Thursday, May 31, 2012

Visual AIDS Artist Materials Grant


ARTIST MATERIALS GRANTS
DEADLINE: Friday, June 1, 2012


Artist Materials Grants are awarded to Visual AIDS Artist Members who
are in need of financial assistance in obtaining materials for their
artwork. Artist Members are eligible for one grant per 12-month cycle.
Grants are issued in the form of a gift card to one of the following:
Pearl Paint, Blick Art Materials or B&H Photo/Video.  The
number of Materials Grants issued by Visual AIDS is subject to
available funds. To be eligible you must:


1. Be a current member of the Frank Moore Archive Project and have
shown evidence that you are a working artist.
2. Have not received a Materials Grant in the past 12 months.
3. Agree to report on the use of the grant, submit receipts from supply
purchases, and show works created with grant funds.
4. Submit an application by the DEADLINE.


You can download the Materials Grant application at
http://www.thebody.com/visualaids/pdfs/MaterialsGrants.pdf


If you have any questions, please contact Nelson Santos at 212-627-9855
or nsantos@visualaids.org

My PrEP Experience

"Paul @ Gracie Mansion (Performance Graffiti series)," 2002
Derek Jackson
silver gelatin print
Starting next week Visual AIDS will be launching a multi week blog series looking at community reactions to recent FDA decisions (TRUVADA and TAKE HOME TESTS), with images from the Frank Moore Archive Project. 


In anticipation we are excited about this blog that is also opening up conversation. 
Take a look:  My PrEP Experience

Help Women With a Vision Keep Helping Women

Deon Haywood,  executive director in the remains of the WWAV office
The Women With A Vision office was destroyed by arson earlier this week. 
Everything was destroyed.  We are "literally starting from scratch, so donations and in-kind contributions are critical right now," writes Deon Haywood in her open letter to the community. 

Some community support has been swift. More is needed. 
Read more about what happened and how you can help here: Dear Friends

Women With a Vision is a New Orleans based organization that works to improve the lives of marginalized women, their families and communities by addressing the social conditions that hinder their health and well being. 


Wednesday, May 30, 2012

The Big Picture

“Betty Crocker,” 2008, Jean-Pierre PĂ©russe

"Artistic expression can be many things. It can be educational or a call to action. It can be soothing or shocking. It can reflect our times and passions. At its heart, however, it is an expression of the individual artist and his or her engagement with life" begins writer Peter Carlyle-Gordge in his piece on Art and AIDS for the magazine The Positive Side. 


Read the rest here: The Big Picture

What does it mean to know?



Last week Buffalo Bills wide receiver David Clowney tweeted a picture of his HIV negative test results. In a follow up tweet he wrote, “Everyone should get tested!! Don't wait till HIV/AIDS Awareness Day to find out if you have it or not!!

His efforts are well intentioned, and yet because of the criminalization of people living with HIV, it is important that people understand what it means to know your status if results come back positive.

While some health care professionals will provide an in-depth consultation including treatment options, if someone’s results come back positive, almost no one talks about the legal ramifications of knowing you have HIV.

The Positive Justice Project has created a checklist for people living with HIV who are at risk or, are facing criminal prosecution for HIV Nondisclosure or Exposure.

·      DO try to have proof that you told your partner your HIV status BEFORE SEX.
·      DO NOT EMAIL anything that ever could be used against you or that shows a desire to keep your HIV status secret, or that expresses any worries you have about revealing your HIV status to a partner.
·      DO talk to your health care provider about the fact that you tell your partners about your HIV status before sex (oral, anal, penile-vaginal). Ask your provider to document this and show you where it is written in your file.
·      CONSIDER taking your partner with you to a doctor or case manager visit so the doctor or case manager can document having talked with both of you about your HIV status.
·      DO tell your doctor and other health care providers to NOT disclose or discuss your medical information to the police without a court order (different from a subpoena).
·      KNOW the law in your state.
·      DO NOT TALK to the police or answer questions about your situation without a lawyer. If you are questioned or approached before being arrested, say nothing. Just politely ask if you are being charged with a crime.
·      DO NOT TELL the police or detective that you are HIV positive and DO NOT consent to an HIV test.

