Author Archives: Christina

David Greenspan
Superstitions
A Terrifying Comedy

The POOL Pop Up Theater
The New Ohio Theater

154 Christopher Street Suite 1E
New York, NY 10014

DATES:
Nov. 1 at 8pm;
Nov. 5 at 5pm;
Nov 7 at 2pm;
Nov. 8 at 8pm;
Nov. 11 at 8pm;
Nov. 13 at 2pm;
Nov. 14 at 8pm;
Nov. 17 at 8pm;
Nov. 19 at 5pm;
Nov. 20 at 8pm)

SUPERSTITIONS
By Emily Zemba
Directed by Jenna Worsham


Grieg finds a penny on the ground. When he tries to offer it to a stranger sitting near him — it sparks an absurd and frightening conversation about “bad luck.” Superstitions is an 8-character unconventional comedy about navigating personal and national terrors. Who knew the ridiculous could be so terrifying?

Featuring: Celeste Arias*, Latoya Edwards*, Nicholas Gorham, David Greenspan*, Iliana Guibert*, Rebecca Jimenez*, Ricardo Vázquez*, and Naren Weiss*. *Actors Equity

Check out thepoolplays.org for cast and design information! In addition, there you will find the most current information on COVID-19 restrictions. To attend a performance you must show proof of vaccination with ID verification for admittance into the theatre. Masks are required for all audience members. However, performers will not be masked.

TICKETS: The Pool is all about expanding access to the stage, both for artists and audiences! Pay-What-You-Choose tickets are all General Admission at $5, $25, or $50. On show days, in person, audiences can choose any price (availability permitting).

MORE INFO: https://ci.ovationtix.com/34708/production/1076696

DAVID GREENSPAN He is the recipient of six Obies, including an award in 2010 for Sustained Achievement.

Sonia Gechtoff The 60’s in New York A Series of Transitions

October 27 through November 19, 2021

David Richard Gallery, LLC
211 East 121 ST | New York, NY 10035
2nd floor
P: (212) 882-1705

www.davidrichardgallery.com

An exhibition that looks critically into this pivotal and transformative period following the artist’s move from San Francisco in 1958. Like the preceding decade, during the mid-1950s with Gectoff’s arrival in the Bay Area, the 60s were full of change and experimentation in New York. This presentation maps several such transitions, including: changes in Gechtoff’s painting medium and method of application; experimenting with collage and lithography; but most profound, the notable change of the imagery in her drawings and paintings.

The presentation will include paintings and drawings, the mainstay of Gechtoff’s repertoire from the 1950s and 60s. Both media share strong relationships to one another with bold marks, paint laden strokes on canvas, full bodied gestures with graphite on paper, and equal attention given to figure and ground that spans both decades. However, this presentation will focus on the technical, formal and aesthetic changes that occurred in the 1960s with respect to Gechtoff’s paintings and drawings and will also include the new media of collage and lithography from that period.

Regarding technique, Gechtoff moved away from the palette knife, which was her signature tool for marking the canvas and delivering thick impasto applications of paint in bold and determinative strokes. In large part, this was a result of her move from oil paint to the new acrylic medium that had become very popular in the 1960s. While she did continue to work in both oil and acrylic during that decade, her migration to brushes was distinctly noted in both media. The painting presented in this exhibition, Sea Door, 1966 is an oil painting, but the predominance of brush strokes is evident. By the 1970s, her migration to acrylic paint was complete and continued throughout the remainder of her career.

Jennifer Gibson
Balance and Strength Training Free

Mondays 2:00pm – 3:00pm
Starting Nov 1, 2021

Contact
Jennifer Gibson of the Integral Yoga Institute
jenjiyoga@gmail.com
for information and zoom link

Jennifer Gibson is certified through the reputable Integral Yoga Institute of New York City, which served the West Village community and surrounding areas for over 50 years.

Jennifer has been a Yoga Instructor since 2005, specializing in yoga for seniors since 2011.
She is thrilled to share the tools of yoga with seniors for balance and building strength. In Jennifer’s current work with seniors, what began as one class quickly grew into three different classes per week, each packed with 20-30 students. Participants range between the ages of early 60s to early 90s and have a wide variety of ability.

Jennifer is passionate about making the practice of yoga accessible to everyone. She loves how appreciative seniors are to learn yoga and how much they look forward to every class, and she is excited to bring the benefits of yoga to the Westbeth community.

