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#the new school
hack-saw2004 · 4 hours
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i think its so funny that alumni from schools like harvard and columbia that were there during the protests in the 60s-80s are expressing support for students currently protesting against the genocide in palestine, and random zionists that were NOT at these protests in the 60s-80s have the never ending audacity to tell these alumni "well thats different, what you protested was good and what they're protesting is bad." as if protesters against the vietnam war and apartheid south africa were not also demonized, arrested, brutalized, and even killed for their activism. history only remembers them fondly after the damage has already been done.
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garadinervi · 1 year
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Angela Y. Davis, January 26, 1944 / 2023
(image: Stanley Seligson (photograph), Angela Y. Davis, September 1975. Guest speakers and performers (NS040101.15), box 23, folder 3, New School photograph collection, New School Archives And Special Collections, The New School, New York, NY. (via Black Women Radicals))
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whatsupwalnut · 1 day
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The New School, April 22 2024
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catdotjpeg · 2 days
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Yesterday (21 Apr), NYC Palestinian Youth Movement stated, "students at the New School set up an encampment on campus in solidarity with their comrades at Columbia University and in protest of their institution's complicity in the zionist entity's ongoing genocide in Gaza."
National Students for Justice in Palestine reported today (22 Apr at 1:20 PM EDT) that NYPD had been called to the school and students are currently calling for allies in the area to mobilize.
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racefortheironthrone · 11 months
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What were your thoughts on the New School strike, given his that was in your profession and your neck of the woods?
As a fellow adjunct, I supported the strike and I was glad to see that they were able to win substantial wage improvements to help deal with the cost of living in NYC. I hope that my union is able to use the New School's new per-course wage rates as leverage in our next collective bargaining campaign.
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I do have some concerns about the long-term financial stability of the New School, but that's something that predates the strike. The New School is a very expensive (almost $80k a year) private university with almost no endowment (although it does have a lot of real estate...), and its workforce is like 90% adjuncts. I don't know how much more its leadership can squeeze on either the tuition or "labor savings" side of the equation.
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toastedstencils · 1 month
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Hello! This is the first few pages of my comic Alice&Key! If you think it looks awesome and cool it’s going to be on sale at MoCCA fest this weekend!! At the parsons illustration table 136!!
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each copy was handmade by me and includes stickers and a poster!! Again table 136!! Go grab a copy💓💓💓
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shogun-paints · 1 year
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Mixed media painting. No AI.
Tap dancer @aidandances (IG)
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jgthirlwell · 1 year
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01.28.23 Kodak Quartet performed at the Jack Studio Festival Event at The New School, performing a work by Khyam Allami and performing a stunning rendition of Ligeti's String Quartet No 1.
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cmece-mass · 1 year
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A Public Dialogue Between bell hooks and Cornel West
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longlistshort · 1 year
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Artist Alex Katz created this mural, Bill 2, a portrait of modern dancer and choreographer Bill T. Jones, in 2019 for Murals of La Jolla in San Diego. Murals of La Jolla is a project started in 2010 by The Athenaeum and the La Jolla Community Foundation. It commissions artists to create work to be displayed on buildings around La Jolla. A map of all the murals currently on view can be found here.
From the Murals of La Jolla website about the work-
Alex Katz’s mural, Bill 2, celebrates Bill T. Jones, one of the most noted and recognized modern-dance choreographers of our time. Executed in Katz’s bold and simplified signature style, Bill 2 depicts Jones’ visage, through a series of distinct expressions. The repetition of his face has a cinematic and lyrical quality, reinforcing his place in the world of dance, music and film. Portions of the face are dramatically cropped, giving the viewer only quick and gestural glimpses of Jones. Bill 2, is a striking homage to two artists, Katz and Jones, both renowned in their respective fields of visual and performing arts. The mural’s proximity to the new Conrad Prebys Performing Arts Center gives a nod to the interconnected worlds of art, music, and dance.
The Guggenheim museum in NYC is currently showing Alex Katz: Gathering, a retrospective of the artist’s work from the late 1940’s until the present. The exhibition will be up until February 20, 2023.
