Otis Street Arts Project

Otis Street Arts Project

Friday, September 28, 2018


Does This Make Me Look Fat?

 A discussion led by Dafna Steinberg

Sunday September 30
3-5 PM


 Dafna Steinberg will lead a discussion about the larger female body in self-portraiture and selfies based off a paper she is presenting at SECAC in Birmingham, AL in October. 


Dafna Steinberg is a native of Washington, DC. A graduate of Hampshire College, the International Center of Photography, and Goldsmiths, University of London, she has exhibited in and curated challenging thematic shows in America and abroad. From 2010 till 2012, she was a member of the art collective Sparkplug, supported by DC Arts Center. In 2012, Ms. Steinberg was commissioned by Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company to create three pieces for the debut of the comedy/drama Mr. Burns: A Post-Electric Play. Ms. Steinberg has been an artist in residence at Vermont Studio Center (Johnson, VT), Sou’wester (Seaview, WA) and Starry Night Artist Retreat (Truth or Consequences, NM). She has exhibited nationally and internationally, including shows at Ford Gallery (Portland), Arc Gallery and Studios (San Francisco), Flashpoint Gallery (DC), the Katzen Arts Center (DC), Lunchbox Gallery (Miami), SOHO20Gallery (NYC), Woolly Mammoth Theater (DC) and the International Center of Photography School (NYC). In 2018, she debuted her series And All I Got Was This Lousy T-Shirt in a solo exhibition at Vivid Solutions DC Gallery in Washington, DC. She is an adjunct faculty member at Northern Virginia Community College.

Ms. Steinberg’s work has spanned a variety of mediums, including photography, video, collage, installation and performance. She works with themes that relate to the experiences of women and the fragmentation of the female body. She also makes work about interactions between men and women and how these interactions play out in building relationships and understanding. Most of the time, her work is pretty funny. She has also made work in response to the current political and cultural climate regarding objectification of the female body, reproductive rights, sexual assault and continuous attacks on a woman's right to be autonomous. She explores how, as much as things change, they still stay very much the same.

Otis Street Arts Project
3706 Otis Street
Mount Rainier, MD


Thursday, September 13, 2018

Bodies Open on Saturday

BODIES

Curated by Amy Lokoff

September 15th- October 13th

Open Reception 

Saturday September 15th 

5-8 PM

Featuring the works of 

Jasjyot Singh Hans, Hard Stitched, Dafna Steinberg, and Matt Storm.








Using photography, drawing, embroidery, and performance this exhibition centers and celebrates bodies that have traditionally been hidden or marginalized within mainstream media and pop culture. It aims to broaden our collective vision of who can be the protagonist in the stories we tell.

Can we learn to separate morality and worthiness from appearance?

About the Artists:

Ashley Ja’nae uses pen and ink to draw portraits that explore the humanity and experiences of Black American women. Her work focuses on visual texture, rhythm, contrast, space, and the idea of what one can create with limitations. Her collective work functions as a visual safe space while it explores self-acceptance, intersectionality, and the deconstruction of beauty standards.

Dafna Steinberg works with themes that relate to the experiences of women and the fragmentation of the female body. She also makes work about interactions between men and women and how these interactions play out in building relationships and understanding. Most of the time, her work is pretty funny. She has also made work in response to the current political and cultural climate regarding objectification of the female body, reproductive rights, sexual assault and continuous attacks on a woman's right to be autonomous. She explores how, as much as things change, they still stay very much the same.

Matt Storm.  From the artist “As a transgender person, there are not many places I can find nuanced and complex images of people like me.”
“There may never be a comprehensive way to look at a body “like mine”, unless it is a way to look at mine, specifically. And the same for all of us. This series of images of my body in the studio creates a new lexicon of ways to see a body, inclusive of ways to see mine. Sometimes, we can only see what we already know how to see. What ways of looking, enabled by a ten-second self-timer, a tripod, a digital camera, and blessedly rich natural light, see me?”

Hard Stitched is an alias for the artist. His series was created following years of therapy sessions as a way to cope with traumas and real-life experiences that come with the label as a "black, gay, male" in Post-Colonial America. Masculinity, social media meets pornography, the historical fetishization of ethnic bodies, and creating individual power through socially taboo forms of self-identity and expression. Using traditional techniques such as hand embroidery, illustration, and fabric dyeing, the artist uses his unique style to translate an often suppressed truth.
 Amy Loko is a creative economy catalyst based in Washington, DC. Over the past 10 years she has worked with over 200 visual artists  and coordinated exhibitions and arts programming in a variety of venues in the DMV including Anacostia Arts Center and Honfleur Gallery. She is passionate about finding ways to make art accessible to people who don’t think that art is for them and to support and empower artists who are underrepresented and/or under resourced.

Events:

September 15, 2018
 Opening reception 5-8pm

September 30
 Does This Make Me Look Fat?: Self-Portraiture, Selfies and the Bigger Female Body - lecture by Dafna Sternberg 3-5pm

October 7, 2018
 BODIES Artist Talk moderated by Amy Loko 7-9pm

October 13
 Poetic Vibes: The Body Edition 8-10pm

See the DCist article here