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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20191011T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20191103T170000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20190924T124845Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191104T210156Z
UID:24984-1570780800-1572800400@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:Must They Also Be Gods: Flux Factory Major Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:  \nImage by Ishmil Waterman\, flyer design by Cayla Lockwood\nMust They Also Be Gods\nOctober 11 – November 3\n\nCurated by Kalon Hayward\nAssistant Curator Bri Frei\nCuratorial Advisor Haiba Hamilton\n \nOpen Hours:\nThursday – Sunday\, 1 – 6pm\nOpening Reception\, October 11\, from 7 – 11pm\n \nPlease share our event on Facebook \nFull Schedule below\n \n\n\nMust They Also Be Gods is a group show that features the work of over 15 emerging and mid-career Black artists that highlights the creative process of African diasporic peoples in connection with an insistent and inherent focus on beauty and spirituality. \nThrough a diverse range of mediums\, participating artists use their process as a form of enchantment\, linking them to a creativity used to sustain Black culture(s) throughout time – past\, future and present. \nOver the course of one month Must They Also Be Gods will house visual\, performance\, musical arts and workshops in the Flux Factory Gallery\, as an invitation and conduit for all visitors to engage their own creativity. \nPARTICIPATING ARTISTS \nAlbert Garcia\, Ariella Tai\, Dareece Walker\,  Caffetti\, Cameron Granger\, Denae Howard\, Eli Fola\, Felicia Holman\, Ishmil Waterman\, Jade Fair\, Jonathan Gonzalez\, K’La Soul\, Mellasenah Edwards\, Monica Brown\, Mr Hollis King\, Niambi Ra and The Blackstarz\, Nichole Washington\, Nicole Goodwin\, Ntangou Badila\, Ricardo Osmondo Francis\, Sasa\, Stanley Février\, Urban Mystery Skool for Radical Creatives\, Zeelie Brown \n\n\nFULL SCHEDULE\nFriday October 11 – OPENING\n> 7pm\, Ain’t I a Woman (?/!)\, Performance by Nicole Goodwin\nPerformance is a study in both physical body movement and the antithesis of movement. Using the body\, breath\, and voice to Challenge traditions. she forges a new path that shows a large Black\, Queer woman as someone who is deserving of public admiration. “I see myself as a living time capsule transporting itself through this dimension.”\n> 8pm – 11\, DJ Set by Eli Fola\, Yoruba Tech Soul with Saxaphone \nThursday October 17 – Late Hours for the LIC Gallery Nights\nSpecial Open Hours from 1pm – 9pm  \nSaturday October 19 – WORKSHOPS\n2pm\, Hip Hop Yoga workshop Urban Mystery Skool for Radical Creatives\, with MC Make Change\n4pm\, Orgonite Workshop with Sasa The Crystal Wrapper \nFriday October 25 – NIGHT OF PERFORMANCE\n7pm – 9:30pm\nPerformances by Albert Andrew Garcia\, Felicia Holman and Zeelie Brown\,  \nSaturday October 26 – WORKSHOPS\n2pm\, Transferable Skills: Writing & Creative with Felicia Holman\n4pm\, Twerk Dance Class with Bri Frei  \nThursday October 31 – CONCERT & BAZAAR\nDoors at 8pm\, Show at 8:30\nFeaturing K’La Soul and Niambi Ra and the Blackstarz 
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/musttheyalsobegods/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/newgods_webbanner.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Flux Factory":MAILTO:nat@fluxfactory.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20191019T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20191019T160000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20191007T171124Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191127T220842Z
UID:25062-1571486400-1571500800@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:Flux Takeover of Socrates Sculpture Park
DESCRIPTION:Flux Takeover of Socrates Sculpture Park\nSaturday\, October 19th\, 12 – 4 PM\nFree. No rsvp required\n\nSocrates Sculpture Park\n32-01 Vernon Boulevard / Long Island City\, NY 11106 \nSocrates Sculpture Park\, gets Flux’d! Flux Factory is thrilled to bring Resident and Alumni performance interventions to the beloved the Long Island City/Astoria waterfront park dedicated to supporting artists in the production and presentation of public art. \nFlux Factory\, takes over the Park for an adventurous afternoon of performance\, engagement\, and installation activating The 2019 Socrates Annual exhibition. Come experience Flux’s core themes in action — collaboration\, experimentation\, and play. \nPROGRAM OF EVENTS\nAll events will occur throughout the park between the hours of 12 – 4pm. \nLIST OF PARTICIPATING ARTISTS \nAbang-guard (Jevijoe Vitug and Maureen Catbagan)\, Abigail Entsminger and Seth Timothy Larson\, Amir Badawi\, Catalina Jordan Alvarez\, Daniel Fishkin\, Eleni Zaharopoulos\, Flex Factory with Aliya Bonar\, Cayla Lockwood and others\, Jaime Iglehart\, Jonathan Sims\, Roopa Vasudevan\, Tommy Nguyen \nWorks by Jevijoe Vitug (Abban-guard)\, Eleni Zaharopoulos and Daniel Fishkin were presented with help by Queens Council On the Arts.
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/flux-takeover-of-socrates-sculpture-park/
LOCATION:Socrates Sculpture Park\, 32-01 Vernon Boulevard\, Long Island City\, NY\, 11106\, United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/Featured_Socrates.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20191114T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20191115T190000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20191007T185420Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191118T173920Z
UID:25452-1573758000-1573844400@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:Flux Thursday: San Francisco Supper
DESCRIPTION:Flux Thursday: San Francisco Supper\nNovember 14\, 7 – 1am \nJoin us this Flux Thursday for San Francisco Supper.\nThe doors to the Golden City open at 7pm with an esoteric dinner experience at 8pm. \n7pm Doors (kitchen)\n8pm Supper\n8:30 Screening\n9:30 Dance Party\n12am soft cut off\n1am hard out \nPlease bring something to share\, Rice-a-Roni is strongly encouraged. After supper\, curl up in a white duvet of fog and enjoy film Screenings by Sindhu Thirumalaisamy and Cameron Granger. Stay late for a dance party SF style with DJ Sponsored Lynx. \nThe San Francisco Supper is curated by Danny Crump with help from Jevijoe Vitug\, and Sarah Dahlinger. \n\n\nto share! \n\n\nThis event will take place in the Flux Factory kitchen on the second floor\, up two flights of stairs. \n\nFlux Thursdays are Flux Factory’s longest-running program\, and takes place on the second Thursday of each month. Each month\, an artist or group of artists presents work\, which Fluxers and guests share food and take time to get to know each other. \nThis event is free but please bring food or drink to share \nCheck out these examples of previous Flux Thursday events. No one is the same\, though all are delicious. \nUpcoming Flux Thursday\nDecember 12th\, 2019\nJanuary 9th\, 2020\nFebruary 13th\, 2020
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/flux-thursday-san-francisco-supper/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/SFSupper2.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20191121T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20191121T210000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20190921T220058Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191125T180355Z
UID:25253-1574359200-1574370000@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:Flux Factory Annual Art Auction
