Category Archives: Past Events

Westbeth Diamond Jubilee
Celebrating Productivity and Creativity Beyond the Age of 75.

Dates:
Sept 8 – Sept 29,2018
Opening Reception:
Sept 8, 5:30PM – 8PM
with Young Jazz Ensemble

Coinciding with the 50th Anniversary of Westbeth Artist Housing, a very special exhibit of the work of seven artists who have been actively creating beyond the age of 75 will open on Saturday, September 8th in the Westbeth Gallery. Entitled A Diamond Jubilee, this exhibition will feature a wide variety of art forms: abstract, figurative and impressionistic paintings, as well as masks, puppetry, embroidery, and photographs.

By the year 2050, experts predict that the segment of the population over the age of 60 will more than double, jumping from 900 million to 2.1 billion. Further complicating the situation, the United States Social Security Administration is running a deficit year in, year out. The only way they’ve been able to stay afloat is by eating into a reserve accumulated from surpluses of past years. However, that well is expected to dry up by 2034, and unless the age of retirement is increased, the SSA will only be able to pay out 79% of the need from the amount accumulated through taxes.

Jenny Tango may provide the solution. At 92 years old, she is renowned for her vitality, quick wit and lust for life, which she attributes, in part, to marrying a man 28 years her junior. Active since the 1970’s in the Feminist Movement, Tango is a figurative painter who often uses her own naked body in her portraits. By her own admission, she lives in a different world than most people and wouldn’t have it any other way: “If you conform to the middle class idea of [society], boy can you be boring. I mean look at Trump! He is the perfect example of someone who has more than everything, and as far as I’m concerned, he has nothing.”

Ralph Lee, a mask maker whose creations have appeared in everything from the Metropolitan Opera to Broadway to Saturday Night Live, is perhaps best known for founding the Village Halloween Parade, which today draws 60 thousand costumed participants and 2 million onlookers each year. He, too, believes that conformity is over-rated, especially since one of the great things about being human is the freedom of choose which mask to wear. Just as the widely popular television show RuPaul’s Drag Race promotes the idea that “We are all born naked and the rest is drag”, Ralph Lee explains, “In a lot of cultures, you become the deity when you’re wearing the mask. It allows you to behave in a lot of different ways, to use your body in a different way.”

Judy Lawne came up with the idea for A Diamond Jubilee shortly after she was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. As a photographer, she considered the camera an extension of her body, and now must use a tripod to continue her work. She persists because she’s devoted to capturing, “a moment in time. There may be 60 to 100 pictures taken of any one [subject], but there’s only one that is really a moment in time. That’s what photography is: a moment in time that no other medium can capture. “

You are invited to attend the opening reception of A Diamond Jubilee on Saturday, September 8th from 5:30pm to 8pm. The show will run until September 29th in the Westbeth Gallery (55 Bethune Street, New York, NY 10014).

Featuring the work of:
Penny Jones, puppets and marionettes
Edith Isaac Rose, figurative paintings and embroidery
Robert Ludwig, abstract paintings
Jenny Tango, figurative painting
Judy Lawne, photography
Ralph Lee, masks and puppets
Bea Kreloff,figurative paintings and drawings.

More info:
Stanley Wlodyka
(646) 474-4275
wlodyka.stanley@gmail.com

Grove Pharmacy and Westbeth Artists Residents Council
Let’s Talk Nasal and Oral Inhalers

This is the one year anniversary of these healthful and informative talks!
This Sunday find out the answers to: Do I have to rinse my mouth after oral inhaler?; Can I get an asthma inhaler over the counter?; and more!

Featuring Ilana Aminov BSPharm and
Rebecca Aminov, Pharmacy Intern.

Refreshments and bag a goodies.

Entertainment by Eve Zanni and Isaac Raz.

FREE EVENT

Whitney Staff Art Show 2018
WESTSIDE EXPOSURE

WHITNEY SHOW POSTER 2018 REAL-3

Exhibition: July 11–26, 2018
Opening Reception: July 10, 2018, 6–8 pm
Gallery Hours: Wednesday–Sunday, 1–6 pm

From its origins in Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney’s Greenwich Village studio in 1914 to its relocation to the Meatpacking District in 2015, the Whitney Museum of American Art has always sought to support living artists at critical moments in their careers. Many of the Museum’s staff members, who make the Museum’s exhibitions, programs, publications, and day-to-day operations possible, are artists themselves. For the third time in its history, the Whitney’s Staff Art Show will be held in a public space, offering staff an opportunity to share their work and deepen connections with one another as well as a wider audience. This year’s exhibition will include the work of over ninety artists, presenting a wide range of mediums and content and reflecting the diversity of thought and artistic practice among the Whitney’s staff.

