Showing posts with label Goethe-Institut. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Goethe-Institut. Show all posts

Friday, February 1, 2013

Goethe-Institut opens 'Facing Democracy'

At the opening of Facing Democracy at the Goethe-Institut, Washington/patricia leslie

A new photo and video exhibit Facing Democracy by three artists with global reach has opened at the Goethe-Institut in Chinatown.

 
Featured in the show are works by a Pulitzer Prize winner twice, Lucian Perkins, who worked at the Washington Post 27 years and whose pictures document wars around the world; Danny Wilcox Frazier, who has photographed economic effects on the poor worldwide with a recent focus on his home state, Iowa; and Baltimorean Jenny Graf Sheppard, the creator of the video, Site Specific and Everywhere, about the Occupy movement.
At the opening of Facing Democracy at the Goethe-Institut, Washington/patricia leslie

The unframed photos on the wall of discontent and upheaval are mostly the “in your face” variety, dramatic and powerful. Looking at them, a viewer’s hearing sense is triggered, and the imagined sounds of the times become quite real. The pictures are reminders of the sacrifices the participants made to be there and their contributions to the movement to awaken the world to the needs of the 99 percent and the consequences, if ignored. They made me nostalgic for the lost opportunity to join Occupy activists.

At the opening reception, Goethe-Institut Director Wilfried Eckstein welcomed guests and asked “Where is democracy going?”
 
Wilfried Eckstein, right, director of the Goethe-Institut, Washington, welcomed Lucian Perkins, one of the featured artists in Facing Democracy/patricia leslie
 
The Occupy movement was “the largest protest I’ve covered in 27 years," said Mr. Perkins, "especially with Mitt Romney’s 70 percent comment.” Occupy “did play a role in the election, and we’ll have to see what happens,” he said.

After the reception, the Institut hosted the screening of a series of 12 short films entitled Why Democracy, made by filmmakers from around the world.
 
The photo show and the films are part of several events which explore the future of democracy and will culminate in a panel discussion, Mapping Democracy:  Utopia and Renewal with Athens and Munich representatives on February 24 from 2 - 4 p.m. at the Goethe-Institut. 
 

 

Click here for the film schedule in the Mapping Democracy series. The Goethe-Institut "organizes and supports cultural events that present German culture abroad and that further intercultural exchange," according to its website.
 
What: Facing Democracy  

When: Now through February 24, 2013 on Monday – Thursday, 9 a.m. – 5 p.m., and Friday, 9 a.m. – 3 p.m.


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Where: FotoGalerie, Goethe-Institute, 812 Seventh Street, Washington, D.C. 20001

How much: No charge

Metro stations: Gallery Place-Chinatown or walk from Metro Center (10 minutes)

For more information: 202-289-1200
 
 
patricialesli@gmail.com


Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Hacking on tap at the Goethe-Institut today


At a lunch talk today at the Goethe-Institut, a panel of artists and experts will discuss political and digital activism on the Web, the open source movement, Twitter, and hackers.

The enormous technological and communications changes embracing the planet and "hacker culture" are primary foci of the discussion which is co-sponsored by the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, the Swiss Arts Council Pro Helvetia and the Embassy of Switzerland.

Other topics include online petitioning, "Anonymous," Wikileaks, and opportunities and pitfalls of digital media.  Are digital contributors artists?  (This is only a two-hour session?)

Scheduled panel members are:  Hans Bernhard, artist and founding member of Ubermorgen.com; Steven Kurtz, professor of visual studies at the State University of New York, Buffalo; Frank Rieger, author and representative from the Chaos Computer Club, Berlin; and Mark Tribe, artist and assistant professor of modern culture and media studies at Brown University.
 
RSVPs are required.  Call to save a seat.

What:  Activism (and Hacker Culture)

When:  12 – 2 p.m., Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Where:  Goethe-Institut, 812 Seventh Street, NW, Washington, D.C.

Cost:  No charge

For more information and to make a reservation202-289-1200

Metro station:  Gallery Place-Chinatown or walk from Metro Center

patricialesli@gmail.com

Friday, November 18, 2011

Goethe-Institut opens new photo show


The opening of 'On the Lakeshore...and Other Stories' at the Goethe-Institut/Patricia Leslie


A photograph by Kaitlin Jensco, a featured artist at the Goethe-Institut

       
A photograph by Sara Winston, a featured artist at the Goethe-Institut


A photograph by Iris Janke, one of the featured artists at the Goethe-Institut


       Visitors admire the photographs of Sara Winston at the Goethe-Institut/Patricia Leslie


At the opening of the Goethe-Institut's new photo show/Patricia Leslie

An exhibit of everyday European and American household and family scenes opened last week at the photo gallery at Goethe-Institut, and features works by Germany's Iris Janke and two American photographers, Sara Winston and Kaitlin Jensco. Children, including some of the same children pictured in different poses, are the subjects of many of the photographs which are mounted with handwritten labels on walls.
According to information at the Goethe, the exhibit is intended to enrich conversation, sparked by the artists who collaborated on "dialogue on a common topic: self-identity." Examples of Ms. Jensco's rural upbringing in Southern Maryland are quite evident in her photographs.
Sara Winston grew up in Orange County, New York and is a graduate of the Corcoran College of Art and Design where Ms. Jensco is a student. Ms. Janke's work has been exhibited in several galleries in Europe and included in many publications.
The opening day of the exhibit was timed to coincide with the just-ended DC FotoWeek.
What: "On the Lakeshore ... and Other Stories"
When: Now through January 27, 2012: 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Monday-Thursday; 9 a.m.-3 p.m., Friday
Where: Goethe-Institut, 812 Seventh Street, NW
Admission: No charge
Metro Stations: Gallery Place-Chinatown (1/2 block away), Metro Center, or Navy Memorial-Archives
Bike racks: Available
For more information: 202-289-1200