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Cosmic to Corporeal: Contemporary Queer Performance Practices

September 21 – November 9, 2019

Submission deadline: Tuesday, August 20, 2019 (EXTENDED!)

Submission fee: $10 (free for MAC members)

Open to all media!

Apply here: http://themacdallas.submittable.com

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION

The MAC is calling for submissions that respond to the thematic of an upcoming exhibition, entitled Cosmic to Corporeal: Contemporary Queer Performance Practices, curated by Liss LaFleur and on view September 21 through November 9, 2019.

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Cosmic to Corporeal is a juried exhibition which will explore performance practices specifically in relation to the queer body. We are particularly interested in the relationship of the body to technology, and invite submissions of all media with an emphasis on performance, performance documentation, performance texts, video, and time-based works. This exhibition seeks to provide an international, intergenerational, and intersectional exchange of artists who are working to redefine the constructs of performance art and identity.

Potential areas of focus include:

Corporeal < of the body, for the body, from the body >

  • How does the revolution begin in our own body and expand our corporealities? (including riots, revolutions, manifestations and revolts)
  • How can artists create visceral work where spectators see themselves drawn through the human body, to the point of falling inside themselves?
  • How can vibrations, repeated gesture, sound, light, or other bodily or bioacoustic sources generate ephemeral experiences?
  • How can presence and embodiment produce more than just a physical occupation of space?

Cosmic < surroundings, future bodies, othered bodies >

  • How are artists using expanded forms of reenactment/ reimaging to destabilize the narratives of the past?
  • What happens when queer artists project themselves 20 years into the future and present their own vision of what the future holds?
  • How can “hacking the body” expand into code, poetry, performance or other ideas related to corporeality?
  • How is technology used to explore the charged border between ‘queered’ bodies and society, narratives and politics, or private selves and public views?

ABOUT THE JUROR

Liss LaFleur is an American artist, activist, and educator primarily working with video, installation, and performance. Through her work, she posits questions regarding gender, identity, sexuality and power within an increasingly digital world.

LaFleur is a 2018- 2019 Immersive Scholar, funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. As an Immersive Scholar, she is using cultural analytics to research the #metoo movement and produce a new series of 3D animations. This ongoing project was nominated for a 2019 Webby Award, and the data associated will be among the first acquisitions in the #metoo archive at the Schlesinger Library at Harvard.

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Since 2014, her works have been exhibited and screened internationally, including presentations at the TATE Modern, Cannes Court Métrage, on PBS/ POV Digital, the Reykjavik Art Museum in Iceland, the Museum of Glass, the Mckinney Avenue Contemporary, Sister Gallery in Australia, and the Czong Institute for Contemporary Art in South Korea. Her recent lectures include “Queering Virtual Reality” at SXSW, “Dyke Camp & Future Feminism” as the Rose Goldsen Guest Artist at Cornell University, “Propositions: Greener Pastures” at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and “Hack MIT” at the MIT Media Lab.

LaFleur was born into a family of creative figures in Houston, TX: her grandfather was one of the first public radio hosts in the south; her grandmother, a beloved opera singer; and her mother, a glass artist. She holds an MFA in Media Art from Emerson College, and is an Assistant Professor of New Media Art in the College of Visual Art and Design at the University of North Texas. She is currently represented by Galleri Urbane Marfa + Dallas.

ELIGIBILITY

The exhibition is open to all artists 18 years of age or older. Each participant may submit up to three completed works for consideration. Entries are due by 11:59 PM CST on Thursday, August 15, 2019.

Selected art should be ready for installation at the time of delivery. No artwork shall be removed from the exhibition before the closing date. Artists whose work requires the use of electronic equipment must plan to provide their own equipment, and indicate their needs along with their proposal.

HOW TO APPLY

Autobookmark plug in for adobe acrobat. Please apply via The MAC’s Submittable page at themacdallas.submittable.com.

Artists may submit up to three artworks for consideration. Additionally, we request a brief bio (250 words) and a written artist statement (500 words or less) that responds directly to how your proposed work(s) respond to this exhibition prompt. Artists may submit images (up to 5MB each), video (up to 250MB each), audio (up to 30MB each), and PDFs (up to 10MB each). Public links to media on YouTube, Vimeo, and SoundCloud will also be accepted.

