News


28 Feb
Thank You
  

 

The B-Word Project’s final event was November 17, 2012. For the previous 18 months, the B-Word Project brought musicians, performance artists, journalists, choreographers, authors, critics, film-makers, and attorneys to California State University Long Beach to engage students and our general community in thinking about censorship. While the B-Word Project is over, we invite you to enjoy the B-Word Project website and the videos, blogs, and readings available here.

The Carpenter Center was proud to coordinate the B-Word Project, creating the paths across our campus for interdisciplinary learning. We are grateful to the Association of Performing Arts Presenters and the Doris Duke Charitable Trust for sponsoring the B-Word Project. Thank you to all who took part in B-Word Project activities and performances.

We will be offering similar programs in the future, to continue to make the arts accessible and intriguing for our campus and our community.

 

 
01 Oct
In Collaboration: Bill T. Jones and CSULB Dept. of Dance
  

In Collaboration: Bill T. Jones and CSULB Dept. of Dance Fri/Sat, Nov. 16-17, 2012 at 8pm

Internationally renowned choreographer Bill T. Jones joins the Carpenter Center and CSULB Department of Dance for the Southern California premiere of his landmark piece, Reading Mercy and the Artificial Nigger—a work inspired by a Flannery O’Connor short story—that transcends boundaries as it mixes dance, literature and race.

The finest dancers from the CSULB Department of Dance have been selected to perform the work, in an evening that kicks off three premiere works by noted CSULB faculty choreographers—Gerald Casel, Sophie Monat, and Andrew Vaca.

Note: Image is of Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance company in Reading Mercy and the Artificial Nigger. The performance at Carpenter Center will be performed entirely by CSULB students.

 

 
27 Aug
NEA 4 - Panel discussion
  

 

Thursday, 27 September 2012 1:00pm

NEA 4 - Panel discussion with Karl Manheim (Loyola University Law School and ACLU) and Dr. Craig Smith (CSULB Center for First Amendment Studies) plus three artists of the NEA 4.

FREE EVENT RSVP NOW

Related Readings: The New Religious Right vs the National Endowment for the Arts

 

 
16 Jul
NEA 4 at CSULB
  

The "NEA Four" (Karen Finley, Tim Miller, John Fleck, and Holly Hughes), were performance artists whose proposed grants from t he United States government's National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) were revoked by John Frohnmayer in June 1990. The grants were overtly vetoed on the   basis of subject matter even after the artists had successfully passed through a peer review process. The case made its way to the United States Supreme Court in National Endowment for the Arts versus Finley. The artists won their case in 1993 and were awarded amounts equal to the grant money in question. In response, the NEA, under pressure from Congress, stopped funding individual artists.

The artists will be at CSULB on September 27 & 28, 2012, participating in B-Word Project activities.

Performances

Holly Hughes/Tim Miller - Thurs, Sept. 27, 2012 at 8pm

John Fleck/Karen Finley - Fri, Sept. 28, 2012 at 8pm

Lecture

NEA 4- Panel discussion - Thursday, September 27 at 1pm

 

 

 

Thurs, Sept. 27, 2012 at 8pm

Get set for an evening of outrageous satire, unrestrained passion, and unapologetic viewpoints as performance artists Holly Hughes and Tim Miller each share their latest contemplations on contemporary society—shaking audiences out of their complacency and provoking movement and thought.

In Sapphic Sampler Platter, Hughes unleashes her experiences—from being a poster child for the cultural wars and a fellow traveler at the WOW café (a home for wayward girls), to a feminist cooperative for feminists who were kicked out of other feminist groups for having the wrong haircut and her misadventures in academia. It’s a middle life crisis in the key of canine, shot through with poetry and biting wit.

In Sex/Body/Self, Tim Miller shares excerpts from his work and speaks about the role performance plays in constellating identity in this highly stimulating, fiercely funny, and opinionated rant with performance about identity, the culture wars and queer strategies for the future.

TICKETS: Holly Hughes/Tim Miller

 

 

 

Fri, Sept. 28, 2012 at 8pm

John Fleck takes the audience on a hair-raising roller coaster ride with a pair of Mad Women: Judy Garland & John Fleck's mother, Josephine. Buckle up and hold on tight as they twist, wind & sing their way through the cultural mindset of the late 1960s!

Plus Catch 23: Broken Negative, a work in progress by Karen Finley where she uncovers and reveals the desperation of making meaning out of trauma creatively. The piece—part memory, part emotional individuation, part research and discovery—revisits the inspiration of her earlier iconic   works that confronted subjects such as abuse, female rage, violence, homophobia and the outsider.

TICKETS: John Fleck/Karen Finley

 

Carpenter Performing Arts Center

 

6200 Atherton St., Long Beach , CA 90815 (near Palo Verde, on the CSULB campus)

(562) 985-7000

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18 Mar
CALIFORNIA RUSSIAN DOCUMENTARY FILM FESTIVAL: Three films by Marina Goldovskaya and panel discussion
  

RUSSIAN WOMEN’S PERSONAL JOURNEYS IN THE MOTHERLAND 
Marina Goldovskaya, one of best internationally-known woman directors, was the first Russian filmmaker to introduce a personal diary style in the documentary genre to describe the social changes and their effects on the lives of the people. These changes have made Anna Politkovskaya, one of Russia’s bravest journalists.

 

The late Journalist Anna Politkovskaya will be featured in three films by Marina Goldovskaya.

Anna Stepanovna Politkovskaya   (1958-2006) was a Russian journalist, author, and human rights activist known for her opposition to the Chechen conflict.

 

 

This event is sponsored in collaboration with

 

 

 

 
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