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Christy Chan
VISUAL | Kala Art Institute is excited to present New Normal / Old Normal, a performance and panel discussion.

New Normal / Old Normal

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Date/Time
Date(s) - 09/06/2018
7:00 PM - 9:00 PM

Location
Kala Art Institute

Category(ies)

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BUY TICKETS $10-25 Sliding Scale (Recommended Member $15, Students $10) | NOTAFLOF (no one turned away for lack of funds)

  • 6:30PM Doors open.
  • 7PM Performance starts
  • 7:45PM Panel Discussions or 10 minutes after the performance ends.

Kala Art Institute is excited to present New Normal / Old Normal, a performance and panel discussion. Artist Christy Chan will present a re-staging of her performance The Long Distance Call followed by the panel discussion Making Art in the Age of #45.

Expanding on her own personal experiences and interactions with KKK members during her childhood growing up in rural Virginia, Chan presents The Long Distance Call, a re-enactment of phone calls between Chan and Miss. Anne, a KKK seamstress in Alabama. During the phone calls, Chan allowed Miss. Anne to believe she was an ethnically white customer in order to convince her to fabricate a Klan robe for her video work. Their unsettling yet banal phone calls tell the story of an unexpected interaction between two women, from trust gained to the eventual abrupt end of their communications. The Long Distance Call is performed by Catherine Lerza and Christy Chan.

The original phone calls took place in 2013 and the re-enactment was first performed in San Francisco at Southern Exposure in 2015, two years before the Trump administration took office and the KKK and extreme right became politically emboldened for the first time since the 1970’s.

Following The Long Distance Call, Kala will present Making art in the age of #45, a panel discussion with Ryanaustin Dennis (founder, co-director of The Black Aesthetic), Guillermo Galindo (composer, sonic architect, performance and visual artist), Christy Chan (artist), Favianna Rodriguez (artist), and Dorothy Santos (writer, editor, and curator). Panelists will explore how the role of the arts and artists working in race, class and political issues has evolved since Trump’s inauguration. The panel moderator is Bay Area comedian Dhaya Lakshminarayanan, winner of the Liz Carpenter award for political humor (previously awarded to Samantha Bee) and hosts The Moth in San Francisco.

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