There is an entry fee of $10 per application for non-MAC members. MAC members should contact assistant(at)the-mac.org for instructions. Notifications will be sent on Thursday, August 22, 2019.

SHIPMENT

Artists are responsible for delivery and pick-up of their own artwork. All work needs to be shipped or personally delivered to The MAC by Friday, September 13, 2019. Return shipment or personal pick-ups will be scheduled for Sunday, November 10 through Tuesday, November 12, 2019. Shipped work must include return delivery label.

Please ship to:

Attn: Rachel Rogerson

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The MAC

1503 South Ervay Street

Dallas, TX 75215

Note: The MAC operating hours are Tuesday through Sunday 12-5

Contact assistant(at)the-mac.org with questions or concerns.

WHEN/WHERE

Cosmic to Corporeal: Contemporary Queer Performance Practices

September 21, 2019 – November 9, 2019

Opening reception and performance Saturday, September 21, 6-9

FaceTime User Guide

When you want to make or receive a phone call, you don’t have to reach for your iPhone—you can use your Mac. When someone calls you, a notification appears on your Mac and you can take the call—and even use Real-Time Text (RTT) for your phone calls, if your carrier supports it. (See FaceTime phone call requirements.)

Note: Phone calls you make and receive on your Mac use cellular minutes—cellular charges may apply.

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Make calls from apps on your Mac

  1. In the FaceTime app on your Mac, sign in and make sure FaceTime is turned on.

  2. Set up your iPhone and Mac for phone calls, if you haven’t done so already.

  3. Depending on the macOS app you want to use for your phone call, do one of the following:

    • FaceTime: Enter a phone number in the field at the top of the FaceTime window (you may need to press Return), then click the Audio button (or use the Touch Bar). You can also click Audio to see your past phone calls.

      If you set up RTT phone calls, you can choose to make an RTT call.

    • Contacts: Select a contact, move your pointer over a phone number, then click the Phone button .

      If you set up RTT phone calls, you can choose to make an RTT call.

    • Safari: Click a phone number on a webpage, then click Call.

    • Mail: Place the pointer over a phone number in an email, click the pop-up menu , then choose how you want to make the call.

    • Maps: Click a place of interest, then click the Call button .

    • Spotlight: Enter the name of a person or place in the Spotlight search field, then click a search suggestion to view in Spotlight. Click the Phone button .

    • Nonton online veer zaara sub indo. Calendar: Open an event, look for an underlined blue phone number in the event details, click the number, then click Call.

    • Reminders: Open the reminders list, click an underlined blue phone number, then click Call.

    • Find My: Open the People list, then select a name. Click the Info button , click Contact, then click the FaceTime phone button .

Note: If you’re restricted to calls with only certain people, an hourglass icon appears next to those people you can’t call.

Answer calls on your Mac

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On your Mac, when a notification appears in the top-right corner of the screen, do one of the following in the notification:

  • Accept an incoming call: Click Accept.

    If the person calling you has set up RTT for the call and you want to answer it that way, click RTT.

  • Decline a call: Click Decline.

    Tip: If the call came from someone you don’t want to receive calls from, you can block the caller.

  • Decline a call and send a message using iMessage: Change name of notebook in onenote. Click next to Decline, choose Reply with Message, type your message, then click Send. Both you and the caller must be signed in to iMessage.

  • Decline a call and set a reminder to call back later: Click next to Decline, then choose how long you want to wait to receive a reminder. When the time comes, you receive a notification—click it to view the reminder, then click the link in the reminder to start the call.

If your Mac has a Touch Bar, you can use it to accept a call, decline a call, decline and send a message, or decline and set a reminder.

You can’t receive a call from someone who’s restricted by communication limits in Screen Time, but it appears as a missed call in the FaceTime window or in Notification Center.

See alsoMake and receive RTT calls in FaceTime on MacChange FaceTime ringtones on MacWhat is Screen Time on Mac?Apple Support article: If FaceTime isn’t working on your Mac