Reading this checklist can be disheartening. It is good to talk it over with others. For more information visit: HIV Law and Policy.

Friday, May 25, 2012

Visual AIDS recommends

 
George Towne  
Portraits & Landscapes
June 1 - July 14
Reception: June 6 from 6-8 PM
Michael Mut Gallery
97 Ave C, NYC


Pegasus
Featuring Visual AIDS artist member, Eric Rhein
May 16 - July 13, 2012
Cristina Grajales Gallery
10 Green Street, 4th Floor, NYC



HOME IS...
Group show featuring Frank Holliday, Mark Morrisroe, McDermott & McGough, Jack Pierson and more.
Curated by Massimo Audiello

May 18 - June 16, 2012
Ercole
142 West 26th Street, NYC



Group shows featuring Sean Paul Gallegos:


RE-MADE
May 9 - June 2, 2012
BRONXARTSPACE
305 E 140 ST, Bronx, NY
SHOW # 2
May 19- June 29, 2012
The Parlour
791 Bushwick Ave at Dekalb Ave



Keith Haring
continues thru July 8, 2012
200 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn
 


Charles Lum
LAST KISS film screenings
SICILIAQUEER film fest in Palermo, Sicily from June 1-7, 2012               

The 7th TLV Fest Tel-Aviv, Israel, June 9-16, 2012

 

   

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

I Am Not Alone In This Way



Radiator Gallery
10-61 Jackson Ave
LIC, NY 11101

May 27, 2012
3:30-5:30pm

Featuring:
Ariel "Speedwagon" Federow
Aldrin Valdez
Camilo Godoy
Charles Long
Ella Boureau
Riley MacLeod
Ryan Green
Ted Kerr

The Radiator Gallery is pleased to present 'I am not alone in this way', a salon that invites you to consider how our most intimate ways of being—striving and surviving, often in a hostile world—can be viewed as responsible for positive social change.

* The salon is in conjunction with the exhibition Don’t Worry What Happens Happens Mostly Without You currently on view at the Radiator Gallery. This exhibition curated by Kris Nuzzi explores the personal identities of artists Jeanie Choi, Camilo Godoy, Ted Kerr, James Richards, Aldrin Valdez and Sam Vernon, as they navigate through a world shaped by experiences of marginalization, silencing and difference. Whether speaking from their own life, recreating a historical memory or representing an underrepresented community, their work explores poetic and subtle ways to communicate issues of immigration, race, queerness and desire. Together they reveal the connections and differences between these loaded social issues and invite the viewer to share in their intimate experiences.

Preceding the salon:
Letters to CeCe
1pm – 3:30pm

Join us as we write support letters to CeCe MacDonald as she awaits sentencing. We will also be learning how having a pen pal in prison can help make a difference. Letters to CeCe is supported by Pretty Queer (prettyqueer.com), Astraea Lesbian Foundation for Justice, and Visual AIDS. 

Visual AIDS event: LETTERS TO CECE


Letters to CeCe1:00 – 3:30 pm

Radiator Gallery
10-61 Jackson AveLong Island City, NY 11101

Please join us for Letters To CeCe, where you are invited to write a support letter to CeCe MacDonald as she awaits sentencing. We will also be learning from Riley MacLeod how having a pen pal in prison can help make a difference.

Chrishaun “CeCe” McDonald is a young African American transgender woman who is charged with two counts of “second degree murder” after an incident that began when she was violently assaulted because of her gender and race. On May 2nd CeCe accepted a plea agreement to a reduced manslaughter charge.

