June 16-30 (See schedules below) Human Rights Watch Film Festival. The 22nd annual edition of the festival returns with stories of resilience from across the globe about the universal issues that grip our time. Screenings include "Granito", "Familia", "La Toma", and other films from Latin America. At Film Society of Lincoln Center, 165 West 65th Street. For schedules and more information, click here
June 29 (4-7 pm) Andrea Arroyo's "Eternal" - Opening. A series of prints from "Flor de Vida," inspired by female characters from world history and mythology, along with a selection of works from "Flor de Tierra, Homage to the Women of Juarez." At The Treasure Room Gallery, 475 Riverside Drive, between 119 an 120 Streets. Running through September 2, Mondays to Friday from 9 am to 5 pm. For more information, click here
June 29 (6:30 pm) Spanish Cinema: "Mondays in the Sun." Javier Bardem leads an ensemble cast in this film about laid-off workers in a northern Spanish town. At Instituto Cervantes, 211-215 East 49th Street. For more information click here
July 1 -3 (See schedules below) African Diaspora International Film Festival. Opening with the U.S. premiere of Nightjohn, John Burnett's drama about an orphaned slave girl growing up on a Southern plantation in the 19 century. At Teachers College, Columbia University, 525 West 120th Street. For schedules and more information click here
July 1 (6-9 pm) The Shadow Line. A one-day exhibition inspired by Joseph Conrad's short novel. Curated by Valentina Casacchia, from the Guggenheim Museum. Featured artists include Verónica Botticelli, Wayne Liu, Barbara Salvucci, among others. At L.E.S. Gallery, Clemente Soto Vélez Cultural and Educational Center, 107 Suffolk Street, between Delancey and Rivington Streets. For more information, click here
July 1 (7:00 pm) Ecuadorian Film Showcase in New York. Screening of Gabriela Calvache's The Silent Walls, a documentary that tells the personal stories and hopes of workers in Quito, Ecuador charged with rebuilding a seventeenth-century house. At Instituto Cervantes, 211-215 East 49th Street. For more information click here
July 2 (11:00 am) Film Screening: Africa United. This road movie sends a soccer prodigy and his family through the heart of Africa on the way to the World Cup. Part of the African Disapora Film Festival. At Teachers College, Columbia University, 525 West 120th Street. For more information click here
June 29 (4-7 pm) Andrea Arroyo's "Eternal" - Opening. A series of prints from "Flor de Vida," inspired by female characters from world history and mythology, along with a selection of works from "Flor de Tierra, Homage to the Women of Juarez." At The Treasure Room Gallery, 475 Riverside Drive, between 119 an 120 Streets. Running through September 2, Mondays to Friday from 9 am to 5 pm. For more information, click here
June 29 (6:30 pm) Spanish Cinema: "Mondays in the Sun." Javier Bardem leads an ensemble cast in this film about laid-off workers in a northern Spanish town. At Instituto Cervantes, 211-215 East 49th Street. For more information click here
July 1 -3 (See schedules below) African Diaspora International Film Festival. Opening with the U.S. premiere of Nightjohn, John Burnett's drama about an orphaned slave girl growing up on a Southern plantation in the 19 century. At Teachers College, Columbia University, 525 West 120th Street. For schedules and more information click here
July 1 (6-9 pm) The Shadow Line. A one-day exhibition inspired by Joseph Conrad's short novel. Curated by Valentina Casacchia, from the Guggenheim Museum. Featured artists include Verónica Botticelli, Wayne Liu, Barbara Salvucci, among others. At L.E.S. Gallery, Clemente Soto Vélez Cultural and Educational Center, 107 Suffolk Street, between Delancey and Rivington Streets. For more information, click here
July 1 (7:00 pm) Ecuadorian Film Showcase in New York. Screening of Gabriela Calvache's The Silent Walls, a documentary that tells the personal stories and hopes of workers in Quito, Ecuador charged with rebuilding a seventeenth-century house. At Instituto Cervantes, 211-215 East 49th Street. For more information click here
July 2 (11:00 am) Film Screening: Africa United. This road movie sends a soccer prodigy and his family through the heart of Africa on the way to the World Cup. Part of the African Disapora Film Festival. At Teachers College, Columbia University, 525 West 120th Street. For more information click here
July 6 (6:30 pm) Film Screening: "Tie Me Up, Tie Me Down." Directed by Pedro Almodóvar and starring Antonio Banderas, this film tells the love story of a man in a mental hospital and the actress he's kidnapped. At Instituto Cervantes, 211-215 East 49th Street. For more information click here
July 7 (7:00 pm) Lourdes Delgado Exhibit. This photo exhibit documents the lives of the members of New York's jazz community in the first decade of the 21st century. Running through July 14 at Instituto Cervantes, 211-215 East 49th Street. For more information click here.