DESCRIPTION:Embroidered flyer made by Maria Lulu Varona\nFlux Factory Annual Art Auction\nThursday\, November 21st\, 6-9PM \nEFA Project Space\n323 W 39th St\, Manhattan \nPurchase Ticket Now \n  \n  \nFlux Factory’s annual gala and silent auction returns for its 13th year. Come party at our biggest event of the year with an open bar\, delicious catered food by Muse Dodd\, game by Walker Tufts\, and much more! \nOver 50 artworks donated by Flux artists and community members will be available for silent auction. Proceeds from the auction support Flux Factory’s prolific exhibitions -thanks to you\, we can keep all our public events free and compensate artists for their work. \nBID ON ARTWORKS ONLINE\nTo get a jump on your bid\, or to support Flux Factory from afar\, you can go to our Paddle8 Auction. Online bidding will close at 5pm on November 20th. \n  \nThank you to our Auction Chair\, and Flux Factory’s newest Board Member\, Rodrigo Sanchez. \n2019 Annual Art Auction Honorees \nSheila Lewandowski\, founding Executive Director of Chocolate Factory Theater\, has not only nurtured this beloved performance space since 2004\, but also has emerged as a key civic leader in Long Island City. Sheila engages deeply with controversial local subjects\, with sensitivity to those in need and a wonkish genius to see into the heart of an issue and catalyze solutions that address Queens’ broad and diverse needs. Sheila serves on LIC’s Community Board 2\, organizes the Taste of LIC\, formerly served as Managing Director of the Queens Council on the Arts\, and was recently honored as a visionary leader by Bennington College. Beyond the bonafides\, Sheila advocates in unseen ways for many in need and has been an irreplaceable influence on Flux Factory’s sustainability efforts. \n\nChloë Bass is a multiform conceptual artist\, educator and writer whose output is as prolific as it is varied. Her solo exhibition\, Wayfinding\, commissioned by the Studio Museum of Harlem\, is now on view at St. Nicholas Park. Chloë is chair of the Queens College MFA program\, where she is a professor of art and social practice and where she co-directs Social Practice Queens\, a current Rubin Foundation awardee. As a key social practice artist and thinker of the last decade\, Chloë has long been an influence and co-conspirator in Flux Factory’s participatory leanings. The first collaboration was “Traffic Disruption Village”\, in which Chloë staged a traffic jam so long that travelers stuck there created their own bivouacs and design strategies in an imagined itinerant society. Honoring Chloe at this moment in Flux’s evolution acts as a reminder of our foundational mission and priorities\, to lift up challenging\, socially engaged work in defiance of market forces. \n  \nThank you to our Wine Sponsor \n \n  \n  \nProduced with hand-harvested grapes from select high-altitude vineyards located in the Andes provinces of Argentina\, we are thrilled to be serving Terrazas de los Andes wines at this year’s auction. \n\n\n\nThank you to our Beer Sponsor\n\n  \nThank you to our generous Beer Sponsor\, Lagunitas. Their beers are available in 20-ish countries and growing. They regularly support local communities by turning beer into money for the cause (like for Flux Factory)\, and are in the business of brewing IPA and other fine ales. As they like to say: wherever you go: beer speaks\, people mumble. Flux Factory is proud to serve their delicious brew at the 2019 Annual Art Auction.\n\n\n\n\n\n  \nPurchase Ticket Now
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/art-auction-2019/
LOCATION:The Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts\, 323 W 39th St\, Manhattan\, 10018\, United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/gif:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Flamingo-GIF.gif
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20191123T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20191215T180000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20191031T212952Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191216T203309Z
UID:25368-1574537400-1576432800@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:RUB - Now Wave and Graphic Activism
DESCRIPTION:Flyer by Cayla Lockwood\nRUB – Now Wave and Graphic Activism\nFlux Factory Major Exhibition\nNovember 23 – December 15\n\nOpening Reception: November 23\, from 7:30 – 12am\nOpen Hours: Thursday – Sunday\, 1 – 6pm\nCLOSED FOR THANKSGIVING WEEKEND \nFULL SCHEDULE BELOW \nRUB is an independent publication\nan exhibition at Flux Factory\nan invitation to collaborate\, learn and build community \n\nRUB moves between two axes: the DIY strategies of the NOW-WAVE\, and GRAPHIC ACTIVISM. The NOW-WAVE houses artists who produce counterculture that challenges the boundaries of Nationhood\, and address issues that cross cultural boundaries. This movement wrestles with the notion of collective vs individual identities\, and uses a praxis of art and activism that moves beyond the white box context. The second axis is experimentation and reinvention through GRAPHIC ACTIVISM. The RUB Exhibition centers pieces with a special sensitivity for printed matter and publishing as practice\, that makes visible under-represented and under-appreciated identities. Themes that are included are: the experience of POC and QPOC; therapeutic art practices that deal with abuse\, depression\, and trauma; using graphic languages in the processes of resistance; and always returning to the personal as political. RUB features a selection of multidisciplinary practitioners and artists who use these two axes as raw materials. \nRUB originated as an independent publication\, zine and channel. RUB has traveled around the world\, into different exhibitions spaces such as the “Freedom School” at SPRING/BREAK Art Show— during Armory arts week in NYC\, Singapore art bookfair\, AKI Gallery in Taipei\, Taipei Contemporary Art Center\, Queer zine Fest\, LA Printed Matter\, and more recently AKTA community center in Tokyo and Kyoto Art Center. RUB’s mission is creative engagement with local experimental communities of color in an era where the United States is ruled by a paranoiac\, and a dehumanizing nexus has come in his wake. We witness a culture infected with commodification\, consumerism\, violence and the rupture of identity. A culture of manufactured fear and legally institutionalized discriminations. RUB is a free space\, an incubator in a society shaped by brutality where uncensored voices can express nonconformity\, opposition and provocation to the socio-political panorama. Within the space of RUB\, we can escape the imposed boundaries through a de-colonial\, DIY and activist practice. \nNOW WAVE and GRAPHIC ACTIVISM Movement Members List\nAarati Akkapeddi\, Amelia Bande\, Mitsuko Brooks\, Eun Hyea Choi\, Jevijoe Vitug\, Kaitlin Chan (Queer Reads Library)\, Pei Ling Ho\, Toby Millman\, Martha Naranjo Sandoval\, Maureen Catbagan\, Yin Ming Wong\, Andre Ramos-Woodard\, Yanbo Li\, XVK\, Eleni Theodora Zaharopoulos + more artist contributors coming \n\nFULL PROGRAM \nNOVEMBER 23\nOPENING RECEPTION with performances\n7:30pm to 12am\, Performances by Pei Ling Ho\, Amelia Bande and Echo the Golden Ghost \nIn this participatory performance Pei Ling Ho explores themes of “East/West” and “self/other” within the contemporary context of global feminism. Often use her own body as a vehicle to activate social issues on the impact of exotic and local culture\, gender identity awareness\, the legitimacy of parents under the social system\, and the emotional blackmail in a family. \nAmelia Bande is a writer working in performance\, theater and film. Her plays Chueca and Partir y Renunciar were staged in Santiago\, Chile. She is part of the Gel Film Series (2012- present) and she co-founded Publishing Puppies\, a press for visual work\, poetry and fiction (2011-present). She has recently shown work\, solo and collaborative\, at Artists Space\, The Poetry Project\, Pratt Manhattan Gallery\, Dixon Place\, BAM\, The Shandaken Project\, and many more. \n\nEcho the Golden Ghost  will be enacting a physical haunting out of grief for genocidal displacement of not only humans but its own embodiment as a golden figure. Gold\, just like our labor and our bodies is commodified and extracted in the name of white western cisheteronormative imperialism and american exceptionalism. \n\nCLOSED FOR THANKSGIVING WEEKEND \n\nDECEMBER 1\n10am – 6pm\, ADULT MENTAL HEALTH FIRST AID TRAINING \n(must attend all 8 hours)\n\nRSVP Required\, please enroll here \nThis course teaches participants a five-step action plan to help someone 18 years or older who is displaying signs of a mental illness or emotional crisis. Participants will receive a city certificate of participation.\n \n\nDECEMBER 7\nWORKSHOP AND GARAPARTY\n4 – 7pm\, WORSHOP: FAMILY ALBUM PHOTOS IN ART by Martha Naranjo Sandoval \n\nFamily pictures are interesting because their amateur quality makes them as intentional as they are accidental. In this workshop we will revise works of art that use family pictures in different ways and experiment with family pictures. Found family pictures will be provided but we encourage to bring your own as well. \n10pm – 1am GARAPARTY created by DEX FERNANDEZ with DJ Dekdestroy from Manila\nSuggested Donation $5\nThe GaraParty was born out of that desire with the notion of parasitic infestation expanded in the form of a fantasy: Guests assume the role of Garapata\, set free and welcomed by a willing host – the party venue. GaraParty is a commentary: An escape from the dire circumstances of reality\, such as dirty politics\, poverty\, loneliness\, discrimination\, etc. It is also an idyllic moment where\, in contrast to reality\, parasites – or metaphorically\, humans on the margins of society.