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Free the Mind, The Creepers, Catfox

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Come join us for an early evening of music! Leave the kids at home and the melodic notes and clever words will drift through the air straight into your adult ears!

A night of fun, witty, poignant, special, loving, truthful, sincere, brave, honest, charismatic, intense, dark, childlike, spunky, silly, bright, funny, touching, inspiring, selfish, sad, grand, budding, supple, sharp, beautiful music!

A celebration of women, and the love of women, if you will…

FREE THE MIND
Feminist matriarchy rock. Educating men with their minds, killing them with their hearts, teaching you to shut up and listen, dragging your brain through the juice and hoping it seeps in.

THE CREEPERS
Melodies dedicated to the love and worship of women. Entering the place where your love lives, and staying over night, and making breakfast in the morning.

CATFOX
Demon of glam-camp rock-erotics and sorceress of hi-literature, nu-carny, post-life song-spells. Defining what it means to be pure power and strength, grabbing your innards and gently, slowly pulling them out inch by inch until the smile on your face in permanent.

Rhythm of Afrika

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Dance Music Disruptors and Rhythmic Fall present… a night in African House, Deep House, Soulful House, Afrobeat, African Dance Music & African Diaspora Dance Music

SPAWNCAMP & 8 BALL RADIO

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Celebrate Black Friday with this Knockdown Center takeover – two bills on one night, featuring hardcore experimental electronics and a set in the bar.

SPAWNCAMP:
Dreamcrusher
https://dreamcrusher.bandcamp.com/

DJ Wallhacks
https://soundcloud.com/t0mmik

Corset
https://soundcloud.com/luggagestudio

8 BALL RADIO:
Logan Takahashi
https://soundcloud.com/logantakahashi

Adrian Rowland
http://mixlr.com/8-ball-radio/showreel/perfect-ten/

Zimmer Down

IN THE READY ROOM:
Lost Soul Enterprises
https://soundcloud.com/lost-soul-enterprises

NACHO! HO! HO!

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Live streaming from Knockdown Center, visual artists Kenya (Robinson) and Doreen Garner bring their show #trashDay to Clocktower Radio. #trashDay elevates the vernacular of urban fiction, reality television, gossip publications, social dance, and fashion, and uses it as a point of departure for satire and social commentary.

Join us for a celebration of the prodigal return of the #trashDAY duo, with holiday seasonal turn-ups, and nachos. A whole buffet of nachos, salsas, veggies, and cheeses. Plus thought enemas, that #trashDAY Cocktail and Ratchetpiece Theatre. Join us in the “Barry Booth” and get your gravelly voice on, or deliver your 10 dollar gift at guest check-in to register for the Second Annual NACHO-HO-HO Gift Exchange. Fun will be had, minds blown and shit talked. L’chaim up in this bitch and Santa ain’t safe — it’s not our fault nobody celebrates Kwanzaa.

Cassette mixtapes featuring the Best of #trashDAY are available for purchase before and during the event.

#SantaAintSafe #RudolphCanGetItToo #AgressiveChristmasStockings #MuleTideGreetings

Presented in partnership with Clocktower Productions, a non-profit art institution working in the visual arts, performance, music, and radio. More info at clocktower.org.

Event will be followed by NachoHH Afterparty featuring DJ Black Helmet in the Ready Room

Round Table on Queer Abstraction

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In conjunction with the exhibition Read My Lips, this round table will create a conversation around the the constellation of art practices that have been termed Queer Abstraction, a moniker not without its own limitations. Queer abstraction is in no way a new turn-of-phrase, and its origins would be impossible to locate. The goal of this conversation would be to wonder out loud and together, what are the offerings and limitations of this term in contemporary queer art practices?

We hope this event can be a space for healing and supporting and loving each other at the close of this overwhelming election week. We’ll have snacks and solidarity.

About Read My Lips
Read My Lips is a two-person show featuring work by Kerry Downey and Loren Britton that considers queer abstraction as an investment in indeterminacy, which allows for an expansive sense of embodiment, including but not limited to, the slipperiness of gender, affect, desire, and language.

Presenter bios

John Edmonds (b. 1989) is a photographer and writer who lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. He received his MFA in Photography from the Yale School of Art and his BFA in Photography at the Corcoran School of Arts + Design. His work is in both private and public collections, including the Philadelphia Museum of Art, FOAM Museum Amsterdam Library and the George Eastman House, and has been shown both nationally and internationally.

Mark Joshua Epstein (b.1979) is a visual artist based in New York. Epstein received his MFA from The Slade School of Fine Art in London and his BFA from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Epstein’s work has been shown in recent solo exhibitions at Biquini Wax, Mexico City, Brian Morris Gallery New York, and Illinois State University and in recent group shows at School 33 in Baltimore, Vox Populi in Philadelphia and Schema Prjects in Brooklyn. Epstein has participated in a number of residency programs including the Millay Colony, the Macdowell Colony and the Saltonstall Foundation.

