Category Archives: Past Events

PEN America
World Voices Festival
Literary Quest: Westbeth Edition

Thursday: May 9, 2019
6:30PM – 10:00PM

Meet at Westbeth Gallery

Residents of New York City’s historic Westbeth Center for the Arts open their homes to Festival-goers for this perennial favorite festival event. Join your fellow writers and readers in the West Village, grab a map, and wander through the hallways of the city’s oldest and largest artists’ community for intimate, salon-style readings and discussions by Festival authors, including Felicity Castagna, Inês Pedrosa, Rodrigo Rey Rosa, Pajtim Statovci, Najat El Hachmi, Wu Ming-yi, and others. This uniquely immersive literary experience concludes with a special reception in the Westbeth Gallery.

Tickets

Get Tickets: $20

Presented with the Westbeth Artists Residents Council

PARENT PORTRAITS
Group Show

Show Dates:
May 11 – June 8, 2019

Opening reception
Saturday, May 11, 2019, 4-8 PM
Closing reception
Saturday, June 8, 2019, 5-7 PM

FOR SPECIAL EVENTS ASSOCIATED WITH THIS EXHIBITION, SEE BELOW

At Westbeth Gallery, 57 Bethune Street, NY, NY 10014
Gallery hours: Wednesday – Sunday 1-6 PM, or by appointment.

Robert Bunkin, Anniversary Portrait, 1977, oil on canvas, 30 x 40 inches

Westbeth Galleryis pleased to present Parent Portraits, an exhibition focusing on artists’ representations of their parents, curated by artists Robert Bunkin and Jenny Tango. The exhibition will offer works by these contemporary international artists working in diverse media, including painting, sculpture, drawing, intaglio printmaking, and embroidery:

Participating Artists:

Sigmund Abeles, Ken Aptekar, Anneli Arms, Joan Banach, Isabel Barber,
Brian Brooks, Robert Bunkin,Susanna Coffey, William Crist, Patricia Dahlman,
Harvey Dinnerstein, Elise Dodeles, Jenny Dubnau, Richard Estrin, Donna Festa,
Leonid Gervits, Dan Gheno, Susan Grabel, Amaya Gurpide,
Patrick Earl Hammie, Mark Hanson, Melanie Hickerson, Jayne Holsinger,
Sedrick Huckaby, Sara Issakharian, Karen Kaapcke, Catherine Kehoe, Brian Kreydatus,
Mel Leipzig, Beverly McIver, Marybeth McKenzie, Ron Milewicz, John Mitchell,
Arnold Mesches, Bill Murphy, Danielle Muzina, Jennifer Pochinski,
Carolyn Pyfrom, James Rauchman, Joseph Santore, Elinore Schnurr,
Ryan Schroeder, Frances Siegel, Orly Shiv, Jenny Tango, Polly Thayer,
Audrey Ushenko, Clarissa Payne Uvegi, Costa Vavagiakis, Jerome Witkin.

Beverly McIver, Cardrew III, 2015, Oil on canvas, 36 x 36 in. (91.44 x 91.44 cm), courtesy of Betty Cuningham Gallery.

Among the most significant and intimate relationships we all share, parents are defined here as biological or adoptive, but not “spiritual” or metaphorical.

Sigmund Abeles, Artist’s Mother, Henrietta Banner Abeles, 1971, plaster, 10 ½ x 10 ½ x 10 inches

This subject has rarely been the theme of an art exhibition. Many artists have depicted their mothers and fathers as a kind of search for their own identity or as a tribute to their nurturers and first patrons. We often have conflicted relationships with our parents and this complexity can motivate the work. Interpretations of this subject run the gamut from highly charged narratives to straightforward realism, with humor and affection along the way. All of the works are extremely personal expressions of the artist’s relationship.

Jenny Tango, Mom and Dad Napping, 1947, pencil on paper, 9 x 12 inches

The exhibition offers works by a cross-section of younger and older artists of diverse backgrounds, including works by Arnold Mesches (d. 2016) and Polly Thayer (d. 2006). The exhibition contextualizes these contemporary works with a visual timeline of historic artists’ portraits of their parents, including such masters as Dürer, Rembrandt,
Whistler, Cassatt, Picasso, Motley, Neel, Freud and Hockney. Additional historic images submitted by participating artists will be posted over the course of the exhibition.