\n\nDECEMBER 12\nFLUX THURSDAY\n6pm\, RELEASE OF RUB CATALOG BOOK WITH ALL THE CONTRIBUTORS\n \nFlux Thursday is Flux Factory’s longest running program. It is a potluck\, so please bring something to eat or drink to share.  \n7:30\, DIY PUBLISHING PANEL With the release of the artists books “A Landscape of Ghosts” by J\nTriangular in collaboration with Kyoto Art Center\, “365 songs of sex” by Chen An An\, Kaitlin Chan (Queer Reads Library) will be part of this conversation in Hong Kong and will talk about her new project in Taipei. \n \n9pm – 12am\, KARAOKE NIGHT  \n\nDECEMBER 13\n7 – 9pm\, SCREENING \nTwo Women” by Juanita Imran and Pharah Diaz. \n“Their contribution is an intergenerational project between grandmother and granddaughter that features images of powerful women and poems authored by Mohammed and Diaz about empowerment\, pain\, and aging” – Alexandra Juhasz \nPlus a viewing of a series of short films made by Latin American\, trans and cis Women\, and gender non-confirming filmmakers\, who utilize punk and other experimental contemporary aesthetics. \n\nRUB Curatorial team\nCayla Lockwood:  artist\, curator and graphic designer based in NYC. She is currently an artist in residence at Flux Factory and a curatorial member of Little Berlin (Gallery) in Philadelphia. Teaches workshops internationally in printmaking and bookbinding. \nChen An-An:  Sculptor\, installation artist and curator based in Taiwan. Her works revolve around queer feelings of love\, desire\, and loss within the complex relationship between self-identity and social system. \nJ Triangular:  Colombia Born-Taiwan based. Founder of RUB zine. Independent curator\, queer poet\, DIY video artist and photographer. Making art projects that addresses themes as counterculture and music\, queer community identity\, self- empowerment and camcorder activism. \nLulu Meng: New York-based artist born in Taipei\, Taiwan. Her multidisciplinary practice\, including installation\, sculpture\, photography\, drawing\, video\, and curatorial projects investigates the formation and fluctuation of individual identity in a society. \nTerrill Warrenburg:  Artist and independent curator living in Brooklyn\, NY. Her work is non-representational and rooted in self-discovery and meditative practice. Interested in art’s ability to foster empathy between individuals\, Terrill’s curatorial interests include collaborative partnerships\, cross-cultural dialog\, and alternative media. \nRUB is thanks to the support of grants from the NYC Department of Cultural Affairs\, The Andy Warhol Foundation\, the New York State Council on the Arts\, the international circulation grant from the Colombia Ministry of Culture\, Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in New York (TECO) and from individual donors.
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/rub-exhibition/
LOCATION:Flux Factory\, 39-31 29th St\, Long Island City\, NY
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/rub_show_graphic_website_oct-01.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20191126T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20191126T210000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20191113T171723Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191202T211415Z
UID:25529-1574796600-1574802000@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:Artist Talk by  Anna Sorokovaya
DESCRIPTION:Artist Talk by Anna Sorokovaya  \nNovember 26th\n7:30pm \n  \nPlease let us know you’re coming on Facebook \n  \n\nAnna Sorokovaya is a visual artist and curator\, interested in interdisciplinary projects connected with topics of museology\, education\, reflecting on the changes of the political and cultural scenes. She focuses on issues of public and private\, construction of identities\, self organization. As an artist works with installation\, objects and photography. \nAnna studied theory and history of art at the National Academy of Fine Arts in Kyiv\, did Master research about social aspects of museum practices. She participated in documenta 14\, Kassel (2017) as part of the Soshenko 33 collective and co-curated Common Frontier project in the frame Kyiv Biennial (2015). Her works was exhibited within the frame of exhibitions Neighbours (Warsaw)\, Women’s texts: feminist art from the East (Kyiv\, Madryd)\, UK/Raine: Emerging artists from the UK and Ukraine (London). \nSince 2012 she has been engaged in activity around the preservation and actualization of Soshenko 33\, an artists’ studio facility historically embedded within the postgraduate system of the National Academy of Fine Arts in Kyiv. \nAnna’s residency is sponsored by the Ukrainian Institute.
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/artist-talk-by-anna-sorokovaya/
LOCATION:Flux Factory\, 39-31 29th St\, Long Island City\, NY
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/AnnaSorokova_feature.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20191201T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20191201T180000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20191118T173008Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191202T211403Z
UID:25588-1575194400-1575223200@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:RUB - Mental Health First Aid Training
DESCRIPTION:Mental Health First Aid Training\nDecember 1\n10am – 6pm\n\nFree with RSVP. Please enroll here\nAttendees must RSVP and commit to the full day\, which includes a 1-hour lunch break\n \nThis workshop is a program for the exhibition\nRUB – Now Wave and Graphic Activism \n\nFREE 8-HOUR certification program in Mental Health First Aid\, offered by NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. \n\n\n\n\nLike CPR\, Mental Health First Aid prepares participants to interact with a person in crisis and connect the person with help. First Aiders do not take on the role of professionals — they do not diagnose or provide any counseling or therapy.\n\n  \nCertified Mental Health First Aid instructors provide:\n– concrete tools and answers to key questions\, like “what do I do in a mental health crisis?” and “where can someone find help?”\n– a list of community healthcare providers and national resources\, support groups\, and online tools for mental health and addictions treatment and support. – a program manual to compliment the course material.\n\nThis is a free 8-hour certification program and an invaluable learning opportunity offered and taught by the
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/rub-mental-health-first-aid/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/RUBmentalhealth_feature.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20191207T220000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20191207T235900
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20191119T192541Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191209T174319Z
UID:25564-1575756000-1575763140@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:RUB - GaraParty
DESCRIPTION:DECEMBER 7\n10pm – 1am\nSuggested Donation $5\n \nFlux Factory Gallery \nThis party is a program for the exhibition\nRUB – Now Wave and Graphic Activism \nGARAPARTY is created by DEX FERNANDEZ with DJ Dekdestroy from Manila \n\nPlease share on Facebook! \n\nThe GaraParty was born out of that desire with the notion of parasitic infestation expanded in the form of a fantasy: Guests assume the role of Garapata\, set free and welcomed by a willing host – the party venue. GaraParty is a commentary: An escape from the dire circumstances of reality\, such as dirty politics\, poverty\, loneliness\, discrimination\, etc. It is also an idyllic moment where\, in contrast to reality\, parasites – or metaphorically\, humans on the margins of society.\n\n\n\n \nGARAPARTY will be preceded by:\n \n4 – 7pm\, WORSHOP: FAMILY ALBUM PHOTOS IN ART by Martha Naranjo Sandoval \n\nFamily pictures are interesting because their amateur quality makes them as intentional as they are accidental. In this workshop we will revise works of art that use family pictures in different ways and experiment with family pictures. Found family pictures will be provided but we encourage to bring your own as well.
