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Kids’ Halloween party

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Free and open to the public! Come in costume.
Photo portrait booth!

Trick or Treating!!

Fun sensory games:

TOUCH: guts, brain, eyeballs, and more!
HEAR: Play our spooky Theremin!
TASTE: Bob for an apple, and have it candied… in blood!
SEE: Hand-print spider craft project

3:30-4:30pm Free shuttle to Mt. Olivet Cemetary gates: the starting point of the Maspeth Lions Club Halloween Ragamuffin Parade
Exhibitions also on view 2-6pm:
Maybe I’m Amazed
Things with Claws

 

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Things with Claws

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Things with claws don’t just scratch us but get deep inside of us.  They cling to our bodies and we walk around simultaneously burdened and accompanied by them, never alone, always with this thing attached to us. J McDonald presents some of these things as Part II of the A Way From Home project.

 

 

Herman Kolgen and Nicolas Bernier

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As part of Quebec Digital, New York (October 22 – 25), Elektra and FuturePerfect co-present two audiovisual masters from Montreal — Herman Kolgen and Nicolas Bernier. Kolgen performs his acclaimed Dust, an audiovisual masterpiece inspired by Man Ray’s photograph “Elevage de Poussiere.” Concerned with giving form to what the eye cannot capture, Kolgen creates a spectacular world from mere dust particles, revealing their fibrous networks, deep structures and hypnotic complexities. At the threshold between the invisible and the visible, Dust becomes intoxicating and the video surface a veritable accumulation of x-rays. Simultaneously emotional and conceptual, audiences will never see or hear dust again in the same way.

Nicolas Bernier’s Frequencies (synthetic variations) is a part of an ongoing process that draws upon basic generative systems. Performed in real-time, this is Bernier’s first laptop performance, a dialogue between sound, light and material. Frequencies consists of pre-written sequences of synthetic sounds with light synchronized within small acrylic structures; a digital work visually translated into physical elements. With incredible precision and minimal means, Bernier creates a mesmerizing work where audiences can either hear the light or see the sound.

 Click here for more info.

Bloch Party

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BLOCH PARTY with Packet Biweekly
and a giant Swiss log
at Onderdonk House
18-20 Flushing Ave, Queens, NY 11385
October 17, open house beginning 1pm,
performances and magazine launch 4-6pm

What does a 100-year old Swiss log on a journey around the world have to do with New York City’s oldest Dutch farmhouse? Come find out on Saturday, October 17! Onderdonk House hosts Bloch for an afternoon of family-friendly activities, with tours of the historic 18th century house. An afternoon of refreshments, readings, and musical performance marks the launch of Packet Biweekly’s special log edition. A campfire on the house grounds at sunset will close the evening.

Tamar Ettun: Mauve Bird with Yellow Teeth Red Feathers Green Feet and a Rose Belly, PART BLUE

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Mauve Bird with Yellow Teeth Red Feathers Green Feet and a Rose Belly, PART BLUE is a performance and immersive psychological landscape by Tamar Ettun and her performance group The Moving Company. Using dance, sound, vast colors, and everyday object assemblages, Ettun seeks to locate a bodily impulse for empathy. This marks the first part of a performance tetralogy, each associated with colors and seasons (Blue/Winter, Red/Spring, Yellow/Summer, Orange/Fall). A new installment will premiere each year until the completion of the project in 2018.

PART BLUE starts as a still formal sculpture, in which the movers are bound to one another as an apparatus made of humans and objects. The elements lean against one another, so the connections among objects and humans are necessary but tenuous; if anyone were to let go, the machine would collapse on itself entirely. The performers begin to mirror each other’s movements, eventually leaving their places in the system. Each one develops her own unique set of repetitive movements emanating from her object. This piece confronts our own mechanized psychological defenses with accumulated gestures. Through contradiction and complement in stillness and movement, viewers are invited to enter the moving installation, while the various scenes and the performers/movers mirror each other in search of primal empathy.

This performance follows Tamar Ettun’s solo exhibition at Fridman Gallery in NYC, featuring sculptural and video portions of this project.