FREE Event Open to All
Subsidized by Westbeth Artists Residents Council and a grant from NYC Councilmember Corey Johnson

Doron Tadmor
Feldenkrais Class
Resumes in Westbeth Community Room

When: Wednesdays 11am
Where: Westbeth Community Room 155 Bank Street NY NY 10014

b/w Washington and West St. Enter through courtyard

We will resume our Feldenkrais Class with Doron this coming Wednesday, February 23rd, at 11:00 a.m. in the Westbeth Community Room.

Our Covid protocols are still in place – you must have proof of your Covid vaccination and you must wear a mask at all times in the community room. Please bring your own mat or blanket .

Thank you – we look forward to seeing as many of you as possible on Wednesday.
Cost: $5 per class
No experience necessary. Drop ins welcome. Wear comfortable clothes.

Class Instructor: Doronn Tadmor Guild-certified Feldenkrais Practitioner
More Info at: www.flexible-brain.com

More information; Sandra Kingsbury slkingsbury189@gmail.com

Attendees must show proof of Covid 19 vaccination (at least 1 dose) for those who qualify, a photo ID and wear a face covering.
Maximum occupancy 35.

Sponsored by Westbeth Beautification Committee

Erin Quinn Purcell Directs “Where I’ve Never Gone: Diane in Ten Frames”

Where I’ve Never Gone: Diane in Ten Frames
By Ellis Stump
Directed by Erin Quinn Purcell

FREE PERFORMANCE

Saturday Oct 23, 2021 at 7PM
Sunday. Oct 24, 2021 at 7PM

Westbeth Community Room
155 Bank St
NYC 10014

Seating is limited. Reservations strongly recommended. Reserve Now!
Email” WARCevents@gmail.com

Covid vaccination, photo ID, face covering. Maximum occupancy 35 persons.

50 years since Diane Arbus’s passing by suicide, we reopen and theatrically bring to life her iconic final project: “A Box of 10 Photographs.” These scenic snapshots preserve moments in Arbus’s lifetime and New York City history, while exploring current themes of mental health, identity, creative appropriation, and imagination. 

This play, by rising playwright Ellis Stump, was mentored at Columbia University by David Henry Hwang (M Butterfly) and is directed by Erin Quinn Purcell.

Erin Quinn Purcell has worked as an actor/director/writer in New York City for over 25 years. She serves as Performing Arts Chair on the Westbeth Artist Residents Council.

In addition to directing “Where I’ve Never Gone”, Erin is also currently working with Jay Reiss (The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee) on a new musical, Iceboy! (music and lyrics by Mark Hollmann) at the Pasadena Playhouse starring Megan Mullally, Nick Offerman, Adam Devine and Laura Bell Bundy. You can watch 4 numbers from the musical on their website https://www.playbill.com/article/watch-megan-mullally-and-nick-offerman-in-the-upcoming-musical-iceboy.

Anita Steckel
Politics of Desire and Oppression in Art

“My Town” (c. 1969-1974), silver gelatin print, 37 x 49 inches (all images courtesy the Estate of Anita Steckel, Hannah Hoffman Gallery, Los Angeles, and Ortuzar Projects, New York)[/caption]

HYPOALLERGIC
Art Review
Oct 13, 2021

Anita Steckel
Hannah Hoffman Gallery
Los Angeles, California

By Natalie Haddad

Read the complete review HERE

LOS ANGELES — In 1973 Anita Steckel wrote, “If the erect penis is not ‘wholesome’ enough to go into museums — it should not be considered ‘wholesome’ enough to go into women. And if the erect penis is ‘wholesome’ enough to go into women, then it is more than ‘wholesome’ enough to go into the greatest art museums.”

The statement appeared in the press release for Fight Censorship, a group the artist formed that year to oppose institutional censorship of sexually themed art by women; members included Judith Bernstein, Louise Bourgeois, Joan Semmel, and Hannah Wilke.

“N.Y. Canvas Series #2” (c. 1971), screenprint and oil on canvas, 64 x 99 inches

Anita Steckel at Hannah Hoffman, organized with Steckel’s estate, features plenty of penises, and plenty of artworks that ought to be in museums. The exhibition, which spans the late 1960s to the early ’80s, includes selections from four series that integrate collage, drawing and painting, and silkscreened or photocopied images.

With her Giant Women on New York photomontage series (1969–74), Steckel inserts her own image in New York City’s skyline. In “My Town,” a sultry Steckel lies nude across the city, its towers passing through her transparent body. “Pierced” is more blunt in its depiction of the phallic skyscraper’s abuse of the female body: the artist hangs limp above the Chrysler Building, impaled at the waist by its sharp crown.

Read the complete review HERE