Events

…Cairo stories at Kevorkian Center

Cairo Stories: Ideological, Cultural And Economic Issues Facing Women In Egypt Today
Kevorkian Center
255 Sullivan Street
New York, NY 10012

Oct. 16, 2018 – 6:30–9:30 pm

Event SpeakersHow are women in today’s Egypt navigating the structures of the nation state: social systems, economic responsibility, and familial ties in a changing urban landscape? This panel brings together leading journalists, urban scholars, and artists to discuss the current political and social climate in Cairo.

The Cairo Stories panel is produced in association with the exhibition …cairo stories by artist Judith Barry, presenting oral histories from more than 215 interviews Barry conducted with women of varying social and economic classes in Cairo between 2003 and 2011. It continues an on-going series of as-told-to recorded stories, based on personal interviews conducted by the artist.

…cairostories exhibition, curated by Piper Marshall, is on view at Mary Boone Gallery through October 27th. http://www.cairostories.com/mary-boone-gallery-2018/

Panelists

Lina Attalah – Publisher of Mada Masr
Lina Attalah is the co-founder and chief editor of Mada Masr, a Cairo-based news website. She has been a journalist for over a decade, covering primarily Egypt and the region, including the Syrian revolution and the Iran 2013 presidential elections. She was previously the chief editor of Egypt Independent, another Egyptian leading English-language news media.

Judith Barry – Artist, NYC
Professor | Director of the ACT program at MIT, Cambridge
Judith Barry’s research-based practice utilizes installation, architecture and design, film/video, performance, sculpture, photography, and new media. In 2000, Barry was awarded the Kiesler Prize for Architecture and the Arts. Barry has exhibited internationally at such venues as Documenta, Berlin Biennale, Venice Biennale of Art/Architecture, Sao Paulo Biennale, the Carnegie International, and the Whitney Biennial. Currently, she is Professor and Director, ACT at MIT, Cambridge | www.judithbarrystudio.com | www.cairostories.com

Mona El-Naggar
The New York Times, Senior Producer, International Video
Mona El-Naggar is a senior producer for The New York Times, leading the international on-the-ground video coverage. She turned to filmmaking after more than a decade reporting in the Middle East and covering the growing discontent leading up to the Arab Spring. Her work explores issues of identity with a focus on youth, women and religious extremism. Mona was a Pulitzer finalist for a story tracing the transformation of a young man from a bodybuilder into an ISIS fighter. Her work with a team of reporters documenting the Rohingya massacres in Myanmar was nominated for an Emmy. She produced Ladies First, a documentary that goes inside the largely inaccessible world of Saudi women, and The Story of Esraa, which explores social change in Egypt through the intimate tale of one woman’s quest for independence. Mona studied political economy at Georgetown University and received a master’s degree in news and documentary from New York University. | Twitter: @monaelnaggar | Instagram: @elnaggarmona

Omnia Khalil – PhD student, Anthropology, CUNY, NYC
Co-founder of 10 Tooba| Applied Research on the Built Environment, Cairo
Omnia Khalil is PhD student, City University of New York (CUNY), anthropology program. She is co-founder of 10 Tooba| Applied Research on the Built Environment. Her current research titled “Urban Geographies of Violence in Post-Revolutionary Cairo” focuses on forms of violence in a local community of Bulaq Abulella in Egypt. She is an engaged scholar and urban anthropologist and has over ten years’ experience in social mapping and participatory community urban action planning. Omnia was heading a participatory community action plan in Ramlet Bulaq and was a post MA fellow in the anthropology department at AUC, where she finished her thesis in cultural anthropology. Her MA thesis is titled “The People of The City, Space, Laboring and Power; Unraveling the How in Ramlet Bulaq”. During her MA research, Omnia participated in a one-semester exchange program with Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi, India.


Judith Barry, Spiegel-Wilks Artist in Residence Lecture
…Cairo stories
Tuttleman Auditoriam
Institute of Contemporary Art

Oct. 23, 2014 – 6:00 pm

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Emily and Jerry Spiegel Fund to Support Contemporary Culture and Visual Arts and the Lise and Jeffrey Wilks Family Foundation Artist Residency

Slought is pleased to present …Cairo stories, a video and photographic installation by Judith Barry, on display at Slought from September 15 to October 24, 2014. Please join us for an opening reception, as well as a conversation with the artist and Alexander Alberro (Columbia University), on Monday, September 15th, from 6:30pm-8:30pm.

