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	<title>ISSUE Project Room &#187; Announcements</title>
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	<link>http://www.issueprojectroom.org</link>
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		<title>Closing the Can Factory, Opening 110 Livingston</title>
		<link>http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2012/01/25/closing-the-can-factory-opening-110-livingston/</link>
		<comments>http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2012/01/25/closing-the-can-factory-opening-110-livingston/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Jan 2012 16:05:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>andrew</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[110 Livingston]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Announcements]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.issueprojectroom.org/?p=10641</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<div class="header-img" style="width:300px; height: auto;">

<img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-10645" title="Our lovely Can Factory sign" src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/MG_1763-e1327508442155.jpg" alt="" style="width:300px; height: auto;"/>

</div>

Check out some photos from last weekend's final concert at the Old American Can Factory!

There's still time left to <a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/support-us/become-a-member/">become a member</a> and receive<strong> two free tickets to any <a title="Gaudeamus Muziekweek New York: Jan. 25 – 28, 2012" href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2012/01/06/gaudeamus-muziekweek-new-york/">Gaudeamus Muziekweek New York</a> concert</strong>, <em>in addition</em> to the usual two free tickets, discounts, and other thank-you gifts we're offering toward membership. So don't delay – <a title="Become a Member" href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/support-us/become-a-member/">check out the great benefits </a>of a membership to ISSUE Project Room.

<div style="width: 180px; margin: 10px auto;"><a href="https://npo.networkforgood.org/Donate/Donate.aspx?npoSubscriptionId=1002039&#38;code=Home%20Page" target="_blank"><img src="https://npo.networkforgood.org/Donate/Skins/102302/images/DarkBlue.gif" alt="" /></a></div>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="header-img"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-10645" title="Our lovely Can Factory sign" src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/MG_1763-e1327508442155.jpg" alt="" width="550" height="366" /></div>
<p>We&#8217;ve posted some photos from last week&#8217;s final concert in the Old American Can Factory, featuring Talibam!, Jonathan Kane&#8217;s February, and Tony Conrad &amp; MV Carbon. It was a surreal experience, with giant eyeball projections, minimalist blues, no-school rap, and an hour-long drone set (by which time most of us were sitting on the floor) to close out an amazing four years in our beloved Gowanus Can Factory.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2012/01/06/gaudeamus-muziekweek-new-york/"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-10343" title="gaudeamus" src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/gaudeamus-240x300.jpg" alt="" width="240" height="300" /></a>But we&#8217;re looking ahead: this week, we&#8217;ve brought one of the top international contemporary music festivals to New York for the first time, in Gaudeamus Muziekweek New York. These artists straddle electronic, chamber, orchestral, and conceptual music with pieces involving everything from 100 metronomes (<a title="at 110 Livingston – Gaudeamus Muziekweek New York: Iktus Percussion + Ensemble MAE" href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/12/19/at-110-livingston-gaudeamus-muziekweek-new-york-iktus-percussion-ensemble-mae/">Gyorgy Ligeti&#8217;s &#8220;Poème Symphonique,&#8221; performed by Iktus Percussion</a>) to Yannis Kyriakides&#8217;s audiovisual compositions, juxtaposing projections of text with music performed by his own <a title="at 110 Livingston — Gaudeamus Muziekweek New York: Composer portrait of Yannis Kyriakides by Ensemble MAE + International Contemporary Ensemble" href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/12/19/at-110-livingston-gaudeamus-muziekweek-new-york-composer-portrait-of-yannis-kyriakides-by-ensemble-mae-international-contemporary-ensemble/">Ensemble MAE with the International Contemporary Ensemble</a>.</p>
<p>There&#8217;s still time left to <a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/support-us/become-a-member/">become a member</a> and receive<strong> two free tickets to any <a title="Gaudeamus Muziekweek New York: Jan. 25 – 28, 2012" href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2012/01/06/gaudeamus-muziekweek-new-york/">Gaudeamus Muziekweek New York</a> concert</strong>, <em>in addition</em> to the usual two free tickets, discounts, and other thank-you gifts we&#8217;re offering toward membership. So don&#8217;t delay – <a title="Become a Member" href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/support-us/become-a-member/">check out the great benefits </a>of a membership to ISSUE Project Room.</p>
<p>Photos from the final Can Factory concert are after the jump!</p>
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href="http://a6.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/s720x720/397277_430775129998_58496764998_1618112_1106456846_n.jpg" rel="430774574998fp-gallery" title="Photo by Bradley Buehring"><i class="fbthumb" style="background-image:url(http://photos-f.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/397277_430775129998_58496764998_1618112_1106456846_a.jpg);"></i></a><a id="" class="fbMedThumb viewable" href="http://a4.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc7/s720x720/429345_430775149998_58496764998_1618113_1078111363_n.jpg" rel="430774574998fp-gallery" title="Photo by Bradley Buehring"><i class="fbthumb" style="background-image:url(http://photos-d.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc7/429345_430775149998_58496764998_1618113_1078111363_a.jpg);"></i></a><a id="" class="fbMedThumb viewable" href="http://a1.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc7/s720x720/402093_430775194998_58496764998_1618114_246915332_n.jpg" rel="430774574998fp-gallery" title="Photo by Bradley Buehring"><i class="fbthumb" 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style="background-image:url(http://photos-f.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/419891_430775299998_58496764998_1618119_513725812_a.jpg);"></i></a><a id="" class="fbMedThumb viewable" href="http://a3.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/s720x720/418896_430775324998_58496764998_1618120_175733573_n.jpg" rel="430774574998fp-gallery" title="Photo by Bradley Buehring"><i class="fbthumb" style="background-image:url(http://photos-c.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/418896_430775324998_58496764998_1618120_175733573_a.jpg);"></i></a><a id="" class="fbMedThumb viewable" href="http://a7.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/s720x720/419552_430775364998_58496764998_1618122_336075306_n.jpg" rel="430774574998fp-gallery" title="Photo by Bradley Buehring"><i class="fbthumb" style="background-image:url(http://photos-g.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/419552_430775364998_58496764998_1618122_336075306_a.jpg);"></i></a><a id="" class="fbMedThumb viewable" href="http://sphotos.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-snc7/s720x720/419569_430775339998_58496764998_1618121_680754093_n.jpg" rel="430774574998fp-gallery" title="Photo by Bradley Buehring"><i class="fbthumb" style="background-image:url(http://photos-e.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc7/419569_430775339998_58496764998_1618121_680754093_a.jpg);"></i></a><a id="" class="fbMedThumb viewable" href="http://a1.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/s720x720/421311_430775394998_58496764998_1618123_551460854_n.jpg" rel="430774574998fp-gallery" title="Photo by Bradley Buehring"><i class="fbthumb" style="background-image:url(http://photos-a.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/421311_430775394998_58496764998_1618123_551460854_a.jpg);"></i></a><a id="" class="fbMedThumb viewable" href="http://a4.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/s720x720/397800_430775429998_58496764998_1618124_75927891_n.jpg" rel="430774574998fp-gallery" title="Photo by @[100000548872442:2048:Bradley Buehring]"><i class="fbthumb" style="background-image:url(http://photos-d.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/397800_430775429998_58496764998_1618124_75927891_a.jpg);"></i></a><a id="" class="fbMedThumb viewable" href="http://a6.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc7/s720x720/427737_430775489998_58496764998_1618125_1098696229_n.jpg" rel="430774574998fp-gallery" title="Photo by Bradley Buehring"><i class="fbthumb" style="background-image:url(http://photos-f.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc7/427737_430775489998_58496764998_1618125_1098696229_a.jpg);"></i></a><a id="" class="fbMedThumb viewable" href="http://a8.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/s720x720/421494_430775534998_58496764998_1618126_387937878_n.jpg" rel="430774574998fp-gallery" title="Photo by Bradley Buehring"><i class="fbthumb" style="background-image:url(http://photos-h.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/421494_430775534998_58496764998_1618126_387937878_a.jpg);"></i></a><a id="" class="fbMedThumb viewable" 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Buehring]"><i class="fbthumb" style="background-image:url(http://photos-g.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/423526_430775614998_58496764998_1618129_390841961_a.jpg);"></i></a><a id="" class="fbMedThumb viewable" href="http://sphotos.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ash4/s720x720/408153_430775639998_58496764998_1618130_1331218795_n.jpg" rel="430774574998fp-gallery" title="Photo by @[100000548872442:2048:Bradley Buehring]"><i class="fbthumb" style="background-image:url(http://photos-d.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/408153_430775639998_58496764998_1618130_1331218795_a.jpg);"></i></a><a id="" class="fbMedThumb viewable" href="http://a6.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc7/s720x720/396585_430775664998_58496764998_1618131_464142685_n.jpg" rel="430774574998fp-gallery" title="Photo by Bradley Buehring"><i class="fbthumb" style="background-image:url(http://photos-f.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc7/396585_430775664998_58496764998_1618131_464142685_a.jpg);"></i></a><a id="" class="fbMedThumb viewable" href="http://sphotos.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ash4/s720x720/419543_430775694998_58496764998_1618132_1416473438_n.jpg" rel="430774574998fp-gallery" title="Photo by Bradley Buehring"><i class="fbthumb" style="background-image:url(http://photos-h.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/419543_430775694998_58496764998_1618132_1416473438_a.jpg);"></i></a><a id="" class="fbMedThumb viewable" href="http://a2.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/s720x720/403296_430775714998_58496764998_1618133_125180167_n.jpg" rel="430774574998fp-gallery" title="Photo by @[100000548872442:2048:Bradley Buehring]"><i class="fbthumb" style="background-image:url(http://photos-b.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/403296_430775714998_58496764998_1618133_125180167_a.jpg);"></i></a><a id="" class="fbMedThumb viewable" href="http://a3.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/s720x720/419171_430775739998_58496764998_1618134_680187838_n.jpg" rel="430774574998fp-gallery" title="Photo by @[100000548872442:2048:Bradley Buehring]"><i class="fbthumb" style="background-image:url(http://photos-c.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/419171_430775739998_58496764998_1618134_680187838_a.jpg);"></i></a></div></div></p>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Gaudeamus Muziekweek New York: Jan. 25 &#8211; 28, 2012</title>
		<link>http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2012/01/06/gaudeamus-muziekweek-new-york/</link>
		<comments>http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2012/01/06/gaudeamus-muziekweek-new-york/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 06 Jan 2012 21:12:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>andrew</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Announcements]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fundraising]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.issueprojectroom.org/?p=10171</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2012/01/06/gaudeamus-muziekweek-new-york/" name="Gaudeamus Muziekweek New York: Jan. 25 - 28"><img src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/gaudeamus_web-300x184.jpg" /></a>

There's still time left to <a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/support-us/become-a-member/">become a member</a> and receive<strong> two free tickets to any <a title="Gaudeamus Muziekweek New York: Jan. 25 – 28, 2012" href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2012/01/06/gaudeamus-muziekweek-new-york/">Gaudeamus Muziekweek New York</a> concert</strong>, <em>in addition</em> to the usual two free tickets, discounts, and other thank-you gifts we're offering toward membership. So don't delay – <a title="Become a Member" href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/support-us/become-a-member/">check out the great benefits </a>of a membership to ISSUE Project Room.