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/garaparty-for-rub/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/GaraParty_Feature.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20191212T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20191212T233000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20191120T231823Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191214T232219Z
UID:25633-1576173600-1576193400@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:RUB - Flux Thursday
DESCRIPTION:DECEMBER 12\nRUB – FLUX THURSDAY\n6pm – midnight \nFlux Thursday is Flux Factory’s longest running program. It is a potluck\, so please bring something to eat or drink to share. \nThis party is a program for the exhibition\nRUB – Now Wave and Graphic Activism \nPlease invite people on Facebook \n  \n\nSCHEDULE \n6pm POTLUCK dinner and release of the RUB Catalog.\n7pm Gil\n7:30 break. \n8:00 DIY Self-Publishing Panel with Kaitlin Chan presenting her graphic novel and collaborative memoir\, @LuLu Meng and her photobook: QueiLing 歸零\, and me with “a landscape of ghosts” in collab with Kyoto Art Center.\n9:00 break. \n9:10 Talk about the illuminator collective.\n10-12: Karaoke.
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/25633/
LOCATION:Flux Factory\, 39-31 29th St\, Long Island City\, NY
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/RUB-FluxThursday-1.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Flux Factory":MAILTO:nat@fluxfactory.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20191213T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20191213T220000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20191122T222201Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191214T232156Z
UID:25622-1576263600-1576274400@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:RUB - Screening\, "Two Women"
DESCRIPTION:DECEMBER 13\n7 – 9pm\, SCREENING\nFlux Factory Gallery\nPlease invite people on Facebook \nTwo Women \nby Juanita Imran and Pharah Diaz. \nThis screening is a program for the exhibition\nRUB – Now Wave and Graphic Activism \n“Their contribution is an intergenerational project between grandmother and granddaughter that features images of powerful women and poems authored by Mohammed and Diaz about empowerment\, pain\, and aging” – Alexandra Juhasz \nTwo Women will be preceded by a series of short films made by Latin American\, trans and cis Women\, and gender non-confirming filmmakers\, who utilize punk and other experimental contemporary aesthetics.
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/rub-screening-two-women/
LOCATION:Flux Factory\, 39-31 29th St\, Long Island City\, NY
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/RUBscreening.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Flux Factory":MAILTO:nat@fluxfactory.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20191216T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200204T170000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20191116T205601Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200204T194252Z
UID:25727-1576483200-1580835600@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:Artist-in-Residence Open Call
DESCRIPTION:Open Call Live. Apply Here!\nSpanish | Français | 日本語\n \nDeadline: Monday February 3rd\, 11:59pm  \nFlux Factory is a 26 year old non-­profit arts organization\, artist collective and international residency program located in Long Island City\, Queens\, NYC\, one subway stop away from Manhattan. We are committed to building a sustainable community for diverse cultural producers\, including visual artists\, builders\, curators\, community organizers\, chefs\, activists\, musicians\, writers\, and others. \nWe are currently looking for cultural producers of all kinds to join the Flux community for 3 to 9 month residencies. Residencies will begin as soon as April\, through the Fall of 2020. \nFlux Factory cultivates a spirit of openness and generosity through a unique collaborative and participatory approach to realizing its residency and public programs. Fluxers benefit from an immersive environment that encourages experimentation and peer to peer resource sharing. Residents work together to shape and realize Flux’s expansive programming\, proposing and leading exhibitions and educational events. Flux Factory nurtures individual practices by offering professional development opportunities\, including one-on-one studio visits\, collaborative projects\, gallery time and monthly salons. \nCheck the Residency page for more information\nIf you have any questions\, please contact us at residency@fluxfactory.org \nOur labyrinthine building includes 16 studios\, a gallery\, silkscreen studio\, woodshop\, co-working office\, communal kitchen\, library\, and rooftop garden. \nEach resident is responsible for their own funding\, however Flux Factory will write letters of invitation for grants and other funding opportunities\, and share opportunities for additional resources if available. \nIf you have any questions\, please contact us at residency@fluxfactory.org \nOpen Call Live. Apply Here!
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/artist-in-residence-open-call/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/gif:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/ResidencyOpenCall2020_02.gif
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20191221T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200101T220000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20191125T204802Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211108T072507Z
UID:25605-1576954800-1577916000@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:Solstice: An Exhibition of Works in Light
DESCRIPTION:Solstice: An Exhibition of Works in Light\nDecember 21 – January 1 \nOpening: Saturday December 21 7pm-1am\nPerformances start at 8pm\nLet us know you’re coming on Facebook \nOpen Hours\nSunday Dec 22: 2pm to 8pm\nSaturday Dec 28: 2pm to 8pm\nSunday Dec 29: 2pm to 8pm\nFor visits by Appointment\, contact wintersolsticeexhibition@gmail.com\n(evenings preferred). \nClosing Reception: Wednesday January 1: 4pm to 9pm \nCurated by Jonathan Sims \n\n\n\n\n\nSolstice is a convening of ten artists on the night of the winter solstice\, the longest night of the year. Each of these sculptors\, installation artists\, and performers incorporate light as a central element of their practice. To celebrate the darkness of the midnight sun\, the typical gallery lighting will be removed and the Flux Factory gallery plunged into blackness. To celebrate the coming return to longer days\, all light in the space will emanate from the LEDs\, digital projectors\, fiberoptics\, and incandescent bulbs in the artists’ work– reflected\, refracted\, directed\, and lensed into being. \nInstallations:\nLuba Drozd\, Laurent Fort\, Sizhu Li\, Lindsay Packer\, Ksenia Salion\, Jonathan Sims\, \nOn December 21\, the night of the winter solstice\, four artists will present audiovisual performances that push the boundaries between the digital and analog media:\nÉMU\, Night Shining\, Paloma Kop\, Testu Collective
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/solstice/
CATEGORIES:Residency Shows
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/solstice-exhibition-graphic_800x240.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200109T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200109T220000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20191220T193956Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200110T175751Z
UID:25770-1578596400-1578607200@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:Flux Thursday: Great Lengths
DESCRIPTION:Flux Thursday: Great Lengths\nJanuary 9th\, 7 – 10pm \nPlease share the invite on Facebook \n\n\nJoin us for another amazing Flux Thursday! This month’s edition will be about great lengths and extraordinary measures. \nOrganized by Amir Badawi\, with presentations by Carlos David Trujillo and Marjan Verstappen. \nIt’s a potluck so please bring something to share. Presentations will start at 8pm. \nFlux Thursdays are Flux Factory’s longest-running program\, and takes place on the second Thursday of each month. Each month\, an artist or group of artists presents work\, which Fluxers and guests share food and take time to get to know each other. \n\n\n\nCheck out these examples of previous Flux Thursday events. No one is the same\, though all are delicious. \nUpcoming Flux Thursday\, 2020\nFebruary 13th\nMarch 12th\nApril 9th \n\n+ GOOGLE CALENDAR+ ICAL EXPORT
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/flux-thursday-great-lengths/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/GREAT-LENGTHS-WEBSITE.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200116
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200218
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20191207T225947Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200217T224950Z
UID:25839-1579132800-1581983999@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:2020 Exhibition Season Open Call
