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Wednesday, May 7, 6:30-8:30pm
Judson Memorial Church
by Washington Square Park

239 Thompson Street, cross street W. 3rd
In the assembly hall basement

Participants are invited to present projects and programs they are working on, or ideas in development.  Refreshments will be provided.

Friends,

As you know, Where We Are Now has met a few times and we have had very productive discussions on what individuals are working on, their thoughts on the current political conditions / challenges in NYC and beyond, and the myriad methods for mass organizing. What has become very evident is the deep need on the part of everyone involved to have a coordinated clearinghouse where people can participate with each other and learn about different political projects. This structure in and of itself feels sorely lacking in the city and we all realized how powerful the need to produce something on this level is.

At the same time, our process thus far has generated confusion about what exactly this network is, and what sorts of support it can and cannot offer to individual projects. This confusion comes out of the difficult paradox of organizing an art political community for the sake of organizing an art political community. Aiming to capitalize on the civil discourse generated during an important election season, but being resistant to defining a singular analysis and politics, the group process has proved somewhat arduous for all involved. While an open format has been daunting, it has also allowed us to gain an appreciation of the vast community interested in this work. We simply need to become more effective. With that in mind, we would like to propose a slightly different format for the next meeting as well as a different structure for Where We Are Now in general.

We hope to offer the large network-wide monthly meetings as ‘meet ups’ where individuals and organizations can present what they are working on or ideas they are developing.  The meetings would operate as a networking social event.  People who are interested in sharing a specific project with the group will put their names on a speaker’s list when they arrive, and will each be given 2-5 minutes to talk about their project, depending on how many people wish to present.  We will begin the meeting with brief introductions from anyone who did not sign up to present a specific project, then we will hear each of the project presentations.  At the end of each presentation, a sign-up sheet will be passed around where people can write their email address if they are interested in supporting the specific project.  These lists will then make their way back to the presenter, who will be able to follow up with those interested (or not!) however they would like. We hope that this revised structure will allow those who want to work collaboratively to do so while others can feel free to develop projects without feeling they need to check in with the larger group before launching them in the public arena.

As the Where We Are Now Organizers Committee, we plan to channel our energies toward a goal that we feel can act as a catalyst for making Where We Are Now more energized and productive.  To that end, we will develop online infrastructure that can help facilitate a mission of coordinating art and politics in this city. This website will function to announce and visually represent various projects happening around the city, provide a forum for interactive dialogue, and offer tools and resources to individuals and institutions. For the sake of efficacy, this project will be anchored by our small core group, but we welcome suggestions and any programmers with experience in the Ruby on Rails coding language.  Our aim is to ideally launch this site in September.

Until we launch the coordinating Where We Are Now website, there seems to be a widespread opinion that the working group structure of the network might prove difficult to generate a productive programming form. Launching a robust website that facilitates the actions that we have discussed in the large group meetings seems the best method currently for providing a more sustainable model that has transparency, coherency and a useful structure.

We appreciate everyone’s work and involvement with Where We Are Now so far. We know this process isn’t easy, but we also believe in the political strength of coordinating our actions. There are too many difficult political conditions stemming from the powers that be here in the city for us to not organize. We remain confident that a coordinated extended political cultural community is our best chance at producing a counter model for social change. Trying to sustain an open platform is difficult, but ultimately, we see a light at the end of the tunnel for channeling such energy into a productive social force. If all goes well, the website and these meet-ups should help clarify Where We Are Now’s goals and will eventually generate a structure for coordinating the profound and exciting social energy that we have seen emerge at these amazing meetings.

Sincerely,

Nato Thompson, Creative Time
Carin Kuoni, Vera List Center for Art and Politics at the New School
Jakob Schillinger, Vera List Center for Art and Politics at the New School
Lydia Matthews, Parsons the New School for Design
Doug Ashford, Cooper Union
Beka Economopoulos, The Change You Want To See Gallery
Jason Jones, Not An Alternative

-Members of the Where We Are Now Organizers Committee

On April 2nd more than 130 artists, activists, and academics met, discussed, questioned, plotted, and planned in the basement of Judson Church. The bulk of this took place in smaller break-out groups, and each of those groups will meet this month to have more face time, get deeper into things, and roll up sleeves.