Check out a few sample tracks from some of the artists who are performing at Gaudeamus Muziekweek, hosted on the Free Music Archive.

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<p>Help support ISSUE's move to 110 Livingston – donate today!</p>

<div style="width: 180px; margin: 10px auto;"><a href="https://npo.networkforgood.org/Donate/Donate.aspx?npoSubscriptionId=1002039&#38;code=Home%20Page" target="_blank"><img src="https://npo.networkforgood.org/Donate/Skins/102302/images/DarkBlue.gif" alt="" /></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="header-img"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-10334" title="gaudeamus_web" src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/gaudeamus_web.jpg" alt="" width="550" height="338" />Gyorgy Ligeti preparing &#8220;Poème Symphonique&#8221; (Tjerk van der Meulen, Rotterdam)</div>
<div class="schedule" style="width: 240px; font-family: 'Courier New', Courier, monospace; font-size: 14px; float: left; margin: 10px;">
<div style="font-weight: bold; text-align: center; padding: none 10px;" align="center">All performances at<br />
ISSUE Project Room<br />
110 Livingston Street,<br />
Downtown Brooklyn<br />
Doors open at 7:30;<br />
performances begin at 8pm</div>
<h3 style="background-color: #b00; color: #fff; font-size: 13px; margin-bottom: 5px; font-weight: normal; padding: 10px;"><a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/12/19/at-110-livingston-gaudeamus-muziekweek-new-york-wet-ink-ensemble/">Wednesday, Jan. 25 at 8 pm</a></h3>
<div style="padding: none 10px;">Wet Ink Ensemble gives U.S. premiere of 2011 Gaudeamus Prize-Winner Yoshi Onishi&#8217;s <em>&#8220;Départ dans…&#8221;</em> <a href="https://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/218826"><strong>Buy Tickets</strong></a></div>
<p><a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/12/19/at-110-livingston-gaudeamus-muziekweek-new-york-electronic-music-wouter-snoei-matthew-ostrowski-r-we-who-r-we/"><br />
</a></p>
<h3 style="background-color: #b00; color: #fff; font-size: 13px; margin-bottom: 5px; font-weight: normal; padding: 10px;"><a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/12/19/at-110-livingston-gaudeamus-muziekweek-new-york-electronic-music-wouter-snoei-matthew-ostrowski-r-we-who-r-we/">Thursday, Jan. 26 at 8 pm</a></h3>
<div style="padding: none 10px;">Electronic music, with Wouter Snoei, Matthew Ostrowski, and R WE WHO R WE (Philip White &amp; Ted Hearne) <a href="https://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/218829"><strong>Buy Tickets</strong></a></div>
<p><a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/12/19/at-110-livingston-gaudeamus-muziekweek-new-york-composer-portrait-of-yannis-kyriakides-by-ensemble-mae-international-contemporary-ensemble/"><br />
</a></p>
<h3 style="background-color: #b00; color: #fff; font-size: 13px; margin-bottom: 5px; font-weight: normal; padding: 10px;"><a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/12/19/at-110-livingston-gaudeamus-muziekweek-new-york-composer-portrait-of-yannis-kyriakides-by-ensemble-mae-international-contemporary-ensemble/">Friday, Jan. 27 at 8 pm</a></h3>
<div style="padding: none 10px;">Yannis Kyriakides portrait concert with Ensemble MAE + International Contemporary Ensemble (ICE) <a href="https://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/218828"><strong>Buy Tickets</strong></a></div>
<p><a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/12/19/at-110-livingston-gaudeamus-muziekweek-new-york-iktus-percussion-ensemble-mae/"><br />
</a></p>
<h3 style="background-color: #b00; color: #fff; font-size: 13px; margin-bottom: 5px; font-weight: normal; padding: 10px;"><a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/12/19/at-110-livingston-gaudeamus-muziekweek-new-york-iktus-percussion-ensemble-mae/">Saturday, Jan. 28 at 8 pm</a></h3>
<div style="padding: none 10px;">Ligeti&#8217;s &#8220;Poème Symphonique&#8221; and other works performed by Iktus Percussion + Ensemble MAE <a href="https://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/218827"><strong>Buy Tickets</strong></a></div>
</div>
<p>Since 1945, the Netherlands-based contemporary music festival <strong>Gaudeamus Muziekweek</strong> has presented groundbreaking and challenging new music by emerging composers from around the world. Working in partnership with Gaudeamus, ISSUE Project Room will present, for the first time in the United States, a festival highlighting some of the extraordinary talent that has emerged from the Gaudeamus Muziekweek.</p>
<p>Gaudeamus Muziekweek New York will mark ISSUE Project Room’s move to its new home at 110 Livingston Street in Downtown Brooklyn, where it has won a 20-year, rent-free lease and where, beginning in late January, it will present all of its programming. One of New York’s foremost commissioners and presenters of experimental art and performance, ISSUE has grown rapidly since its 2003 founding. In the process, it has contributed to the development of the Gowanus section of Brooklyn, where it is currently located, and, previously, Manhattan’s Lower East Side. It will now play a vital role in the development of rapidly growing Downtown Brooklyn.</p>
<p>ISSUE Project Room’s gorgeous jewel-box theater at 110 Livingston—originally designed by McKim, Mead, and White and built in the 1920s—will become the only European-style chamber hall open to the public in New York, and one of only a few in the United States. ISSUE Project Room Executive Director Ed Patuto says, “The ability to present works in an authentic hall with acoustics that complement the performance will be an unprecedented asset for New York’s experimental and broader cultural communities.”</p>
<p>Like ISSUE, Gaudeamus serves as a catalyst and incubator for the development of trends in contemporary music. The festival has nurtured and supported the work of composers ranging from Louis Andriessen, Gyorgy Ligeti and Pauline Oliveros to Yannis Kyriakides, Richard Barrett and Ted Hearne.</p>
<p>Mixing performances by Dutch and American ensembles, Gaudeamus Muziekweek New York will feature the U.S. premiere of 2011 Gaudeamus Prize-winner Yoshi Onishi’s “Départ dans…” performed by Wet Ink Ensemble, plus performances by International Contemporary Ensemble (ICE), Iktus Percussion, and the Netherlands-based ensemble MAE. Programs include a portrait of Amsterdam-based composer Yannis Kyriakides, an evening of electronic music featuring Wouter Snoei, Matthew Ostrowski, and Philip White &amp; Ted Hearne; a rare performance of Gyorgi Ligeti’s Poème Symphonique for 100 metronomes; and performances by the CUNY New Music Ensemble.</p>
<p><span id="more-10171"></span></p>
<p class="credits">Gaudeamus Muziekweek New York is supported, in part, by public funds from the Netherlands Cultural Services and has received funding through a grant from the Netherland-America Foundation. Support has also been provided by Buma Cultuur, Gaudeamus Muziekweek and Muziek Centrum Nederlands with special thanks to Erwin Maas and Henk Heuvelmans.</p>
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		<title>ISSUE&#8217;s 2012 Emerging Artists Commissions</title>
		<link>http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2012/01/04/issues-2012-emerging-artists-commissions/</link>
		<comments>http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2012/01/04/issues-2012-emerging-artists-commissions/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Jan 2012 21:22:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>andrew</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Announcements]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[artist in residence]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Series Highlights]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2012/01/04/issues-2012-emerging-artists-commissions/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Michelle Boule Cauleen Smith Matthew Papich Che Chen Jen Rosenblit and Jules Gimbrone ISSUE Project Room’s 2012 Emerging Artists Commissions will focus on transdisciplinary practices with a special attention to contemporary political, aesthetic and social concerns. This year we attempted to reach outside our normal range of focus to include a wider variety of artists [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="image-grid">
<div class="image"><a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2012/01/04/issues-2012-emerging-artists-commissions-michelle-boule-fall-2012/" onmouseover="hideCaption('1')" onmouseout="showCaption('1')"><img src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/boule_th.jpg" alt="" title="boule" width="120" height="120" class="size-full" />
<div class="text" id="1">Michelle Boule</div>
<p></a></div>
<div class="image"><a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2012/01/04/issues-2012-emerging-artists-commissions-cauleen-smith-june-2012/" onmouseover="hideCaption('2')" onmouseout="showCaption('2')"><img src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/smith_th.jpg" alt="" title="smith" width="120" height="120" />
<div class="text" id="2">Cauleen Smith</div>
<p></a></div>
<div class="image"><a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2012/01/04/issues-2012-emerging-artists-commissions-matthew-papich-fall-2012/" onmouseover="hideCaption('3')" onmouseout="showCaption('3')"><img src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/papich_th.jpg" alt="" title="papich" width="120" height="120" class="size-full wp-image-8383" />
<div class="text" id="3">Matthew Papich</div>
<p></a></div>
<div class="image"><a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2012/01/04/issues-2012-emerging-artists-commissions-che-chen-fall-2012/" onmouseover="hideCaption('4')" onmouseout="showCaption('4')"><img src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/chen_th.jpg" alt="" title="chen" width="120" height="120" class="size-full wp-image-8384" />
<div class="text" id="4">Che Chen</div>
<p></a></div>
