Showing posts with label conference. Show all posts
Showing posts with label conference. Show all posts

Monday, November 18, 2013

QUEER POLITICAL CABARET CULTURE IN CONTEMPORARY MEXICO CITY, Laura G. Gutiérrez, University of Texas, November 20, 2013


University of Texas FDP Colloquium, Center for Women's and Gender Studies

Desiring the Possible: Queer Political Cabaret Culture in Contemporary Mexico City

Wed, November 20, 2013 • 3:30 PM - 5:00 p.m.
Burdine Hall (BUR) 214, South of Dean Keeton & Wichita St. (click for map)

db-image
Laura G. Gutiérrez (photo: University of Texas)


Laura G. Gutiérrez, Associate Professor

Department of Theatre and Dance / Performance as Public Practice Program

Contemporary political cabaret is a performance practice that mixes various live art strategies from the early part of the twentieth century with contemporary experimental theatre, and fuses them with musical and dance numbers and heavy doses of political satire.
The individuals or groups that define themselves as political cabaret practitioners each have an idea of what this practice is, but given that it is currently thriving and is a sort of phenomenon in a micro-level, one could venture and generalize that there is a particular Mexico City style of cabaret.
This political cabaret, which has gained currency in the last twenty years, is a particular favorite mode of self-representation for queer artists and activists. My presentation examines the ways in which cabaret is a political and artistic practice that produces a queer space. In more specific terms, political cabaret is part of the growing queer counter-public culture in the city with its left-of-center social and economic politics.
Whereas in the early 1990’s political cabaret was mostly restricted to El Hábito—managed artistically and otherwise by the same-sex couple Jesusa Rodríguez and Liliana Felipe—twenty years later, political cabaret has created an alternative queer cultural map of the city.
By the latter I do not simply mean that El Hábito continues to exist under a new guise and new management as El Vicio—run by the four-member female queer collective Las Reinas Chulas—but that more urban and symbolic space has been gained in the process. For example, Las Reinas Chulas, in addition to their Festival of International Cabaret, which has been held for 9 consecutive summers now and has spread beyond the space of El Vicio, they have a television program for the national federal cultural channel (CONACULTA), one member is part of a daily radio show (El Weso), another member often takes part of LGBT marches and writes a newspaper column, and most of them have performed in the other city-sanctioned political cabaret space, the Foro A Poco No.
My presentation traces the shifts in signification and the growth of political cabaret as it has helped to map a queer public culture in Mexico City. I do the above in order to begin to conceptualize notions of desire in the context of Mexican counter-public culture, not just in relationship to same-sex desire, but also in regard to the possibility of an alternative political future for Mexico, always taking into account its limitations.


Laura G. Gutiérrez (PhD University of Wisconsin-Madison) is Associate Professor of Latin American and Latina/o Performance Studies in the Department of Theatre and Dance/Performance as Public Practice at the University of Texas-Austin. She holds an affiliate appointment in the Center for Mexican American Studies. Her research and teaching interests are Mexican and Chicana/o embodied practices and visual culture, gender and sexuality, and questions of nation, modernity and the transnational.
Gutiérrez is the author of Performing Mexicanidad: Vendidas y Cabareteras on the Transnational Stage (U Texas P, 2010), which won The Ninth Annual MLA Prize in United States Latina and Latino and Chicana and Chicano Literary and Cultural Studies. Prior to joining the UT faculty, she taught at the University of Arizona where she received the 2012 Provost's General Education Teaching Award, and, before that, at the University of Iowa. Gutiérrez is on the Board of Advisors of the Tepoztlán Institute for the Transnational History of the Americas and on the Editorial Board of Feminist Formations.

Thursday, September 27, 2012

This Week: Shakespeare and the Law, panel at the University of Texas with scenes from The Merchant of Venice, September 28


From the on-line magazine from UT Law:

Shakespeare and the Law:

Scenes and a panel on legal issues in The Merchant of Venice, September 28

Actors from Spirit of Shakespeare, a University of Texas student organization; the University of Texas at Austin Department of Theatre and Dance, under the direction of Fran Dorn; and Hidden Room, an Austin-based original practices company under the direction of Beth Burns, will perform versions of the courtroom scene from The Merchant of Venice as part of a panel discussion titled “Is that the Law?: Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice,” on Friday, September 28, 2012, in the Eidman Courtroom at the University of Texas School of Law from 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.

The event, free and open to the public, is sponsored by the Department of English at the University of Texas at Austin and the University of Texas School of Law.

A reception will be held at 6:30 p.m. in the Jamail Pavilion adjacent to the Eidman Courtroom in the Law School’s John B. Connally Center. (See Maps and Directions.) The panel, which includes the performance, starts at 7:00 p.m.

This year, four panelists will discuss legal and related issues central to The Merchant of Venice. They are:
  • Alan Friedman, professor of English, coordinator of Actors from the London Stage, and faculty advisor for Spirit of Shakespeare at the University of Texas at Austin
  • Angela Littwin, Assistant Professor at the University of Texas School of Law
  • James Loehlin, director of Shakespeare at Winedale and professor of English at the University of Texas at Austin
  • James Shapiro, Larry Miller Professor of English, Columbia University
Spirit of Shakespeare (SOS) is a group of University of Texas students involved in promoting Shakespeare programs on campus and in the community. For several years now, the SOS players have performed scenes from the annual Actors from the London Stage (AFTLS) play and have helped to augment and elucidate the Shakespeare and the Law panel discussions.
Shakespeare and the Law grew out of the AFTLS residency, a familiar and regular part of the University’s Shakespeare offerings since 1999, and a conference on “The Law and Other Performing Arts” held at the Law School in 2002. AFTLS, a London-based theatrical touring company, brings its unique educational and theatrical program, which features a troupe of five classically trained actors from major English theaters, to this campus and city for week-long residencies every year.