Special Events

May 12, 2019, Sunday at 3PM – 4:30PM
MOTHER ‘S DAY TOUR:

This interactive tour will offer highlights and insights into some of the over 70 works in the exhibition, which features 50 contemporary artists and a timeline of past artists’ portraits of their parents, collected by the curators and the artists in the exhibition.
This program is free and doesn’t require reservations.

Further information: rbunkin@mail.com or tel./text 347 979-4009

May 18, 2019 Saturday at 3PM
CHILDREN OF WESTBETH PARENTS

: Three generations of children will discuss Westbeth’s impact on parents and on themselves, followed by an open forum.
Geoffrey Jones, multimedia director, video artist and composer/musician – son of Penny Jones, puppeteer
Nelly Rieffler, award winning author, daughter of choreographer/dancer Ellen Marshall
Melika Dave, cross-media artist, daughter of painter Vinod Dave
This program is free and doesn’t require reservations

May 25, 2019 Saturday at 3PM
MAGDALENA: A family story of love and dementia

Conceived, written, and performed by Gabri Christa
Directed by Erwin Maas
Design and dramaturgy by Guy de Lancey
MAGDALENA is an intimate multimedia solo work by the award-winning filmmaker and a Guggenheim Fellow Gabri Christa. Utilizing storytelling, visuals, and dance, the artist reveals a deeply personal account of experiencing her Dutch mother’s dementia, and an effort to piece together her past, marked by struggles with war, interracial marriage and unconventional motherhood. The piece premiered last fall in Theaterlab NYC where it received rave reviews. 2 PERFORMANCES ONLY:

$10. Tickets (Seniors tickets free with reservation) can be purchased at Brown Paper Tickets
https://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/4215424

June 1, 2019 Saturday at 3PM
PARENT POEMS will be offered in conjunction with the exhibition PARENT PORTRAITS at Westbeth Gallery, 57 Bethune Street, NYC, on Saturday, June 1, at 3 pm.
Admission to the Parent Portraits exhibition and Parent Poems is free.


This thematic reading will feature seven poets: Edward Field, Hugh Seidman, Edith Chevat, Elizabeth Lash, Perry Brass and James K. Zimmerman. Parent poems from Anything You Don’t See by Enid Dame will be read by Robert Bunkin.

The six books of poetry by Westbeth Icon, Edward Field, have won him acclaim and honors. He has edited anthologies, translated Eskimo songs and stories, and written the narration for the Academy Award-winning documentary, To Be Alive. He is the editor of the Alfred Chester Newsletter and has prepared several volumes of Chester’s work for Black Sparrow Press. Field has also collaborated on several popular novels with Neil Derrick under the joint pseudonym of Bruce Elliot.


Hugh Seidman has taught writing at the University of Wisconsin, Yale, Columbia, the College of William and Mary, and The New School. His work has appeared in The Brooklyn Rail, Harper’s, The Paris Review, and Virginia Quarterly Review. His many awards include The Green Rose Prize from New Issues Press (Western Michigan University) for SOMEBODY STAND UP AND SING. His poems have been published by Miami University Press, Random House, Doubleday, Yale University Press, and Half Moon Bay Press.

Edith Chevat is the editor of Girls: An Anthology. Her novel, The Book of Esther, takes a haunting American past—the McCarthy era—and shows how individual lives are changed by history. Her novel, Love Lesson received a starred review in Booklist. Her chapbook Lost, is a poem of personal loss and the loss of 9/11. Her stories, interviews, and poems have appeared in various periodicals and journals. She lives in New York City within sight of Ground Zero.
Elizabeth Lash, winner of the 2019 Miriam Chaikin Foundation Writing Award (Poetry), is a NYC-based attorney who has written on a variety of subjects—from art law and ex-KGB agents to women engineers and corruption in Azerbaijan. Her poetry has appeared in The 5-2: Crime Poetry Weekly, and her non-fiction articles have been published by the Center for Art Law, the Holy Cross Journal of Law and Public Policy, Transparency International, the Engineering News-Record, and GetCrafty.com, among others. She also runs the podcast “Entering the Bar, with Liz Lash,” about the humanistic (and often hidden) sides of lawyers.

Perry Brass has published many books of poetry and science fiction, including The Lover of My Soul, Sex Charge, Mirage and its sequel Circles, Out There, Albert or The Book of Man, Works and Other ‘Smoky George’ Stories and The Harvest in addition to numerous anthologies of Gay poetry and fiction.