<div class="image"><a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2012/01/04/issues-2012-emerging-artists-commissions-jen-rosenblit-and-jules-gimbrone-may-2012/" onmouseover="hideCaption('5')" onmouseout="showCaption('5')"><img src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/rosenblit_th.jpg" alt="" title="rosenblit" width="120" height="120" />
<div class="text" id="5">Jen Rosenblit and Jules Gimbrone</div>
<p></a></div>
</div>
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<p><strong>ISSUE Project Room’s 2012 Emerging Artists Commissions</strong> will focus on transdisciplinary practices with a special attention to contemporary political, aesthetic and social concerns.  This year we attempted to reach outside our normal range of focus to include a wider variety of artists working across different media.  ISSUE&#8217;s curators Lawrence Kumpf and Zach Layton worked with panelists Matthew Walker, James Hoff, Howie Chen and Ulrike Muller to select this year&#8217;s commissions.  We are very much looking forward to working with the applicants in the upcoming year.</p>
<p class="credits">ISSUE Project Room’s Emerging Artists Commission program is made possible, in part, with public funds from the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature; and by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/nysca_100px.gif" alt="" title="nysca_100px" width="100" height="126" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-5695" /><img src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/logo-nyculturalaffairs_cmyk1-300x138.jpg" alt="" title="logo-nyculturalaffairs_cmyk DCA Logo" width="300" height="138" class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-5681" /></p>
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		<title>Wall Street Journal:  A New ISSUE Arises</title>
		<link>http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/12/21/wall-street-journal-a-new-issue-arises/</link>
		<comments>http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/12/21/wall-street-journal-a-new-issue-arises/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 21 Dec 2011 19:35:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>michelle</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[110 Livingston]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Press]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.issueprojectroom.org/?p=10263</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[RAISING A NEW ISSUE IN DOWNTOWN BROOKLYN Published in the Wall St. Journal on December 21, 2011 By STEVE DOLLAR Four years after winning a rent-free, 20-year lease on its new home, Issue Project Room is finally taking up full residence at 110 Livingston St. in downtown Brooklyn. &#8220;The space is really unique for the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>RAISING A NEW ISSUE IN DOWNTOWN BROOKLYN<br />
Published in the <a href="http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204791104577110904215037764.html">Wall St. Journal</a> on December 21, 2011</p>
<p>By STEVE DOLLAR</p>
<p>Four years after winning a rent-free, 20-year lease on its new home, Issue Project Room is finally taking up full residence at 110 Livingston St. in downtown Brooklyn.</p>
<p>&#8220;The space is really unique for the city,&#8221; said Ed Patuto, the executive director of the nonprofit arts presenter, which makes its big move on Jan. 25. The inaugural event will be the first American staging of the Dutch new-music festival Gaudeamus Muziekweek. </p>
<p>The Livingston Street site, which resides on the ground floor of a stunning Beaux Arts-style building designed in 1926 by the architectural firm of McKim, Mead &#038; White, has been the focus of a $3.7 million fund-raising campaign, boosted in 2009 by a $1.1 million grant from Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz. </p>
<p>Along with more conventional renovations, that sum was necessary for an overhaul of the space&#8217;s raw, intensely reverberant interior—which includes a dramatic, 40-foot-high vaulted ceiling—not only to enhance listening quality, but to protect neighbors living on the floors above in what are now condominiums developed by Two Trees Management Company. (The firm purchased the former Board of Education site from the city in 2003 for more than $45 million.)</p>
<p>&#8220;New York doesn&#8217;t have a European-style chamber-music hall,&#8221; said Mr. Patuto, who this year secured another $1.1 million in funding from civic sources to reach the $2.3 million mark—sufficient to proceed with plans to occupy the organization&#8217;s new home. &#8220;And it doesn&#8217;t have a space that is that flexible in terms of how it can<br />
transform. We&#8217;ll have everything from black-box capability to a complete white box: We can put visuals anywhere around the room for a completely immersive environment.&#8221;</p>
<p>Mr. Patuto took over at Issue Project Room in November 2010—a year after the death of its founder, Suzanne Fiol—and has devoted much of his energy to the transition. With more than 200 performances and 30 commissions in 2011 (much of them focused on avant-garde music and mixed-media work of both local and international significance), the current venue at the Old American Can Factory in Gowanus was bustling.</p>
<p>But the downtown space, in the epicenter of the growing Brooklyn arts corridor—which includes the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the Mark Morris Dance Center and Roulette, among others—offers a richer spectrum of possibilities.</p>
<p>&#8220;The room is really live and has a beautiful, sweet sound,&#8221; said Mr. Patuto, who has already overseen a series of special concerts there. Beyond what such acoustics can do for a string quartet, they open all sorts of creative opportunities for experimental artists. This year, in one particularly memorable example, the composer Ellen Fullman ran 50-foot wires across the room. &#8220;It became a resonating box,&#8221; Mr. Patuto said.</p>
<p>Throughout its new season, the venue will test which kinds of acoustic treatments suit it best. The plan calls for the use of about 50 acoustic panels to deaden specific parts of the space, which features &#8220;marble floors, marble columns and brass doors,&#8221; Mr. Patuto noted. The organization arrived at a modular approach to design for the space, working with architects Dan Wood and Amale Andraos of WORK AC and acousticians from Arup. It will allow for traditional seated presentations and more ambient events, including performances using a unique 16-speaker array currently installed at the Can Factory.</p>
<p>&#8220;There will be no fixed stage, no fixed seating,&#8221; Mr. Patuto said. &#8220;The experience of coming to Issue Project Room will be as unpredictable as the performances themselves.&#8221; &#8230;</p>
<p>Of course, Issue Project Room hasn&#8217;t quit the Can Factory quite yet. January will offer a closing slate of performances, including a farewell party on Jan. 20 with headliners Jonathan Kane and his minimalist blues band, February.</p>
<p>&#8220;Issue&#8217;s almost our home base,&#8221; said Mr. Kane, who will be celebrating the release of an album recorded live at the venue in 2010 as part of a festival for the experimental music label Table of the Elements. The album also marks the first project to be released on Issue Project Room&#8217;s own in-house label, which will document performances fostered by the organization.</p>
<p>He added, &#8220;It&#8217;s maybe what the Southside clubs were to Muddy Waters or what CBGB was to the Ramones. People dance a lot and there&#8217;s a lot of audience enthusiasm.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>ALEX WATERMAN with Timothy Nassau (from the Brooklyn Rail)</title>
		<link>http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/12/13/alex-waterman-with-timothy-nassau-from-the-brooklyn-rail/</link>
		<comments>http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/12/13/alex-waterman-with-timothy-nassau-from-the-brooklyn-rail/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Dec 2011 14:24:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>andrew</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Announcements]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.issueprojectroom.org/?p=10134</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Vidas Perfectas, a new Spanish-language production of Perfect Lives, Robert Ashley’s visionary television opera from 1983, will premiere December 15 through 17 at Brooklyn’s Irondale Theater, with performances of the first three episodes of seven. It will take three years to complete the adaptation, which will travel to Ballroom Marfa in Texas, where the next [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/the-church.jpg" alt="" title="the-church" width="300" height="224" class="alignleft size-full wp-image-10135" />Vidas Perfectas, a new Spanish-language production of Perfect Lives, Robert Ashley’s visionary television opera from 1983, will premiere December 15 through 17 at Brooklyn’s Irondale Theater, with performances of the first three episodes of seven. It will take three years to complete the adaptation, which will travel to Ballroom Marfa in Texas, where the next two episodes will be performed and filming for tv will begin. From there, its future is uncertain. Timothy Nassau discussed Vidas Perfectas via e-mail with its director, composer, and musicologist Alex Waterman.</p>
<p>Timothy Nassau (Rail): How did Vidas Perfectas come into being?</p>
<p>Alex Waterman: Zach Layton, Robert Ashley, and I applied for a National Endowment for the Arts grant in 2009 to present a performance version of Perfect Lives as part of the Essential Repertoire series that Layton produces. When we applied we had it in our minds that we would just perform the music in a chamber music setting with either Robert Ashley reading, or one of his band members.</p>
<p>read the whole interview at <a href="http://www.brooklynrail.org/2011/12/music/alex-waterman-with-timothy-nassau">brooklynrail.org</a></p>