From their website about the exhibition-
Emerging as an artist in the mid-20th century, Katz forged a mode of figurative painting that fused the energy of Abstract Expressionist canvases with the American vernaculars of the magazine, billboard, and movie screen. Throughout his practice, he has turned to his surroundings in downtown New York City and coastal Maine as his primary subject matter, documenting an evolving community of poets, artists, critics, dancers, and filmmakers who have animated the cultural avant-garde from the postwar period to the present.
Staged in the city where Katz has lived and worked his entire life, and prepared with the close collaboration of the artist, this retrospective will fill the museum’s Frank Lloyd Wright rotunda. Encompassing paintings, oil sketches, collages, drawings, prints, and freestanding “cutout” works, the exhibition will begin with the artist’s intimate sketches of riders on the New York City subway from the late 1940s and will culminate in the rapturous, immersive landscapes that have dominated his output in recent years.
Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Company has numerous performances every year. Conceived and directed by Bill T. Jones, and choreographed by Jones with Janet Wong and the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Company, the latest work, Curriculum II, will be performed at on March 10, 11, and 12, at the Institute of Contemporary Art Boston.
Jones also hosts the series Bill Chats at NYC’s The New School. On January 30th, he will be in conversation with Bessie Award-winning theater director and performance artist, Niegel Smith and curator, producer, and director, Kamilah Forbes. For more events check out the New York Live Arts calendar.
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morgananara1 · 9 months
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Inspired By: Jan Lauschmann
Digital Photo/Vid Class "Inspired By" Project
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designedbysher · 2 years
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My complete inspiration wall at the end of the three week intensive Fashion Visual Presentation class at Parsons.❤️
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catdotjpeg · 8 hours
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Pro-Palestine students in NYC are picketing outside of the New School again today. Quotes from radical writers are on the doors. Like students at other colleges, New School students are demanding that their school boycott & divest from Israel & refuse to work with NYPD.
-- Ash J, 24 Apr 2024 1:54 PM EDT
The demands put forward by The New School Students for Justice in Palestine are as follows:
Divest from death: The New School must commit to a complete divestment from all corporations benefiting from and complicit in the ongoing genocide and apartheid against the Palestinian people. We demand complete financial transparency as a step toward this commitment. After multiple strikes in just the last two years and a top-down dissolution of an entire college just a few days ago, the students, staff, and faculty that run The New School have long deserved to know where our money is going.
Protection for pro-Palestine protestors: Students, staff, and faculty who have been and will continue to protest in support of Palestine, against the genocide and apartheid they have faced for a century, must be protected from institutional retaliation. The NYPD has been weaponized against student protesters across the city, demonstrating that academic institutions will prioritize protecting their profits and public image over the values they claim to hold. We demand The New School’s commitment to refuse collaboration with the NYPD.
Academic boycott of the apartheid state: We reject normalized collaboration with any educational and cultural institutions of the genocidal apartheid State of Israel, which are inherently complicit in the legitimization of the occupation of Palestine and oppression of the Palestinian people. We demand that The New School enact a full academic boycott of Israeli academic and cultural institutions.
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marvels-bitch-boy · 2 years
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I GOT INTO THE FUCKING NEW SCHOOL IN NEW YORK!!!!
I GOT OFF THE WAITLIST!!! THERE WAS A 21% CHANCE OF GETTING IN FROM IT! AND I GOT IN
I GOT IN!!! I GOT IN THE FUCKING CREATIVE WRITING PROGRAM!!!!!!
(I have no idea where I'm gonna go now but I'm gonna ride this high until I god damn die!)
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nicoooooooon · 1 year
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A woman in the Horn & Hardart automat in Times Square, Pigment print (1956) by Frank Paulin
Born in Pittsburgh in 1926, Frank Paulin grew up in New York and Chicago. By the end of the 1950s he had been taking classes under acclaimed art director Alexey Brodovitch at the New School. With most of his days occupied by school and work, he would take to the city’s streets at night—mostly around Times Square—which provided him with subjects from all walks of life set against the stunning visual framework of advertisements, neon signs, and reflective store windows.
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ssssssws-world · 2 years
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