Created from a collection of more than 200 interviews Barry conducted with Cairene women between the US invasion of Iraq in 2003 and the beginning of the Egyptian Revolution in 2011, …Cairo stories is a series of short video monologues. The selection of stories chronicles personal experiences of women from a variety of social and economic classes in Egypt and expands the artist’s concerns with notions of representation, history, subjectivity, and translation — particularly as these ideas circulate across cultures.

The original interviews were conducted in simultaneous translation to maintain fluidity and integrity of tone and meaning, and Barry considers them to be collaborations between her and the subjects. The vast source material was then ‘vetted’ by a diverse range of Cairene women. The emotional integrity of each woman’s story is the crux of this project; the translators and interviewees remained active participants in both the narrative arc of their stories and the development of the project. In the gallery, a selection of 15 narratives is performed by actors, highlighting that all stories, including those we tell ourselves, are ultimately fictions.

…Cairo stories is a continuation of Not reconciled, a series of ‘as told to’ stories Barry recorded in a variety of countries and cultures, and bears witness to the artist’s long-term interest in the strength and the political implications of the voice. Since the Egyptian revolution, the voice — and the right to vote or ability to speak out ­— has become a central concern in everyday life. The positions of women in the public, political — and private — spheres is also at the forefront of these discussions.

Since the 1970s, feminists such as Hélène Cixous have written about the continued importance of self-historicization by women to ‘transform their history, to seize the occasion to speak.’ This philosophic position of écriture féminine directly addresses the transformation of subjectivity and the contention of sanctioned identity. It is through both writing and foregrounding the female voice that …Cairo stories opens a space for embodying a new subjectivity.

Tuttleman Auditorium
Institute of Contemporary Art
118 S. 36th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104-3289
(215) 898-7108


Judith Barry
…Cairo stories
Slought

Sept. 16, 2014 – Oct. 25, 2014
Exhibition opening Sept. 16 at 6:30 pm

barry_cairostories-1

Slought is pleased to present …Cairo stories, a video and photographic installation by Judith Barry, on display at Slought from September 16 to October 25, 2014. Created from a collection of more than 200 interviews Barry conducted with Cairene women between the US invasion of Iraq in 2003 and the beginning of the Egyptian Revolution in 2011, …Cairo stories is a series of short video monologues. The selection of stories chronicles personal experiences of women from a variety of social and economic classes in Egypt and expands the artist’s concerns with notions of representation, history, subjectivity, and translation — particularly as these ideas circulate across cultures.

The original interviews were conducted in simultaneous translation to maintain fluidity and integrity of tone and meaning, and Barry considers them to be collaborations between her and the subjects. The vast source material was then ‘vetted’ by a diverse range of Cairene women. The emotional integrity of each woman’s story is the crux of this project; the translators and interviewees remained active participants in both the narrative arc of their stories and the development of the project. In the gallery, a selection of 15 narratives is performed by actors, highlighting that all stories, including those we tell ourselves, are ultimately fictions.

…Cairo stories is a continuation of Not reconciled, a series of ‘as told to’ stories Barry recorded in a variety of countries and cultures, and bears witness to the artist’s long-term interest in the strength and the political implications of the voice. Since the Egyptian revolution, the voice — and the right to vote or ability to speak out ­— has become a central concern in everyday life. The positions of women in the public, political — and private — spheres is also at the forefront of these discussions.

Since the 1970s, feminists such as Hélène Cixous have written about the continued importance of self-historicization by women to ‘transform their history, to seize the occasion to speak.’ This philosophic position of écriture féminine directly addresses the transformation of subjectivity and the contention of sanctioned identity. It is through both writing and foregrounding the female voice that …Cairo stories opens a space for embodying a new subjectivity.

Slought
4017 Walnut Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104

Slought – https://slought.org/resources/cairo_stories


 

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Women Filming Women in the Middle East:
Film Forum Conversation with Judith Barry, Julia Meltzer and Sarah Gualtierie
Levantine Cultural Center

April 24, 2014, 7:00-9:00 pm

Two American filmmakers/artists talk about the challenges and rewards of making films about women living their daily lives in Cairo and Damascus. Each of the films, made in very different styles, chronicle a period right before Egypt and Syria were gripped by revolutionary turmoil. Short clips from each film will be shown in advance of the discussion. The participants include artist Judith Barry on Cairo Stories (Egypt) (info-duration) and director Julia Meltzer on The Light in Her Eyes (Syria, Info-duration, co-directed with Laura Nix), with moderator Sarah Gualtieri, author of Between Arab and White: Race and Ethnicity in the Early Syrian American Diaspora and Director of the Middle East Studies Program at USC. Seating is limited, tickets are $15, $10 students/members.