The Moving Company performers: Maia Karo, Laura Bernstein , Sabrina Shapiro , Rebecca Pristoop , Tina Wang , Mor Mendel, Tamar Ettun. Costume design by Ella Dagan

Surface Matters

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Knockdown Center is pleased to present Surface Matters, an exhibition of recent work by Brett Day Windham, Carolyn Salas, Daria Irincheeva, Katie Bell, and Leah Dixon, curated by Holly Shen and Samantha Katz. Each artist employs the use of common construction and building materials, as well as salvaged or found objects to create works that address sculptural issues related to perception and presence of the object, and the tactile and spatial elements of its physical form. The works are linked through their exploration of familiar materials, which have been deconstructed through repetitive motions or tasks and reconfigured to appear transformed. At the same time, this undoing and redoing exposes a disconnect between visual apprehension and the physical reality of object surfaces that often mimic more refined materials. Situated within the industrial architecture of the Knockdown Center – a sprawling converted factory space composed of brick, steel and massive timber beams – the works on view here address their environment, underscoring the viewer’s shifting perception of the texture, shape, weight, and volume of each object.

Katie Bell collects and disassembles a range of raw building materials, recombining them into painterly compositions. Structural elements typically hidden from plain sight, such as plaster, expanding foam filling, and wood planks are piled and stacked at precarious angles, reversing their utility as functional supports. Surfaces like linoleum, ceiling tiles, and wood veneers are gouged and torn, exposing what lies beneath these facades.

Carolyn Salas also manipulates industrial processes and materials to explore the potential conflict between surface and form. Cutout No. 2, from the artist’s recent series’ of free-standing planar sculptures, is a flattened wall or divide, which has been rendered obsolete by its large, negative ‘cut-out’ space. The structure betrays its heavy, dense form by appearing two dimensional and lightweight.

Working with basic building materials like brick, wood, paint samples, cement, and construction paper, Daria Irincheeva’s work addresses cycles of development and destruction inherent within complex systems. Her sculptures are representations of the rhythm of building, collapse, and repair. In Morning Composition #072, wooden rods poised like drum sticks lean on bubble wrap on the floor below a gridded array of paint samples mounted to canvas. The muted pastel swatches can be reshuffled endlessly, like the continuous repairs of a fixer-upper home. This delicate gradient rests for the moment in this careful design yet retains a provisional quality of latent transformation.

Leah Dixon’s work is the result of what she describes as gestures of aggression and play upon her materials, which include wood, leather, rubber, and ready-made objects like buckets and baskets. Reminiscent of athletic or playground equipment and the repetitive movements conjured by their implied use, these constructs point to the body as a site to be developed or improved upon.

Brett Day Windham accumulates the detritus of urban environments through habitual walks, taking predetermined routes and collecting items from each passage, such as discarded dime bags, broken earbuds, mussel shells, feathers, floor sweepings, recycled magazines. Paris Flanerie (2015), a large wall-hanging tapestry, is comprised of objects collected in Paris over the course of two months and arranged by color. A detailed map depicting each of the artists’ daily walks accompanies the work, with a color-code for Paris’ 20 arrondissements corresponding to the color groups of these found objects.

Windham’s practice of using cast off materials for continual construction—in this case a kind of oblique storytelling and mapping—is echoed in the approaches of Dixon, Irincheeva, Salas, and Bell, whose work comments on the dynamics of urban fabrication, where new elements are constantly being circulated, erected, and demolished.

Maybe I’m Amazed

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Maybe I’m Amazed is an exhibition at Knockdown Center, curated by Sorry Archive. The groundwork for the design comes from Batty Langley’s 1724 writings in Newgate Prison, which remained unrealized until today. Langley, a once well-respected designer of elaborate gardens, fell out of favor after he became involved with freemasonry and esoteric speculations. Hs his predictive theories for sustaining plant life heightened to fixation, his ambitions for unearthly terrain led to experimentations with new soil materials and magnetic drainage; manipulating light spectra, and the gravitational effects of various planetary systems. Although he died broke, Langley’s books were enormously influential for George Washington’s Mount Vernon and other plantations in Britain’s American colonies. Thanks to Spangler’s Candy Company for sample soil. On view weekends 2-6pm October 31 through November 22.

