Sunday Salon
Interrogations of Form
December 15, 2019
Held in our historic period rooms, these insightful conversations throughout the year feature artists, scholars, cultural leaders, and social trailblazers who gather to offer new points of view and unique perspectives on Armory productions, explore a range of themes and relevant topics, and encourage audiences to think beyond conventional interpretations and perspectives of art.
“The Park Avenue Armory has two consistent modes: The first is to overwhelm; the second is to inspire a quiet conviction that you’re missing something amazing in another part of the building. Both struck with full force…filling the gilded, schizo-baroque rooms and halls with a dazzling mix of artists, thinkers, and impresarios”
—Artforum
Performance Details
Symposium: Culture in a Changing America
Join an interdisciplinary group of artists, thinkers, activists, academics, and community leaders as they explore the role of culture in a changing America. Two main tracks feature keynote conversations, artist salons, open studios, intimate performances, and interactive workshops. The Art & Identity track explores how artists’ creative practices and individual identities reflect or respond to societal concerns; topics include artistic use of ever-evolving technology, shifting notions of gender, and courageous responses to the impact of racism on art. The Art & Activism track focuses on the power of artists to affect change in their communities through artistic endeavors and activism; it features artist-activists from the film, television, and food industries, architecture practices, as well as artists working in partnership with New York City agencies.
The symposium concludes with a special keynote conversation moderated by The Studio Museum in Harlem’s Director and Chief Curator Thelma Golden, with choreographer, director, and dancer Bill T. Jones, the Kennedy Center’s Marc Bamuthi Joseph, visual artist Julie Mehretu, and musician Toshi Reagon centered on the state of American culture in the age of Trump, followed by a musical performance by Toshi Reagon and special guests.
This symposium is presented in collaboration with The Studio Museum in Harlem.
Artist Talk: The Lehman Trilogy
Director Sam Mendes and Ben Power discuss adapting Stefano Massini’s epic and realizing the immigrant story in modern times. Playwright Lynn Nottage moderates.
Sunday Salon: Museum as Sanctuary
Tania Bruguera, installation artist and Armory Artist-in-Residence best known for challenging institutions and power structures with her socially-engaged art projects, invites us to engage with the concept of “Museum as Sanctuary.”
3:00pm
On View from 4:30pm–5:30pm
Conversation with the Artists at 4:45pm
5:30pm
Confrontational Comedy
Confrontational Comedy returns for a fourth year, headlined by Nish Kumar (host of BBC’s late-night comedy show, The Mash Report, as well as appearances on Comedy Central’s Stand-Up for Central, Drunk History, The Alternative Comedy Experience & Live At The Comedy Store). Joining him are comedians Charla Lauriston (former writer Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, Comedy Central’s Why? W/ Hannibal Buress, TBS’ People of Earth, and FOX’s Ghosted), Billy Wayne Davis (appearances on Conan, Last Comic Standing; comedy albums “Billy Wayne Davis” & “Billy Wayne Davis: Live at Third Man Records”) and Tien Tran (former member of The Second City’s 106th Mainstage revue, Dream Freaks Fall From Space). This unforgettable evening of comedy sets and conversation highlights the power of humor to confront stereotypes and engage audiences around uncomfortable topics. Hosted by Warrington Hudlin (Founding President, Black Filmmaker Foundation; producer of House Party and Boomerang).
Artist Talk: Everything that happened and would happen
Artist and composer Heiner Goebbels and composer, vocalist and scholar Gelsey Bell discuss the creation of work that defies categorization and the realization of productions in unconventional spaces.
Artist Talk: Drill
Hito Steyerl is joined by Anton Vidokle (artist and founder of e-flux), Christopher B. Toepfer (founder of The Neighborhood Foundation), and Ayham Ghraowi (Producer and Assistant Director of Drill) for a conversation about the inspirations, ideas, and creative development of her Armory installation. Curator Tom Eccles moderates.
Performance Lecture: Drill
Learning/Unlearning of Violence: Performance Lecture by Vanessa Gravenor
Screening & Conversation
The Dead Walk Into a Bar: Screening & Conversation with Anton Vidokle, Adam Khalil, and Bayley Sweitzer
Content advisory: The Dead Walk into a Bar contains nudity and material that some may find challenging.
Sunday Salon: Spoken Word
Park Avenue Armory and the Nuyorican Poets Cafe mark the 20th anniversary of the Friday Night Poetry Slam (and the 45th anniversary of the Cafe) with an afternoon of literature, performance art, poetry slam, and hip-hop theater. Headlined by Ishmael Reed and Staceyann Chin, featuring Craig “muMs” Grant, Erik “Advocate Of Wordz” Maldonado, Darian Dauchan, and Caridad “La Bruja” De La Luz. The afternoon culminates in a performance by Malik Work, with Quincy Valentine and Jazmin Yvonne: Nostos in Verse, a condensed version of the actor-writer-emcee’s acclaimed hip hop theater piece, Verses @ Work.
3:00–4:00pm: Board of Officers Room
Spoken Word Performances & Open Mic
4:00–5:00pm: Board of Officers Room
Readings & Conversation
5:00–6:00pm: Veterans Room
Hip-Hop Theater Performance
- READ PARTICIPANT BIOS
Artist Talk: Antigone
Director Satoshi Miyagi and Carol Martin (Professor of Drama at Tisch School of the Arts, New York University) discuss the infusion of Japanese Noh theater and other global traditions in his re-imagining of this classic Greek tragedy.
Symposium: Theaster Gates & The Black Artists RetreatOpening Celebrations:
Sonic Musings, Meditations & Testimonies:
Sonic Soul Session #1: Roller Skating Party:
Theaster Gates, a charismatic figure in the contemporary art world, with a practice situated both within and without gallery walls, vacillating between aesthetics, urban planning, and activism, hosts his renowned Black Artists Retreat for the first time outside of Chicago.
For this year’s retreat, Gates, an Armory Artist-in-Residence, welcomes black artists and allies from Chicago, New York, and beyond for a weekend of communion, celebration, and multi-disciplinary exploration of this year’s theme: sonic imagination.
Artist Talk: Judgment Day
Director Richard Jones and playwright Anne Washburn discuss adapting Ödön von Horváth’s play for the stage and mounting it in an unconventional space.
Sunday Salon: Dance
With diversity moving into the mainstream and ballet at a crossroads, pioneering artistic directors, choreographers and dancers gather for an afternoon salon to explore what 21st-century beauty looks like. For ballet, an art form that traditionally has looked backward for inspiration and prided itself on its exclusivity, evolving perspectives present both opportunities and challenges. The Salon includes conversations, demonstrations, and interactive conversations and is presented in partnership with Dance Theatre of Harlem.
3:00pm: Beauty, Identity and Ballet in the 21st Century: Re-imagining BalletA Conversation with Choreographers
4:00pm: Beauty/Process
6:00pm: Beauty, Identity and Ballet in the 21st Century: The FormA Conversation with Artistic Directors