Judith Barry’s Cairo Stories continues her Not Reconciled series where she investigates the construction of subjectivity, history and identity in countries and cultures around the world. She recently presented videos and photographs at Rosamund Felsen Gallery from her latest series, …Cairo Stories, and some of these, in Arabic and English, will be shared with the audience on April 24th. Through collaboration with Cairene women from many different backgrounds, these stories focus on the negotiations women make across Cairo’s social, cultural and economic life and illuminate the complex systems, allegiances and political stratas that inform their daily lives. Barry conducted the interviews in Cairo between 2003 and 2011.

In exploring the experiences of Cairene women—Cairo being one of the centers of the Middle East—notions of representation, history, and subjectivity are brought to the fore. These stories, retold by actors, underscore the fact that all stories, even ones we tell ourselves, are ultimately fictions, while maintaining the emotional impact of each of these individual woman’s life.

Three of Judith Barry’s works are currently on view as part of the Hammer Museum’s exhibition Take It Or Leave It: Institution, Image, Ideology through May 18, 2014.

Julia Meltzer’s documentary The Light in Her Eyes on Syria recounts the life of Houda al-Habash, a conservative Muslim preacher, who founded a Qur’an school for girls in Damascus 30 years ago. Every summer, her female students immerse themselves in a rigorous study of Islam. A surprising cultural shift is under way-women are claiming space within the mosque. Shot right before the uprising in Syria erupted, The Light in Her Eyes offers an extraordinary portrait of a leader who challenges the women of her community to live according to Islam, without giving up their dreams.

 More on Judith Barry’s Cairo Stories

For the past few years, Judith Barry has been working on a Cairo version of Not reconciled, an ongoing series of “as told to” stories that she has collected over a period of 15 years in a variety of countries and cultures. Not reconciled: Cairo Stories began with an invitation from the Townhouse Gallery in Cairo, and has developed through collaborations with Egyptian women from the American University in Cairo and various NGOs in the city. The stories that have been collected touch on the Nasser and Sadat periods as well as current events, but they focus on the negotiations that women in particular must make within Cairo’s cultural and economic life, emphasizing the complexities of family life, allegiances and questions of class, and the very particular sense of place embodied by Cairo’s inhabitants.

The Cairo Stories project extends and expands two significant threads of her work: the investigation of how notions of “history” and the “construction of subjectivity” are performed and documented within the context of specific places and cultural conditions; and the exploration of how art, architecture and technology (particularly innovative uses of animation and compositing) can intersect to create aesthetic and critical discourse in the public realm.

Levantine Cultural Center Event Page

Levantine Cultural Center
5998 W. Pico Blvd.
Los Angeles CA 90035
Between La Cienega & Fairfax

 

 


A Conversation with Judith Barry
Rosamund Felsen Gallery

April 18, 2014 at 12 pm

A Conversation with Judith Barry, Friday, April 18, 12 noon

Rosamund Felsen Gallery,
B4 Bergamot Station,
2525 Michigan Avenue,
Santa Monica, CA 90404
(310) 828-8488

Otis Graduate Public Practice Program and USC MA Curatorial Program are co-presenting an informal discussion with Judith Barry on her current Los Angeles exhibitions. The conversation will be moderated  by Rhea Anastas, USC’s Director of the MA Curatorial Program, and Karen Moss, art historian, curator and writer, who teaches in both programs at Otis and USC.

Barry’s exhibition at the Rosamund Felsen, …Cairo stories, a collaboration with women from many different backgrounds, focuses on negotiations women make across Cairo’s social, cultural, economic life, illuminating the complex systems, allegiances and political strata that inform their daily lives. See more info on the exhibition and press release at: http://rosamundfelsen.com/exhibitions/

Three of Barry’s works are also currently on view in the UCLA Hammer’s Take It or Leave It: Institution, Image, Ideology through May 18th.
http://hammer.ucla.edu/exhibitions/detail/exhibition_id/244

 

 


…Cairo stories
On KCHUNG Radio, 1630 AM

April 13, 2014 at 8 pm, PST

To stream: See http://www.kchungradio.org/stream.html

Archive available on April 16, 2014 as …Cairo stories.  
To access the archive, search KCHUNG by the air date: http://www.kchungradio.org/

 


voiceoff

Talk and Screening – Judith Barry Voice/Off
Whitechapel Gallery

April 10, 2014, 6:30-9:00 pm

Booking essential.