With never-before exhibited work from:
Reade Bryan
Chris Oh
Nicole Reber
Matthew Speedy

Oct 30, opening reception 6-9:30
Meat sculpture reception gleefully provided by Craig Bowden and Michael Merck.
Drop-in séance in the back room with Joan Carra and a 100-year old Swiss log.

Nov 21-22, closing reception / simultaneous events
Tragedy and Healing in Nantucky
Ray Smith Studio’s Chicken Shit Bingo
Pancake Feed

A Way From Home

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A mobile art project brought to you by J McDonald. Originally designed as a home for ‘environmental artists’ to use in realizing projects sited in a new suburban development in Charlotte, North Carolina, J McDonald refers to the industrial and agricultural histories of so many American cities that are being replaced by homogeneous suburban sprawl. It is constructed from an industrial steel tank from a local defunct furniture finishing factory, and pre-fab cheap housing materials like fake brick and engineered siding. The trailer’s mixture of styles and functions is an absurd attempt to fit an incongruous and fluid context.

The trailer will be host to a series of pop-up art installations, performances, and more.

– October 3 – 17, J McDonald presents his recent sculptures: ‘New Environments for the Modern Creature’
– October 24 – November 1, “Things with Claws
John Furgason
Serban Ionescu
Carlos Little
Olga Sophie Kauppinen
J McDonald
Jonah Emerson-Bell
– November 7 – 15, Evelyn C. LewisPollinis
November 21, Ray Smith Studio’s “Chicken Shit Bingo
November 22,Pancake Feed
December 12 – 20, Katie Shima, Threaded Trajectory 
 January 9, Nick Normal’s Temporary Allegiance flag workshop for the Autonomous Nation of THANKYOUTHANKYOUTHANKYOU

Bloch

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BLOCH is a global and multidisciplinary project by Swiss artist duo Com&Com (Marcus Gossolt / Johannes M. Hedinger).

The Bloch is part of an old carnival tradition from the Swiss region of Appenzell. When the last spruce tree is felled in the winter, the trunk – known as the Bloch – is pulled by twenty men from the village of Urnäsch to Herisau and back. At the end of this one-day procession, the trunk is sold to the highest bidder in the village square of Urnäsch to be processed into shingles or furniture that bring good luck.

In 2011, Com&Com bought the Bloch and have been taking it on a journey around the globe, with stops on every continent before returning to Switzerland.

Bloch has hosted performances, processions, conferences, exhibitions, concerts, and more…. among its many adventures, it was used as a printing press in St. Gallen, has appeared on TV at a TED talk in Zurich, Bloch visited Berlin, stopped at Art Basel, ZKM in Karlsruhe. Bloch traveled to Asia to the Juming Museum in Taiwan, the 9th Shanghai Biennale, the Japan Creative Center in Singapore. Then Bloch took a tour of North Dakota, where it visited the geographical center of North America and spent the summer at a Native American reservation.

BLOCH in NYC 2015
– October 10, 2-6pm. Silent OH! at Silent Barn
– October 15  Hymnalogue at Vital Joint
– October 17, 4-6pm Bloch Party at Onderdonk House
– October 24, 10:30am Bloch Parade from Onderdonk House to Knockdown Center
– October 30, 7:30-9:30pm Séance with Joan Carra and opening of Maybe I’m Amazed
– November 21 BHQFU Comedy Night: Tragedy and Healing in Nantucky
– November 22 Thanksgiving Pancake Feed
– December 12 – January 10 Bloch Show: exhibition – performance – conference

Collapse

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NYPAC, the New York Performance Artists Collective, is pleased to present COLLAPSE (or, falling flat), an evening of curated performances at the Knockdown Center on October 3rd. The program is inspired by the legacy of failure in contemporary art, dance, and performance, as manifested in physical gestures (falling over, misstepping), unrealizable conceptual frameworks, and frustrated ideological objectives. COLLAPSE adopts failure as an artistic model that is itself past its prime. In a context where corporations can be too big to fail, how do technology and politics affect the possibilities of artistic acts of resistance, of therapeutic engagement? In what new ways can we disappoint each other?