Literary Event
Alison Armstrong and Jack Dowling

When: Wednesday Sept 26, 2018 at 7PM
Where: Westbeth Community Room

An evening of selected short stories and memoirs.

Alison Armstrong’s books include The Joyce of Cooking (1986); Gazelle: Nine Monologues (2017); and Pentimenti: Selected Memoirs (2018). Her essays and reviews have appeared in literary journals, and her fiction and poetry in BOMB, Exquisite Corpse, Mid-American Review, and Notre Dame Review. Armstrong teaches at the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan and exhibits annually with Japanese Artists Association.

More info about Alison, Here

Jack Dowling had a successful career as a visual artist but more recently has devoted himself to writing, publishing stories in the Hamilton Stone Review, among other publications. As Westbeth’s visual arts chair for some fourteen years, he lent his considerable curatorial skills to the shows at Westbeth’s gallery—and he continues help artists exhibit their work to great effect.

More info about Jack, Here

Brigitta Varadi
MARKINGS

Exhibition Dates:
August 4 – 24, 2018

Opening reception:
August 4 Saturday
3pm – 6pm
Closing reception:
24 August Friday
3pm – 6pm

Artist talk:
18 August Saturday
3pm – 5pm

Gallery Hours: Wednesday through Sunday 1-6pm.

Through her work, Brigitta Varadi explores pattern and repetition of gesture that relate to the invisible and everyday rituals of working life and the constructed environment. Her projects combine painting, textile, video and public interventions.

Brigitta’s latest project MARKINGS gathers together and explores the different marks used by farmers to identify their sheep in the North West region. With the use of traditional techniques and a system of marks used by shepherds, her works examine the mechanics of remembering and reminding. Creating a dialogue with farmers and place the project also opens on to a broader reflection concerning the signs and forms of identification humans use to identify animals, plants and territories.

Váradi’s works bear affinities with socially committed art, but they were not created in the name of political activism. Instead, she examines the disappearing traditions and daily activities of small, secluded communities around the world: her grandmother mopping up her kitchen floor several times a day, the “liberty” tea made by inhabitants of New York State and the marking system of the dwindling community of shepherds in Ireland. Research always plays a key factor in her creative process, for instance taking pictures and recording videos, and her finished works often necessitate experimentation with an entirely new technique.

‘The act of inscription—more than the content of the inscribed markings—is paramount. In visual and material fidelity, each artwork represents a person, one whose occupation and knowledge, their ownership and memory, leave a bold mark on the canvas. These graphic representations—and they are both mimetic representations and abstractions—could be equally at home on a damp Irish hillside or in the modern art gallery. In the shared gestures of the farmer and the artist, two lineages come together…..Indeed, embedded into these artworks—literally felted and matted, smeared onto their surfaces—is a history of labor and tradition: men’s and women’s, commercial and domestic, craft and fine art. Like Pollock straddling his drip paintings, Varadi crouches atop the wool as she felts it, counting, rolling a single piece—the fleeces of five sheep—up to 25,000 times. She works each textile as if making pastry, turning it to ensure even shrinkage as its wet fibers hook together. The physical properties of wool fight back, taxing Varadi’s body as she transforms it from raw material into singular artwork.’
excerpts from essay by Andrea Alessi (Link to full essay: Marking memory

BIO:
Brigitta Varadi was born in Hungary and currently she divides her time between Co.Leitrim, Ireland, New York, USA and her native Hungary. Brigitta’s work is found in many public and private collections including a government commission by the Office of Public Works for The Department of Education and Science, Athlone, Ireland and is recently completed a collaborative public art commission for Sligo County Council, Ireland (2017).
Brigitta Varadi latest solo shows were held at the Budapest Gallery, Hungary (2017), Leitrim Sculpture Centre, Ireland (2015), Serbian Church Gallery Hungary (2015), Textile Arts Centre New York. (2014). She has participated in the New York Foundation for the Arts IAP Mentoring Program (2016) and been awarded fellowships by the Wassaic Project, NY (2016) Leitrim Sculpture Centre, Ireland (2015), Textile Arts Centre, Brooklyn (2014), LOCIS, European Cultural Program (2014) and TRADE, Ireland (2011). She has been artist in residence at the Marble House Project, Vermont, NARS Foundation, NY, Chashama, NY, Tyrone Guthrie Centre, Ireland and KulttuuriKauppila, Finland.
She is a recipient of numerous awards from the Arts Council of Ireland, Leitrim County Council and Culture Ireland. She was the grand winner of the Art Slant 2016 Prize. Her work has been reviewed in the Irish Times and included in several books. Brigitta was acknowledged for her contribution to the arts of Ireland by the President, Mary Mc Alesse, 2008.

