6:15 am By Maegan La Mala · Arts|Culture|Events|Los Angeles|Poetry · Comments Off
3 May 2011Regular readers will note that posting, tweeting and Facebooking has been light to non-existent. It’s not that there hasn’t been a lot going on : more empty words from Washington on immigration while politicians and the media have seemingly discovered the “R” section of the dictionary and want us to as well when it comes to the killing of Osama Bin Laden. Revenge, Relief, Remembrance, Reaction. I was engaged in some “R” words of my own. Reading y Relaxation.
Two Saturdays ago, I had the honor of performing in an amazing collaboration put together by the author and curator of talents, Charlie Vázquez. Resurrection, a series of performance and poetry pieces took place on Easter Eve at los Kabayitos Theater inside the Clemente Soto Velez complex of the Lower East Side of NYC. I shared space with Aravind Adyanthaya, J Skye Cabrera, Lola von Miramar (Larry La Fountain-Stokes), Carlos Manuel Rivera, Vanessa Martir, Charlie Vazquez, y Steven Maldonado. There was also visual art gracias to the Organization of Puerto Rican Artists, Inc. (O.P.Art) before and after the show featuring art by Everardus Bogardus , Giovanni Caravaggio, Pepe Villegas, Rafael Rosario-Laguna,
Luis Carle, and Peter Madero III. I only saw portions of the performance but there will be a video available shortly and honestly the warmth I received from the other artists and the full house really resurrected me as an artist. So thank you to all who came to the show including our own Bianca Laureano, fellow Latina artista Alicia Anabell, City Council Woman Melissa Mark Viverito, and Puerto Rican activist Pedro Julio Serrano.
From there it was onto Los Angeles. What was originally just supposed to be a vacation and participating in May Day LA, turned into my West Coast reading debut thanks to the amazing people behind the Make/shift Reclamation Tour, Jess Hoffman and Hilary Goldberg, who just happened to be in Southern Cali at the same time I was. I read a new poem at Cal State Los Angeles and share space with Jess, Hillary, Fabiola Sandoval, tk karakashian tunchez with Film/Video/Audio by Alexis Pauline Gumbs and imMEDIAte Justice.
Read more…
5:05 pm By BiancaLaureano · Arts|Culture|Media|Politics|Washington DC · 11 Comments
25 Apr 2011There has been a lot of emails I’ve received regarding the National Latino Museum and the advocacy around supporting the creation of such a space in Washington, DC. The proposed National Latino Museum would be on the National Mall where many Smithsonian museums are located.
I have to admit that I am torn about this museum for various reasons. Not because of the folks who are advocating for the space (Eva Longoria-Parker and Emilio Estefan, Jr. are some of the celebrity pull), yet because I grew up going to Smithsonian museums as a child. Growing up in Maryland, and for those of you unaware the metro system in the area connects DC, Maryland, and Virginia, my father is an artist and many weekends we would go as a family into the city and hang out on the Mall.
My parents were also big hippies and support(ed) the independence of Puerto Rico throughout my childhood, (they still do to an extent, but right now they are focusing on staying alive as older adults with various health issues they didn’t imagine). As a result, my parents made it clear to us that the Smithsonian museums, although free, open to the public, entertaining, and something we were taking advantage of because of those three things; it was a government (especially federal) building.
One of the reasons they shared this with us was because they wanted us to understand what it means that we are consuming art that is considered by the US government worthy of exhibition. There are a lot of problems and privileges that come with having art supported by a government that continues to cut funding for the arts in public schools. It’s actually something that I find ironic, especially when the museums began to implement the alarm/censors that go off when you get too close to a piece of art. Additional irony: officers as security in the museum. I understand protecting and making sure the pieces are not harmed/altered/bothered but having visitors under surveillance was a jarring experience and remains one to this day for me.
7:24 am By Maegan La Mala · Arts|history|Immigration|Media|travel · 3 Comments
22 Apr 2011Often when attending a performance, the role of the audience is as a passive witness. Their role is to observe and in some sense accept what is placed before them. Rarely is it a challenging space. Often there is an expectation of being catered to, of being told a story and walking away with new knowledge, but not a new experience. Scenes Unseen, an interactive, multimedia production produced by Irina Contreras and Nico Dacumos, slated to premiere at the National Queer Arts Festival on June 4, 2011 at the African American Arts & Culture Complex (in San Francisco), wants to change all that. They have created a work that touches on some of various intersections among immigration, detention, race, sexuality and gender. Irina & Nico were gracious enough to chat with me about the project, how it came to be, and why they chose to format the performance in a way that confronts not just the audience, but the performers as well.