DESCRIPTION:2020 Exhibition season Open Call for Participating artists\nDeadline February 17th\n(All submission except for Pink Flamingo are due February 17th) \nImage from Solstice: An Exhibition of Works in Light\, curated by Jon Sims. Image Description: A darkened gallery with brightly colored light emanating from sculptures on the walls and floor. A small group of people looking at the artwork.\nFlux Factory is seeking artists and creators to participate in our 2020 exhibition Season. Each year Flux Factory hosts four group exhibitions\, organized by emerging curators selected from the wide cohort of recent Flux Factory Artists-in-Residence. \nKnown for thoughtful interactivity\, collaboration and playful programming\, each of the 2020 exhibitions explore questions of community and interdependence through an experimental lens. Please visit our 2019 group exhibitions to view past projects: Talk Back\, Wicket Leeks\, Must They Also Be Gods\, and RUB. \nShare this Open Call on Facebook \nEach exhibition has unique requirements and needs\, so please read the guidelines thoroughly and apply to the exhibition that best suits your work. Every participating artist\, educator\, cook\, musician\, designer\, and so on\, will be paid a stipend for their participation. \nThanks in part to the DCLA Disability Forward Fund\, priority will be given to artists living with a disability or artists whose work addresses issues of disability and accessibility. \n\n2020 EXHIBITIONS \nDin Din\nMay 1st – May 24th\, 2020\nCurated by Sarah Dahlinger\, Cayla Lockwood and Nat Roe \n\nDin Din is a group exhibition and experimental diner\, a social space with food-centric artworks and public events. The exhibition will be segmented into 3 thematic weeks: family and tradition; death and food cycles; and kitsch and Americana. Much like the abundance of offerings on a classic diner menu\, this multi-theme program celebrates the many aspects and intricacies of food in relation to community\, environment\, and the imagination. Proposals in the following categories are welcome: tableware and furniture; artworks; cookbooks or written works; meals and food-based events or performances.  \n\nFull exhibition details and application here\n \n\nwhere will i be buried*\nJune 5th – June 28th\, 2020\nCurated by Muse Dodd and Catherine Feliz\, concept co-created by Jasdeep Kang \n\nwhere will I be buried?* is a whisper\, a vigil\, a torn photograph in a lovers wallet\, a plea.where will I be buried?* is a group show for Queer and Trans* People of Color that honors our experiences in life and death and the spaces in-between. Through installation\, performance\, film screenings and community dialogue this exhibit will connect diverse diasporas around the non-permanence of memory\, home\, maintaining and changing cultural traditions and legacy. \n\n\nwhere will I be buried?* invites proposals for installations\, workshops\, performances\, gatherings\, walks\, spoken word\, screenings\, visual arts\, video\, sound works\, panels\, grassroots\, poetry and more! \n\nFull exhibition details and application here\n \n\nPink Flamingo: Clubs in Flux\nJuly 17th – August 9th\, 2020\nCurated by Jess Dilday and Anton Lapov \n\nPink Flamingo: Clubs in Flux seeks artists to imagine and produce their ideal multimedia music space\, to be installed inside Flux Factory’s gallery. Three sequential week-long environments will provide an immersive listening experience\, and culminate in a final “club night” or party.  \nSelected artists or artist collectives will be responsible for building-out a “club” environment\, providing or selecting music for the culminating party\, and any accompanying performances or interactive programming to activate the space. Additionally\, Pink Flamingo will host a 24/7 radio broadcast throughout the month\, where music and audio connected to each installation will be broadcast.   \nAn accompanying exhibition of archival NYC club materials will be displayed in an adjacent space. Pink Flamingo seeks to explore the ephemeral nature of these urban party spaces and highlight the importance of experiential values created during many short-lived club ventures.  \n\nFull exhibition details and application here\n  > Application deadline: March 17th\, 2020\n \n\nNobody’s Fashion Week\nSeptember 4th – 29th\, 2020\nCurated by Lexy Ho-Tai\, Jaime Iglehart\, Dew Igworia and Johanna Schwab \n\nNobody’s Fashion Week is a reimagining of the fashion industry from the bottom up. The Flux Factory Gallery will be transformed into a creative hub\, incorporating elements of a makerspace\, educational space\, exhibition space\, and pop-up shop. The show aims to democratize fashion by encouraging multidisciplinary collaboration\, skill-sharing culture and self-expression for everyone. We are seeking alternative and emerging textile artists\, clothing designers\, photographers\, models (experienced and first-time)\, historians\, workshop organizers and other creators engaging with the concept of fashion. Submit proposals to activate this multi-faceted\, creative space. Let’s shift the fashion industry together!\n \n\nFull exhibition details and application here
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/exhibition-open-call-2020/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/Exhibition_OpenCalls.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200116T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200119T190000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20191227T190936Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211108T072452Z
UID:25805-1579201200-1579460400@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:Know The Ways: Solo Exhibition by Marjan Verstappen
DESCRIPTION:Know The Ways:\nSolo Exhibition by Marjan Verstappen\nFriday January 17 – Sunday January 19 \nOpening reception: Thursday\, January 16\, 7 – 11pm\nOpen Hours: Friday\, Saturday & Sunday\, 1 – 6pm \nPlease share this event on Facebook \nA solo exhibition by Flux resident Marjan Verstappen\, Know The Ways is a critical exploration of colonial understandings of the frontier\, as received through the abstract landscapes of Florence Martin. A virtually unknown contemporary of the Transcendentalist painting group\, Martin destroyed her paintings in the 1960s during a crisis of faith. Using x-rays and rare historical photographs of the paintings\, Verstappen has recreated a collection of Martin’s major works. Through these actions\, Verstappen explores deep spiritual and cultural conflicts within Martin’s paintings\, and ultimately\, the legacy of guilt and greed within settler relationships with the land.
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/know-the-ways/
LOCATION:Flux Factory\, 39-31 29th St\, Long Island City\, NY
CATEGORIES:Residency Shows
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/FF_Feature.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200125T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200125T180000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20200101T214746Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211108T072440Z
UID:25926-1579950000-1579975200@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:Good Morning\, India!
DESCRIPTION:Image description: A decaying wall mural of the Indian flag\, gold on the top a blue wheel in the middle and green on the bottom\, with a pile of rubble and bricks on the bottom. from Bangalore circa. 2014.\nSaturday\, January 25\nMedia Making Workshop\n11am–4pm \nArtist talk by Sindhu Thirumalaisamy\n4pm \nPlease share this event on Facebook\nThis workshop is open to people of all ages and backgrounds but an RSVP is required. Refreshments will be provided. Please RSVP to maya@fluxfactory.org \nInquilab Zindabad! \nThe spirit of resistance is alive in India. The forces of facism are met with the love\, care\, humor\, and strength of a newly forming people’s movement. For a month the whole nation has been in protest against Hindu supremacist laws that suppress the basic rights of several minority groups\, particularly Muslims. Sounds and images have been a vital part of this resistance. WhatsApp memes\, songs\, music videos\, kolams\, and a range of posters have flooded our imagination\, describing the nation that we want to live in. Join us for a workshop and talk with Flux resident Sindhu Thirumalaisamy where we will listen\, view\, read\, and contribute to the resistance with sounds and images. \nPrior to the talk\, the Flux Factory gallery will turn into a workshop for media making. Do you want to make a poster? A meme? Want to record a video? A song? Want to learn how to draw a kolam? Want to chat with about what is happening in India and beyond? We will gather materials\, equipment\, and people to help make all of this happen! \nSindhu Thirumalaisamy is an artist working across sound\, video\, text\, and installation. She is a participant of the Whitney Independent Study program in 2019-20. Sindhu holds an MFA in visual art from the University of California\, San Diego\, is an alumnus of the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture\, and a fellow of the Robert Flaherty Film Seminar.
