Tag Archives: New York

Roy Brown to perform at free concert at El Museo del Barrio on March 23rd

Roy Brown
MUSICAL TRIBUTE TO LOS DESAPARECIDOS
? Friday, March 23 at 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm
This musical tribute features ALAS, Argentina’s most successful progressive group formed in 1974, the folkloric fusion sounds of VIVA QUETZAL and Roy Brown, the renowned activist singer from Puerto Rico.
Come early and see The Disappeared (Los Desaparecidos), galleries will be open until 7:00 pm .
Admission: Free with Ticket. Ticket Distribution at theatre box office between 5:00 and 7:00 pm. Seating is Limited to two tickets per person.

El Museo del Barrio’s Teatro Heckscher, 1230 5th Avenue (104th/105th Streets), New York

The State of Puerto Rican Politics in New York City

Boricua Power

The National Institute for Latino Policy
invites you to a roundtable

Discussion based on José Ramón Sánchez’ new book
Boricua Power: A Political History of Puerto Ricans in the United States

Tuesday, May 15, 6:15pm

NYU Wagner
The Puck Building, 2nd Floor Conference Room
295 Lafayette Street (and Houston Street)
New York, NY 10012-9604

(B,D,F,V to Broadway-Lafayette, N,R,W to Prince Street, 6 to Bleecker Street)

Roundtable Participants

Alicia Cardona
Author: Rambling on Random Thoughts and New York Puerto Rican Women Achievers

Arlene Davila:
Professor, Anthropology, Social and Cultural Analysis (American Studies)
New York University, author: Barrio Dreams: Puerto Ricans, Latinos and the Neoliberal City; Latinos, Inc.: The Marketing and Making of a People; and Sponsored Identities: Cultural Politics in Puerto Rico

David Diaz
Distinguished Lecturer in Media & Politics, City College (CUNY);
formerly senior correspondent and anchor on WCBS and WNBC-TV

José A. García
Senior Research and Policy Associate, Demos: A Network for Ideas
and Action; and author, East Coast Latino Voting Rights Act Reauthorization Manual

Mickey Melendez
Author, We Took the Streets: Fighting for Latino Rights with the Young Lords

Councilmember Melissa Mark Viverito
Democrat representing District 8

Joseph Wiscovitch
President, Wiscovitch Associates

Respondent

José Ramón Sánchez
Associate Professor of Political Science and Chair of Urban Studies,
Long Island University-Brooklyn Campus

Moderator

Angelo Falcón
President and Co-Founder, National Institute for Latino Policy; and author, Atlas of Stateside Puerto Ricans,
and co-editor, Boricuas in Gotham: Puerto Ricans in the Making of Modern New York City

Co-sponsored by the

Women of Color Policy Network
at NYUWagner
RSVP with
Wynnie Lamour 212-334-5722 or wlamour@nlcatp.org

COPWATCH DURING NATIONAL PUERTO RICAN DAY PARADE

Click below to watch a documrntary trailer for “CopWatch : What’s your badge number?” specifically documenting the history of Sunset Park Brooklyns communities police problem:

CopWatch / What’s your badge number?

http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=2034786634
http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=2033434037

As summer begins in NYC, the weekends get filled with cultural parades and an array of activities that is distinct to each community and neighborhood in NY.

The Puerto Rican Day Parade brings millions of people alongside 5th Ave on the east-side of manhattan. Many who return from the main parade continue to celebrate in their neighborhoods as we pour out onto the streets waving flags, salsa music blaring from speakers and conga players drumming those African Rhythms of our roots.

In communities such as Sunset Park in Brooklyn, a mostly Puerto Rican neighborhood, year after year, local youth are all too familiar with the aggressive confrontations of police officers who greet them with shoves and batons to the head. Many are corralled and pushed around from block to block as cops claim that these are disturbances to the quality of life in the community.

CopWatchers have documented these mistreatments, videotaping police shoving youth right in front of their own homes who aggressively told that they must clear the streets immediatley or face arrest, many clearly never even getting the opportunity to walk away.

Droves of young people get assaulted. Including an 8 yr. old girl who was shoved onto a gate in June of 2004. Teenage girls were maced, chocked and manhandled by NY’s Finest, 72nd pct. 19 young people were assaulted and charged for misdemeanors including disorderly conduct and resisting arrest, all of which eventually got dropped because police officers failed to prove why they were charged.

None of the officers were ever charged. All continue to work 72nd pct in the same community. Year after year, police aggression during the Puerto Rican Day Parade have escalated to levels reminiscent of those same images taken in the 50’s and 60’s of police violence.