Mala : What is Scenes Unseen about and who are the performers in this piece?
Irina : Scenes Unseen involves several narratives in which people have had to choose certain aspects of their identity such as within detention centers, immigration processing units, jails and many others over the course of history and today. In 2007, a woman named Victoria Arellano died in the San Pedro Detention Center. This incident as well as the response to the event led to the creation of Scenes Unseen. Nico’s poem, Hasta la Victoria, read in the beginning of the kickstarter video is based on for written for Victoria.
One act features Kristina Wong and Ms Barbie Q performing as themselves but looking at how they have engaged with their identities when they have entered spaces as women of color performers. Another act features choreography by Cherry Galette, texts and performance by Bamby Salcedo and Nenu that touch upon the 1931 Placita Raid in LA, the vigil for Victoria Arellano in 2007 and the physical act of crossing among other things. Byron Jose, an artist born in Guatemala, is doing a performance that looks at his own personal story while weaving what it’s like to work with people that call themselves “immigration activists”. He chose the place of the airplane since that is how so many people are deported to Guatemala in particular. Diego Gomez and Amitis Motevalli AKA the Sandninja are also performing and are a little different in that we have chosen them because they both are incredibly articulate in their ability to improv within the public that attends performance. And those are just a few of our performers!
Nico: Overall, the idea of using specific physical spaces fits into our ideas of interactive theater and finding ways to engage and challenge an audience by getting them out of their seats and having them “play” with us.
The audience will be led through many different parts of the theater, including the foyer, the parking lot, the backstage ramp and the theater proper. Part of how audience engagement has come up is in terms of thinking of what happens when we as artists try to challenge audiences or other things we see as oppressive. Oftentimes, a performance that is supposed to challenge, say, white fetishization, just results in more fetishization by white audiences.
Mala : So how do you challenge that second level of fetishization?
Irina & Nico : One possible way is to address is directly while it is happening in the performance by physically interacting with the audience.
Irina: I think its important to reflect upon it later, but also in the moment.
Nico: Another way is through structuring your performance in such a way that you are not just a brown queer performer that can be looked at and enjoyed, but a real live person that is talking to the audience and asking them to participate in the performance.
Irina: We recognize that we are only human and we will often interact in ways that fall into the ways we were socialized but we do also believe based on previous experiences working to further develop ourselves as people, performers, writer, teachers etc. that we have to challenge these norms more proactively.
Read more…
7:33 am By Maegan La Mala · Activism|Arts|Culture|Health|history|Justice|Los Angeles|Media|media justice · 1 Comment
19 Apr 2011
I am so excited to write about this because the Southern Cali portion of the tour includes so many people I love…yes myself included. So blessed that this will be my West Coast debut in such an amazingly well curated space.
For those that don’t know:
Makeshift Reclamation: New Feminist Art and Activism
A multimedia event showcasing how contemporary feminists are resisting and creating alternatives to not only gender-based oppression but also a collapsing economic system, climate crisis, and more. Featuring live readings, performances, and video works by artists and activists including Jessica Hoffmann, coeditor/copublisher of the independent, transnational, antiracist feminist magazine make/shift; Hilary Goldberg, whose new project, recLAmation, is a Super 8 experimental documentary/narrative film in which queer superheroes navigate a future beyond capitalism; and others.Upcoming Southern California Tour Dates 2011
Friday, 4/22, 8 p.m.: Echo Park Film Center
1200 N Alvarado St. (@ Sunset Blvd.) Los Angeles, CA
Feminist Media Night with imMEDIAte Justice
Live performances by Hilary Goldberg, Jessica Hoffmann, tk karakashian tunchez; Film/Video/Audio works by Alexis Pauline Gumbs, imMEDIAte Justice, POOR MagazineSaturday, 4/23, Time TBD: Cal State Long Beach
Chicana Feminisms Conference, USU Beach Auditorium,
1250 Bellflower Blvd., Long Beach, CA
Live performances by Irina Contreras, Fabiola Sandoval, tk karakashian tunchez, Hilary Goldberg, Jessica Hoffmann; Film/Video/Audio works by Alexis Pauline Gumbs, imMEDIAte justice, POOR MagazineMonday, 4/25, 3:15 pm, Cal State Los Angeles
U-SU Theater, Student Union, 5151 State University Drive, LA, CA
Live performances by Hilary Goldberg, Jessica Hoffmann, Maegan “la Mala” Ortiz, Fabiola Sandoval, tk karakashian tunchez; Film/Video/Audio: Alexis Pauline Gumbs, imMEDIAte Justice, POOR MagazineTuesday, 4/26, 7:30 pm, UC Santa Barbara
Multicultural Center Theater, 1504 Santa Barbara, CA
Live performances by Irina Contreras, Hilary Goldberg, Jessica Hoffmann, tk karakashian tunchez; Film/Video/Audio: Alexis Pauline Gumbs, imMEDIAte Justice, POOR Magazine
8:18 am By Maegan La Mala · Arts|literature|Media|New York City|Puerto Rico · Comments Off
17 Apr 2011
I am honored and blessed to be a part of this event and those who come can be blessed to by a most divine power.