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/good-morning-india/
CATEGORIES:Residency Shows
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/banner-image-DCD.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200213T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200213T220000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20200112T201715Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200214T170028Z
UID:26031-1581620400-1581631200@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:Flux Thursday: Valentine Card Making
DESCRIPTION:Flux Thursday\nFebruary 13th\n7 – 10pm \nPlease share this event! \nJoin us for an evening of Valentine Card making\, sappy movies\, sweet treats and some karaoke ballads. \nThis event is free but please bring food or drink – sweet treats are on theme\, but bring whatever you’d like to share. \nFlux Thursdays are Flux Factory’s longest-running program\, and takes place on the second Thursday of each month. \nThis event takes place in the Flux Factory kitchen\, which is up two flights of stairs. \nCheck out these examples of previous Flux Thursday events. No one is the same\, though all are delicious. \nUpcoming Flux Thursday\, 2020\nMarch 12th\nApril 9th\nMay 14th
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/flux-thursday-valentine-card-making/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/Valentines_FluxThursday_banner.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200213T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200213T220000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20200112T230027Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200429T150230Z
UID:25309-1581620400-1581631200@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:Flux Thursday: Monthly
DESCRIPTION:Flux Thursday\nJanuary 13th\, 7 – 10pm \nFlux Thursdays are Flux Factory’s longest-running program\, and takes place on the second Thursday of each month. \nEach month\, an artist or group of artists presents work\, which Fluxers and guests share food and take time to get to know each other.  \nThis event is free but please bring food or drink to share \nCheck out these examples of previous Flux Thursday events. No one is the same\, though all are delicious. \nCheck back here soon for more information about this upcoming Flux Thursday! \nUpcoming Flux Thursday\, 2020\nMarch 12th\nApril 9th\nMay 14th
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/flux-thursday-november-14th/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/FluxThursday_Feature.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200214T210000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200215T010000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20200121T185618Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211108T072428Z
UID:26001-1581714000-1581728400@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:Heartflux Hotel
DESCRIPTION:Heartflux Hotel\nFebruary 14\, 9pm \nWhere hearts don’t break\, they’re only in flux.  \nPlease invite hearts on FB \nFlux Factory invites you to check-in for a one night get away. Together we’ll dance out what’s been building up in our bleedin’ hearts. \nWe’ll have signature delectables and art installations to get you going\, with sounds from Satele to whisk you away. \nHeartflux Hotel is part of the two person exhibition After you\, running from February 19 – 23\,  with video and installation works by Carlos David TC and Cameron A. Granger.
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/heartflux-hotel/
CATEGORIES:Residency Shows
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/HeartfluxHOtel_Feature.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200219T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200219T170000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20200124T224428Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211108T072416Z
UID:25967-1582099200-1582131600@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:After You: Carlos David TC + Cameron A Granger
DESCRIPTION:AFTER YOU\nFebruary 19 – 23\nCarlos David TC + Cameron A Granger \nSpecial event: Heartflux Hotel\nFeb 14\, 9pm – 1am\nWhere hearts don’t break\, they’re only in flux.  \nFeb 19\, 7pm Opening\nFeb 23\, TBD Closing + Artist Talk \nPlease share on Facebook \nAfter you is a two person exhibition of video and installation works by Carlos David TC and Cameron A. Granger. \nDrawing on their personal and shared histories\, the places they call home and the digital spaces they frequent\, the duo looks to find a new home through the work of one another. \n“After You is dedicated to the wonderful gift of being loved by the ones we love\, and the life that gift can bring.” – Carlos + Cameron \nCameron A. Granger came up in Cleveland\, Ohio alongside his mother\, Sandra\, inheriting both her love of soul music\, and a habit of apologizing too much. A 2017 student of the Skowhegan School of Painting &amp; Sculpture\, his work explores his place and role as a product of American history and media. His most recent projects include “Ten Toes Down” at the Museum of Contemporary Photography in Chicago\, “Pearl” a body of collaborative works with his mother at Ctrl+Shft in Oakland\, and “A library\, for you” a traveling community library founded in Cincinnati\, Ohio. \nCarlos David TC is a Miami based multidisciplinary artist who explores identity in the digital space.
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/after-you/
CATEGORIES:Residency Shows
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/Horizontal.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200226T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200226T220000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20200126T044500Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200227T202757Z
UID:26044-1582745400-1582754400@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:Pêdra Costa Artist Talk: Decolonization is a Verb Inscribed in Bodies\, Tongues\, and Orifices as Portals
DESCRIPTION:Pêdra Costa Artist Talk: Decolonization is a Verb Inscribed in Bodies\, Tongues\, and Orifices as Portals\nFebruary 26th\, 7:30pm \n\nJoin us for an evening with artist and scholar Pêdra Costa discussing their work in conversation with Nine Yamamoto-Masson (current Flux Factory Artist-in-Residence). \n\nPêdra Costa is a ground-breaking\, formative Brazilian urban anthropologist and performer based in Berlin who utilizes intimacy to connect with collectivity. They work with their body to create fragmented epistemologies of queer communities within ongoing colonial legacies. Their work aims to decode violence and transform failure whilst tapping into the powers of resilient knowledge from a plethora of subversive ancestralities that have been integral to anti-colonial and necropolitical survival. \n\nIn this special artist conversation at Flux Factory\, Pêdra will present their work in conversation with Nine Yamamoto-Masson and will discuss the role of art in the project of decolonising the body\, society\, and also art institutions\, illustrated by examples of struggles in Brazil\, Germany\, and “the USA.” \n\nwww.cargocollective.com/pedra
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/pedra-costa-artist-talk-decolonization-is-a-verb-inscribed-in-bodies-tongues-and-orifices-as-portals/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/Pêdra_Costa.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200228T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200228T210000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20200128T191557Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211108T072407Z
UID:25983-1582916400-1582923600@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:An Evening of Quadraphonic Sounds
DESCRIPTION:February 28\, 7pm\nFREE \nPlease invite friends on Facebook \nAn experimental sound performance in four channel speakers that will envelope the audience with evolving and sonorous motion. Visual artist Jonathan Sims will be providing live projections \nBorn in Evergreen Park\, IL in 1984\, Anthony Janas. Retired Magician. Boat Captain. Sound Artist with a focus on advanced modular synthesizer techniques and digitally processed field recordings. Member of multimedia group known as Urbe and seminal noise/performance group Panicsville. Contributing artist for the Midwest Society for Acoustic Ecology.  Anthony Janas has presented work throughout the United States\, Mexico and Western Europe. Anthony Janas work has ranged from sound installations on sailboats to playful performances such as juggling cheeseburgers. Anthony Janas’s work attempts to merge the institutional and pastoral moments of human existence. \nJenn Grossman is a sound/experiential media artist concerned with the psycho-spatial possibilities of time-based media\, exploring displaced realities\, staged synchronicity\, cyclical time\, collective memory\, embodiment/disembodiment\, perceptual affect\, and transcendent experience. She treats sensory media as a portal into the surreal\, subconscious\, and otherworldly; through its displacement into everyday settings\, objects\, and spaces. Her work has taken the form of modular sound sculptures/installations\, multichannel sound works\, light/projection events\, ambient music/soundscapes\, video\, and public interventions. \nJeff Kolar is an independent sound and media artist\, composer\, and curator. He is the Founder and Artistic Director of Radius\, an experimental radio broadcast platform established in 2010. His work\, described as “speaker-shredding” (Half Letter Press)\, “wonderfully strange” (John Corbett)\, and “characteristically curious” (Marc Weidenbaum)\, activates sound in unconventional\, temporary\, and ephemeral ways using appropriation and remix as a critical practice. His solo and collaborative projects\, installations\, and public performances often investigate the mundane sonic nuances of everyday electronic devices. \nJonathan Sims is a New York City based visual artist who originally hails from Texas. His visual arts practice is characterized by brightly colored geometric abstractions and simple\, minimalist symbology that evokes language and universal\, ancient design. \nJonathan began his practice with painting\, but has since moved into digital animation\, sculpture and projection installations\, print\, long exposure photography and graphic design. His work is intended to elicit a sense of familiarity and artistic intent in viewers\, but his compositions remain stubbornly non-objective\, and his fictional “glyph” languages refuse transliteration. A consistent premise underlying his work is based on the idea that a modern human’s relationship with the very ancient past is mirrored in their relationship with the distant future. \nPast exhibitions include gallery shows and large scale projection installations in San Antonio\, Bushwick\, Governor’s Island\, and upstate New York.