As a result, in 2006 community members/local clergy and cultural workers organized a free concert which at the same time served as a campaign to educate folks on their rights when dealing with police conflict. The concert was called “El Grito de Sunset Park” and it went on, even though the 72nd pct. police community affairs officers and the commanding officer refused to grant them a sound permit.

That year, no one was arrested, even with all the police provocation. Irish communities in NYC have not recieved the same level of aggression from the police during their st. patricks day parade. Copwatchers have also documented the NYPDs tolerence for public intoxication and have also witnessed the blind eye police give to their selected communities. Could it be that the NYPD favors selected ethnic groups? Is it because the NYPD has historically been an Irish dominated run department within the state.

This is not to take away from the Irish community from peacefully celebrating their pride and culture, but one would like to believe that everyone has the opportunity to have a day in which they can celebrate without being discriminated against because of their race and culture. So once again, the community will come together for “El Grito de Sunset Park 2, 2007” along 49th St. and 5th avenue @ 6:30pm in Brooklyn despite the 72nd pcts. commanding officers attempt to deny the community members its sound permit. And despite the fact the the NYPD has permanently installed survelience cameras at all the places were CopWatchers documented police violence in years past. Are those cameras there to document police conflict? Or are they there to selectively chose video for manipulation as an excuse to the NYPD’s violence?

But just like 2006, the community will gather for a peaceful day to enjoy music, celebrate its pride and ultimately a showing that this community can police itself without the need of the NYPD.

Geographic Portraits

Lourdes Delgado

A new photography series by Lourdes Delgado

July 17 – August 11, 2007
Opening
Saturday, July 21, 5:00-7:00 pm

Gallery Hours
Tuesday – Saturday 12:00 – 6:00 pm

SOHO20 CHELSEA GALLERY
511 WEST 25 STREET, SUITE 605, NEW YORK, NY 10001
T: 212-367-8994
Web: soho20gallery.com

Selected for the 13th ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S EXHIBITION
Juried by CARRIE SPRINGER, Senior Assistant Curator
Whitney Museum of American Art

THE BORINQUENEERS – Theatrical World Premiere

The Borinqueneers

Friday, July 13, 6PM – 9:30PM

Newark Museum
49 Washington Street
Newark, NJ.

Reception and Q&A Session with the film’s producer Ms. Noemi Figueroa Soulet

This event is a fund-raiser for the New Jersey Hispanic Research and information Center (NJHRIC) at the Newark Public Library.

The Borinqueneers chronicles the story of the all-Puerto Rican 65th Infantry Regiment, the only Hispanic segregated unit in U.S. Army history. Using rare archival footage and intimate interviews, this film explores the exploits andpainful tribulations of these now-forgotten veterans. Risking their lives to further the cause of democracy, these soldiers from the U.S. colony of Puerto Rico, were drafted but were not afforded full citizenship rights. Many served and died valiantly. During the Korean War they would face their toughest challenge,.

ADMISSION IS FREE, BUT PLEASE NOTE THAT SEATING IS VERY LIMITED AND REQUIRES PRIOR RESERVATIONS.

To RSVP call Newark Museum at call (973) 596-6550 or email arquelio.1.fraticelli@verizon.com.
For more information, including directions to Newark Museum, visit www.newarkmuseum.org.
The museum is easily accessible from New York City.
It is 3 blocks from the NJ Path Station – Broad Street Station.

We hope you will be able to join us for a well-deserved and long-overdue recognition of the Puerto Rican 65th Regiment.

Visit www.borinqueneers.com!

El Pozo Productions
P.O. Box 302
Crompond, NY 10517
(914) 739-3989
contact@borinqueneers.com
www.borinqueneers.com

Art Historian Yasmin Ramirez at the Brooklyn Museum

Yasmin Ramirez, Arts Fellow at the Center for Puerto Rican Studies,
gives a talk on the work of a Caribbean artist.

Free tickets are available at the Visitor Center at 6:30 p.m.

Location:
200 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, New York 11238-6052
Telephone:
(718) 638-5000; TTY: (718) 399-8440
Admission:
Suggested Contribution: $8; Students with Valid ID: $4; Adults 62 and over: $4; Members: Free; Children under 12: Free
Hours:
Wednesday–Friday: 10 a.m.–5 p.m.; Saturday–Sunday: 11 a.m.–6 p.m. Get detailed hours
Subway:
Eastern Parkway/Brooklyn Museum Get detailed directions

TRANSVOYEUR: Gender, Space, Art and Architecture — Liverpool/New York at MediaNoche

trans_gend_spac_art_arch_2007_med.jpg

Transvoyeur: Gender, Space, Art and Architecture.
Liverpool and New York Exchange Programme 2007.

Artists: Daiva Gauryte (Liverpool, UK) and Kofi Fosu (New York, US).

