Category Archives: Events

WESTFEST DANCE FESTIVAL 2019
Dance Inside/Out
April 25 – April 28, 2019

WESTFEST
DANCE INSIDE/OUT
April 25th – 28th

Westbeth Artists’ Residence
55 Bethune St / 155 Bank St New York, NY 10014
www.westfestdance.com

TIME OUT names WESTFEST one of the best dance concerts in NYC this month. Click HERE

WESTFEST is a cutting edge, curated dance festival presenting established and emerging movement artists in the historic Westbeth Artists’ Residence in West Village, NYC. The festival includes two distinct programs: WestFest Top Floor and All Over Westbeth.

WESTFEST TOP FLOOR
Join us April 25th – 28th, 8PM for WestFest – Top Floor at the Martha Graham Studio Theater as we present visionary NYC dance artists in a traditional theater setting.

Program A – Thursday, April 25th and Saturday, April 27th at 8PM – includes artists Carol Nolte/Dance Collective, danceTactics performance group / Keith A. Thompson, Amos Pinhasi, Claire Porter / PORTABLES, Choreographer My Lindblad Szlavik (SE/DK), Chloe London Dance, Benjamin Freedman, and Li Chiao-Ping/Li Chiao-Ping Dance.

Program B – Friday, April 26th and Sunday, April 28th at 8PM – includes artists BOiNK! Dance & Film, Jamal Jackson Dance Company, The Bang Group, LMnO3 (Deborah Lohse, Cori Marquis, and Donnell Oakley), HUMA, Ramona Sekulovic, Louise Benkelman & Tommy Seibold, and Abarukas.

Tickets: $20
Purchase Ticket Link: TBD
Time: 8 PM
Running Time: 1 hour
Location: 55 Bethune St, New York, NY 10014

ALL OVER WESTBETH
Our site-specific program, takes place on the weekend of April 27 & 28th. Join us for guided tours of Westbeth’s unique architectural history featuring original dance creations tailored to several of the community’s most iconic spaces.

Free tours begin every 15 minutes from 2-4 PM both days.

Performers include TruDee, BOiNK! Dance & Film, Sarah Esser, Kevin Clark – Soluq Dance Theater, Taylor Donofrio & Donofrio Dance Company, N E 1 4 Dance, Copy That Dance, Molly Mingey.

Tickets: FREE
Tours: Every 15 minutes from 2-4 PM
Running Time: 1 hour
More Info: www.westfestdance.com
Location: 155 Bank St, New York, NY 10014

CONTACT:
Carol Nolte – Founder / Artistic Director & Founder westfestdance@gmail.com
Lauren Hafner Sheehan & Dylan Baker / Producers westfestdance@gmail.com

Activities at the Martha Graham Studio Theater are made possible in part by generous support from The New York State Council on the Arts, a state agency.
WestFest 2019 is made possible by a generous grant from NYC Council Speaker Corey Johnson.
WestFest 2019 is produced under the auspices of the Westbeth Artists’ Residents Council. westbeth.org

Barbara Hammer featured in EXIT INTERVIEW in the New Yorker

photo: Elinor Carucci for The New Yorker

Hammer is a pioneering visual artist known primarily for her films, most of which deal with lesbians, personal histories, and the body.

Hammer is dying. At seventy-nine, she has lived with cancer for thirteen years and has exhausted all available treatment options. She has spoken publicly, repeatedly, about her impending death, both as an artist reflecting on her creative life and as an activist for allowing terminally ill patients to take charge of the dying process.

– Masha Gessen
The New Yorker

Read full article HERE

ARTSY publishes article “Inside New York’s Last Remaining Artists Housing” Feb 2019

Photo CMaile

“Ultimately, Westbeth forces us to consider why it’s so difficult to value the function of artists in society. The work of an artist isn’t always about productivity, and we don’t always see the results of this creative labor. “Imagining is something you do,” Gruen clarified, “not something that happens. It’s the job of the artist to daydream.” This might seem quaint, but Gruen knows that “being successful doesn’t necessarily mean fame or gallery representation. It is simply having the time and space to work.”


– Julia Wolkoff
! February 2019
All photos in article are by Frankie Alduino
Artsy.net

Read full article HERE

This is a lovely article about Westbeth that explores the complexity of artists’ lives and how providing affordable housing supports their immeasurable contribution to the cultural and economic life of the city.

A few minor corrections:

1. Residency Limitation: Although the co-founders of Westbeth had intended a residency limit of 5 years, it was not incorporated into leasing documents or any other written requirement. Early on, the new tenants voiced concern for the need for stability in their own creative lives, and the lives of the children. Westbeth was unusual in its time for its welcome to artists and their families.

Therefore there was no Board failure to enforce a 5 year limit, because in effect it was never formally required.

Invigorated by the optimism at the time, the co-founders had hoped Westbeth would be a springboard for commercial success for its artists residents. Rather that success is evident in the tangible and intangible benefits that Westbeth artists contribute by their work and presence to the immense vitality of the city.

2. Opening of Wait List. There is no cap on residency in the anticipated opening of the wait list.

3. Westbeth is rent stabilized. It is not rent controlled. It became rent stabilized in 2012.

4. There are other artists housing in New York City: ArtSpace in East Harlem which opened a few years ago, and Manhattan Plaza which opened in 1977 and is approx 70% performing artists.