Avram Finkelstein is an artist and writer living in Brooklyn. Finkelstein is a founding member of the collective responsible for Silence=Death and AIDSGATE, which was recently included in Regarding Warhol: Sixty Artists, Fifty Years at The Metropolitan Museum in New York. He is also a founding member of the art collective, Gran Fury, with whom he collaborated on public art projects for international institutions including The Whitney Museum of American Art, The Venice Biennale, ArtForum, MOCA LA, The New Museum of Contemporary Art, Creative Time, and The Public Art Fund. The collective had its first retrospective at 80 WSE in 2012, and has work in the permanent collections of The Whitney, MoMA, The New Museum and The New York Public Library. His solo work has shown at The Whitney Museum, The Cooper Hewitt Museum, Kunsthalle Wien, The Harbor Gallery, Exit Art, Sue Scott Gallery, Monya Rowe Gallery, La MaMa La Galleria and The Leslie Lohman Museum, and is in the permanent collections of MoMA, The Whitney, The Metropolitan Museum, The New Museum, The Smithsonian, The Brooklyn Museum, The Victoria and Albert Museum and The New York Public Library.

Chitra Ganesh is a Brooklyn based artist whose drawing, installation, text-based work, and collaborations suggest and excavate buried narratives typically absent from official canons of history, literature, and art. Ganesh graduated from Brown University with a BA in Comparative Literature and Art-Semiotics, and received her MFA from Columbia University in 2002. She has held residencies at the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, New York University, Headlands Center for the Arts, Smack Mellon Studios, and the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, among others. Her works have been widely exhibited across the United States including at the Queens Museum, Asia Society(New York), Berkeley Art Museum, Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (California), and the Contemporary Arts Museum in Houston, with solo presentations at PS1/MOMA (New York), The Andy Warhol museum (Pittsburgh) and Goteborgs Konsthalle (Sweden). International exhibition venues include MOCA (Shanghai), Fondazione Sandretto (Italy), Monte Hermoso (Spain), Kunsthalle Exnergrasse (Austria), Kunstverein Göttingen (Germany), and the Gwangju Contemporary Arts Centre (Korea).

Glendalys Medina investigates structures such as architecture, character, language, image and culture. Through drawings, sculptures, videos and performance she pulls these structures apart, pieces them together, and makes them hers. Self-improvement and habitual practices such as incantations and mediation activate her work. Medina’s artistic practice is a spiritual one in which geometry reveals creative intelligence and daily practices cultivate personal growth. Hip-Hop, abstraction, and new age thinking inform the work. Born in Puerto Rico, Medina received an MFA from Hunter College. Her work has been exhibited at such notable venues as Artists Space, Museum of Contemporary Art in Vigo Spain and the Bronx Museum. She has been awarded a residency at Yaddo in 2014, the Rome Prize in Visual Arts for 2012-2013 from the American Academy in Rome, a NYFA Fellowship in Interdisciplinary Art in 2012, and the Bronx Museum’s Artist in the Marketplace residency in 2010.

Sheila Pepe is best known for her large-scale, ephemeral installations and sculpture made from domestic and industrial materials. Since the mid-1990s Pepe has used feminist and craft traditions to investigate received notions concerning the production of canonical artwork as well as the artist’s relationship to museum display and the art institution itself. Pepe has exhibited widely throughout the United States and abroad in solo and group exhibitions as well as collaborative projects. Venues for Pepe’s many solo exhibitions include the Smith College Museum of Art, Northampton, Massachusetts, and the Weatherspoon Art Museum, Greensboro, North Carolina. Her work has been included in important group exhibitions such as the first Greater New York at PS1/MoMA; Hand + Made: The Performative Impulse in Art & Craft, Contemporary Art Museum Houston, Texas, and Artisterium, Tbilisi, Republic of Georgia. Pepe’s work was recently featured in the exhibition Queer Threads at the Leslie Lohman Museum of Lesbian and Gay Art in New York, and commissions for the 8th Shenzhen Sculpture Biennale,  exhibitions include a commission for the ICA/Boston’s traveling exhibition Fiber: Sculpture 1960-present. Pepe was a resident faculty member at Skowhegan School, 2013. She is now a Core Critic in the Painting + Printmaking Department at Yale University.

Ashton Cooper is a Brooklyn-based independent writer and curator. This past summer, she curated “Mal Maison” at Maccarone in New York. Recent writing projects include an essay for a publication on artist Ellen Cantor to be released by Capricious in late 2016 as well as a catalog essay for Mira Dancy’s exhibition at the Yuz Museum in Shanghai. Her writing has appeared in the Brooklyn Rail, Modern Painters, Hyperallergic, Artinfo.com, Cultured, Art + Auction, Pelican Bomb, ASAP Journal, and Jezebel. She contributed the essay “The Problem of the Overlooked Female Artist: An Argument for Enlivening a Stale Model of Discussion” to the exhibition catalog for “Lucid Gestures” at the McCagg Gallery at Barnard College. She is the director of Nicelle Beauchene Gallery in New York.

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