£8.50/£6.50 concession (£6.80 Whitechapel Gallery Members/£5.20 Whitechapel Gallery Concession Members ). *Proof of concessions and membership to be shown on the door.

Artist Judith Barry, a pioneer of video art, discusses and screens a series of her artworks in this rare UK event. She will be joined by esteemed writer Jean Fisher and together will discuss the complexities of using the voice as a form of political representation through film, video and installation. The conversation will be led by Curator Omar Kholeif.

This talk considers questions such as, how has the voice been manipulated and contorted through media? Can the voice be considered a bearer of an ultimate truth, or as a subversive counterpoint? The discussion also considers the voice’s relationship to feminist discourses and its distribution through new technologies.

Event page at Whitechapelgallery.com.

 


Take it or Leave it: Institution, Image, Ideology
The Hammer Museum

Feb. 9 – May 18, 2014

Take It or Leave It: Institution, Image, Ideology is the first large-scale exhibition to focus on the intersection of two vitally important genres of contemporary art: appropriation (taking and recasting existing images, forms, and styles from mass-media and fine art sources) and institutional critique (scrutinizing and confronting the structures and practices of our social, cultural, and political institutions). The exhibition brings together works by thirty-six American artists who came to prominence between the late 1970s and the early 1990s.

The majority of the works on view are from the 1980s and 1990s, a groundbreaking period that was shaped by the feminist and civil rights movements of the previous decades. Conscious of the profound impact on society of mass media such as television, newspapers, and film, artists examined critical questions of identity and representation via politically and socially engaged practices. This era witnessed a number of significant events that reverberated in the art world: the AIDS crisis; Ronald Reagan’s “trickle-down” economics and the subsequent recession; the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Cold War; among others.

Expanding on the work of earlier conceptual artists, who were committed to exploring the very definition of art, the artists featured in Take It or Leave It believe that art cannot be fully understood or experienced without acknowledging the contexts in which it is produced, viewed, and distributed. They point to the links between art institutions and the other organizations that make up our society, asserting that to separate art from aspects of our daily experience—whether education or medicine, marriage or war, parenting or advertising—is to reinscribe arbitrary and false divisions between art and society, between our aesthetic lives and our everyday lives.

Although Take It or Leave It is a historical show focusing on a period in the recent past, it also includes recent work, arguing for the continued relevance of these artists’ practices and also revealing their sustained commitment to both historically recognizable and emerging strategies of appropriation and institutional critique. The exhibition highlights dynamic practices in notably diverse mediums, including painting, sculpture, installation, photography, video, text, and performance. The works are by turns subtle and aggressive, poetic and didactic, emotional and intellectual. They are as challenging as they are rewarding, as radical as they are rational. Take It or Leave It seeks to revive and participate in the meaningful debates that the artists have fostered over time and to instill a desire for critique, in its many forms, to remain a cornerstone of American art.

Artists featured in the exhibition: Judith Barry, Gretchen Bender, Dara Birnbaum, Nayland Blake, Tom Burr, Mark Dion, Mark Dion & Jason Simon, Jimmie Durham, Andrea Fraser, Robert Gober, Felix Gonzalez-Torres, Renée Green, Jenny Holzer, Mike Kelley, Mary Kelly, Silvia Kolbowski, Barbara Kruger, Louise Lawler, William Leavitt, Zoe Leonard, Sherrie Levine, Glenn Ligon, Paul McCarthy, Allan McCollum, John Miller, Matt Mullican, Cady Noland, Adrian Piper, Stephen Prina, Martha Rosler, Haim Steinbach, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Christopher Williams, Sue Williams, Fred Wilson and David Wojnarowicz.

Take It or Leave It is organized by the Hammer Museum and co-curated by Anne Ellegood, senior curator at the Hammer Museum, and Johanna Burton, Keith Haring Director and Curator of Education and Public Engagement at the New Museum.

Take It or Leave It: Institution, Image, Ideology is made possible by a major grant from The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.