5. New School Drama has its own building in the Westbeth complex. Their students use that building’s entrance on Bank St. They along with Martha Graham students and Westbeth residents all use the Bank St courtyard to relax, and rehearse in warm weather.

Marilynn Grant Barr
THE FIRST SHOE COLLECTION
Is How We Walk Who We Are?

Marilynn Grant Barr’s The First Shoe Collection features life-sized ceramic shoes that merge utility, history, and creativity—begging the question “Is how we walk who we are?”

February 2- February 23, 2019.
Opening Reception: Saturday, February 2, 2019, 6-9pm.

Westbeth Gallery, 55 Bethune Street, NYC.
Gallery hours: Wednesday to Sunday 1-6 pm.

“Besides protection from the elements…” Barr writes, “Shoes continue to attract commoners and celebrities alike—you, me, ‘Carrie Bradshaw,’ Parineeti Chopra, Whoopi Goldberg, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Wendy Williams, and more to a sumptuous footwear feast to wear, collect, and display.”

“Every shoe has a story” Barr states. Inspired by a vintage, wooden shoe last liberated from a second-hand store, Barr made The First Shoe (a pink spiral design with cerulean lace and a chunky heel ceramic shoe) that harkened to “my love of carnival cotton candy.” Then dozens of sketches followed, which served as blueprints for a collection influenced by music, art, history, … and continues to grow.

Barr is a practicing artist based in Greensboro, NC. She is an alumna of the high school of Music & Art, NYC where she majored in art and the University of North Carolina where she earned her Bachelor and Masters degrees. Her works have been included in juried exhibits and she is a recipient of the North Carolina Arts Council’s Regional Artist Project Grant.

Barr works to provoke conversations of “iconic imagery that imprinted your style,” adding, “I hope to entertain and intrigue audiences; to initiate chatter about dying industries; answer questions about who we are, and discuss, though vintage is currently buried in the digital-divide, can it be, the new kid on the block? I wonder.”

The First Shoe Collection—Is how we walk who we are? I wonder by Marilynn Grant Barr.

GrowNYC and WARC present
a recycling event

Bring clean, reusable, portable items such as clothing, books, toys, electronics, household appliances.
YOU DO NOT NEED TO BRING SOMETHING TO TAKE SOMETHING.

Please DO NOT bring expired food, opened personal care items, ripped dirty clothing, fabric scraps, non working electronics, large furniture, or incomplete toys and books.

Westbeth Community Room
12:00PM – 3:00PM

155 Bank St b/w West and Washington Sts
enter through courtyard

GrowNY helps New Yorkers by providing essential services and taking action to make NYC a truly livable city, one where every person can flourish.

Karin Batten receives 2019 Pollock-Krasner Foundation grant

photo CMaile

The many different materials I use create complex and poetic works layered with meaning of open seas and land. I play organic shapes against geometric patterns. Some forms are scraped and layered while others are fully present. I work spontaneously and intuitively.

– Karin Batten
More Info on Karin Batten HERE

Pollock-Krasner grants have enabled artists to create new work, purchase needed materials and pay for studio rent, as well as their personal and medical expenses. Past recipients of Pollock-Krasner grants acknowledge their critical impact in allowing concentrated time for studio work, and in preparing for exhibitions and other professional opportunities such as accepting a residency.

More Info HERE

Vija Vetra, dancer and choreographer featured in West View News January 2019

Photo from Vija Vetra archives

For Vija Vetra, at 95 years old, spirituality remains an important part of her life.
This comes as a surprise, considering that her profession is an intensely physical one, and that after living for nine and a half decades she exhibits remarkable physical strength and flexibility, as well as a mind that is almost impossibly sharp and quick-witted. Inevitably, she is bombarded by the question, “What’s the secret?”, and after ruminating on it innumerable times, she’s boiled it down to a twofold answer. First: Always be as a child. Never lose that sense of curiosity and wonder and appreciation for the small, daily glories. Second: Dance, dance and dance. With music, or without, it doesn’t matter. Just dance.
– By Stanley Wlodyka
Read the entire West View article Here

Westbeth Icon Evening: Vija Vetra Here

Gloria Miguel
actor and Westbeth’s newest Icon

Gloria Miguel actor, and co-founder of the celebrated Spiderwoman Theater which introduced the Native American experience to audiences in America and all over the world.

Gloria Miguel started out in show business at an early age in circus sideshows with her family. Decades later, in the mid-’70s, Gloria and her sister Elizabeth (Lisa Mayo) joined up with their sister Muriel in forming Spiderwoman Theater. Spiderwoman has been delighting and educating audiences with plays about women’s issues and indigenous matters ever since, both in North America and overseas. Their productions include Women in Violence, Lysistrata Numbah!, Sun, Moon and Feather, Reverb-ber-ber-rations, Power Pipes, and Winnetou’s Snake Oil Show from Wigwam City. In addition to her work in theatre and film, Gloria Miguel has taught drama, led workshops, and served as a drama consultant. She and her sisters each received an honorary doctorate of fine arts from Miami University in 1997. Gloria continues to perform.

More info on Gloria at
: Profile in Art

The Westbeth Artists Residents Council created the Icons Project to honor the Westbeth artists who continue to work in the arts and are an inspiration to others.