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		<title>Darmstadt: Essential Repertoire – Stockhausen&#8217;s &#8220;Cosmic Pulses,&#8221; Feldman&#8217;s &#8220;For Christian Wolff,&#8221; and Terry Riley&#8217;s &#8220;In C&#8221;</title>
		<link>http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/11/28/darmstadt-essential-repertoire-%e2%80%93%c2%a0stockhausens-cosmic-pulses-feldmans-for-christian-wolff-and-terry-rileys-in-c/</link>
		<comments>http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/11/28/darmstadt-essential-repertoire-%e2%80%93%c2%a0stockhausens-cosmic-pulses-feldmans-for-christian-wolff-and-terry-rileys-in-c/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Nov 2011 01:50:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>andrew</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Announcements]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.issueprojectroom.org/?p=10108</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[New York Premiere of Karlheinz Stockhausen’s Cosmic Pulses // Morton Feldman’s marathon For Christian Wolff // Darmstadt’s celebrated Terry Riley’s In C Darmstadt “Classics of the Avant Garde” presents its fourth annual Essential Repertoire festival at ISSUE Project Room. Described as  “a conscious provocation on multiple levels” by the New York Times, and “one of the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="header-img" style="width:520px;"><img src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/stokhausenbells.jpg" alt="" title="stokhausenbells" width="520" height="520" class="alignleft size-full wp-image-10111" /></div>
<h3>New York Premiere of Karlheinz Stockhausen’s <em>Cosmic Pulses</em> // Morton Feldman’s marathon <em>For Christian Wolff</em> // Darmstadt’s celebrated Terry Riley’s <em>In C</em></h3>
<p>Darmstadt “Classics of the Avant Garde” presents its <strong>fourth annual Essential Repertoire</strong> festival at ISSUE Project Room. Described as  “a conscious provocation on multiple levels” by the New York Times, and “one of the most significant presentations of the season” by Time Out New York, this “open-minded and inclusive” festival encompasses everything from Darmstadt Summer Course for New Music figurehead Karlheinz Stockhausen to godfather of the New York School, Morton Feldman to proto-minimalism pioneer Terry Riley.</p>
<p>The festival starts with a marathon reading of Morton Feldman’s <em>For Christian Wolff</em>.  Generally regarded as the most austere of Feldman’s late works, Ensemble Sospeso will perform this three-hour duet for flute and piano. On Friday, Analog Arts will give the New York premiere of <em>Cosmic Pulses</em>, the last piece of electronic music written by Karlheinz Stockhausen. With 8 channels of “sound projection” surrounding the audience, <em>Cosmic Pulses</em> is a sonic behemoth, and will be complemented by other Stockhausen works, Telemusik and Trompete. The festival will conclude with Darmstadt’s celebrated annual performance of Terry Riley’s 1964 Minimalist classic,<em> In C</em>, anchored—due to popular demand—by noted La Monte Young collaborator and former Swans drummer Jonathan Kane, who made his debut with the ensemble last year. This electrifying yearly new music jam session, called “the most vital, audacious and energizing performance of the score,” by the New York Times in 2007, has never before taken place at Issue Project Room.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/10/17/ensemble-sospeso-morton-feldmans-for-christian-wolff/">Thursday, December 8 at 8 p.m.</a><br />
Morton Feldman<br />
<em>For Christian Wolff</em> (1986)<br />
Ensemble Sospeso: Nicholas DeMaison (keyboards), Amelia Lukas (flute)</p>
<p>An “extended waking dream,” written and premiered in 1986, For Christian Wolff is scored for keyboards and flute, played here by Ensemble Sospeso’s Nicholas DeMaison and flutist Amelia Lukas. Generally regarded as the most austere of Feldman’s late works, For Christian Wolff is described by DeMaison as “fantastically quiet, full of pitches and yet somehow never quite emerging from a perpetual state of almost-being.” Since its Carnegie Hall debut in 1998, Ensemble Sospeso’s performances have been described as “stunning” (The New York Times), “a wonder to watch” (The Wall Street Journal) and “gorgeously rich” (The Village Voice).</p>
<p><a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/10/17/darmstadt-essential-repertoire-karlheinz-stockhausen%e2%80%99s-%e2%80%9ccosmic-pulses%e2%80%9d-and-%e2%80%9ctelemusik%e2%80%9d/">Friday, December 9 at 8 p.m.</a><br />
Karlheinz Stockhausen<br />
<em>Cosmic Pulses</em> (2007), <em>Telemusik</em> (1966), <em>Trumpet from Orchestra Finalists</em> (1996)<br />
Analog Arts: Joe Drew (trumpet and sound projection)</p>
<p>Joe Drew, of <a href="http://analogarts.org/">Analog Arts</a>, will give the New York premiere of <em>Cosmic Pulses</em>, the last piece of electronic music Karlheinz Stockhausen wrote. With an 8-channel sound system surrounding the audience (and a subwoofer on every channel), <em>Cosmic Pulses</em> envelops the audience in a swirl of sound. <em>Cosmic Pulses</em> will be paired with Stockhausen’s early electronic masterpiece, <em>Telemusik</em> (1966) and an excerpt from <em>Orchestra Finalists</em> (1996), the second scene of <em>Wednesday</em> from the <em>Licht</em> cycle.</div>
<div>Joe Drew is a trumpeter, composer, and specialist in the music of Stockhausen.  He is responsible for the US premiere of Cosmic Pulses in 2008. Drew toured with Markus Stockhausen and Marco Blaauw in musikFabrik’s production of Michael’s Journey Around the World, the second act from Licht. Drew is also the director of the Iron Composer competition and a doctoral fellow at NYU Steinhardt.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/11/07/darmstadt-essential-repertoire-terry-rileys-in-c/">Saturday, December 10 at 8 p.m.</a><br />
Terry Riley<br />
In C (1964)</p>
<p>Darmstadt: Essential Repertoire closes with the seventh annual performance of Terry Riley’s minimalist classic, and instigator of a musical movement, “In C.” The piece will be performed in true Darmstadt fashion, by an intergenerational ensemble of New York experimental musicians, amplified and backed by former Swans drummer and La Monte Young collaborator Jonathan Kane. The annual electrifying new music jam session, called “the most vital, audacious and energizing performance” of the piece by the New York Times, has never before taken place at Issue Project Room.</p>
<p>Darmstadt &#8220;Classics of the Avant Garde&#8221; is the Brooklyn-based music series led by composer-musicians Zach Layton and Nick Hallett, focusing on the experimental tradition. Darmstadt is sponsored by ISSUE Project Room, and presents its two annual programs: a month-long Institute of premieres, workshops, video screenings, and lecture-performances in June and an Essential Repertoire festival of cherished works from the experimental music canon in the Fall.</p>
<p>Darmstadt: Essential Repertoire 2011<br />
December 8-10 at ISSUE Project Room in the OA Can Factory<br />
232 3rd Street, 3rd Floor Brooklyn, NY 11215<br />
Doors for all concerts open at 8 pm. Music begins at 8:30 pm.<br />
Tickets $10/$8 ISSUE Project Room members</p>
<p>ABOUT ISSUE PROJECT ROOM<br />
ISSUE Project Room, a registered 501(c)(3) organization, was established in 2003 by visionary artist Suzanne Fiol, and is a vibrant nexus for cutting-edge, multi-disciplinary arts in Brooklyn. ISSUE supports emerging and established experimental artists through more than 200 programs each year including music concerts, literary readings, films, videos, dance, visual and sound art, new media, critical theory lectures and discussions, site-specific work, commissions, educational workshops, master classes, and genre-defying interdisciplinary performances that challenge and expand conventional practices in art.</p>
<p>Support for ISSUE has been provided by CHORA, a project of the Metabolic Studio, a direct charitable activity of the Annenberg Foundation led by Artist and Foundation Director Lauren Bon. CHORA aims to support the intangibles that precede creativity.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/">http://www.issueprojectroom.org/</a></p>
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		<title>2012: The Exciting Year Ahead</title>
		<link>http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/11/28/2012-the-exciting-year-ahead/</link>
		<comments>http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/11/28/2012-the-exciting-year-ahead/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 28 Nov 2011 18:00:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>michelle</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Announcements]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fundraising]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[<p>ISSUE Project Room needs your support! Please consider giving a year-end contribution to help us continue supporting hundreds of experimental artists annually.</p>

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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Dear Friends,</p>
<p>Thank you for so much for all of your support this year. 2012 is going to be the most exciting and pivotal year yet for our organization, and I want to ask you to <strong><a href="https://npo.networkforgood.org/Donate/Donate.aspx?npoSubscriptionId=1002039&amp;code=Home%20Page">consider making a tax-deductible year-end gift of $50, $100, or $250</a></strong> to support our ninth year of presenting groundbreaking new work.</p>
<p>In 2011, donations from our community helped support more than 135 performances, i<strong>ncluding the commission and presentation of 30 new works by innovative artists from New York and around the world</strong>. The <em>Wall Street Journal</em> hailed these efforts, deeming us “Brooklyn’s leading avantgarde presenter.”</p>
<p>2012 will be a milestone in our history. We are thrilled that, <strong>beginning in March, all performances and events will take place at 110 Livingston St. in Downtown Brooklyn</strong>—New York’s new home for experimental music and arts. Our move to 110 will allow artists’ use of the space to inform the architectural design process for renovations of the theater.</p>