James K. Zimmerman is a widely-published, award-winning poet. His second book of poetry, Family Cookout, is the winner of the Jessie Bryce Niles Chapbook Competition from The Comstock Review.

Enid Dame (1943 – 2003) was a poet, fiction writer, teacher, editor, and publisher. She and her husband, poet Don Lev, edited and published the literary tabloid, Home Planet News. She was on the faculty of the New Jersey Institute of Technology and Rutgers University where she served as Associate Director of the Writing Program. The 2007 anthology, Broken Land, edited by Julia Kasdorf and Michael Tyrell, was dedicated to her memory.

The session will close with volunteers from the audience reading “Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night” by Dylan Thomas, “Daddy” by Sylvia Plath, “Mother to Son” by Langston Hughes, and “Regina Exler, 1890-1976” by Samuel Exler.


Press contact & further information:
Robert Bunkin, tel./text: 347 979-4009, email: rbunkin@mail.com

Closing Reception Saturday June 8, 2019. 5PM – 7PM

For more information call or text Robert Bunkin at 347-979-4009 or email rbunkin@mail.com

STORIES AROUND THE TABLE #4

WHEN: Wednesday May 15, 2019 at 7PM
WHERE: Westbeth Community Room. FREE
WHY: Returning by popular demand, STORIES AROUND THE TABLE #4, is a performance and reading by writers detailing the lives of women.

WHO:

KAREN LUDWIG – actor, director, and teacher
NANCY GABOR – director and leader of the popular workshop Never Too Old to Play
JOAN HALL – collagist and poet
SHAMI CHAIKIN – OBIE award winning actor
DAWN D’ARCY – musician, writer, and grandmother to Etta
DALE SOALES – actor featured in Orange is the New Black for the past 6 years
JOYCE AARON – OBIE award winning actor
CHRISTINA MAILE – landscape architect

WESTBETH ICON Evening
David Del Tredici composer

Thursday May 16, 2019 at 7PM
Westbeth Community Room

David Del Tredici, American composer and long time resident of Westbeth

The Pulitzer Prize winner in Music and a former Guggenheim and Woodrow Wilson fellow, Del Tredici is considered a pioneer of the Neo-Romantic movement. He has also been described by the Los Angeles Times as “one of our most flamboyant outsider composers”

Del Tredici draws on literature for his song cycles including Lewis Carroll (particularly Alice in Wonderland), but he has also been inspired by contemporary American poets, especially Westbeth Icon, Edward Field.

Del Tredici has also created works celebrating “gayness”, acknowledging that many great composers were gay and that “it’s something to be celebrated”. A reviewer has noted that themes in his work examine “tormented relationships, personal transformations, and the joys and sorrows of gay life”. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and has held additional residencies at Yaddo, the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, and the MacDowell Colony.

Westbeth Icon Series celebrates the life and work of senior artists who continue to work and who inspire others by their passion and dedication.

The evening consists of a filmed interview, live performances of Del Tredici’s work, and remarkes by the composer himself.

This is a special, not to be missed evening!

Westbeth Movie Night
EXIT THROUGH THE GIFT SHOP

When: Friday May 10 at 7PM
Where: Westbeth Community Room
FREE SCREENING

A 2010 British documentary film, directed by street artist Banksy. It tells the story of Thierry Guetta, a French immigrant in Los Angeles, and his obsession with street art. The film charts Guetta’s constant documenting of his every waking moment on film, from a chance encounter with his cousin, the artist Invader, to his introduction to a host of street artists with a focus on Shepard Fairey and Banksy, whose anonymity is preserved by obscuring his face and altering his voice, to Guetta’s eventual fame as a street artist himself. It is narrated by Rhys Ifans. The music is by Geoff Barrow. It includes Richard Hawley’s “Tonight The Streets Are Ours”.

The film premiered at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival on 24 January 2010, and it was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.

Since its release, there has been extensive debate over whether the documentary is genuine or a mockumentary, although Banksy answered “Yes” when asked if the film is real.

Sponsored by Westbeth Artists Residents Council

WESTBETH FLEA MARKET
SPRING 2019 SALE

OUR 36TH YEAR OF BARGAINS GALORE

Friday, Saturday, Sunday
May 17, 18, 19, 2019
11AM – 5PM

Westbeth Flea Market, For countless years, has been a mecca for finding the unique and the beautiful at incredible prices. We also have become the best place to purchase beautiful original affordable art, donated by artists or the families of artists.