Saturday April 23, 2011 from 6 to Midnight,
Performances start at 8pm
$5.00 DONATION
CASH BAR
RESURRECTION will be an evening of multimedia performance poetry by New York City’s Latin@ avant-garde elite, incorporating spoken word, dance, music, visual effects and art exhibit.
Presented by The Organization of Puerto Rican Artists, inc. O.P.Art
in collaboration with The Clemente Soto Vélez Cultural & Educational Center and HISPANIC PANIC!
At The Clemente Soto Vélez Cultural and Educational Center
107 Suffolk Street, New York NY
Room #309 and Teatro Kabayito
Between Rivington and Delancey,
F, J or M train to Delancey/Essex.
PRESENTING: POETRY, PERFORMANCE
Aravind Adyanthaya
J Skye Cabrera
Lola von Miramar (Larry La Fountain-Stokes)
Maegan La Mala Ortiz
Carlos Manuel Rivera
Vanessa Martir
Charlie Vazquez/Steven Maldonado
***WARNING*** THIS SHOW WILL CONTAIN ADULT THEMES
VISUAL ART EXHIBIT AND SALE
Showing recent works:
Everardus Bogardus , Andricel Yanela Peña,
Giovanni Caravaggio, Pepe Villegas, Rafael Rosario-Laguna,
Luis Carle, and Peter Madero III
The Organization of Puerto Rican Artists, Inc. (O.P.Art). Is a non-profit organization sponsored by The New York Foundation for the Arts, and is a 501(c)(3) Tax-exempt organization.
www.op-art.org
6:39 pm By BiancaLaureano · Arts|Culture|Internet|Media|New York City|Uncategorized · Comments Off
14 Apr 2011Often when we share what films we’ve reviewed and seen it requires VL readers to dish out some money to get to the theater or wait to rent (or find other ways) to see the film. This is the first time we are reviewing media that is FREE, that you can interact with online and whenever you have access.
East WillyB is a Latino centric web series created by Latinos, produced by Latinos, and casting Latinos. Created over coffee in Brooklny, creators Julia Ahamuda Grob and Yamin Sagel sat down and discussed what they wanted to create, who they wanted to reach, an what messages they wanted to send. Reaching the “new generation of Latinos” who are wired and plugged in, educated, and tired of one-dimensional stereotypes in the media was their focus. They began working on the scripts and character development and created East WillyB. This is a series that will be featured on the web and have various webisodes uploaded each week (so you don’t have to wait a full 7 days to get the next episode!). Each webisode is less than 5 minutes and has a multiplatform appraoch (i.e. animation, comedy, drama, etc.).
8:21 pm By BiancaLaureano · Arts|Colombia|Movies|Women · 4 Comments
9 Apr 2011The trailer for this documentary film about indigenous struggles in Colombia came to my attention earlier this week and I wanted to share it with VL readers as many of you may be interested in coordinating a screening or supporting the documentary. Below is the synopsis from the film website as well as the trailer which is in Spanish with English subtitles.
Colombia has 102 indigenous peoples that are currently caught in the crossfire between Latin America’s oldest guerrilla group and the army. WE WOMEN WARRIORS is a journey inside the war-torn native nations that are surviving Colombia’s internal armed conflict, guided by three valiant female leaders who illuminate salient examples of bravery and nonviolence.
WE WOMEN WARRIORS shares intimate stories of resistance and survival. Doris Puchana, 26, is a young mother who defends the vulnerable Awá population that grows coca leaves (the base for cocaine). Ludis Rodriguez, 34, a spunky Kankuamo widow, tells us from prison how she was framed and captured on false charges of rebellion. Tiny in height but tremendous in spirit, Flor Ilva Trochez, 36, is the first female leader for the Nasa tribal government. She leads peaceful demonstrations to fight for the removal of police barracks set up in the Nasa community that endanger civilians by placing them in the line of fire.
