Read a Book: Jaamil Olawale Kosoko’s #negrophobia as a lesson in sitting in pain
I’m drawn to the body, repelled by the face. I think of Stop and Frisk Watch apps. I think of fear.
I’m drawn to the body, repelled by the face. I think of Stop and Frisk Watch apps. I think of fear.
“…the erotic is not a question only of what we do; it is a question of how acutely and fully we can feel in the doing.”
The curator of this weekend’s “Food for Thought” at Danspace talks about challenging the dominant representation of black masculinity
Tara Sheena chats with Jaamil Kosoko about Open Spectrum Critical Dialogues at New York Live Arts.
These ugly feelings: disgust, animatedness, mourning, are radical in their fugitivity.
Here is our completely subjective and totally biased Abridged & Annotated Guide to the Brooklyn International Performance Art Festival.
The 14th annual Philadelphia Live Arts Festival, which runs from September 3 – 18, 2010, will showcase 18 cutting-edge programs featuring over 35 original dance, theater, and music works by acclaimed U.S. artists from Philadelphia and New York, along with internationally recognized artists from France, China, and Ireland. With
Jaamil Olawale Kosoko and M. Lamar are Incomprehensible, Jen Rosenblit claps hands, and Lucy Sexton, Lisa Kron, Yvonne Rainer and The Bessies celebrate Judy Hussie-Taylor, Rockette Phoebe Pearl and The Right to Free Expression (1st Amendment).
Several times, misdirected/redirected, freezing and running in white-out conditions, I wondered why bother at all. But, sometimes it’s all you can do to just show up… 2 American Realness Discourse Talks, 2 Works-in-progress, 1 tight bit o’ dance.
How will we ever go back after the planting that guest curator Eva Yaa Asentawaa sowed during last week’s “the skeleton architecture, or the future of our worlds?”
A candid conversation on performing while black and male. With Germaul Barnes, Whitney Hunter, Jaamil Olawale Kosoko, Jeremy Toussaint-Baptiste & Andre Zachery.
Body-based artists explore notions of other-ness in a pair of showcases curated by Jaamil Olawale Kosoko