<p>In the coming year, your support will enable:</p>
<p>• <strong>100+ pre-renovation performances</strong> at 110 Livingston<br />
•<strong> 24 commissions of new work</strong><br />
• <strong>4 year-long artist residencies</strong> by Hunter Hunt-Hendrix, Aki Onda, Sergei Tcherepnin and Yarn/Wire<br />
• <strong>Temporary acoustic treatment of 110 Livingston</strong>, to enable expanded pre-construction use<br />
• <strong>A new NYU-Brooklyn Poly Lab</strong>, where students will collaborate with artists to create open-source<br />
software that will be made available to artists in our community.</p>
<p><strong>Please join us in celebrating the arts and the exciting year ahead by making a fully tax-deductible donation.</strong> Your participation continues to be absolutely vital to our success as we work to raise $25,000 by December 31 to support 2012 programs.</p>
<p>Thank you, again, for all of your support. We look forward to sharing with you another year of artistic invention in our new performance space!</p>
<p>With all my best wishes,</p>
<p>Ed Patuto<br />
Executive Director</p>
<p><strong>P.S. <a href="https://npo.networkforgood.org/Donate/Donate.aspx?npoSubscriptionId=1002039&amp;code=Home%20Page">Make your gift by December 31, 2011</a> and receive 2 free tickets to a concert in our first month at 110 Livingston.  </strong>Make a gift <a href="https://npo.networkforgood.org/Donate/Donate.aspx?npoSubscriptionId=1002039&amp;code=Home%20Page">online</a>, call us at 718-330-0313 x5 or mail a check payable to &#8220;ISSUE Project Room&#8221; to 232 3rd Street, 3rd Fl, Brooklyn, NY 11215. Attn: Year-End Campaign.</p>
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		<title>Dec. 15 &#8211; 17 at Irondale Brooklyn: Robert Ashley&#8217;s &#8220;Vidas Perfectas&#8221;</title>
		<link>http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/10/31/robert-ashleys-vidas-perfectas/</link>
		<comments>http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/10/31/robert-ashleys-vidas-perfectas/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 31 Oct 2011 21:19:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>jeremy</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Announcements]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[events]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[A new Spanish-language version of &#8220;Perfect Lives&#8221; December 15 &#8211; 17 at Irondale Theater in Brooklyn, 8pm Presented by ISSUE Project Room, Irondale Theater, and Ballroom Marfa Buy Tickets &#124; $25 / $20 for members Trailer by Alex Waterman &#38; Eve Essex About Artists Perfect Lives Press About Robert Ashley’s Vidas Perfectas, a new Spanish-language [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="header-img"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-9901" title="vidas_logo" src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/vidas_logo1.jpg" alt="" width="550" height="120" /></p>
<h2 style="text-align: center;">A new Spanish-language version of &#8220;Perfect Lives&#8221;<br />
December 15 &#8211; 17 at Irondale Theater in Brooklyn, 8pm<br />
Presented by ISSUE Project Room, Irondale Theater, and Ballroom Marfa<br />
<a href="https://web.ovationtix.com/trs/pr/887565">Buy Tickets</a> | $25 / $20 for members</h2>
<p><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/29095221?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0" frameborder="0" width="550" height="413"></iframe><br />
Trailer by Alex Waterman &amp; Eve Essex</p>
</div>
<p><span id="more-9853"></span></p>
<div class="vidas-perfectas-menu">
<div><a style="color: #d9682b;" href="javascript:showAbout();">About</a></div>
<div><a style="color: #339ec7;" href="javascript:showArtists();">Artists</a></div>
<div><a style="color: #337446;" href="javascript:showPL();">Perfect Lives</a></div>
<div><a style="color: #cf2528;" href="javascript:showPress();">Press</a></div>
</div>
<div id="About" style="display: block;">
<h3>About</h3>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-9888" title="VIDAS-PERFECTAS-UPDATED" src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/VIDAS-PERFECTAS-UPDATED3-300x231.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="231" />Robert Ashley’s Vidas Perfectas, a new Spanish-language production of the ground-breaking television opera Perfect Lives (1983), will premiere at Irondale Theater in Brooklyn, directed by Alex Waterman. With the blessing of Ashley, Waterman is directing an entirely new version of Perfect Lives for the 21st century, from a Spanish translation by Javier Sainz de Robles. The cast and crew includes downtown musician and author Ned Sublette, Elio Villafranca as “Buddy, the World’s Greatest Piano Player,” Peter Gordon as the producer and sound designer, and Sarah Crowner, set designer. Vidas Perfectas will represent all seven of the opera’s episodes as a full stage and television production.</p>
<p>Alex Waterman says, “Robert Ashley changed the game completely. There is no other composer living today that has been able to create an entirely new kind of opera. Others have innovated, played with, polished up, improved upon or just added to the form as it has existed for the last few hundred years. Ashley brings us a totally new form of opera that makes sung speech sound like talk, synthetic orchestration sound like unconscious thought, and the performance feel like a dream that we can’t wake from. Ashley didn’t just reinvent opera. He has re-imagined the American musical landscape.”</p>
<h4>A brief synopsis of Vidas Perfectas</h4>
<p>Raoul de Noget (no-zhay’) and his friend Buddy, “The World’s Greatest Piano Player,” have come to a small town close to the border between Mexico and Los Estados Unidos, to entertain at ‘La Vidas Perfectas Lounge.’ Raoul, a Cuban, grew up north of the Border, and Buddy (also Cuban) grew up on the other side of the border. As one of the characters in the opera describes Buddy after they become known in town, “There’s no doubt that the Mexican is in it. The doubt is if he’s Mexican.”<br />
Raoul and Buddy fall in with two locals, ‘D’ (the ‘Captain of the Football Team’) and his sister, Isolde. They conspire to commit the ‘perfect crime,’ a metaphor for something philosophical: to remove a large amount of money from The Bank for one day (and one day only) and let the whole world know that it is missing — crime if they are caught, art if they are not. A couple of innocents, Ed and Gwyn, head for the border with ‘D’ and his friend Dwayne (‘who has trouble being understood’), to elope and get married. They are, without knowing it, carrying the money (from the Bank) in the trunk of the car. According to the plan, the missing money will be discovered to be back in the Bank the next day.</p>
<p>Among the colorful characters that journey through the opera’s seven episodes are a loving pair of unnamed old people from the Home for Old People, the Sheriff and his wife (Will and Ida), who finally unravel the mystery of the crime, and Isolde who watches the celebration of the changing of the light at sundown — amid a picnic of her neighbors — and who knows that the perfect crime has been successful.</p>
</div>
<div id="Artists" style="display: none;">
<h3>Artists</h3>
<h4><strong>Ned Sublette (1951-) • Starring as “R”</strong></h4>
<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-9868" title="ned_sublette" src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/ned_sublette.jpg" alt="" width="280" height="210" />Ned Sublette is a singer-songwriter and author. Trained as a composer and classical guitarist, his albums include Kiss You Down South(forthcoming), Cowboy Rumba (Palm Pictures) and, in collaboration with Lawrence Weiner, Monsters from the Deep and Ships at Sea, Sailors and Shoes (Excellent).</p>
<p>Known for his work integrating musical, cultural, and political history, he has published three books: Cuba and Its Music: From the First Drums to the Mambo (Chicago Review Press; ASCAP Deems Taylor Award winner); The World that Made New Orleans: From Spanish Silver to Congo Square (Lawrence Hill Books; Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities Book of the Year for 2009); and The Year Before the Flood(Lawrence Hill), a memoir of living in Louisiana in two different eras. In collaboration with his wife Constance Sublette, he is currently working on The American Slave Coast, about the slave trade in the making of the US economy.</p>
<p>His best-known song, “Cowboys Are Frequently Secretly,” was released in a version by Willie Nelson in 2006. He appeared as an expert witness in Spike Lee’s 2010 HBO film If God is Willing and Da Creek Don’t Rise. A frequent collaborator with Vidas Perfectas music producer Peter Gordon, Sublette is a longstand- ing member of Gordon’s Love of Life Orchestra. Known for his work with Cuban music, he co-founded and ran the influential label Qbadisc, which beginning in 1992 pioneered the marketing of contemporary Cuban music in the United States, and he produced recordings by Los Muñequitos de Matanzas, Maraca y Otra Visión, and Los Van Van, among others.</p>
<p>Sublette is the founding theorist of postmamboism, which places music at the center of understanding and uses music to interrogate other fields of study. He has produced more than a hundred documentaries about music of Africa and the diaspora for the public radio program Afropop Worldwide, and co-founded that program’s subseries Hip Deep. In 2010-11 he was the Patrick Henry Writing Fellow at the C.V. Starr Center for the Study of the American Experience at Washington College in Chestertown, Maryland, and has also been a Guggenheim Fellow, a Tulane Rockefeller Humanities Fellow, and a Cullman Fellow at the New York Public Library. He is a graduate of the Missouri Auction School.</p>
<h4><strong>Elio Villafranca (1969-) • as “buddy, the world’s greatest Piano player”</strong></h4>
