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May
17– August 17, 2008
Cool
Remixed: Bay
Area Urban Art + Culture Now
Great Hall Low Bay
Presented by the Education Department
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Note:
The exhibition pumps it up @ LOUD HOURS, Weds, 3–5 p.m.,
starting July 2. Hi-decibel music and videos.Free
for visitors ages 13–20.
The Oakland
Museum of California goes from retro to metro in its 1950s-era Birth
of the Cool and contemporary Cool Remixed exhibitions,
opening May 17 through August 17, 2008.
Cool
Remixed is the museum’s topical spin
on Birth of the Cool, a look at
the mid-century music, architecture, fashion, and art of
southern California, organized by the Orange County Museum
of Art.
Produced
by Oakland Museum of California staff, Cool Remixed captures
northern California “cool” via graffiti art, film,
fashion, dance, skateboard and bike culture, and themed lounges
where visitors can chill.
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| Thoung
Van, Float to Freedom Shoe sculpture. Photo Rue
Flaherty. |
Curators Evelyn
Orantes and Christine Lashaw invited
local artists and Oakland community organizations—the
East Bay Asian Youth Center (EBAYC), Oakland High’s Visual
Arts Academy (VAAMP), Town Park, Visual Element of the EastSide
Arts Alliance, Youth Radio, and Youth UpRising—to create
art and installations for the exhibition.
“Cool
Remixed reflects the relationship youth have
with their environment, how they create personal space and
define themselves,” said Orantes, cultural arts developer
at the museum. “What has surfaced from our discussions
and their artwork is a real sense of pride in being from
O-town.”
The Cool
Remixed curators and community partners have
created a venue—including a central performance area—where
visitors can sample and mix the signature aspects of East
Bay cool. “The exhibition gives youth a platform to
speak and be heard,” said Lashaw, head preparator for
the education department.
 |
| Dalena
Le, Jennifer Truong, Jennifer Ly, Marn Saechao, Gwendolyn
Ly, and Julia Ngo. City Cool, car hood (detail). |
- Local artists KDub,
Mike Reyes, Ben Winslow and others will provide a glimpse into
the world of skateboarding, or “street
surfing” circa the 1960s. They will build a quarter-bowl
skate ramp for the exhibition, with a video by Reyes of local
skaters projected as a backdrop.
- Local artist Estria
Miyashiro and graffiti writers from Visual
Element will create murals for the exhibition. City streets
have served as canvases for graffitists since the 1960s; once
considered vandalism, graffiti have become legitimate art.
- Videos of T.U.R.F.
dancing (see glossary) will play in the Youth UpRising
lounge. T.U.R.F. dancing followed breakdancing, one of the
original forms of freestyle dance that complemented hip-hop.
- DJ Leilani “Leilizzlemac” Hopson
from Youth Radio will be on hand to teach basic DJing skills.
- VAAMP artists will
host a green lounge to reflect their concern
for the environment, using recycled and deconstructed materials
to create wearable art, autobiographical sculpture (with sneakers
and hubcaps), and a colorful tree constructed of painted plywood
and skateboard decks.
.
- Murals, ’zines,
and youth-produced films will be featured in the EBAYC lounge.
Both Cool
Remixed and the Birth
of the Cool exhibitions are included with museum
admission.
PUBLIC
PROGRAMS (see www.museumca.org/newsletters/CR_e-flyer-5.htm for details)
Saturday, May
31, noon–9 p.m. Art Saves Lives: 2008 Oakland
Youth Arts Festival
Oakland youth’s exciting, multimedia response to Cool Remixed. Sponsored
by Oakland Unified School District; hosted by Mind Power Collective. Free.
Sunday, June
15, noon–5 p.m. Cool Daddy-O!
Hipsters and flipsters, honor your finger-poppin’ daddies on Father’s
Day. Cool cars and hot bikes on view. Customize your ride with the Shorty Fatz
bike crew. Included w/admission.
Friday, June
20, 6–9 p.m. Pacific Coast Jazz: Rebirth
of the Cool. An intimate evening of jazz and poetry.
Sunday, June
29, 1–4 p.m. Family Explorations! California
Cool
Visit the Birth of the Cool exhibition and see how artists, architects,
and musicians created a dynamic arts community in LA in the 1950s. Design a
modern model home from cardboard or create a geometric abstract painting. Learn
turntable basics at the DJ station in the Cool Remixed exhibition.
Included w/admission.
Sunday, June
29, 2 p.m. Birth of the Cool curator tour
with Chief Curator of Art Philip Linhares. Included w/admission.
Sunday, July
20, 1–4 p.m. Family Explorations! Sample
This
Sample what’s currently cool in
youth culture: learn beat-boxing basics, create a mini skate ramp
and puppets, pick up DJ skills with “Leilizlemac” of
Youth Radio. Included w/admission.
Friday, August
1, Curator Tours (First Fridays After
Five 5–9 p.m.) 6 p.m. Cool Remixed curator tour
with Evelyn Orantes and Christine Lashaw; 7:30 p.m. Birth
of the Cool tour with Chief Curator of Art Philip Linhares.
Included w/admission.
Glossary
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| T.U.R.F.
Dancing. Courtesy Youth Uprising. Photo by Yoram Savion. |
B-boying,
or breakdancing, one of the original forms of freestyle dance
that complemented hip-hop
Hella.
Originated in the Bay Area and commonly used in place of "really" or "very."
Hyphy.
A hyperactive style of behavior and dance associated with Bay
Area hip-hop culture in the 1990s. Even though we’re
hyphy and loud we aren’t all about violence and drama.
The
O, O town, the town, oak town: synonyms
for Oakland. I hella love the O.
Remix. A
music-industry term for taking samples from existing songs and
combining them into new formats.
Scraper
bike. An Oakland original, a “scraper” is
the two-wheeled equivalent of a scraper car, the iconic Buick
or Cadillac from the1980s or 1990s modified with wide rims,
two-toned paint jobs, and accessories like suction tips that
emit a sound as you drive.
Town
Park, Oakland’s only skater-built public park,
at DeFremery Park in West Oakland.
T.U.R.F.
dancing (Taking Up Room on the Floor) is one of the
newest form of hip-hop dance, emerging from a genre of music
and culture called hyphy.
Tutting. A
style originally practiced by young funk dancers, derived from the
positions seen in ancient Egyptian drawings (i.e., King Tut). When
a dancer "tuts" he changes the angles of his arms per the
beat.
The
museum’s concurrent Cool
show, Birth of the Cool:
California Art, Design, and Culture at Midcentury, presents the iconic cool of the late 1950s
and 1960s that established LA as a major American cultural
center. Think Chet Baker, Miles Davis, Ornette Coleman, and
Dave Brubeck; Eichler homes and Eames chairs; and abstract
painters Karl Benjamin and Lorser Feitelson. May
17–August
17, 2008.
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Cool
Remixed: Bay Area Urban Art and Culture Now is made possible
by generous support from the Oakland Museum
Women’s Board, The Bernard Osher Foundation, and Phyllis
C. Wattis Foundation. Media sponsorship provided by the East Bay
Express.
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