These working group meetings are open to anyone who’s interested in getting involved:

Arts In Action Working Group, Wednesday April 9th, 7pm. At Eyebeam: 540 W. 21st Street, (between 10th and 11th Avenues), Manhattan. A portion of this meeting will be structured as a salon/clearinghouse, where participants can announce projects and events, offer or solicit resources, meet and identify collaborators. The other portion of the meeting will be oriented towards brainstorms and planning for the upcoming Where We Are Now “day of action” to take place in early summer.

Communications Working Group, Sunday April 13th, 3pm. At The Change You Want To See Gallery: 84 Havemeyer Street at Metropolitan Ave, Williamsburg, Brooklyn. At the last break-out participants discussed plans to form project teams along the following lines: maps/ephemera, translation, media tent for day of action, pirate radio/podcasting, stenciling/wheatpasting/visibility, website. At this upcoming working group meeting we will further concretize these ideas, identify point people for each project, make plans, and make stencils!

Conference and Pedagogy Group, to be determined.

Community Group, to be determined.

Where We Are Now is a network of cultural, educational, and activist organizations and individuals dedicated to developing coordinated strategies to raise people’s awareness of the multitude of art political activities in New York City. Our goal is to demonstrate how powerful critical voices still exist, ones that cry out for global justice, agency and participation. Using the pivotal moment of the 2008 presidential election, we share a sense that the times have changed and are ours to claim. Through activities as diverse as art exhibitions, days of decentralized action, street performances and pedagogical conferences, we seek to gauge the status of the political in contemporary art, and consider how we may act as resources to one another and to other communities within and beyond New York City.

Where We Are Now hosts monthly network-wide meetings, as well as working group meetings for each of the three working groups (conference and pedagogy; communications; and arts in action).

The larger network-wide meetings are held on the first Wednesday of every month, from 6:30-8:30pm at the assembly hall of Judon Church by Washington Square Park. The first hour is a network-wide meeting with updates about endorsed projects, report-backs from the three working groups, and discussion. In the second hour working groups will break-out for smaller working meetings.

In between monthly meetings, working groups hold meetings in various locations in the city, to plan for the Where We Are Now conference, day of arts in action, and other network projects.

WHERE WE ARE NOW ANNOUNCEMENT LIST
There is a general announcement-only email list for the overall Where We Are Now network. This is where announcements for big network meetings are posted, as well as other network-wide business. Everyone interested in the Where We Are Now network should join this list. Traffic is limited to 2-3 posts per month.

To join this list, please send an email to
wherewearenow-announce-subscribe@googlegroups.com

WORKING GROUP LISTSERVS
Each of the working groups has a discussion list where meetings are announced, updates are posted, and relevant discussion takes place between meetings. List traffic is generally low (i.e. you won’t be overwhelmed with email!) but joining these lists is the best way to plug in and get involved with the network. Here’s how:

CONFERENCE AND PEDAGOGY GROUP
To join this list, please send an email to
wherewearenow-pedagogy-subscribe@googlegroups.com

COMMUNICATIONS GROUP
To join this list, please send an email to
wherewearenow-comms-subscribe@googlegroups.com

ARTS IN ACTION GROUP
To join this list, please send an email to
wherewearenow-artaction-subscribe@googlegroups.com

Next Meeting: Sunday, April 13, 3pm at The Change You Want To See Gallery. 84 Havemeyer St, at Metropolitan Ave, Williamsburg, Brooklyn 11211.

The Where We Are Now Communications Working Group:

Some of us want to marry art, activism, and critical practices here in New York.
Some of us want pandemonium in the streets.
Some of us want to offer a way to frame and interpret collective art-activist gestures.
Some of us want a bird’s eye view of art and activism in New York City.
Some of us want to engage contemporary art and academic institutions in the service of change.
Some of us want to see New York City step into political discussion with all of the voices that we have at our disposal.
Some of us want art to inform and interrogate activist practices.
Some of us want technology to further art and activism and hurry things up.
Some of us want to broadcast diverse voices.

We want an infrastructure that allows us to deepen our understanding of existing resources, build new ones, collaborate, and impact New York now. And after!

Seeking graphic designers, photographers, videographers, wheatpasters, writers, theorists, producers, interpreters, promoters, and propagandists.