In addition to developing her own practice, Brigitta works on commissions and exhibitions, developing projects with people of all ages and abilities within the community sector, schools, prisons and arts centers. She has co-designed and facilitated the Creative Lab for the United Nation, Framework Convention on Climate Change, Bonn, Germany (2013). She is currently the Residency Director at chaNorth, chashama a nonprofit organization that supports artists by giving them space to create and present their work, while fostering community development through the arts

‘Indeed, embedded into these artworks—literally felted and matted, smeared onto their surfaces—is a history of labor and tradition: men’s and women’s, commercial and domestic, craft and fine art. Like Pollock straddling his drip paintings, Varadi crouches atop the wool as she felts it, counting, rolling a single piece—the fleeces of five sheep—up to 25,000 times. She works each textile as if making pastry, turning it to ensure even shrinkage as its wet fibers hook together. The physical properties of wool fight back, taxing Varadi’s body as she transforms it from raw material into singular artwork.’
excerpts from essay by Andrea Alessi

Link: Brigitta Varadi website

Some images from the show!

Benedict Gallagher, sheep farmer with sheep

Sheep Markings
County Donegal, Ireland

Benedict Gallagher and son, sheep farming County Sligo, Ireland

Noel Ruane sheep marking 80″x80″
Ox Mt sheep wool, silk, merino wool.

Denny Dolan, sheep farmer, County Lettrim

LET’S TALK
Hemp and CBD Oil
Sponsored by Grove Drugs
and Westbeth

When: Sunday August 12, 2018 2PM -3:30pm
What: Talk and Q&A with Ilana Aminov BSPharm, RPH

With: Catering by Michael Stewart of Tavern on Jane St
Entertainment by Eve Zanni and Isaac Raz

The 8th in a series of wonderfully detailed and health-conscious talks sponsored by Grove Drugs and Westbeth Artists Residents Council.

CBD oil is the short form of the term cannabidiol oil. Cannabidiol is a natural component of industrial cannabis or hemp. CBD oil is cannabis oil that has a significant content of cannabidiol. It is made from the flowers, leaves and stalks of hemp and not from its seeds like hemp oil.

While they are similar in some ways, there are important differences between hemp oil and CBD oil. As a consumer, it’s easy to get confused by phrases such as “cannabis oil” and “marijuana oil,” especially when many companies seem to use these terms interchangeably.

Which one is used for cooking and is a fantastic moisturizer? And which is the one to be used to treat various ailments and disorders without the intoxicating effects of marijuana.

Find out on Sunday August 12.

LET’S TALK ABOUT HEMP AND CBD OIL, PART 2
A West Village Wellness Social

When: Sunday September 9, 2018 2PM -3:30PM
Where: Westbeth Community Room
Who: Ilana Aminov, BSPharm,RPH and Michael Drew Embrey, host
Why:CBD oil and hemp oilis said to have a wide variety of health benefits for humans and other animals alike.

Entertainment: Eve Zanni and Isaac Raz
Catering: Michael Stewart at Tavern on Jane

Brought to you by Westbeth Artists Residents Council and Grove Drugs

CBD oil is the short form of the term cannabidiol oil. Cannabidiol is a natural component of industrial cannabis or hemp. CBD oil is cannabis oil that has a significant content of cannabidiol. It is made from the flowers, leaves and stalks of hemp and not from its seeds like hemp oil.

Some things which are said to be alleviated by CBD Oil / Hemp Oil:
1. Relief for Chronic Pain
2. Calms Childhood Epilepsy
3. Reduces Anxiety and Depression
4. Fights Multi-Drug Resistant Bacteria
5. Reduces Inflammation
6. Reduces Oxidative Stress
7. Help for Schizophrenia
8. Promotes Healthy Weight
9. Improves Heart Health
10. Improves Skin Conditions

FLU SHOTS

When: Tues Sept 11, 2018
1PM – 4PM

where: Westbeth Community Room

In the United States, October through May is considered flu season. Most people will get the flu between late December and early March, which are typically the coldest months of the year. The cold weather combined with the low humidity allow flu virus particles to remain in the air for longer, making it easier for them to spread from person to person.