Westbeth is a home to the arts, to artists – painters, dancers, actors, writers, sculptors, musicians and more. What they donate to the Westbeth Flea Market are the things they have found to be amusing, beautiful, useful, and astonishing.

COLLECT LIKE AN ARTIST!

Proceeds of our sales go to maintaining gardens and street trees, sponsoring Westbeth projects, and low cost classes open to the public, such as the popular Feldenkrais class.

Proceeds also go to city, national and international charities, particularly disaster relief. Our recent charitable donations include Gods Love We Deliver, Puerto Rico Relief, Palestinian Children’s Aid, NY Times Neediest Cases, World Wildlife Fund, and many more.

Read more about the Beautification Committee which sponsors the Flea Market HERE

A Literary Evening
Steve Clorfeine and Brenda Bufalino

Where: Westbeth Community Room
155 Bank St, enter through courtyard

When: Thursday May 23, 2019 at 7PM

Writer, Director, Teacher and Performer, Steve Clorfeine will read from his latest book, Simple Geography. Over a period of 8 months, Steve create a collage journal of written notes and cut up images on alternating pages.”Occasionally one informed the other, but the image sometimes created its own story.”
Steve has published his writings in Parabola, and Contact Quarterly. His four books of poetry have been published by Station Hill Press, and Codhill Press.
He studied with Barbara Dilley – a member of Merce Cunningham’s company, and writing with Alan Ginsberg, Ted Berrigan, and Diane Di Prima.
He has taught at SUNY in New Paltz, Naropa University, Amsterdam Theater School, and the Dance Therapy Institute of Switzewrland.

Brenda Bufalino‘s latest book, Song of the Split Elm, re-creates and imagines the life of her great grandmother who lived on the Penobscot reservation on Indian Island in 1853… “Madeline was born singing. She sang melodies like chants, like forecasts, like conversations with flowers and birds.” Madeline’s father Jeremiah, a Calvinist preacher, lived in fear of his daughter’s unique voice and spirit, which could not be contained. Madeline’s Penobscot mother, Hannah, wove her baskets in silence far from Jeremiah’s hope for her redemption”.
Brenda is leading exponent and innovator in the tap world, performing, lecturing, teaching master classes and workshops throughout the United States, and the world.
​She has appeared as a guest soloist atCarnegie Hall, Avery Fisher Hall, The Apollo Theater, The Brooklyn Academy of Music, The Smithsonian Institute and the Kennedy Center.
Ms. Bufalino created The American Tap Dance Orchestra. They have appeared on PBS “Great Performances/Tap Dance in America,” “A Night of Tap At The Apollo Theater,” “The International Festival of the Arts in Central Park,” and seasons at “The Joyce Theater,”and “Dance Theater Workshop.”
A writer of essays and numerous articles, Ms. Bufalino also wrote the forward and afterword for the reissue of “Jazz Dance.”

For the Love of Music and Dance
Avri Ohana Paintings
Ze’eva Cohen Her Life in Dance

Exhibition Dates: June 15th – July 6th, 2019

Gallery Hours: Wednesday – Sunday 1:00 – 6:00PM

Where: Westbeth Gallery 55 Bethune St between Washington and West Sts.


SPECIAL EVENT
Ze’eva Cohen and Avri Ohana in conversation with Terry Stoller, founder of Westbeth ‘s Oral History Project

Wednesday June 26the 7PM – 8PM
ADMISSION FREE

Avri Ohana is a multi-style artist whose new body of work presents paintings inspired by his love for classical music, opera and jazz. In following his intuitive response to music, Ohana finds a new sense of freedom as he lets unexpected elements surface in his work. This fresh approach yields mostly abstract paintings, while some are inspired by nature and some by opera. The delicate balance and nuance between color, shape, and form is his interest. What is important to Ohana is not how a painting is defined or classified, but if it is breathing and alive.

A retrospective of dancer and choreographer Ze’eva Cohen’s long career in dance containing photographs of her work taken by major dance photographers, as well as posters and videos. Two of her dances, Rainwood and Island, include projections of paintings by Ohana and will be screened continuously during the exhibit.

