Events

Bring Your Own Body: transgender between archives and aesthetics Gallery Conversation and Opening Reception

Friday, October 21, 2016
Cantor Fitzgerald Gallery, Haverford College

4:30–5:30 p.m.
Gallery Conversation with Curators Stamatina Gregory and Jeanne Vaccaro

5:30–7:30 p.m.
Opening Reception


CLAPBACK

Performance by Bring Your Own Body Artist niv Acosta

niv Acosta
niv Acosta

Saturday, October 22, 2016
4:00 p.m.
Institute of Contemporary Art, University of Pennsylvania

Supported by the Leeway Foundation

CLAPBACK is about the power of black asses to shed our colonial oppressions, transcend the expectation of dying young, and shift the earth’s gravitational field and jettison evil trolls.

Working across dance performance, sculpture, and educational forums “as ways to consider political issues of race and gender,” the event will feature the institution “as a white, blank surface, which Acosta aims to mark by means of his choreographic action, moving across—and against—his audience.

niv Acosta is a dance artist, educator, black Dominican, transexual, queer native New Yorker. He attended the Martha Graham School of Contemporary Dance (NYC), American Dance Festival (Duke Univ.) and CalArts (Dance BFA). In 2010 niv received an Art and Social Change Grant from The Leeway Foundation with which he presented two solo works titled “denzel” and “denzel prelude” at Studio 34 in Philadelphia. niv’s work and thought leadership has been featured in many publications including Performance Journal, VICE, Brooklyn Magazine, Apogee Journal and more. His performance work has shown at various spaces nationally including The Kimmel Center (Philly), Human Resources (L.A.), MOMA PS1, Studio Museum, New York Live Arts, New Museum, Brooklyn Arts Exchange, Danspace Project among many. niv has collaborated with artists Deborah Hay, André Singleton, Monstah Black, A.K. Burns, Andrea Geyer, Ralph Lemon, Ishmael Houston-Jones, Larissa Velez-Jackson.


Queer Genealogies of the Normal

October 27–28, 2016
Haverford College and International House Philadelphia

Organized in conjunction with the Cantor Fitzgerald Gallery exhibition Bring Your Own Body: transgender between archives and aesthetics, Queer Genealogies of the Normal gathers artists, archivists, scholars, and curators for a conversation about the politics of archival research, curation, public display, and historical reenactment.

Organized by Jeanne Vaccaro, Visiting Assistant Professor of Independent College Programs, Haverford College and Gustavus Stadler, Associate Professor of English, Haverford College.  Presented by the John B. Hurford ’60 Center for the Arts and Humanities, the Distinguished Visitors Program of Haverford College, and International House Philadelphia.

Thursday, October 27, 2016
Regina Kunzel
Regina Kunzel

4:30–6:00 p.m.
Keynote Lecture: “In Treatment: Psychiatry and the Archives of Modern Sexuality”
Talk by Regina Kunzel

Doris Stevens Professor in Women’s Studies; History and the Program in Gender and Sexuality Studies; Director, Program in Gender and Sexuality Studies, Princeton University

Chase Auditorium, Haverford College

Jack Doroshow as The Queen

7:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m.
Screening of The Queen (1968)
International House Philadelphia
*Free with Haverford ID

*Bus from Haverford College to International House Philadelphia
6:00 p.m. – Depart from Haverford’s Stokes Blue Bus Stop
8:45 p.m. – Depart International House Philadelphia

dir. Frank Simon, US, 1968, 35mm, color, 69 mins.

With an introduction by Gustavus Stadler, Associate Professor of English, Haverford College

The Queen (1968) follows a cross-country drag competition organized by Flawless Sabrina that concludes in the Miss All-America Camp Beauty Pageant held at Town Hall in 1967. The Flawless Sabrina Archive contains film, sculpture, writing, photography, painting, and music; in addition to original work by Sabrina herself, the collection contains pieces by her contemporaries, whom Sabrina inspired or collaborated with, including the Kennedy’s, Francesco Scavullo, John Waters, David Bowie, Andy Warhol, and Diane Arbus. The mission of FSA is to preserve the work of Flawless Sabrina as an historic cultural icon and raise awareness of transgender issues. FSA resides at the convergence of the past and present in countercultural subject matter, enriching society through the documentation of history and the empowerment of difference.