<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-9866" title="Elio_Villafranca_9174_(c)Cynthia Van Elk" src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/Elio.jpg" alt="" width="280" height="171" />Born in the Pinar del Río province of Western Cuba, pianist and composer Elio Villafranca was classically trained in percussion and composition at the Instituto Superior de Arte in Havana, Cuba. Since his arrival in the U.S. in late 1995, he has been involved in jazz and Latin jazz scenes on both the East and West Coasts. Based in New York City, he is resident professor at Temple University in Philadelphia, PA.</p>
<p>Elio Villafranca is at the forefront of the latest generation of remarkable Cuban pianists, composers and bandleaders that for several years has been making major creative contributions to the international development of modern jazz. In the 2010 Grammy Awards he was nominated in Best Latin Jazz Album of the Year, for his performance, composition and coproduction on the album Things I Wanted To Do by Chembo Corniel.</p>
<p dir="ltr">He has released three albums as a bandleader—each well received. His last album, The Source in Between, 2007, remained in the top 10 of the JazzWeek World Top 50 Chart for eleven weeks, and his first album, Incantations/Encantaciones, was ranked amongst the 50 best jazz albums of the year by JazzTimes magazine in 2003. In 2008 Villafranca was also nominated by The Jazz Corner as pianist of the year and he received the Jazz Twirlie Nomination by Dick Crockett, of “The Voice” at 88.7FM, for his album The Source In Between.</p>
<p>That year, Mr. Villafranca was also honored by BMI with the BMI Jazz Guaranty Award and received the first NFA/Heineken Green Ribbon Master Artist Music Grant for the creation of his Concerto for Mariachi, for Afro-Cuban Percussion and Symphony Orchestra. Villafranca was also pianist in the CD La Guerra No by John Santos Y El Coro Folklorico Kindembo, which was nominated in the 2010 Grammy Awards as Best Traditional World Music Album. Over the years Elio Villafranca’s music has featured jazz master artists such as Pat Martino, Jane Bunnett, Terell Stafford, and Eric Alexander, among other notable instrumentalists.</p>
<p>Villafranca has also performed nationally and internationally as leader of his quartet, and as a sideman he has collaborated with leading jazz and Latin jazz artists including: Wynton Marsalis, Jon Faddis, Sonny Fortune, Giovanni Hidalgo, Eddie Henderson; Miguel Zenón, Cándido Camero and Johnny Pacheco.</p>
<p>Villafranca has toured Europe and has performed at various world-renowned venues and events including the Blue Note Jazz Festival in Ghent, Belgium; at the Blue Note Jazz Club in Milan; the Umbria Jazz Festival in Perugia, Italy; the North Sea Jazz Festival at The Hague, Holland; the Guinness Jazz Festival, and a national tour of Ireland.</p>
<h4><strong>Peter Gordon (1951-) • Producer and Sound Designer</strong></h4>
<p><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-9865" title="peter gordon" src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/peter-gordon.jpg" alt="" width="280" height="211" />Peter Gordon is a composer, arranger, producer, and saxophonist whose music has been noted for its original blend of lyricism, wit and drama, usually with funky groove. Gordon first gained attention in New York in the late 1970s with his Love of Life Orchestra (LOLO), which synthesized experimental music with dance music and rock, performing at Downtown New York venues such as The Kitchen, CBGB and Mudd Club, as well as concert halls and museums. An early proponent of using the recording studio as a compositional tool, in addition to LOLO recordings, Gordon produced recordings for Jill Kroesen, Laurie Anderson, Rhys Chatham, David Van Tieghem, Arthur Russell and “Blue” Gene Tyranny.</p>
<p>Since the mid-1980’s, Gordon has composed large-scale scores for collaborations in theater, dance, film and video, including Robert Ashley’s Perfect Lives. Gordon’s scores include Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane’s Secret Pastures (1984); video/music collaborations with Kit Fitzgerald, including Return of the Native (1988); opera and music theater, including The Birth of the Poet (1985), The Strange Life of Ivan Osokin (1994); Bitterroot (2001) and Party Time (1995) with The Talking Band, and Gordon’s collaboration with Lawrence Weiner, The Society Architect Ponders the Golden Gate Bridge (2000), presented by Oper Bonn and Freunde Guter Musik-Berlin. He is the recipient of both an Obie Award and a Bessie Award.</p>
<p>Gordon’s recordings include Star Jaws, Extended Niceties, Geneva, Casino, Innocent and Brooklyn, Leningrad Express, Love of Life Orchestra: Quartet, The Yellow Box (with David Cunningham) and the retrospective anthology Love of Life Orchestrawas released by DFA Records in 2010.</p>
<p>Gordon’s music has appeared films, including Altered to Suit, JoeVersus the Volcano and Deja Vu and television’s Desperate House- wives. Gordon worked with conductor Michael Tilson Thomas and researcher Ronald Robboy restoring original Yiddish scores for the Thomashefsky Project, with performances by the New York Philharmonic, San Francisco Symphony, and New World Symphony.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Born in New York City, Peter Gordon spent his childhood in Virginia, adolescence in Munich and Los Angeles, and attended U.C. San Diego (B.A) and Mills College (M.F.A.), where he studied composition with Kenneth Gaburo and Roger Reynolds, and Robert Ashley and Terry Riley, respectively.</p>
<p>Peter Gordon has received grants from the NEA, NYSCA, DAAD (Berlin Artist Program), and the Japan-US Friendship Committee. Gordon is Associate Professor of Music at Bloomfield College.</p>
<h4><strong>Robert Ashley (1930-) • Composer</strong></h4>
<p><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-9863" title="robert_ashley" src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/robert_ashley.jpg" alt="" width="280" height="186" />Robert Ashley, a distinguished figure in American contemporary music, holds an international reputation for his work in new forms of opera and multi-disciplinary projects. His recorded works are acknowledged classics of language in a musical setting. He pioneered opera-for-television. The operatic works of Robert Ashley are distinctly original in style, and distinctly American in their subject matter and in their use of American language. A prolific composer and writer, Ashley’s operas are “so vast in their vision that they are comparable only to Wagner’s Ringcycle or Stockhausen’s seven-evening Licht cycle. In form and content, in musical, vocal, literary and media technique, they are, however, comparable to nothing else.” (The Los Angeles Times).</p>
<p>Born in Ann Arbor, Michigan in 1930, Robert Ashley was educated at the University of Michigan and the Manhattan School of Music. At the University of Michigan, he worked at the Speech Research Laboratories (psycho-acoustics and cultural speech patterns), and was employed as a Research Assistant in Acoustics at the Architectural Research Laboratory.</p>
<p>During the 1960s, Ashley organized the ONCE Festival, the annual festival of contemporary performing arts in Ann Arbor which, from 1961 to 1969, presented most of the decade’s pioneers of the performing arts. He directed the highly influential ONCE Group, a music-theater ensemble that toured the United States from 1964 to 1969. During these years Ashley developed and produced the first of his mixed-media operas, notably That Morning Thing and in Memoriam&#8230;Kit Carson, and he composed the sound tracks for films by George Manupelli.</p>
<p>In 1969, Ashley was appointed Director of the Center for Contemporary Music at Mills College (Oakland, California), where he organized the first public-access music and media facility. From 1966 to 1976 he toured throughout the United States and Europe with the Sonic Arts Union, the composers’ collective that included David Behrman, Alvin Lucier and Gordon Mumma. With the support of the Rockefeller and Ford Foundations, Ashley produced and directed, Music with Roots in the Aether: video portraits of composers and their music, a 14-hour television opera/documentary about the work and ideas of seven American composers, which premiered at the Festival d’Automne à Paris in 1976 and has since been shown worldwide in over 100 television broadcasts and closed-circuit installations.</p>
<p>Staged versions of the operas Perfect Lives, Atalanta (Acts of God), and the tetralogy, Now Eleanor’s Idea, have toured throughout Europe, Asia and the United States. Ashley and his company have been presented at the Avignon Festival, the Festival d’Automne à Paris, Musica Strasbourg, the Almeida Festival (London), the Festival de Otono (Madrid), New Music America (New York, Chicago, Minneapolis, San Francisco, Philadelphia), the Inventionen Festival and the Hebbel Theater (Berlin), by the Gaudeamus Foundation (The Netherlands), the USIS Interlink Festival ( Japan), the Next Wave Festival (New York) and Site Santa Fe.</p>
<p>Other commissioned works include operas Now Eleanor’s Idea (1993) and Foreign Experiences (1994) for his own opera ensemble, with funds from the Mary Flagler Cary Charitable Trust and Meet the Composer’s Lila Wallace-Reader’s Digest Commissioning Program; Van Cao’s Meditation (1992), for pianist Lois Svard; Outcome Inevi- table (1991), for chamber ensemble, by Philadelphia’s renowned Relâche Ensemble; Superior Seven (1988), for flute with orchestra and chorus, by Barbara Held and the Bowery Ensemble; eL/ Aficionado (1987), opera, by Mutable Music for Thomas Buckner; Atalanta (Acts of God) (1985), by the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, for its anniversary celebration; Odalisque (1984), for orchestra, solo voice and chorus, by The Arch Ensemble, Musical Elements, Alea III, and The Contemporary Chamber Players of the University of Chicago; Music Word Fire (1981), for television, by Channel 13/WNET.</p>