Curator/Editor: Gaynor Evelyn Sweeney.

e: transvoyeuruk@hotmail.co.uk
w: www.transvoyeur.com

The programme explores the issues of gender in the concept of art and architecture. To analyse the theoretical and multi-disciplinary approaches of gender in relation to particular architectural sites, ideas and projects of how space is defined by gender practices, power and vision, masculinity and femininity and different parameters of spatiality, including cyberspace, as well the physical world of various architecture and the human body. The outcome in collaborative research and mutual exchange evolved to present a digital video short by Gaynor Evelyn Sweeney on Daiva Gauryte and Kofi Fosu.

Transvoyeur in association with MediaNoche.

Screening at MediaNoche, 1355 Park Avenue, First Floor, at 102nd Street, New York, US.
September 26 – October 12, 2007.
Gallery hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 3.00 pm – 6.00 pm.

Saturday, October 13 at 7.00 pm, on the handball court wall of White Park, East 106th Street, between Lexington and Third Avenues.

AN INTERVENTION IN WHITE PARK BY TRANSVOYEUR

MediaNoche presents

TRANSVOYEUR in WHITE PARK!
An Intervention

trans_gend_spac_art_arch_2007_med.jpg

No seats, no popcorn — JUST VISION!

GENDER, SPACE, ART AND ARCHITECTURE
Liverpool/New York Artist Exchange

THIS SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13 AT 7PM!

White Park
East 106th Street, between Lexington and Third Avenue.

Can be seen from the street! Off the handball court wall!

For info call: MediaNoche 212.828.0401

AN INTERVENTION IN WHITE PARK BY TRANSVOYEUR

MediaNoche presents

TRANSVOYEUR in WHITE PARK!
An Intervention

trans_gend_spac_art_arch_2007_med.jpg

No seats, no popcorn — JUST VISION!

GENDER, SPACE, ART AND ARCHITECTURE
Liverpool/New York Artist Exchange

THIS SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13 AT 7PM!

White Park
East 106th Street, between Lexington and Third Avenue.

Can be seen from the street! Off the handball court wall!

For info call: MediaNoche 212.828.0401

QUEER LATINO TESTIMONIO

Barnes & Noble Bookstore (Upper Westside)
2289 Broadway at 82nd Street
New York City

Join Us!

Thursday, Oct. 25 at 7:00 p.m.

QUEER LATINO TESTIMONIO, KEITH HARING, AND JUANITO XTRAVAGANZA

Hard Tails

Author Arnaldo Cruz-Malavé will be joined in a reading from his new book by Jorge
Merced, Associate Artistic Director of Pregones Theater, and will sign copies.

In the tradition of the Latin American testimonio, Queer Latino Testimonio is the story of Juan Rivera, a.k.a. Juanito Xtravaganza, a Latino runaway youth who ends up homeless in the streets of New York in the late 70s and becomes partner of the internationally famous 1980s Pop artist Keith Haring during some of the most frenetically productive years of his brief life, as told to the author and retold by him. A hybrid text–part testimonio, part linguistic and cultural analysis, and part art criticism–this is also a history of New York Latino neighborhoods during this
period of devastating disinvestment and gentrification, as well as a personal, heart-felt meditation on the art of listening and the ethical limits of representing queer Latino lives.

Praise for Queer Latino Testimonio, Keith Haring, and Juanito Xtravaganza

“A story of the abject, an urban cultural history, and a literary meditation, Queer Latino Testimonio is a glorious assemblage of voices, images, rhythms, and sensualities of the turbulent last two decades of twentieth century New York City. A stirring portrait of the upheavals, deaths, and hopeful futures of bodies under siege. A marvelous piece of scholarship!”–Martin F. Manalansan IV, Associate Professor of Anthropology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and author of Global Divas: Filipino Gay Men in the Diaspora

“Narrated with sensitivity and style, Queer Latino Testimonio reminds us that the greatest of our cultural icons are never simply isolated geniuses, but instead reflections of the messy, funky, difficult, exasperating and exciting realities of everyday life. In a word, the book you hold in your hands is legendary!”–Robert F. Reid-Pharr, Professor of English, CUNY Graduate School, and author of Once You Go Black: Choice, Desire, and the Black American Intellectual

“A thrilling biography of a character that is both real and imagined, and a fresh vision of what Cultural Studies can become.”–Mayra Santos-Febres, Professor of Hispanic Literatures, University of Puerto Rico, and author of Sirena Selena

“An alluring, uncompromising tale of tails in the waning years of the age of x-travagance, and the dawn of the age of AIDS.”–Rubén Ríos-Avila, Professor of Comparative Literature, University of Puerto Rico, and author of La Raza Cómica.

Event is free and open to the public, but subject to change. Please call ahead to confirm. 212-721-5282