a little preview of the remix
From Katrina to cat ladies, DiverseWorks' new season is on fire
Jul 16, 2010 | 10:56 am
DiverseWorks co-directors Diane Barber and Sixto Wagan recently revealed secrets in the works for the avant-garde performing and visual arts space. The 2010-2011 season encompasses world premieres, major new exhibitions and performances from Houston-based and international artists, continuing the organization's 28-year history of redefining contemporary art for Houston audiences.
The upcoming season of exhibitions and performances are geared to be at times pokingly political, and in more serious moments, arrestingly astute. CultureMap's top picks?
- Before During After is the first season program addressing the impact of Hurricane Katrina five years after the fact. Opening September 10, the exhibition is a visual and literary narrative of how Hurricane Katrina has transformed the lives and work of twelve photographers from Southeast Louisiana. The selection of photographs emphasizes not only the effect of Katrina, but also the way individuals are influenced by their environments, particularly in times of dramatic upheaval.
- Beginning September 30, Bronx-based poetry/theater group Universes continues the Katrina motif with Ameriville, a performance that asks what Hurricane Katrina showed about America as a nation. Rooted in musical poetry with a rhythmic structure powered by hip-hop, jazz, blues, spoken word and Spanish boleros, the performance takes on the country's shortcomings through the lens of Katrina and the hurricane's aftermath. New York Times critic Charles Isherwood has described Ameriville as commenting on "everything that is wrong with America in 90 minutes of sketch and song."
- The season takes another gut-wrenching turn with a work by artist and filmmaker Brent Green, Gravity was Everywhere Back Then. For this film, Green was inspired by the true story of an idiosyncratic home in Louisville owned by hardware store clerk Leonard Wood. When Wood's wife Mary was diagnosed with cancer, he began building the house, affixing one room at a time, in the futile hope that his labor would save his beloved wife. Even after Mary's death, Wood continued to realize the house's design over the following 20 years in his wish to create something as tangible and powerful as his love for his wife. Green found the story so moving that he recreated the narrative for his first feature film. Gravity was Everything Back Then, is to be screenedon November 5.
- Performance artist Kristina Wong's frisky humor will be spotlighted on February 24, 2011. Wong's body of work includes short and full-length solo performance, outrageous street theater stunts and pranks, subversive Internet installations, plays and sketch comedy. Her cat, Oliver, and his recent rash of spraying problems is the inspiration of Cat Lady, her newest stage work that premiered as a work-in-progress in the REDCAT NOW Festival.