<p>Ashley has also provided music for the dance companies of Trisha Brown (Son of Gone Fishin’, 1983), Merce Cunningham (Problems in the Flying Saucer, 1988), Douglas Dunn (Ideas from The Church, 1978) and Steve Paxton (The Park and The Backyard, 1978.)</p>
<p>Robert Ashley is the subject of a film by Peter Greenaway, one of a series entitled Four American Composers, published by Transatlantic Films (London) and Mystic Fire Video (New York). Perfect Lives was published by Burning Books (San Francisco) with Archer Fields (New York), October 1991. Ashley’s recorded music and videotapes are available on Lovely Music, Ltd., Nonesuch/Elektra, New World Records, Mainstream, CBS Odyssey, O.O. Discs, Koch International, Unsounds and Einstein Records.</p>
<h4><strong>Alex Waterman (1975-) • Director</strong></h4>
<p><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-9861" title="alex_waterman" src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/alex_waterman.jpg" alt="" width="280" height="210" />Alex Waterman is a founding member of the Plus Minus Ensemble, based in Brussels and London, specializing in avant-garde and experimental music. In New York he performs with the Either/Or Ensemble. Alex has worked with musicians such as Robert Ashley, Richard Barrett, Helmut Lachenmann, Keith Rowe, Marina Rosenfeld, Anthony Coleman, Elliot Sharp, Ned Rothenberg, Gerry Hemingway, David Watson, Chris Mann, Alison Knowles, Thomas Meadowcroft, and Michael Finnissy. He has performed as guest musician with numerous ensembles, including Trio Event (Berlin), Champs d&#8217;Action-Antwerp, Q-O2-Brussels, and Magpie Music and Dance Company. Waterman has made music for numerous European ballet and modern dance companies including Freiburg Ballett/Pretty Ugly, Scapino Ballet, Nederland Dans Theater III, and others. In 2007 Alex curated two exhibitions in New York, one on experimental music and poetics: Agapê (June 2-July 28th, 2007) at Miguel Abreu Gallery; and the other on graphic notation, Between Thought and Sound: Graphic Notation in Contemporary Music(September 7-October 20, 2007) at The Kitchen in Chelsea. Publications for Between Thought and Sound and Agape are available.</p>
<p>Alex is presently working on his PhD in musicology at NYU as well as writing a book about the composer Robert Ashley with the designer and writer Will Holder. Alex participated in Dexter Sinister&#8217;s residency at the Armory for the 2008 Whitney Biennial writing a new work based upon Herman Melville&#8217;s Bartleby the Scrivener. Alex Waterman and Beatrice Gibson&#8217;s collectively written and scored film, A Necessary Music, narrated by Robert Ashley and with original music by Waterman, premiered at the Whitney Museum ISP show and won the Tiger Prize for Best Short Film at the Rotterdam Film Festival in 2008. Alex lectured and performed as part of the exhibition The Possibility of Action at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Barcelona in 2008, and was in residence at the ICA in May 2009 with his ensemble, in addition to performing solo works. He installed a permanent 12 speaker sound installation out in Napa Valley in July of 2009 at the residence of Norah and Norman Stone, and is presently working on the sound track for a new film project by Cameron Gainer in Vieques, and launching his record label (<a href="http://dsalcoda.org/">D.S. al coda</a>). His writings have been published by Dot Dot Dot, Paregon, FoArm, Bomb, and Artforum.</p>
<h4><strong>Sarah Crowner (1974-) • Set Designer</strong></h4>
<p><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-9859" title="sarah_crowner image" src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/sarah_crowner-image.jpg" alt="" width="259" height="140" />Sarah Crowner received her BA from the University of California, Santa Cruz and her MFA from Hunter College in 2002. Recent solo exhibitions include Zig Zags and Curves at Helena Papadopoulos Gallery in Athens, Greece, in 2011 and Acrobat at Nicelle Beauchene Gallery in New York in 2011. Crowner participated in the 2010 Whitney Biennial and international exhibitions including Paying to Visit Mary Part 2, Kunstverein, Amsterdam; Looking Back: The White Columns Annual, New York; and For the Blind Man in the Dark Room Looking for the Black Cat That Isn’t There, Contemporary Art Museum, St. Louis (traveling). Crowner is currently working towards an upcoming solo exhibition in 2011 at Catherine Bastide, Brussels. Crowner also works on various collaborative projects with Dexter Sinister.</p>
</div>
<div id="PL" style="display: none;">
<h3>Perfect Lives</h3>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-9751" title="09PL_still" src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/09PL_still-300x230.png" alt="" width="300" height="230" />Perfect Lives, the world&#8217;s first &#8216;television opera,&#8217; almost single-handedly changed the way we think about opera, television and performance.</p>
<p>Commissioned by The Kitchen in 1979 and co-produced by Channel Four in Great Britain, parts of the seven-episode series have been seen on American, Japanese, German, Austrian, Spanish and Australian television. It was also celebrated in Peter Greenaway&#8217;s 1985 Four American Composers series.</p>
<p>In 2010, Issue Project Room was awarded an NEA grant for Alex Waterman to produce a new version of Perfect Lives or Vidas Perfectas. Instead of simply reviving Ashley’s masterpiece, Director Alex Waterman is presenting an entirely new version for the 21st century from a Spanish-language translation by Javier Sainz de Robles, re-imagined on the Mexican/American border.Vidas Perfectas will present each of Perfect Lives&#8217; seven, 30-minute episodes in a stage and television production with all new cast, arrangements, and staging.</p>
<p>The first three episodes of Vidas Perfectas will premiere December 15-17, 2011 at at the Irondale Theater in Brooklyn.</p>
</div>
<div id="Press" style="display: none;">
<h3>Press</h3>
<h4>Press Releases:</h4>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://us2.campaign-archive2.com/?u=1ccb716968e915d8cc1da761e&amp;id=97fbf0ccb0">Announcing Robert Ashley&#8217;s Vidas Perfectas</a></li>
</ul>
<h4>Promotional Materials:</h4>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://www.vidasperfectas.org/sites/default/files/vidas_perfectas.pdf">Robert Ashley&#8217;s Vidas Perfectas: Press Packet (PDF)</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.vidasperfectas.org/sites/default/files/vidas_perfectas_trailer.mov">Vidas Perfectas: Video Trailer (.MOV)</a></li>
</ul>
<h4>Press Articles:</h4>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://newyork.timeout.com/music-nightlife/classical-opera/2122927/interview-robert-ashley">Robert Ashley: A visionary opera composer inspires a new generation of followers</a>, Amanda MacBlane in Time Out New York, October 21, 2011</li>
<li><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/18/arts/music/robert-ashleys-older-works-revisited-and-reshaped.html?_r=1#">Composer (and Others) Rethinking His Works</a>, Steve Smith in the New York Times, September 16, 2011</li>
<li><a href="http://www.dramonline.org/blog/news/795927">DRAM celebrates the visionary composer, writer, and experimentalist Robert Ashley</a></li>
<li><a href="http://artonair.org/show/vidas-perfectas-ned-sublette-elio-villafranca">Experimental Composers: Ned Sublette and Elio Villafranca on Art on AIR</a></li>
</ul>
</div>
<p class="credits">Vidas Perfectas is made possible by the National Endowment for the Arts as part of American Masterpieces: Three Centuries of Artistic Genius and by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-10125" title="nysca_rgb" src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/nysca_rgb.jpg" alt="" width="120" height="151" /></p>
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		<title>Everyday Experimental: November 17 &#8211; 19, 2011</title>
		<link>http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/10/31/everyday-experimental-november-17-19-2011/</link>
		<comments>http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/10/31/everyday-experimental-november-17-19-2011/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 31 Oct 2011 20:58:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>andrew</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Announcements]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[critical theory]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[discussion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fundraising]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[littoral]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[performance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[annea lockwood]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[everyday experimental]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[graham lambkin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[moniek darge]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[olivia block]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.issueprojectroom.org/?p=9803</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<div class="header-img" style="width:300;"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-9698" title="1118-Lockwood-Piano-Burning" src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/1118-Lockwood-Piano-Burning.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="270" /></div>

