July 18, 2008 at 8:00 am · Filed under Uncategorized

labotanica is at a crossroads. i’ve decided to take labotanica.org offline for a moment. and also taking a hiatus from the blog. shifting the direction. stay tuned.
p.s. the time-based issue of polvo mag co-edited by labotanica will be available mid-august. more info soon.
June 19, 2008 at 9:37 am · Filed under African Art, African Diaspora, Residency
June 1, 2008 at 7:51 am · Filed under Quotes, Writing/ Literature and tagged: fernando pessoa
“To feel today what one felt yesterday isn’t to feel - it’s to remember today what was felt yesterday, to be today’s living corpse of what yesterday was lived and lost.” fernando pessoa
May 6, 2008 at 4:33 pm · Filed under Music, Performance, Sound, dreams and tagged: beirut
April 29, 2008 at 9:57 am · Filed under Art, Photo
April 29, 2008 at 9:53 am · Filed under Art, Quotes, caribbean art
“We are the periphery of the periphery.”
Jennifer Smit on Dutch Caribbean art. Interview coming soon as part of Polvo’s TBA Mag on time-based art.
Jennifer Smit (1951) is an art historian and independent curator, residing in Curaçao. She was born on the island of Curaçao, she studied art history at the University of Amsterdam and graduated in 1980. She moved back to her native island in 1992. She has frequently curated Dutch Caribbean participation in exhibitions in the Caribbean region, such as Carivista in Barbados in 1998 and in 2000 the Bienal del Caribe in the Dominican Republic. Together with Adi Martis she wrote the first survey of the history of the visual arts of the Dutch Caribbean, Arte Dutch Caribbean Art, published in 2001. Presently she is a lecturer on non Western visual culture and art history at the Instituto Buena Bista, Curaçao Center for Contemporary Art. Frequently she lectures about Caribbean Art in Europe, the U.S. and the Caribbean region and has written extensively for local and Caribbean newspapers and journals about Dutch Caribbean art.
April 29, 2008 at 9:52 am · Filed under Quotes, Writing/ Literature, caribbean art, comparative literature, writers
From, The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Díaz (footnote on p.4)
“You want a final conclusive answer to the Warren Commission’s question, Who killed JFK? Let me, your humble Watcher, reveal once and for all the God’s Honest Truth: It wasn’t the mob or LBJ or the ghost of Marilyn Fucking Monroe. It wasn’t aliens or the KGB on a lone gunman. It wasn’t the Hunt Brothers of Texas of Lee Harvey or the Trilateral Commission. It was Trujillo; it was the fuku. Where in conazo do you think the so-called Curse of the Kennedys comes from? How about Vietnam? Why do you think the greatest power in the world lost its first war to a Third World country like Vietnam? I mean, Negro, please. It might interest you that just as the U.S. was ramping up its involvement in Vietnam, LBJ launched an illegal invasion of the Dominican Republic (April 28, 1965). (Santo Domingo was Iraq before Iraq was Iraq.) A smashing military success for the U.S., and many of the same units and intelligence teams that took part in the “democratization” of Santo Domingo were immediately shipped off to Saigon. What do you think these soldiers, technicians, and spooks carried with then, in their rucks, in their suitcases, in their shirt pockets, on the hair inside their nostrils, caked up around their shoes. Just a little gift from my people to America, a small repayment for an unjust war. That’s right, folks, Fuku.”
April 24, 2008 at 9:14 pm · Filed under African Diaspora, Music, New Media, Sound, dj screw, experimental art forms, hip-hop, screw music, texas, the south
April 24, 2008 at 3:30 pm · Filed under Installation, Performance, Sound
March 20, 2008 at 11:42 pm · Filed under New Media, News, Opportunity, Performance, Sound, Video Art, experimental art forms, labotanica news, writers
CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS: POLVO MAGAZINE SPRING/SUMMER 2008 ISSUE
EMAIL SUBMISSIONS TO: archipelagaatgmaildotcom
“The light of the future casts the shadows of tomorrow.” Sun Ra
The TBA/ Time-Based Art issue will discuss performance art, sound,
video, and ephemera, and their relations to immediacy and fragility.
This issue will frame conversations on memory, the limits of time,
time-travel, and the role of art which is non-tangible and lives in
the memory. TBA will also explore the history of time-based art and
ways to contextualize this form of art-making. The TBA issue is
presented in conversation with “Space is the Place”, an exhibition on
time-based art co-presented by labotanica and Diaspora Vibe Gallery in
Miami, Florida.
DEADLINE: April 30, 2008
RELEASE DATE: June 1, 2008
GUIDELINES:
ARTWORK–please submit your work using jpeg format (high resolution
300dpi) indicate your contact info and bio in the document.
TEXT–please submit your work using rich text format or Word (if your
text includes images send them in jpeg format– high
resolution-300dpi)
indicate your contact info and bio in the document.
EMAIL SUBMISSIONS TO: archipelaga@gmail.com
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