Goals and Implementation:

  • Listservs and Email Blast. We established discussion and planning listservs for the Where We Are Now working groups, as well as an announcement-only email blast list for communications to anyone interested in the network.
  • Website. We are building a new site that will allow individuals and institutions to list projects and events related to art and activism, thus servicing our goal of “locating art and politics in New York City”. The site will include a distributed events tool and an interactive map that pinpoints listed events. People are able to RSVP to events they are interested in, and event creators can send invitations. This tool will be used to facilitate the two Where We Are Now days of action (in the early summer and mid-Fall). It includes telephony reportage, where people at day of action events leave phone messages that automatically convert to digital audio files that are published to the site.
  • Press and Publicity. We will draft framing, analysis, and an articulation of Where We Are Network projects, for the public and the press.
  • Radio Broadcast and Online Audio Streaming. Free103Point9 will do live reportage of Where We Are Now events in the lead-up to the election.
  • Printed Ephemera. Ephemera may consist of a small book, poster, map in conjunction with other Where We Are Now programs.

TO GET INVOLVED:
Send a blank email to wherewearenow-comms-subscribe@googlegroups.com to join the Communications Group listserv.

This group seeks to examine how individuals and groups acquire and exercise social and political agency through collective aesthetic practices and—taking its cue from the group’s name—is particularly interested in the situation at this moment in this (porous) city.

We probe the interface between theory and practice and we are developing two main initiatives. This fall, we’re organizing two public assemblies, one before and one after the presidential elections, to produce four or five distinct incidents of political agency. They will be structured like charrettes (modeled on design charrettes, an often entertaining and effective combination of concept and mobilization) with specific challenges that call for immediate practical solutions developed within a few hours. It will be required that the outcome of each charrette will find a public platform—provided by the institutional members of Where We Are Now and other organizations—to ensure long-term impact beyond the one-day event.

Charrettes will be preceded by key note addresses by some of the charrette participants intended to identify theoretical reference points pertinent to each charrette. While both elements are completely public, a solid number of participants for the charrettes will be secured through the Where We Are Now network in advance. The presentations by keynote speakers will be targeted to a broad audience.

Timed to bracket the presidential elections, the assemblies will enable us to determine the impact of electoral politics on our community in NYC, and to look beyond them.

The keynote presentations could be hosted by The New School in the evenings of Friday, October 17, and Friday, November 14, with charrettes taking place the following days at various sites.

The second initiative of the Where We Are Now Conference and Pedagogy Group aims at a consideration of pedagogy and activism, and will partially be informed by the outcomes of one of the charrettes.

Possible charrette topics are listed below; however, the Conference and Pedagogy Group very much solicits ideas for topics and public platforms from the whole group, by mid-April (just after the next general meeting).

1) “Get Out the Vote” graphic campaign
Example: CUP’s Making Policy Public
Potential public platform: Printed Matter (launching a related publication series)

2) “Political Representation and Visual Culture” course curriculum
Potential public platform: Cooper Union

3) Produce an alternative, independent economic microsystem supporting new models of artistic production.
Example: Rebecca Gordon Nesbit’s 100% proof (curators earn money as editor and commission artists)
Ultimate goal: find production space

4) Re-activate a significant countercultural moment and determine its validity for today.
Example: Sharon Hayes performance, “I march in the parade of liberty but as long as I love you I’m not free”

5) Define the conditions for political momentum.
Example: Francis Alys, project on rumor that acquires physical presence through “Missing Victim” posters

TO GET INVOLVED:
Please send a blank email to wherewearenow-pedagogy-subscribe@googlegroups.com to join the Conference and Pedagogy listserv.

Next Meeting: Wednesday, April 9th, 7pm at Eyebeam. 540 W. 21st Street, (between 10th and 11th Avenues).

The Where We Are Now Arts in Action Working Group:

In this election year a wave of creative energy will sweep the country. It will be characterized by an explosion of brilliant and colorful projects that will bring focus, aim and meaning to politics for people across the nation. As people come together to work toward different and common goals it will be an occasion for new communities, infrastructures and networks to be invented.

This familiar and perhaps idealistic narrative is one that the Arts In Action Working Group is dedicated to realizing. However where this narrative typically plays out in only one of every four years and ends with the act of voting at the ballot box, we aim to expand on the story.