COLLAPSE opened with a looped screening of a new video work by Caitlin Baucom. In Psycho/geographic, Baucom represents the body as a series of pathologized impulses, broken narratives, and failed social corrections. Lauren Bakst followed with a performance that combined elements constantly developing in her work: choreographed movements, procedural systems, and dryly humorous shout-outs to internet and pop culture. Sara Grace Powell presented a new technologically interrupted work about the vertical integration/synergy of the performance art market. The evening closed with a performance by Max Steele titled Mad Girl, a punk show about hell and feminism and mental illness.

Lauren Bakst is an artist whose works takes the forms of choreography, writing, video, and performance. A trained dancer, her work places the skilled body and choreographic form in conversation with questions around subjectivity, affect, memory, and history. She regularly collaborates with Yuri Masnyj—their works have been presented at Pioneer Works and The Drawing Center. Her previous works have been seen at Pieter (LA), CATCH, Center for Performance Research, Dixon Place, Brooklyn Arts Exchange, Abrons Arts Center, Draftwork at Danspace Project, and Movement Research at Judson Church, among others. Lauren was a 2014 danceWEB fellow at ImpulsTanz, the Fall 2014 Research & Development Fellow at the New Museum, and is a 2014-16 Open Sessions artist at The Drawing Center. Lauren is the Managing Editor of the Movement Research Performance Journal and a Contributing Editor to BOMB Magazine. She teaches at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia, PA where she also curates Knowing Dance More, an artist-driven lecture series. As a performer, Lauren has most recently worked with Gerard & Kelly and Michelle Boulé.

Caitlin Baucom is a Brooklyn based performer and composer, invested in parsing fear and making a mess. Her interdisciplinary works have been presented at Defibrillator Gallery, High Concept Laboratories, MDW Fair, Southside Hub of Production, Mana Contemporary, and Cock & Bull Theater (Chicago), Stockholm Fringe Festival (Stockholm), Dimanche Rouge Festival (Paris), Naherholung Sternchen (Berlin), Galerie KUB (Leipzig), Verge Fair (Miami), and ABC No Rio, Panoply Performance Laboratory, Fountain Art Fair, LUMEN Festival, The Slipper Room, Performance Mix Festival, HERE Arts, Good Work Gallery, and Dixon Place (NYC). She has work and writing published in Emergency INDEX: Volume 3, Bad at Sports, and Incident Magazine, and been in residence at Contemporary Artists Center and SOHO20 Chelsea in New York, and the ACC-Galerie in Weimar, Germany. In 2015 she is performing as French poet Renée Vivien in The Ladies Almanack, a feature film by Daviel Shy, and was shortlisted for the Artslant’s Georgia Fee residency in Paris. She works as a performer for the Museum of Modern Art, and holds an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and BA from Evergreen.

Sara Grace Powell is a multimedia artist, recalcitrant, and a virgo. In 2008, she abandoned a New Age Cult in Los Angeles and went on to receive her BFA from Barnard in 2014. And here is one other possibly pseudo-biographical sentence written for virtual publication 2015.

Max Steele is a performer and writer based in Brooklyn. He has presented work at the New Museum, Deitch Projects, BAM, Joe’s Pub, La MAMA, Envoy Enterprises, PPOW Gallery, The Afterglow Festival in Provincetown and the Queens Museum of Art. He writes the psychedelic porno poetry zine Scorcher, and his writing has been featured in Dossier Journal, Spunk [arts] Magazine, East Village Boys, Birdsong, Vice and Best Gay Stories 2014. He was an Artist in Residence at BAX/Brooklyn Arts Exchange from 2012-2014.

NYPAC, the New York Performance Artists Collective, is a non-profit organization dedicated to advancing the production, accessibility, and scholarship of performative and intermedia art. NYPAC is made possible with the generous support of the Rockefeller Brothers Fund. COLLAPSE is kindly hosted by the Knockdown Center.

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