<p><strong>Everyday Experimental</strong> draws its inspiration from commonplace activities and inconsequential sounds of the everyday: from Knowles’ exploration of the sound of a bean to Lambkin’s uncanny field recordings of the interior and grounds of his home in upstate New York. With a special focus on the contribution of women to sound art, ISSUE Project Room will present a series of performances and talks with <strong>Alison Knowles [<a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/10/04/littoral-alison-knowles/">11.17</a>]</strong>, a new work by <strong>Moniek Darge</strong> followed by electroacoustic collaborations with <strong>Françoise Vanhecke and Graham Lambkin [<a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/10/04/moniek-darge-francoise-vanhecke-graham-lambkin/">11.18</a>]</strong> and a sound installation by <strong>Annea Lockwood [11.14-11.19]</strong> along with a performance by <strong>Lois Svard</strong> of Lockwood’s <em>Ear-Walking Woman</em> and a multi-channel sound piece by Chicago based composer <strong>Olivia Block [<a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/10/04/annea-lockwood-presents-ear-walking-woman-performed-by-lois-svard-and-olivia-block/">11.19</a>]</strong>. Through an intergenerational dialogue, Everyday Experimental looks at the work of three historically significant female artists and maps relevant contemporary practices.</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="header-img"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-9698" title="1118-Lockwood-Piano-Burning" src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/1118-Lockwood-Piano-Burning.jpg" alt="" width="550" height="495" /><br />
Annea Lockwood, Piano Burning. Photo by Geoff Adams.</div>
<div id="summary"><strong>Everyday Experimental</strong> draws its inspiration from commonplace activities and inconsequential sounds of the everyday: from Knowles’ exploration of the sound of a bean to Lambkin’s uncanny field recordings of the interior and grounds of his home in upstate New York. With a special focus on the contribution of women to sound art, ISSUE Project Room will present a series of performances and talks with <strong>Alison Knowles [<a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/10/04/littoral-alison-knowles/">11.17</a>]</strong>, a new work by <strong>Moniek Darge</strong> followed by electroacoustic collaborations with <strong>Françoise Vanhecke and Graham Lambkin [<a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/10/04/moniek-darge-francoise-vanhecke-graham-lambkin/">11.18</a>]</strong> and a sound installation by <strong>Annea Lockwood [11.14-11.19]</strong> along with a performance by <strong>Lois Svard</strong> of Lockwood’s <em>Ear-Walking Woman</em> and a multi-channel sound piece by Chicago based composer <strong>Olivia Block [<a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/10/04/annea-lockwood-presents-ear-walking-woman-performed-by-lois-svard-and-olivia-block/">11.19</a>]</strong>. Through an intergenerational dialogue, Everyday Experimental looks at the work of three historically significant female artists and maps relevant contemporary practices.</p>
<p><span id="more-9803"></span>
<p class="credits">Everyday Experimental is made possible, in part, through support from the Barbara Lee Family Foundation and the Casement Fund.</p>
</div>
<div id="schedule">
<h5><a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/10/04/littoral-alison-knowles/"><img class="size-full wp-image-9850 alignleft" title="knowles1" src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/knowles_web1.jpg" alt="" width="258" height="172" /></a><a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/10/04/littoral-alison-knowles/">11.17: Littoral: Alison Knowles</a></h5>
<p>Knowles, an early Fluxus collaborator, will perform <em>Loose Pages</em>, followed by a performance by cellist Alex Waterman of one of Knowles&#8217; &#8220;Bean Scores.&#8221;</p>
<h5><a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/10/04/moniek-darge-francoise-vanhecke-graham-lambkin/"><img class="size-full wp-image-9849 alignleft" title="moniek1" src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/moniek11-e1320094957369.jpg" alt="" width="258" height="173" /></a><a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/10/04/moniek-darge-francoise-vanhecke-graham-lambkin/">11.18: Moniek Darge with Françoise Vanhecke &amp; Graham Lambkin</a></h5>
<p>Sonic artist Moniek Darge fuses land art with soundscaping to paint aural pictures of different places in the world.</p>
<h5><a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/10/04/annea-lockwood-presents-ear-walking-woman-performed-by-lois-svard-and-olivia-block/"><img class="size-full wp-image-9851 alignleft" title="1118-Lockwood-Piano-Burning" src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/1118-Lockwood-Piano-Burning1-e1320095153567.jpg" alt="" width="260" height="234" /></a><br />
<a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/10/04/annea-lockwood-presents-ear-walking-woman-performed-by-lois-svard-and-olivia-block/">11.19: Annea Lockwood&#8217;s <em>Ear-Walking Woman</em> performed by Lois Svard + Olivia Block</a></h5>
<p>Lois Svard performs Lockwood&#8217;s piece for prepared piano and exploring pianist, and artist Olivia Block presents a new multi-channel sound piece.</p>
<h5>
<a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/10/31/annea-lockwood-a-sound-map-of-the-housatonic-river-2010/"><img src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/ruse_bulgaria-e1320178576966.jpg" alt="" title="ruse_bulgaria-e1320099553329" width="259" height="176" class="alignleft size-full wp-image-9945" /></a><a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/10/31/annea-lockwood-a-sound-map-of-the-housatonic-river-2010/">11.14 &#8211; 11.19: Annea Lockwood&#8217;s &#8220;A Sound-map of the Housatonic River&#8221;</a></h5>
<p>Annea Lockwood’s installation “A Sound Map of the Housatonic River” (2010) is constructed from both surface and underwater recordings of the Housatonic River, from the river’s source in the Berkshire mountains to its mouth in the Long Island Sound.</p>
</div>
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		<title>Robert Ashley: &#8220;The music has outgrown the architecture.&#8221;</title>
		<link>http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/10/27/architecture-has-outgrown-the-music/</link>
		<comments>http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/10/27/architecture-has-outgrown-the-music/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 27 Oct 2011 22:25:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>andrew</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Announcements]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[vidas perfectas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alex waterman]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[perfect lives]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[robert ashley]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.issueprojectroom.org/?p=9748</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[On Oct. 23, Issue Project Room held a screening of Robert Ashley&#8217;s 1983 classic made-for-TV-opera &#8220;Perfect Lives,&#8221; in support of our ongoing fundraising campaign for &#8220;Vidas Perfectas,&#8221; to be held December 15 &#8211; 17 at Irondale Theater in Brooklyn. After the screening, Robert Ashley, Alex Waterman and Ned Sublette (who will play the narrator, &#8220;R,&#8221; [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="clear: both;"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-9751" title="09PL_still" src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/09PL_still-300x230.png" alt="" width="300" height="230" />On Oct. 23, Issue Project Room held a screening of <strong>Robert Ashley&#8217;s 1983 classic made-for-TV-opera &#8220;Perfect Lives,&#8221;</strong> in support of our <a href="http://www.unitedstatesartists.org/project/vidas_perfectas">ongoing fundraising campaign</a> for &#8220;<a href="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/2011/10/17/vidas-perfectas-irondale/">Vidas Perfectas</a>,&#8221; to be held December 15 &#8211; 17 at Irondale Theater in Brooklyn. </p>
<p>After the screening, Robert Ashley, Alex Waterman and Ned Sublette (who will play the narrator, &#8220;R,&#8221; in &#8220;Vidas Perfectas&#8221;) stuck around for a Q&amp;A about television, &#8220;Vidas Perfectas,&#8221; and methods of collaboration. The whole interview is available for streaming below, but here&#8217;s an excerpt, just to whet your appetite</p>
<p style="display:inline;">(Listen while reading)</p>
<p> [Audio clip: view full post to listen]</p>
<blockquote style="clear:both;"><p>Why is it for television? As I was growing into music, I was more and more disappointed by the musical experience that I saw on stage. One, because it was so old—the instruments are old, the ideas are so old, everything&#8217;s so old it’s so boring, you know? Because the music that we&#8217;re all thinking of had outgrown the architecture. In the best of circumstances, the architecture and the music—for the people—match. But what&#8217;s happened in the last 50–100 years is that the music has outgrown the architecture. There is no architecture to deal with what we&#8217;re talking about right here [bong] … and I thought, there&#8217;s got to be one, or we wouldn&#8217;t be thinking these thoughts. And it occurred to me &#8230; that our architecture might be the imaginary space behind the surface of the television screen. In other words, you look at the television screen, you see whatever you see—red, green, blue—behind that there&#8217;s an imaginary space and maybe that&#8217;s the place for the music of our time. So I started thinking in that way and I haven&#8217;t changed my mind a bit. I think Alex is the first to see … if you want your music to feel at home, I would suggest you start knocking on the doors of television and saying &#8220;let me in.&#8221; Because that&#8217;s the space for my music. It has everything in terms of the speed of the music, it can handle any situation, and it can go from not much money to a whole lot of money—and you want to be on both ends [bong].</p>
<p style="text-align: right;">—Robert Ashley</p>
</blockquote>
<p style="display:inline;">Full Excerpt:</p>
<p> [Audio clip: view full post to listen]</p>
<div style="margin: 10p auto; width: 276px;"><a href="http://www.unitedstatesartists.org/project/vidas_perfectas"><img src="http://www.issueprojectroom.org/wordpresstest/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/usa_logo.png" alt="" title="usa_logo" width="276" height="77" class="alignleft size-full wp-image-9515" /></a></div>
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