For more information visit:

Free CeCe McDonald on Tumblr 


Support CeCe on Wordpress 

CeCe McDonald Deserves Our Support, ‘Innocent’ or Not article on Colorlines.com

How to Write Your First Letter to Someone in Prison article on PrettyQueer.com

Guidelines for Pen Pals on BlackAndPink.org

Letters to CeCe is supported by Pretty Queer, Astraea Lesbian Foundation for Justice, and the exhibition DON'T WORRY WHAT HAPPENS HAPPENS MOSTLY WITHOUT YOU currently on view at Radiator Gallery.

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

PLAY SMART trading cards



PLAY SMART is an honest and sexy approach to promote harm reduction, testing, and post-exposure prophylaxis among gay men. This is the third edition of the PLAY SMART series, featuring the work of Amos Mac, Iván Monforte, Richard Renaldi and Christopher Schulz aim to also create positive images of different bodies.  PLAY SMART is packaged with two trading cards, a sticker, condoms and lube. The trading cards come in both English and Spanish, and features information to help you play smart.  


PLAY SMART will be available in bulk for free distribution (at the cost of shipping and handling) starting in June.  Contact Ted at Visual AIDS.

ReMixed Messages in DC


ReMixed Messages 

Curated by John Chaich for Visual AIDS, in collaboration with Transformer, the exhibition presents over twenty text-based works reflecting reactions to and connections through HIV/AIDS across generations, juxtaposing public rhetoric with personal revelations through photography, design, painting and installation.

A remix of last year's Mixed Messages exhibition of art, activism, and design, the exhibition pairs internationally renowned figures including Felix Gonzalez-Torres, John Giorno, Yoko Ono, Jack Pierson, Kay Rosen, and David Wojnarowicz, with current works by James Jaxxa, Cammi Climaco, Jayson Keeling, Ivan Monforte, J. Morrison and others.

First presented at LaMaMa La Galleria, New York City in 2011
 the exhibition is being remixed for the International AIDS Conference 2012
July 24-August 4, 2012
Opening Reception & Curator Talk: July 24 from 6:00 - 8:00 PM

Fathom Gallery
1333 14th Street NW, Washington DC

image: Joe DeHoyos, Stay, Stay, Stay, 1995, collage on paper

Monday, May 21, 2012

UNDETECTABLE Public Programming


Bradley Pitts, 2012, courtesy of the artist 


All events are at 
La MaMa La Galleria
(6 East 1st Street, NYC)
Free and open to the public
Opening Reception: Thursday, May 31, 6:00 – 8:00 PM
Exhibition continues thru June 30, 2012

Upcoming Events for Undetectable*

Artist Talk & Curator Walk
Saturday, June 16, 2:00 – 4:00 PM
Undetectable curator Nathan Lee will be joined by select participating artists for an informal walkthrough of the exhibition and discussion of the project.

Helen Epstein and Kenyon Farrow
RESCHEDULED
Thursday, June 21, 6:00 – 7:30 PM
NEW DATE: Saturday, June 30, 2:00-3:30 PM
A conversation between author Helen Epstein (The Invisible Cure) and writer and activist Kenyon Farrow will consider the problem of undetectability in relation to epidemiological and political factors.

Performances by Mary Walling Blackburn and SKOTE
Friday, June 29, 7:00 – 9:00 PM
As part of Mary Walling Blackburn’s work, Against Tenderness, the artist proposes to collectively translate a work by the pioneering queer theorist Guy Hocquenghem. This event will stage a reading of the completed translation, touching on Hocquenghem’s problems with tenderness. SKOTE is a performance collaboration dedicated to the movement arts. Glands is a performance rooted in the relationship between a body and the moments in which it seems to "betray” us, such as in puberty, illness, and aging.

An exhibition, publication, public program and website featuring works by artists in a variety of media that engage the concept of "undetectable," a word that has come to signify new developments and modes of identification in the discourse of HIV/AIDS.  Curator: Nathan Lee.  Assistant Curator: Rachel Cook  For more information about Undetectable visit: projectlamar.com

Catalogue available at the gallery or download pdf version here.   