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Upcoming: Two Days of Arts Conference in Austin, January 31 - February 1


Knowledge and networking for almost no money . . .

Leading the Creative Economy poster

The City's Cultural Arts Division has just e-mailed news for any arts organizations or arts buffs two days of workshops, discussions, entertainment and networking put together by the Texas Commission on the Arts and others. This Monday-Tuesday event January 31 - February 1 offers a rich program. Funded by the government and foundations, itt takes place right here in Austin and you can participate for the astonishingly inexpensive conference fee of $65.

Here's the word:


Register now for this new, annual statewide conference January 31 - February 1, 2011 at the Austin Omni Hotel! Please join us for a chance to interact with your peers from across the state and discuss important issues facing the creative industries. This conference is aimed at art administrators, arts education providers, cultural institution staff, board members and trustees of art organizations, and interested others.


View the conference agenda online! Sessions will address the state of the creative economy in Texas and present strategies for marketing, branding, fundraising, and more. Registration for the two-day conference is just $65. The Omni Hotel is also offering discounted room rates for conference attendees. (You must register by January 10 to receive the discount.) Visit the TCA website to register and for more information about room discounts.

State of the Arts is presented through a partnership of the City of Austin Cultural Arts Division, Texas Commission on the Arts, Texas Cultural Trust Council, and Texans for the Arts Foundation. This project is made possible in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts.


Here's the ALT summary of conference events:


MONDAY, JANUARY 31

General Session, 2 p.m.

Master Storyteller Elizabeth Ellis

Developing Your Brand

Breakout Sessions, 3:15 p.m.– 5:00 p.m.

[A] Social Media 101: Why, How and NOW!

[B] Taking Social Media to the Next Level: Tips, Tricks and Cool Ideas
[C] General Session Alternatives - One-On-One meetings with TCA Program Staff, City of Austin Cultural Contracts staff, or Mid-America Arts Alliance

Economic Development Texas Style – 6 p.m. at Ballet Austin

The Texas Cultural Trust will unveil a new economic impact study focused on the creative industries in our state.

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1

Breakout Sessions -- first phase, 9 a.m. – 10 a.m.

[A] Connecting with Foundations in Texas: What’s the Best Approach?

[B] Corporate Funding for the Arts: What’s the Best Approach?
[C] Using Online Resources to Enhance Fundraising
[D] Building a Fundraising Board

[E] Important! New Americans with Disabilities Act Laws Impact Arts

Breakout Sessions - second phase, 10:15 a.m – 11:15 a.m.

(same as above, repeated)

General session, 11:30 – 12:45

Keynote panel: Surviving and Even Thriving During Trying Times
Panelists include Kevin Moriarity, Dallas Theater Center; Sean McGlynn, City of El Paso Museums and Cultural Affairs Department; Sylvia Orozco, Mexic-arte Museum; and Maureen Patton, Grand 1894 Opera House. Gregory Perrin, University of Texas Libraries, will moderate

Networking lunch

Afternoon breakout sessions, 1:45 p.m. – 2:45 p.m.

[A] Adding Up the Numbers: Calculating Economic Impact

[B] Collaborations and Successful New Models

[C] Engaging New Audiences and Participants

D] Building Your Audience Through Cultural Tourism

[E] Art in Rural Texas

[F] Innovation in Arts Education

General session: Flashes of Inspiration, 3 p.m. – 5 p.m.

Fifteen presenters with five minutes each, with small group discussion afterward

-Texas Event Calendar
-Nature Tourism and the arts
-Texas Music Office
-Texas Cultural Trust’s Art & Digital Media Curriculum Project
-TCA opportunities for youth: Young Masters & Poetry Out Loud
-Groupon as an arts marketing tool
-Building a Nonprofit Village
-What about house concerts
-Mid-America Arts Alliance opportunities
-Texas Biennial exhibition expands statewide
-Family Time Rocks with Sara Hickman
-Building a local arts network
-Preparing for leadership transitions
-Creativity to Community arts nonprofit success one coffee at a time
-Is a Cultural District right for my community

General Session: Texas Music Live, 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.

Marshall Ford Swing Band and young conjunto group Conteño

Monday, November 1, 2010

Upcoming: 'Leveraging Investments in Creativity,' Judilee Reed, November 4

Received directly from the City of Austin Cultural Arts Division:


Take It to the Next Level City of Austin


Judilee Reed, Leveraging Investments in Creativity


Where:
Austin Playhouse
3601 S. Congress
Penn Field
Austin, TX 78704


Driving Directions

When:
Thursday November 4, 2010 from 7:00 PM to 9:00 PM CDT
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Learn about LINC, national trends in the field, and how they connect to Austin!
Please join the Cultural Arts Division, and our co-host the Austin Creative Alliance, for an evening with Judilee Reed, Executive Director of Leveraging Investments in Creativity (LINC).

LINCis a ten-year national initiative to improve the conditions for artists working in all disciplines. LINC builds on research by the Urban Institute that identifies the need for new efforts that expand financial supports for artists' work; improve artists' access to essential material supports such as live-work space and insurance; and bolster knowledge, collaborations, and public policies that affect the work of artists and their contributions to communities.

Launched in July 2003, LINC is quickly coming up to the end of its ten-year initiative. Judilee's presentation in Austin will offer an overview of the work of LINC, national trends in the field, and how they connect to what is happening in Austin now.
Get more information
RSVP Now!

Please call 512-974-7860 if you have any questions about this event. You can also visit the Next Level website for more information about our workshops and speaker series.

Sincerely,

Cultural Arts Division
City of Austin EGRSO
512 9747875