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/an-evening-of-quadraphonic-sounds/
LOCATION:Flux Factory\, 39-31 29th St\, Long Island City\, NY
CATEGORIES:Residency Shows
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/WEBSITE-LOGO.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200301T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200301T210000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20200217T194238Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200302T201929Z
UID:26104-1583085600-1583096400@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:Sensory Mastication: A multi-sensorial dinner experience
DESCRIPTION:Sensory Mastication\nSunday\, March 1\n6-9pm\n\n\n \nSensory Mastication is a multi-sensorial dinner experience created in collaboration by current Flux Factory residents. Inspired by the surrealist dinner parties of the past\, Sensory Mastication invites guest to sit down\, participate and have every sense activated and agitated. Each course during the dinner is designed to spark a specific sense. There will be no set dinner time\, so arrive at any moment and enjoy your sensory meal! \n\nProduced by Anthony Janas\, with collaboration by Flux Factory Residents \n\n \n \n \n  \n\n\nThis project was partially funded by the Illinois Arts Council.
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/sensory-mastication-a-multi-sensorial-dinner-experience/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/Feature_sensory-.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200312T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200312T233000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20200302T201832Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200317T204302Z
UID:26128-1584039600-1584055800@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:Flux Thursday in Hell
DESCRIPTION:Opening night! HOLY HELL by Springboard Collective\nMarch 12\, 7pm – 12am \n7pm – Potluck\n8pm – Hot Wing Eating Contest\n9pm – DJ PlayPlay \nInvite your daring friends on Facebook!! \nJoin us for the opening night of HOLY HELL: Flux Thursday in Hell hosted by Springboard Collective. Bring your hottest dish or a homemade sauce to compete in the hottest sauce tasting. Too spicy? Try to stomach a hot wing eating contest sponsored by Astoria’s own Hellgate Farm hot sauce. See who’s hot and who’s not on the dance floor with DJ Play Play. This event is free and open to the public. See you in Hell!\n \nFlux Thursdays are Flux Factory’s longest-running program\, and takes place on the second Thursday of each month. This event is free but please bring food or drink to share. \nUpcoming Flux Thursday\, 2020\nApril 9th\nMay 14th\nJune 11
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/flux-thursday-in-hell/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/FLuxThurs.240x800.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200312T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200320T233000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20200218T203327Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200330T204229Z
UID:26060-1584039600-1584747000@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:Springboard Collective presents: HOLY HELL
DESCRIPTION:HOLY HELL\nProduced by Springboard Collective \nThis exhibition has been cancelled in response to heightened concerns relating to the spread of COVID-19 \nLet us know you’re coming on Facebook \nDive head first into HOLY HELL\, Springboard Collective’s latest interactive installation- handbaskets provided. Our hell on earth features three stages of sinful performance art\, gluttony\, and a divine comedy that even Dante would be proud of. \nDo you have the hottest sauce? Things heat up Thursday night 3/12 with a hot wing eating competition plus hottest sauce off. Friday the 13th is your opportunity to face the horns on a mechanical bull and hell raising performance art and DJs. Party in hell all night long Saturday night 3/14 featuring stand-up comedy acts and a late night dance party. All events are free and open to the public. What the hell?? \n\nALL EVENTS HAVE BEEN CANCELLED\, please follow @flux_Faxtory on Instagram for online content \nSCHEDULE OF EVENTS\nFlux Thursday in Hell: March 12\,  7pm – 12am\nHottest Sauce & Hot Wing Eating Competition w/ DJ PlayPlay \n\nFriday: March 13\, 7pm\nLate night Mechanical Bull Rides Performances by Abigail Entsminger & Seth Timothy Larson\, Michael O’Malley\nBull Riding w/ DJ Vinyl Richie \n\nSaturday: March 14\, 8pm\nLate night Party in Hell All Night w/ DJ Sponsored Lynx\nDivine Comedy Night with Rachel Joan and Dylan \n\n\nSunday – Thursday: March 15-19\, midnight – 4am\nOpen gallery hours \nFriday\, March 20\, 8pm – 12am\nHell Freezing Over Closing Event \n\n\nSpringboard Collective produces site-specific\, interactive and sculptural environments. Their collaborative projects create unique experiences and engage critical dialogue in playful\, socially-activated spaces. This project is co-directed by Danny Crump\, Sarah Dahlinger\, and Micah Snyder. This exhibition is funded in part by Flux Factory and in-kind donations from Materials for the Arts.
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/holy-hell/
LOCATION:Flux Factory\, 39-31 29th St\, Long Island City\, NY
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/HolyHell_240x800.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200317T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200317T235900
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20200101T214729Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200429T150146Z
UID:26085-1584432000-1584489540@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:Call for Artists: Pink Flamingo - Clubs in Flux
DESCRIPTION:Pink Flamingo: Clubs in Flux\nJuly 17th – August 9th\, 2020 \n– Please be aware that in order to respond to the unfolding COVID19 crisis\, we have had to postpone this exhibition until mid 2021. Exact dates will be determined later in 2020. If you are currently submitting or have already submitted\, we are still accepting applications until April 27\, and these will be added to next year’s submissions. Please reach out to the curators for further details or questions at pinkflamingo@fluxfactory.org. \nFull exhibition details and application here\n Deadline: April 27th\, 2020 \nCurated by Jess Dilday and Anton Lapov \n\nPink Flamingo: Clubs in Flux seeks artists to imagine and produce their ideal multimedia music space\, to be installed inside Flux Factory’s gallery. Three sequential week-long environments will provide an immersive listening experience\, and culminate in a final “club night” or party.  \nSelected artists or artist collectives will be responsible for building-out a “club” environment\, providing or selecting music for the culminating party\, and any accompanying performances or interactive programming to activate the space. Additionally\, Pink Flamingo will host a 24/7 radio broadcast throughout the month\, where music and audio connected to each installation will be broadcast.   \nAn accompanying exhibition of archival NYC club materials will be displayed in an adjacent space. Pink Flamingo seeks to explore the ephemeral nature of these urban party spaces and highlight the importance of experiential values created during many short-lived club ventures. \nThanks in part to the DCLA Disability Forward Fund\, priority will be given to artists living with a disability or artists whose work addresses issues of disability and accessibility. \nFull exhibition details and application here
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/call-for-artists-musicians-dancers-pink-flamingo-clubs-in-flux/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/ClubsInFluxOpenCall_Feature.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200326T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200330T220000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20200306T203721Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211108T072316Z
UID:26149-1585249200-1585605600@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:人柱の物語 (hitobashira no monogatari): solo exhibition by Nine Yamamoto-Masson