Related events at the gallery:

Love, Christopher Street
Reading and Signing
Friday, June 8, 7:00 – 9:00 PM
Join Love Christopher Street editor Thomas Keith, and contributors Christopher Bram, Rev. Irene Monroe, Nicky Paraiso, Eddie Sarfaty, Shawn Syms, Bob Smith & Judy Gold, Charlie Vasques & others for a night of stories.

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

AIDS IS....tote bag


What is AIDS? 
Put another way, "AIDS IS..."

Visual AIDS is proud to unveil our Artist Edition / Broadside tote bag (Summer 2012) from acclaimed artist Daryl Vocat:

Much of my work involves re-drawing and collaging together images from Scout handbooks in order to tell different, or parallel stories to the original narratives. I am interesting in both subverting and paying homage to the ideas and ideals in Scouting. The images that I create often depict moments where it is unclear what has come before, or what will come after. In this particular image a character has begun to write out a phrase starting with the words, "AIDS is__." We don't know specifically how the sentence will end, but instead are left to contemplate what AIDS could be.

About the artist: 
Daryl Vocat is a visual artist living and working in Toronto. He completed his Bachelor of Fine Arts degree at the University of Regina in Saskatchewan, and his Master of Fine Arts degree at York University in Toronto. His main focus is printmaking, specifically screen printing. He works out of Toronto’s Open Studio.

About the project: 
Broadsides are a way that Visual AIDS engages artists to help us communicate the message that AIDS IS NOT OVER.  Past broadsides artists have included Nayland Blake, Chloe Dzubilo and T De Long, Kate Huh, Hunter Reynolds, Glenn Ligon, Barbara Kruger and others.  

The "AIDS IS..." tote is now available from Visual AIDS. Watch for them at the International AIDS Conference this year in Washington, and at events around New York this summer. Contact us at info@visualaids.org to get your own free "AIDS IS..." tote bag. 


Before We Were Queer: The Pop Up Museum Wants Your History!



we image-googled, "before you we were queer" and this is what came up!
source: transnational-queer-underground.net


The Pop-Up Museum of Queer History NYC 2012 shows looking for your submissions addressing the theme, "Before We Were Queer". 


From the call: 
Culturally, the term “queer” gained widespread sexual context in the 1920s & 30s. We are interested in work that explores same-sex desire and transgender identities before this time. We are also open to work that interprets this theme from other angles, including 1) work that addresses periods in history or cultural contexts wherein sexualized queerness was / is not considered “strange” or “other” and 2) work that explores the personal journey to identifying as queer (so long as it speaks to a larger historical story


Deadline: June 4th, 2012
For more information visit: queermuseum.com

Overcoming Health Disparities in the Bay Area....


If you are in the Bay Area, please consider going to what sounds like, an amazing conference. 


OVERCOMING HEALTH DISPARITIES IN THE BAY AREA- USING HIV/AIDS as a MODEL
If you attend and feel like reporting back, Visual AIDS would love to hear what you have to say. 


For more information about the conference, visit HIVFORUM.ORG

Crosswords: FDA and AIDS


"AIDS 101 -- An Intensive," 1997
Archive member Max Greenberg

Last Friday, the FDA approved Gilead’s Truvada as a form of HIV pre-exposure prevention, and this week they ruled favorably over the use of OraSure’s take home HIV test.

While there has been some coverage of both FDA approvals, there has not been, in our view, enough analysis, or conversation within the movement about the ruling. What do we think?

Below are a few articles about the FDA decisions, including an article from Kellee Terrell at the Body who captures the division among HIV activists over Truvada.




Over the next few weeks, Visual AIDS will be sharing reactions to the FDA’s rulings from people within our community.  Let us know your reaction. Email us your images, words, and other responses at info@visualaids.org