It takes roughly two weeks for the body to develop antibodies against the vaccine. If you’re exposed to the influenza virus before you get the vaccine, or within the two-week time frame after you get it, you can still catch the flu. For this reason, the CDC recommends that adults get vaccinated against the flu by the end of October.FREE Everyone welcome.

Flu vaccines work by stimulating your body’s immune system to create antibodies — large proteins that neutralize harmful bacteria and viruses. The antibodies developed as a reaction to the flu shot help to fight off any viral infection that you’re exposed to during flu season.

How effective is the flu vaccine?

The efficacy of a flu shot varies from year to year, and between individuals. The factors that determine how well the flu shot prevents illness include the age and health of the person receiving the flu shot and the similarity between the strains circulating and the strains vaccinated against. Overall, the CDC has found that receiving a flu shot lowers the risk of catching the flu by about 50 to 60%. Those are odds worth considering if you’re unsure about getting the flu shot.

Sponsored by Westbeth Artists Residents Council and Northwell Lenox Hill.

BODY: Unseen /Reclaimed
Art in Odd Places Festival 2018

Art in Odd Places (AiOP) 2018 Festival Exhibition BODY: Unseen/Reclaimed

Curator: Katya Grokhovsky

Exhibition: October 5th –27th, 2018
Westbeth Gallery Hours: Tuesday–Sunday, 12–6 pm

Opening Reception: October 4th, 2018, 6–8 pm

Panel: October 18th 2018, 6-8pm
Closing Reception and Performances: October 27th, 6-8pm

Public Festival: October 11-14th, 2018: Along 14th street, Manhattan

Art in Odd Places (AiOP) 2018 BODY NYC is curated by Katya Grokhovsky, presenting projects by women, female identifying and non-binary artists, taking place along 14th Street, NY on October 11-14, 2018, accompanied by a coinciding group exhibition Art in Odd Places 2018 BODY : Unseen/Reclaimed at Westbeth Gallery on October 4 – 27,  2018.

The theme BODY explores agency, politics and status of the “other” in an urban environment, through various media including performance, installation, sculpture, photography, sound, video and text.

This year, forty five selected local, national and international participants challenge notions and societal constructs of gender, age and beauty, analyze contemporary ideas of self, death, sex, viscera and health, explore issues of otherness, body image, language, memory and belonging through staging of multimedia interdisciplinary projects, movement and participatory works, artifacts and ephemera, considering issues of exclusion, displacement and absence in the current discourse.

Art in Odd Places aims to stretch the boundaries of communication in the public realm by presenting artworks in all disciplines outside the confines of traditional public space regulations. AiOP reminds us that public spaces function as the epicenter for diverse social interactions and the unfettered exchange of ideas.

Artists: Elaine Angelopoulos | Jessica Elaine Blinkhorn | Kasie Campbell | Stacey Cann | Deborah Castillo | Donna Cleary and Kathie Halfin| DON’T MOVE: Kat Cope, Kelly Savage, Kate Frazer Rego | Dominique Duroseau | Catherine Feliz | Dakota Gearhart | Maryam Monalisa Gharavi | Nicole Goodwin | Claus Hedman | Martha Hipley | PEI-LING Ho | KINSFOLK : Holly and Jackie Timpener | Daniela Kostova | Luiza Kurzyna | Joanne Leah | LEGACY FATALE | LuLu LoLo | Jodie Lyn-Kee-Chow | Nadja Verena Marcin | Giulia Mattera | Daniela Mekler | Esther Neff | Rose Nestler | Laura Nova | NO WAVE PERFORMANCE TASK FORCE : Amy Finkbeiner and Christen Clifford | Jody Oberfelder | Sierra Ortega | Verónica Peña  | Maya Pindyck | QUESTIONS COLLECTIVE | X senn-yuen rance  | Autumn Robinson and Lyra Monteiro (The Museum On Site)| Yali Romagoza | Clarivel Ruiz | Jody Servon | Meg Stein | Jaime Sunwoo | TANGA!: Rachel Chick, Andrew Prieto, Alfredo Travieso | THE DoMystics: Monique Blom and Arantxa Araujo | Denise Treizman and Adam Brazil | Grace Whiteside 

Performance Is Alive is the Proud Media Sponsor for Art In Odd Places 2018: BODY

http://www.artinoddplaces.org/