July 7 (7:00 pm) Lourdes Delgado Exhibit. This photo exhibit documents the lives of the members of New York's jazz community in the first decade of the 21st century. Running through July 14 at Instituto Cervantes, 211-215 East 49th Street. For more information click here.
July 7 (7:30 pm) Videoteca del Sur. Weekly showcase of Latin American films. At the Millenium Film Workshop, 66 East 4th St. For list of schedule and more information click here
Ongoing:
Dominican Republic: A Cultural Portrait. Photographer Katherine Taylor explores the cultural and natural beauty of Quisqueya. At CUNY Dominican Studies Institute's Art Gallery, City College, North Academic Center, Second Floor. Enter at 137Street and Amsterdam. Runs through July 31. For more information, click here.
Urban Archives: Emilio Sánchez in the Bronx. Artist Emilio Sánchez exhibits photographs of buildings in Hunters Point, an impoverished area of the Bronx. Running through January 1 at Bronx Museum of the Arts, 1040 Grand Concourse, Bronx. For more information click here.
Jaume Plensa: Echo. Plensa's site-specific sculpture depicts a nine-year-old girl from his Barcelona neighborhood, lost in thought, towering forty feet high. Running through August 14 at Madison Square Park, 1 East 23rd Street. For more information click here.
Otherworldly: Small Delusions and Optical Realities. This show explores the interest of many modern artists in "magical realism," the small-scale, handmade depiction of artificial environments and alternate realities. Running through September 18 at Museum of Arts and Design, 2 Columbus Circle. For more information click here
A Lebanese-Dominican Dominican York Is Born Again as a Bronxite. Nicolas Dumit Estevez explores the perceptions and misperceptions that have shaped the Bronx since the 1960s, and in a group show, a number of other artists respond with perceptions of their own. Running through August 3 at the Longwood Arts Gallery at Hostos Community College, 450 Grand Concourse, the Bronx. For more information click here
Video Artists From Andalucia and The Bronx. This project pairs artists from the Bronx and Andalucia to collaborate on projects exploring cultural memory, day-to-day life, and popular ritual. Running through August 3 at the Longwood Arts Gallery at Hostos Community College, 450 Grand Concourse, the Bronx. For more information click here
Inés Esnal: Linescapes. Artist Inés Esnal presents 25 pieces exploring the tensions of lines and planes and how they define spaces using monographic etching, screenprinting, and installation. Running through February 7 at Instituto Cervantes, 211-215 East 49th Street. For more information click here.
El Museo's Bienal: The (S) Files 2011. El Museo del Barrio's sixth annual biennial showcases over 75 emerging artists as it celebrates the most cutting-edge work being done by Latin American, Caribbean, and Latino artists in the New York area. Running through January 8 at various locations. For more information, click here.
Performing Coordinates: Cityscapes Revisited. Reimagine the city as a palimpsest of history, using the Lower East Side as a point of departure. Running through July 6 at Clemente Soto Velez Cultural Center, 107 Suffolk Street. For more information click here.
Mexican Cinema: "Leap Year." Laura, a journalist in Mexico City, starts a passionate love affair. Starts playing June 24 at Cinema Village, 22 East 12th Street. For more information click here.
Bronx Calling: The First Aim Biennial. Guest curators Wayne Northcross and Jose Ruiz organize an exhibition of seventy-two artists from the Bronx Museum's Artists in the Marketplace program. Running through September 5 at Bronx Museum, 1040 Grand Concourse, Bronx. For more information click here or call (718) 681-6000.
Dee Campos: El Salvador Series. Stark portraits of El Salvadoran children in an orphanage are juxtaposed with beautiful landscape photos of El Salvador. Running through September 5 at En Foco, 1738 Hone Avenue, Bronx. For more information click here.
Eraser. In this group show, selected artists explore methods and means of erasure, and the nature of absence. Running through July 8 at MagnanMetz Gallery, 521 West 26th Street. For more information click here.
Accumulations. Venezuelan artist Esperanza Mayobre and Colombian artist Gonzalo Fuenmayor explore the common theme of collage from opposite ends of the stylistic spectrum. Running through Augiust 22 at artsolar, 44 Davids Lane, East Hampton. For more information click here.
To report errors or to have your event included in these listings, please send an email out to hnypeditor@gmail.com. For events, please indicate date, venue or contact information.
Accumulations. Venezuelan artist Esperanza Mayobre and Colombian artist Gonzalo Fuenmayor explore the common theme of collage from opposite ends of the stylistic spectrum. Running through Augiust 22 at artsolar, 44 Davids Lane, East Hampton. For more information click here.
To report errors or to have your event included in these listings, please send an email out to hnypeditor@gmail.com. For events, please indicate date, venue or contact information.
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