AVRI OHANA was born in Casablanca, Morocco and immigrated to Israel at the age of 12, where he was raised and educated in a kibbutz. As a young man, Ohana was an early member of Ein Hod, Israel’s first artist village, and it was there that he started to develop his artistic voice. His main influences during his formative years were the European Dadaist Marcel Janco, Dan Hoffner the director of Bezalel Art School in Jerusalem, the optical and kinetic artist Yaakov Agam in Paris, and primarily – the painter Eric Brauer of the Vienna School of Fantastic Realism. Ohana’s exhibitions include solo and group shows in Israel, Europe and the United States. Presently, Avri Ohana lives and works in New York City.

ZE’EVA COHEN is a dancer, choreographer, and dance professor emerita at Princeton University, where she founded and directed the dance program for forty years. Cohen grew up in Tel Aviv Israel. She traveled to New York in 1963 to study at the Juilliard School and perform with the Anna Sokolow Dance Company. A founding member of NY Dance Theater Workshop in the late 60’s, she was later known for her groundbreaking solo repertory performances. As choreographer, she worked with her NY dance group and with national and international dance companies, including Boston Ballet, Alvin Ailey Repertory, Inbal and Batsheva dance companies of Israel. In 2015 – her documentary film, Ze’eva Cohen Creating a Life in Dance, was featured in the Dance Camera Festivals both in NY and LA.

Westbeth Movie Night
The Night of the Hunter

When: Wednesday June 12 at 7PM
Where: Westbeth Community Room
FREE
The Night of the Hunter is a 1955 American thriller film directed by Charles Laughton, and starring Robert Mitchum, Shelley Winters, and Lillian Gish. The screenplay by James Agee was based on the 1953 novel of the same title by Davis Grubb. The plot focuses on a corrupt minister-turned-serial killer who attempts to charm an unsuspecting widow and steal $10,000 hidden by her executed husband.

The novel and film draw on the true story of Harry Powers who was hanged in 1932 for the murder of two widows and three children in Clarksburg, West Virginia. The film’s lyrical and expressionistic style with its leaning on the silent era sets it apart from other Hollywood films of the 1940s and 1950s, and it has influenced later directors such as Rainer Werner Fassbinder and Robert Altman.

In 1992, The Night of the Hunter was deemed “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant” by the United States Library of Congress and was selected for preservation in the National Film Registry. The influential film magazine Cahiers du cinéma selected The Night of the Hunter in 2008 as the second-best film of all time, behind Citizen Kane.

KEN WADE
Part 3
Overlapping Hexagons

Effected by the work of Josef Albers and the American artist, Robert Swain, both who made extensive use of the square while brilliantly exploring the interplay of color, I to, along with several artists was attracted to a fixed format for exploring the phenomena & glories of color. I began doing hexagonal paintings early 1968. My first *Overlapping Hex was done in WestBeth, 1970. One day, nonchalantly holding 2 slides of the early overlap painting in my hand, one atop the other slightly askew, I suddenly saw new colors and most importantly—movement—back & forth—in & out of the picture plane that had excited me while drawing **Meditations on a Square—only now—I saw the same dynamic in color.

The Hallway show in 3 parts:

Part 1-March 2-31-Pencil on paper (1964 Tasmania).

Part 2— April 2-30. Pen & Ink on paper. Studying w/Tom Downing and seeing the works of Ken Noland, Tony Smith, Ronnie Bladen. (WashingtonDC 1967-69).

Part 3—A series of mono-print-drawings done not long after moving into WestBeth. (1970)

All work on paper for sale. POR Questions/comments contact: kenwade@me.com

BIO

Education

SUNY 1974 BFA 


Corcoran School of Art. 1966


Tasmanian School of Art 1963

Teaching

Figure Drawing , Parsons School of Design 1976-90
 Adjunct Professor of Art, Hunter College, NYC 1971-75

Selected Exhibitions

Argus Gallery, Melbourne, Australia, 1966


Corcoran Museum, Washington DC, 1968


Jefferson Place Gallery, Washington DC, 1968-69 


The Washington Painters. Baltimore Museum 


Julian Pretto, NYC 1974


OK Harris , 1975


Artist Space, NYC,1979 


Willard Gallery NYC, 1980 


The Pioneer Show, WestBeth Gallery, 
 2008 Sideshow Gallery,, Brooklyn NY. 2010
 Westbeth Gallery, NYC, 2010


Long Island University, Brooklyn Campus, 2011 
 Brick Gallery Hudson, NY 2012
 ATT Open Studio. NYC 2014


Extravaganzas of Obscurity Project Room, 2015
 Black & White Westbeth Gallery 2016