Flawless Sabrina is an artist, producer, activist, cultural icon, and Philadelphia native. Throughout the 1960’s she ran a national drag enterprise and made the award winning documentary, The Queen. In the 1970’s she worked as investigative journalist and continued her film career, consulting on and producing films in Hollywood. For the past twenty years Sabrina has worked in politics for LGBT equality. She is a muse for contemporary artists, and a legendary figure in American history.

Friday, October 28, 2016

10:00–11:00 a.m.
Tour of Bring Your Own Body: transgender between archives and aesthetics exhibition
Cantor Fitzgerald Gallery, Whitehead Campus Center, Haverford College

With exhibition curators Jeanne Vaccaro and Stamatina Gregory

11:00 a.m.–12:15 p.m.
Deviant Histories of Gender and Sexuality
Hurford Center Seminar Room, Stokes 102, Haverford College

Participants:

Moderator:

Heather K. Love
Heather K. Love, Associate Professor of English, University of Pennsylvania

12:15–1:15 p.m.
Lunch
Stokes 106 Multicultural Center, Haverford College

1:15–2:30 p.m.
Artists, Archives, and Legacies of Feminism
Hurford Center Seminar Room, Stokes 102, Haverford College

Participants:

Moderator:

Johanna Fateman
Johanna Fateman, Writer and Musician

The Left Hand of Darkness

2:30–4:00 p.m.
The Right Brain of Darkness
Walkthrough with Artist Tuesday Smillie
Magill Library, Haverford College

The Right Brain of Darkness is a series of watercolor drawings celebrating Ursula K. Le Guin’s classic sci-fi novel, The Left Hand of Darkness; claiming the book as a proto-transfeminist text.

More information »

**Please join us afterward in Magill Library for a reception and public conversation with artist Riva Lehrer and scholar Rosemarie Garland-Thomson as part of the Consent to Be Seen exhibition opening, 4:30–7:30 p.m. in Magill Library’s Sharpless Gallery.


Un presente sin memoria: redescubriendo el Caso Céspedes
A Present Without Memory: rediscovering Céspedes Case

A/O (Caso Céspedes), 2009-10 Fotografía de rodaje

November 3—December 9, 2016
Alcove Gallery and Rufus Jones Study, Magill Library

Thursday, November 3, 2016
Artists’ Talk & Opening
Un presente sin memoria: redescubriendo el Caso Céspedes
A Present Without Memory: rediscovering Céspedes Case

4:30 p.m.
Philips Wing, Magill Library
*Talk will be in English.

Inspired by the Inquisition case of an F to M surgeon, Eleno de Céspedes (Toledo, 1587), Cabello / Carceller’s mixed media project (photos and video) reflects on the traces of a life recorded in the inquisitorial dossier. “A/ O” was first shown in 2010, in Seville, Spain at the Centro Cultural de Arte Andaluz.

More Information »


Happy Birthday, Marsha! Conversation with Reina Gossett and Sasha Wortzel

Happy Birthday, Marsha!

Monday, December 5, 2016
7:30 p.m.
Chase Auditorium, Haverford College

Co-sponsored by the Haverford College Women*s Center

Happy Birthday, Marsha! is an experimental film about the legendary transgender artist and activist Marsha “Pay it No Mind” Johnson and her life in the hours before the 1969 Stonewall Riots in New York City. Reina Gossett and Sasha Wortzel, who co-wrote, co-directed and co-produced the film, stage a performative lecture and screen selections from their highly anticipated film.

Reina Gossett is a black trans woman who has been archiving and spotlighting the lives of Sylvia Rivera and Marsha P. Johnson throughout her work including as membership director of the Sylvia Rivera Law Project and as an artist and writer. While writing the script Reina drew from her relationships and interviews with those who knew Sylvia and Marsha best. Reina’s writing has been featured in Barnard College’s The Scholar & Feminist Online, Captive Genders: Trans Embodiment & The Prison Industrial Complex, Post Post Script Press and Randy Magazine.

Sasha Wortzel is a filmmaker, artist, and educator. Her work explores the politics of space in relation to race, gender, and queer desire. She has recently presented work at the Berlin International Film Festival, DOC NYC, Outfest LA, BFI Flare, Tribeca Interactive, Leslie Lohman Museum, and the Guggenheim Lab. Her work has been supported by the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation and the Astraea Foundation’s Global Arts Fund. She was a 2012-2013 fellow of filmmaker Ira Sach’s Queer/Art/Mentorship. She received her MFA from Hunter College.