Generous support is also provided by The Audrey and Sydney Irmas Charitable Foundation, the LLWW Foundation, Karyn Kohl, the National Endowment for the Arts, Agnes Gund, and an anonymous donor. Support for the Barbara Kruger installation is provided by The Broad Art Foundation.

The Hammer
10899 Wilshire Boulevard, at Westwood Boulevard
Los Angeles, California
http://hammer.ucla.edu/exhibitions/detail/exhibition_id/244

 

 


JUDITH
BARRY: …Cairo stories

March 22 – April 19, 2014
Reception: Saturday, March 22, 5-7 pm
Gallery Hours: Tuesday –Saturday, 10 am – 5:30 pm

Judith Barry ...Cairo stories, 2014 (Photo courtesy Rosamund Felson Gallery)

Judith Barry …Cairo stories, 2014 – (Photo courtesy Rosamund Felson Gallery)

Judith Barry
…Cairo stories, 2014

Continuing her Not reconciled series where she investigates the construction of subjectivity, history and identity in countries and cultures around the world, Judith Barry presents videos and photographs at Rosamund Felsen Gallery from her latest series, …Cairo stories. Through
collaboration with Cairene women from many different backgrounds, these stories focus on the negotiations women make across Cairo’s social, cultural and economic life and illuminate the complex systems, allegiances and political stratas that inform their daily lives. These interviews, conducted in Cairo between 2003 and 2011, took place in both English and Arabic, as do the stories on view in the gallery.

In exploring the experiences of Cairene women – Cairo being the center of the Middle East – notions of representation, history, and subjectivity are brought to the fore. These stories, retold by actors, underscore the fact that all stories, even ones we tell ourselves, are ultimately fictions, while maintaining the emotional impact of each of these individual woman’s life.

Rosamund Felsen Gallery
2525 Michigan Ave. B4, Santa Monica, CA 90404 | t. 310.828.8488 | f. 310.828.1075 | http://www.rosamundfelsen.com | info@rosamundfelsen.com

 

 


 

The Hammer Museum
Flash Talk: William Wells

April 3, 2014, 1:15 pm

williamwells

Hammer Museum director Annie Philbin introducing the director of Townhouse Gallery in Cairo, William Wells, before his FlashTalk on Judith Barry’s ‘…Cairo stories.’ 2014.

Judith Barry’s …Cairo Stories focuses on personal stories told to the artist by women of different backgrounds that she interviewed in Cairo between 2003 and 2011. Speaking to the women about Cairo’s social, political, and economic systems and how they inform their daily lives, the interviews were conducted in both English and Arabic and later turned into scripts and retold using actors. Resulting in both still photographs and videos, the work has been shown in a variety of ways, including its current incarnation as part of the exhibition Take It or Leave It, currently on view at the Hammer Museum, and a more expansive version currently on view at Rosamund Felson Gallery in Santa Monica. …Cairo Stories is part of a larger body of work, …Not Reconciled, which explores the construction of subjectivity, representation, and history.

 

…Cairo Stories grew out of the artist’s experiences representing the U.S. at the Cairo Biennial in 2001 and at Townhouse Gallery in Cairo. As the founding director of Townhouse, William Wells will give us a glimpse into the genesis of the project and working with Barry as well as the general social and political situation for artists in Cairo over the time period of the project and today.

 

Biography

William Wells is the founding director of the Townhouse Gallery in Cairo, Egypt. Established in 1998, Townhouse and Wells have grown to be integral to the emergence of Cairene contemporary art on a world stage and the integration of international contemporary art locally in underserved areas of Cairo.

 

About Townhouse Gallery

Townhouse was established in downtown Cairo in 1998 as an independent, non-profit art space with a goal of making contemporary art and culture accessible to all without compromising creative practice. Townhouse supports artistic work in a wide range of media through exhibitions, residencies for artists, curators and writers, educational initiatives and outreach programs. By establishing local and international relationships, as well as diversifying both the practitioners and audiences of contemporary art, Townhouse aims to support and expand the knowledge, appreciation and practice of contemporary arts in Egypt and the region.

Flash Talk: William Wells – Hammer Museum (Download PDF)
Source: http://hammer.ucla.edu/programs/detail/program_id/2227

Photo source: Hammer Museum Official Instagram Feed –

http://web.stagram.com/p/690705258687370022_24455899