DESCRIPTION:人柱の物語 (hitobashira no monogatari): solo exhibition by Nine Yamamoto-Masson\n\nThis exhibition has been cancelled in response to heightened concerns relating to the spread of COVID-19 \nIn her first solo exhibition on Turtle Island\, Nine Yamamoto-Masson presents new works that reflect on the private dimensions of war and US imperialism in Asia that\, sidelined by hegemonic regimes of knowledge and cold bureaucratization of violence\, often elude representation and public discourse – especially within the US public imaginary of Asia and of US military actions. \nIn this exhibition\, Yamamoto-Masson chooses a reduced formal language and visual codes to unlock engagement with the history\, reality\, and the private and political afterlife of the Manhattan Project and the ongoing global nuclear colonialism it is but one aspect of – including its legions of ghosts around the world. In drawings\, collages\, installations\, and sculptures\, the artist negotiates the politics of what can be publicly revealed of the active legacy of gendered and racialized state-sanctioned violence – including rape as a technology of power – and what remains incommunicable and unwelcome. \nThe works in this exhibition are part of a lager body of intermedia\, academic\, and activist work in which Yamamoto-Masson maps how fascisms and rape culture operate necropolitically in the battlefields of bodies\, memory\, historiography\, and media representation. \nNine Yamamoto-Masson is a French-Japanese artist\, theorist\, writer\, community organizer\, activist\, and translator. In academic research\, artistic and activist practice\, her work analyses the gendered necropolitics of (neo)coloniality with regard to the legacies of European and Japanese colonialism and how they presently manifest as configurations of power and economies of knowledge that exert violence on bodies and futures. She studies the modes of organization of networked resistance\, and the workings of resistant memory challenging hegemonic dominant narratives\, focusing on the role of art and inter-diasporic\, internationalist\, inter-generational solidarities. She is a PhD candidate at the University of Amsterdam; in 2018 and 2019 she was a visiting researcher-artist at Hiroshima City University. \nwww.nineyamamotomasson.com\nPlease share on Facebook
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/%e4%ba%ba%e6%9f%b1%e3%81%ae%e7%89%a9%e8%aa%9e-hitobashira-no-monogatari/
LOCATION:Flux Factory\, 39-31 29th St\, Long Island City\, NY
CATEGORIES:Residency Shows
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Evidence2YamamotoMasson_Fluxweb.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200508T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200614T090000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20200506T204850Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211108T072305Z
UID:26231-1588966200-1592125200@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:A Song For Sickness by Jonathan Sims
DESCRIPTION:A Song For Sickness\n\nBy Jonathan Sims \n\nMay 8 – June 14\, 2020\nIn the Flux Factory Gallery Windows\nSafely viewed from the sidewalk \nOn May 8th at sunset\, Flux Factory will launch A Song For Sickness\, a light installation by Jonathan Sims in the windows of the Flux Factory Gallery. \nThis new piece will join the Center of Holographic Arts Light Windows\, a public-facing exhibition of light art in spaces around New York City and the world. A global event to mark the International Day of Light on Saturday\, May 16. \n\nStatement for A Song for Sickness:\n \n\n“I spent the first ten days of quarantine in New York City in self-isolation with a persistent cough\, shortness of breath\, and terrifying waves of anxiety. A Song for Sickness began as a desire to represent the immense emotional energy I expended in panic attacks and in desperate pleas for intercession and wellness. It is also an inheritance of the countless prayers and spells that human beings have devised over the millennia to ask the universe for healing or\, in my case\, strength to accept the potentially permanent changes that the virus could bring as a new norm in my life. \n“The work is about the constant evolution that every individual undergoes throughout life\, and the unique beauty of that growth. This durational nature of the piece is punctuated by a collage of abstracted symbols that represent our psychic reverberations to these changes. \n“Though this piece came to be in an extraordinary time where the entire planet is hyper-focused on a single virus\, my intent is for this invocation to gather energy to all people for whom illness is a part of their lives. I also want to acknowledge those at greatest risk now\, not only because of the threat of a novel virus\, but because of the failures inherent in capitalist institutions there are those whose tenuous existences are now even more precarious. These include the chronically ill\, those with compromised autoimmune systems\, the elderly\, the caretakers\, and the workers–all of whom are being asked to make sacrifices to uphold the very economies and institutions which have already been failing them. I ask viewers to not only consider this work as a potential conduit for healing\, but as a meditation on the complex relationships every human being experiences with sickness.” \n\n– Jonathan Sims
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/a-song-against-sickness-by-jonathan-sims/
CATEGORIES:Residency Shows
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/SongAgainstIllness_Feature.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200618T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200709T230000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20200520T183209Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200712T172233Z
UID:26381-1592510400-1594335600@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:Karaoke Quotes by Jevijoe Vitug
DESCRIPTION:Karaoke Quotes: Projection and mobile display \nby Jevijoe Vitug\nJune 18- July 9\, 2020\n8pm to 11 pm\n\nInstalled in the Flux Factory Gallery windows at 39-31 29th street\, LIC \n\nIn honor of BIPOC (Black\, Indigenous\, and People of Color) who are battling against systemic racism\,  Jevijoe Vitug has compiled screenshots of karaoke songs online that are mostly revolutionary and popularized by Black artists. Projected on a screen using a karaoke mobile unit\, the lyrics of the songs without the music seem like poignant quotes. Thus the artist calls them “Karaoke Quotes” \nQueens-based artist Jevijoe Vitug creates paintings\, performance and community projects as avant-garde strategy to visibilize labor\, indigenous legacy and the forgotten history of people of color. \nJevijoe earned his MFA dual degree in Studio Arts and Design and Technology from San Francisco Art Institute in 2015 and his work has been included in exhibitions at the Cultural Center of the Philippines (2005\, 2006)\, Singapore Art Museum (2006)\, Diego Rivera Gallery\, San Francisco\, CA (2009)\, Contemporary Arts Center\, Las Vegas (2012)\, Staff show at The Metropolitan Museum of Art \, NY (2017\, 2019)\, Queens Museum\, NY (2018)\, San Diego Art Institute\, San Diego CA (2019). His performance projects have been presented at NIPAF\, Japan (2004)\, Koret Educational Center at SFMOMA\, San Francisco\, CA (2008)\, London Biennale organized by David Medalla (2012\, 2014)\, Flux residency at AroS Museum\, Denmark (2018)\, Museum Mile at The Africa Center and El Museo Del Barrio (2019)\, UP Vargas Museum(2019). In 2019\, Vitug is a recipient of Queens Arts Fund New Works Grant and an artist-in-residence of The Laundromat Project’s Create Change Program. He is member of Museum Union Art Workers\, District Council- 37 Local 1503 and currently serves in the community resident board of directors of Flux Factory. \n@jevijoe
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/karaoke-quotes-by-jevijoe-vitug/
LOCATION:Flux Factory\, 39-31 29th St\, Long Island City\, NY
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Jevijoe_KaraokeClips_Feature.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200708T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200708T190000
DTSTAMP:20260412T121152
CREATED:20200510T235402Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200712T172009Z
UID:26412-1594227600-1594234800@www.fluxfactory.org
SUMMARY:Nobody's Fashion Week Virtual Town Hall
DESCRIPTION:Nobody’s Fashion Week Virtual Town Hall\nWednesday\, July 8\, 5-7pm\nVia Zoom \nZoom link will be sent upon Registration\n\nJoin us for a Virtual Town Hall to kick off Nobody’s Fashion Week! 21 alternative fashion artists\, designers\, educators and organizers will introduce their work.  Their practices span a range of themes –  such as personal identity\, cultural history\, sustainability\, craft and technology – but all share roots in critically engaging with fashion. Presentations will be followed by an opportunity to mingle\, planting seeds for future connections\, conversations and collaborations between like-minded fashion enthusiasts. \nNobody’s Fashion Week offers a nurturing space for emerging artists and the public using wearables and the body as a medium. In September 2020\, Nobody’s Fashion Week will host a month of remote programming that is free and open to the public\, including practical workshops\, panel discussions and artist talks. Nobody’s Fashion Week is a reimagining of the fashion industry from the bottom up. Our aim is to democratize fashion by encouraging multidisciplinary collaboration\, skill-sharing culture\, and self-expression for everyone. \nNobody’s Fashion Week is co-curated by Lexy Ho-Tai\, Jaime Iglehart\, Dew Igworia and Johanna Schwab. \nNobody’s Fashion Week is hosted by Flux Factory\, with support from the Austrian Federal Ministry for Arts & Culture\, the Austrian Culture Forum New York and a generous donation from Joe Castillo. \nIf you have any access needs or if you would like to get involved with Nobody’s Fashion Week\, please email fashion@fluxfactory.org. \n* Flyer created by Juliet Johnson\, Lexy Ho-Tai\, and Johanna Schwab. Image description in Alt Text.
URL:https://www.fluxfactory.org/event/virtual-town-hall/
LOCATION:Via Zoom
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.fluxfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/FashionTownHall_Feature.jpg
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR