored by LACE (Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions)

Upcoming “Queer Pier” Art & Archives Workshop with Thomas Lax

ONE Archives is excited to host the upcoming Queer Pier Art & Archives Workshop with Thomas Lax on February 24th from 5-7pm.  In this two-part workshop, Thomas Lax, Exhibition Coordinator and Program Associate at the Studio Museum in Harlem, will discuss Queer Pier: 40 Years, a year-long arts-based archiving project initiated by FIERCE—a queer youth of color organization in New York City—to mark its ten-year anniversary in 2010. This multi-stakeholder project documented and celebrated the history of radical organizing on The Piers along Manhattan’s West Side. The lecture will be followed by a discussion about interactivity, participation and public engagement in the archive. Participants should bring ideas, projects and materials to workshop. The workshop is free and open to the public.

Following the workshop, ONE Archives will also host a reception for the Queer Caucus for Art, in conjunction with the College Art Association 2012 Conference,  from 7-9pm. All workshop participants are encouraged to stay for the reception and schmooze with an exciting group of queer artists and scholars.

February 24, 2012

Queer Pier Art & Archives Workshop with Thomas Lax

5-7pm

Queer Caucus for Art Reception

7-9pm

ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives

909 West Adams Boulevard

Los Angeles, CA 90007

 

Click here for more information on these events.

Workshop co-sponsored by the Paul Brach Visiting Artist Lecture Series at CalArts and The Contemporary Project (TCP).

Reception presented by the Queer Caucus for Art subcommittee of the College Art Association.

Upcoming Reception and Panel at the USC Doheny Memorial Library

In celebration of the opening of Cruising the Archive: Queer Worldmaking, the third part of the ONE Archives’ Pacific Standard Time exhibition, the USC Libraries will host a reception on January 24th from 5-7pm at the Doheny Memorial Library Treasure Room. Following the reception, the panel discussion “Queer Aesthetics and Archival Practices” will also be held at the Doheny Library from 7-9pm, addressing the practical and theoretical aspects of “the archive” and its relationship to contemporary art today.  Moderated by Malik Gaines, curator, performance artist and assistant professor of combined media at Hunter College, the panel will feature Ann Cvetkovich, professor of English and women’s and gender studies at the University of Texas at Austin; Catherine Lord, professor of studio art at UC Irvine; and Ulrike Müller, artist and coeditor of the queer feminist art journal LTTR. Both events are free and opening to the public. Hope to see you there!

Doheny Memorial Library
University of Southern California (University Park Campus)
3550 Trousdale Parkway
Los Angeles, CA 90089-0185

Opening Reception for Cruising the Archive: Queer Worldmaking
Doheny Memorial Library, Treasure Room
5-7pm

Panel Discussion: Queer Aesthetics and Archival Practices
Doheny Memorial Library, Friends Lecture Hall
7-9pm

The Doheny Memorial Library is located in the center of campus at USC, adjacent to Alumni Park and across from Bovard Auditorium. The closest available public parking is located at Parking Structure 2 (PS2). Enter garage off of Flower Street north of Exposition Boulevard.

The reception for Cruising the Archive: Queer Worldmaking is presented by the USC Libraries. “Queer Aesthetics and Archival Practices” is presented by Visions and Voices: The USC Arts & Humanities Initiative.

Rap-A-Log with Jeanne Córdova Sunday, December 18th

Join us this Sunday, December 18, 2012 from 2-4pm for a rap-a-log with writer, activist, organizer and founder of The Lesbian Tide, Jeanne Córdova, for a reading from her new book When We Were Outlaws: A Memoir of Love & Revolution. A historical photo-show plus stories from the ’70s will take us into an in-depth Q&A about the State of the Union—the Gay, Feminist, Lesbian, and GenderQueer Movements. What’s on your mind? Bring a written question.

More information on Jeanne can be found here.

December 17-18th is also the Pacific Standard Time Downtown/Expo Focus Weekend. Information on special events related to PST in the Downtown area can be found on a downloadable PDF here.

Hope to see you at ONE Archives this Sunday!

Walk-through with the Curators of “Cruising the Archive: Wink Wink”

Don’t miss a walk-through of Cruising the Archive: Wink Wink with Guest Curators David Frantz and Mia Locks this Saturday, November 12, 2011 from 2-3pm at the ONE Archives Gallery & Museum in West Hollywood. The curators will lead an informal discussion about Cruising the Archive and share information about artworks and archival materials included in Wink Wink. Hope to see you there!

The ONE Archives Gallery & Museum is located at 626 North Robertson Boulevard,
West Hollywood, CA 90069
. Enter gallery on El Tovar Place. Parking is free for the first hour at a parking garage located at the end of El Tovar Place. Admission is free – suggested donation of $5.

Above: Installation photograph of Cruising the Archive: Wink Wink.  photograph: David Frantz.