WE WOMEN WARRIORS is both personal and political. Despite her life being threatened after denouncing a massacre in her village, Doris does not abandon her tribal post. Once Ludis is freed she joins other widows in the struggle to move onward, coping and healing after systematic violence swept through her region. Meanwhile, Flor puts Colombia’s constitutional indigenous autonomy into practice and strives toward creating a territory free of armed fighters.
In 2009, Colombia’s Constitutional Court ruled that nearly one-third of its native peoples are in danger of extinction because of the warfare. WE WOMEN WARRIORS bears witness to human rights abuses and offers stories of female empowerment, unshakable courage and faith in the survival of indigenous culture.
WE WOMEN WARRIORS from Nicole Karsin on Vimeo.
9:30 am By BiancaLaureano · Arts|Events|New York City|sex|sexuality|youth · Comments Off
1 Apr 2011Miss Kings County 2011, is Carmen B. Mendoza, a Latina whose platform is de-stigmatizing getting tested for HIV. As part of her goal to begin discussions with Latinos and youth around HIV and topics of sexuality, she is coordinating a special exclusive screening of the documentary film LET’s TALK ABOUT SEX. This film is scheduled to air on TLC Saturday April 9, 2011. If you live in the NYC area you can check the film out before then.
Carmen has coordinated a panel of speakers to discuss the topics presented in the film, including director James Houston, media maker Aiesha Turman and yours truly will be on it as well! I’ve shared the stage with Carmen before and I’m super excited to have this opportunity again. She is an amazing young woman who is pushing the ideas and expectations of beauty pageants in a direction that it has never gone into before.
And before ya’ll anti-pageant folks get all up on this post, read up on what this program focuses on and remember there are many paths to doing this type of work, and this is one of them. If we are committed to reaching folks in various spaces, we have to recognize that doing that work may mean going to where they are, and we need folks doing this work everywhere, not just on the Internets!
Below is the press release for this event. RSVP at MissKingsCounty2011@gmail.com film is at 7pm at Center Stage 48 West 21st Street. Read more…
8:32 am By BiancaLaureano · Arts|Books|Culture|Dominican Republic|literature · 7 Comments
14 Mar 2011On Monday March 21, 2011 at 7 PM EST Dominican author Julia Alvarez, author of In The Time of the Butterflies, will be interviewed by Haitian author Edwidge Danticat (Krik? Krak!; The Farming Of Bones). As part of announcing and participating in this virtual event (unless you live in Miami then you can witness the interview in 3D at Books & Books), Algonquin Books has offered 3 VL readers a copy of Alvarez’s book.
If you are not familiar with the book In The Time of the Butterflies, it is a historical novel of the Maribal Sisters, known as Las Mariposas, during the Trujillo regime. It has been turned into a film starring Salma Hayek, Edward James Olmos, and Marc Anthony. I’ve used this text in teaching from Latina testimonios, women, art, and culture, to women and organizing. The text is also extremely accessible for younger readers.
As we usually do with our giveaway’s at VL, the first three folks that leave a comment and have a valid email address for us to reach them, receive the texts! Algonquin Books will ship internationally, so those of you who have not been able to participate in some giveaways because of your location, this giveaway is for you!
You may watch the live webcast Monday March 21 at 7PM at the Algonquin Book Club site. We are told that you may also sign in to chat with other viewers and there is also a reading guide if you choose to use this text for a book club.
12:37 pm By BiancaLaureano · Arts · 4 Comments
8 Mar 2011I’ve seen this trailer for the film PRECIOUS KNOWLEDGE for a while now and wanted to share with VL readers. A film by Dos Vatos Production, the film focuses on youth at Tucson High School enrolled in their Mexican American Studies Program and discusses the isolation and targeting of ethnic studies in the US. Here is what Dos Vatos shares about thie film:
Arizona lawmakers believe Tucson High School teachers are teaching victimization, racism, and revolution in their Ethnic Studies classes. Meanwhile Tucson Unified School District’s Mexican American Studies Department have data showing that almost 100% of their students graduate from high school and 82% attend college.
Why is studying Mexican culture and history controversial? What is Ethnic Studies? Why is the national dropout rate so high for Latino youth 50%?
The Dos Vatos Productions team filmed a year in the classroom to find out why the Mexican American Studies program is so popular with students, so misunderstood by the public, and discover what actually happens in the classroom.
PRECIOUS KNOWLEDGE illustrates an epic civil rights battle as brave students and teachers battle with lawmakers and public opinion in an effort to keep their classes alive.
Check out the trailer below, and if you want to find out more visit the Precious Knowledge facebook page.
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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