EventsThe New Social Environment#343
Gregg Bordowitz with Yasi Alipour and Nick Bennett
Friday, July 16, 2021 1 p.m. Eastern / 10 a.m. Pacific
These free events are produced by The Brooklyn Rail.
Artist Gregg Bordowitz joins artist and writer Yasi Alipour and writer Nick Bennett for a conversation. We conclude with a musical performance by Laszlo Horvath.
In this Talk
Gregg Bordowitz

Award-winning artist, writer, and activist Gregg Bordowitz teaches in the Film, Video, New Media, and Animation Department at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, andis on the faculty of the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program. His work is the subject of a traveling retrospective spanning thirty years of activity, titled I Wanna Be Well, currently on view at MoMA PS1 and previously presented at the Art Institute of Chicago. His films have shown internationally in screenings and exhibitions at museums including The New Museum, NY; Artist Space, NY; TATE Modern, UK; MoMA, NY; and the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago. Bordowitz is the author of numerous books, including The AIDS Crisis Is Ridiculous and Other Writings, 1986–2003 (MIT, 2006), among others.
Yasi Alipour

Iranian artist, writer, and folder Yasi Alipour currently lives in Brooklyn and wonders about paper, counting, and silence. She received her MFA from Columbia University and is a faculty member at Columbia, Parsons and SVA, New York.
Nick Bennett

Writer Nick Bennett was the Special Projects Editor of the Brooklyn Rail. As Curatorial Assistant at the Rail, he helped to organize the ongoing exhibition Artists Need to Create on the Same Scale that Society Has the Capacity to Destroy, which has been exhibited at the 58th Venice Biennale (2019), Colby Museum in Waterville, ME (2019), and Mana Contemporary in Jersey City, NJ (2017).
The Rail has a tradition of ending our conversations with a poetry reading, and we're fortunate to have Dao Strom reading.
Dao Strom

Artist Dao Strom works with three “voices”—written, sung, visual—to explore hybridity and the intersection of personal and collective histories. She is the author of Instrument (Fonograf Editions, 2020) and its musical companion Traveler’s Ode (Antiquated Future Records, 2020); a bilingual poetry-art book, You Will Always Be Someone From Somewhere Else (AJAR Press); a memoir, We Were Meant To Be a Gentle People, and song cycle, East/West; and two books of fiction, The Gentle Order of Girls and Boys and Grass Roof, Tin Roof. Born in Vietnam, Strom grew up in the Sierra Nevada foothills of California and lives in Portland, Oregon. She is co-founder of two collective art projects, She Who Has No Master(s), and De-Canon.
We’d like to thank The Marion Boulton Kippy Stroud Foundation and Teiger Foundation for making these conversations possible, and for their support of our growing archive 🌈✨