The Arts in Action Working Group is a platform intended to facilitate the production of projects driven by individuals and groups. We are the space where, for example, the activist, artist or group can explain his or her project to a larger community, and the curator can hear about possible projects to organize into a catalogue or show. We are the place where people power comes together and where resources are shared. The Arts in Action Working is the place to go if you have an idea of what the voting could/should look like.

One of the most powerful transformations that occurred in the last century was that art was freed as a discipline from itself. After Duchamp, it is absurd to imagine art as necessarily determined by any particular material, discipline or location. Like politics, art can be, or perhaps is, present in everything and requires only a slight shift in perspective to be revealed. But where a urinal is art and everything is political, the act of voting, of exercising one’s right to affect politics, is contained to only the most limited range of expression.

The Arts in Action Working Group is dedicated to facilitating projects that actively engage the act of voting. We relate to the act of voting as something that happens, not only once in every four years, but as something that could happen more often (perhaps all the time). Voting, as we understand it, can take the form of, but isn’t necessarily limited to, the act of casting a ballot. It is an act that does not represent the end of an electoral narrative but instead is imagined as the beginning.

Projects:

  • A distributed city-wide day of action in the early summer, and another in mid-Fall, to take place in galleries, lecture halls, and in the streets.
  • Regular meetings for artists, activists, writers, curators to promote projects and plug in.

TO GET INVOLVED:
Please send a blank email to wherewearenow-artaction-subscribe@googlegroups.com to join the Arts in Action listserv.

The Conference and Pedagogy Working Group seeks to examine how individuals and groups acquire and exercise social and political agency through collective aesthetic practices and—taking its cue from the group’s name—is particularly interested in the situation at this moment in this (porous) city. We probe the interface between theory and practice.

Projects:

  • Two public assemblies in the Fall, bracketing the presidential election, to produce four or five distinct incidents of political agency. They will be structured like charrettes (modeled on design charrettes, an often entertaining and effective combination of concept and mobilization) with specific challenges that call for immediate practical solutions developed within a few hours. It will be required that the outcome of each charrette will find a public platform—provided by the institutional members of Where We Are Now and other organizations—to ensure long-term impact beyond the one-day event.

The Arts in Action Working Group is dedicated to facilitating projects that actively engage the act of voting. We relate to the act of voting as something that happens, not only once in every four years, but as something that could happen more often (perhaps all the time). Voting, as we understand it, can take the form of, but isn’t necessarily limited to, the act of casting a ballot. It is an act that does not represent the end of an electoral narrative but instead is imagined as the beginning.

Projects:

  • Beyond Voting: a distributed city-wide day of action in the early summer, and another in mid-Fall, to take place in galleries, lecture halls, and in the streets.
  • Regular meetings for artists, activists, writers, curators to announce and promote projects, propose ideas for collaboration, network and plug in.

The Communications Working Group aims to create an infrastructure that allows us to deepen our understanding of existing resources, build new ones, collaborate, and impact New York.

Some of us want to marry art, activism, and critical practices here in New York.
Some of us want pandemonium in the streets.
Some of us want to offer a way to frame and interpret collective art-activist gestures.
Some of us want a bird’s eye view of art and activism in New York City.
Some of us want to engage contemporary art and academic institutions in the service of change.
Some of us want to see New York City step into political discussion with all of the voices that we have at our disposal.
Some of us want art to inform and interrogate activist practices.
Some of us want technology to further art and activism and hurry things up.
Some of us want to broadcast diverse voices.

Projects:

  • Listservs and email blast, website, press and publicity, online social platform, radio broadcast and online audio streaming, a map and other printed ephemera. Seeking graphic designers, photographers, videographers, wheatpasters, writers, theorists, producers, interpreters, promoters, and propagandists.

Individuals and institutions interested in supporting the mission and growth of this network are invited to make a financial contribution. Checks on behalf of Where We Are Now can be made out to “Pond: Art, Activism, Ideas” and mailed to: The Change You Want To See Gallery, 84 Havemeyer Street, Storefront, Brooklyn NY 11211. Donations are tax deductible as the law allows. Please indicate “Where We Are Now” in the memo. Your contributions are greatly appreciated!