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Tonight at Interference Archive!

The Sounds of 1968
Tuesday, May 22, 6:30–9pm


A journey into politicized sound! Collective listening and discussion of vinyl records produced by and documenting 1968 movements, with music, experimental sound, field recordings, and radio reportage. Visit our website for more info.

Our current exhibition is in it's final week:
Don't miss it!

La Lutte Continue…The Struggle Continues …Lotta Continua…La Lucha Continúa…
Exhibition Dates: April 29–May 26, 2018
Opening: Sunday, April 29, 2-8pm


An exhibition and event series about the 50-year-legacy of the global uprisings in 1968.

1968 was a time of explosive global protest. May ’68 might be synonymous with the general strike in France and the Situationists who inspired it, but mass uprisings and occupations that year reached every corner of the globe, with millions of people rising up to build power in pursuit of liberation on their own terms. From Italy to Mexico, from Japan to the United Kingdom, from the United States to Yugoslavia and well beyond, students and workers demonstrated in mass numbers, held strikes, and occupied their universities and factories. The state’s response to these anti-capitalist, anti-racist, anti-imperialist movements was one of brutal repression.

The composition, methods, goals, and achievements of these various movements were far from uniform, but often aligned. They centered on students and workers, rejected the old structures of unions and political parties, embraced intergroup solidarity and collective decision-making, and produced enduring art and propaganda. In studios and on the street, militants utilized time-honored methods of communication, but the generous use of screen printing by Paris’ Atelier Populaire [People’s Workshop] put the technique on the map as a key visual tool of global resistance movements.

The events of 1968 represent one of the last major instances of truly global protest. In the immediate aftermath, political structures and social relations transformed, and the uprisings’ successes and failures prompted, informed, and bolstered burgeoning feminist, LBGTQ, anti-colonial, and Black Power movements, setting the stage for the radical 1970s. Key tactics of liberation—and repression—were developed and shared in this period; fifty years on, the traces of 1968 remain visible in the battles still being fought today. 1968 speaks to the power of utopian visions to spur radical action, and to the necessity of reimagining what is possible.

Visit our website for more information.

Audio Interference Airing in Chicago

Audio Interference, our podcast that features interviews with the artists and activists who are directly involved in or influenced by social movements in our collection, is now broadcasting on WLPN-LP Lumpen Radio in Chicago! Operated by a community of curators, producers and DJs, Lumpen Radio is a project of the Public Media Institute magnifying the work of artists, musicians, activists and cultural workers. Chicago listeners can tune in to 105.5 FM every Friday at 10:30 am CST (11:30 am EST), or stream the program on their website.

You can also hear Audio Interference on WRFI 88.1FM in Ithaca, New York on Mondays and Fridays at 7am EST and on WRFU 104.5 FM in Urbana, IL on Sundays at 7:30 pm CST (8:30 pm EST) - as well as on itunes, soundcloud, and stitcher.

Watch for these other upcoming events:

From Below: Poetry and Social Justice
Thursday, May 31, 7pm


How do we make the world we want to live in? How does art help us re-imagine social and political reality? We want to answer these questions by exploring the places where poetry and political activism intersect — and, maybe just as crucially, interrogating places where they don’t. Poetry, too often, is seen by activists as a mere decoration; activist community-building, too often, is treated by poets as an aesthetic choice. We need new approaches to both meaning-making and community organizing if we want to make radical change. From Below is a poetry and discussion series that aims to get this conversation started.

Join Interference Archive for a public reading and discussion on intersections of poetry and labor organizing with Mark Nowak, members of the Worker Writers School, members of Retail Action Project, and local community college students and retail workers. The reading will be proceeded by a writing workshop for local community college students who work in retail or service industries. RSVP if this is you and you’d like to join us for the workshop.

Weed and Seed Walk with Next Epoch Seed Library
Saturday, June 2, 2pm


The Next Epoch Seed Library has reimagined your typical seed bank in the face of climate change; their library collects plant species that live in close association with humans, but that have not been planted or maintained purposefully; in short, weeds! Growing where others can’t or won’t, these plants are best adapted to live in the long shadow we throw on the landscape.

Join Interference Archive and the Next Epoch Seed Library on Saturday, June 2nd for an afternoon weed walk through Gowanus. Our neighborhood is the perfect place to explore plants growing on superfund sites and brown fields, out of the side of buildings or cracks in the sidewalk, or from other former or current sites of human infrastructure or activity. After we explore, we’ll head back to Interference Archive for a conversation about some of the material in our archival collection that helps us understand climate change and sustainability.

Interested in walking with us? RSVP to info@interferencearchive.org so we can share details on our starting point for the walk.

Radical Discipline:
Exploring the Reasons Children Are Punished, and Alternative Suggestions

Saturday, June 2, 3pm-4:30pm


Radical Playdate presents an open and personal caregiver discussion about disciplining and punishing children—is there ever a need to punish children? How were we punished as children, and what repercussions did that have on us? What are some alternative models for punishment that we can employ as radical caregivers? To frame our discussion, China Martens has generously shared an issue of her exploratory zine on radical parenting. Visit our website for more info and to download a copy of the zine.

An Agitprop Scavenger Hunt
Tuesday, June 5, 7-9pm


Our upcoming exhibition, Educate Agitate Organize!, looks at several different facets of the creation of agitprop. One thing we’re excited to explore is the way that the same symbols are reused across time and place by various movements, as acts of solidarity, as a way to create identity, and to communicate similar or disparate messages.

We want you to help us explore this! Join us on June 5 for an agitprop scavenger hunt. We’ll give you a short list of symbols to hunt for, and we’ll provide an orientation on how to find material in the archive. Then it’ll be your turn to explore and see what you can find!

This event is a great way to get to know the archive more: no experience working with archival collections is necessary, and we hope you’ll come dive in with us! Questions? Feel free to send us an email.

Our Comics Ourselves Book Club
Saturday, June 9, 12-2pm


Do you read comics all the time and have insights you want to share and discuss with a group? Are you a critical thinker, and curious about the genre of comics? Join the Our Comics, Ourselves Comic Book Club! Each month we’ll select one or two comics or graphic novels to read, and then come together for an exploratory, critical, and spirited discussion at Interference Archive.

Visit our website for more info, and to check out what we're reading this month!

Our next exhibition opens June 12:

Agitate! Educate! Organize!
Agit Prop in the 21st Century

Exhibition Dates: June 12 -- September 30, 2018
Exhibition Opening: Tuesday, June 12, 6-9pm


Our daily lives are saturated with information; we consume supposedly “neutral” media that implicitly supports existing power structures, yet we simultaneously fear “fake news” without critically analyzing the truths and biases that coexist in every message we see or hear. The reality is that all media has an agenda: for hundreds of years, people have used art, culture, graphics, performance, and design as central elements of social and political organizing across all realms of the political spectrum, to spread information and reimagine reality. This exhibition reflects historic and current uses of agitprop, or agitational propaganda, at the intersection of design and political organizing.

“Propaganda,” from the same root as “propagate,” refers to information that is shared in support of a cause. In modern times, the word propaganda has been weighted with negative connotations; we aim to reclaim the word and highlight the radical potential of propaganda to instigate change. With the Arab Spring, Occupy, Gezi Park, Black Lives Matter, #NoDAPL, and now the resistance to Donald Trump, we’ve seen a new explosion of agitprop. People of all stripes have come out into the streets, placards and banners in hand, wearing T-shirts and buttons, passing out flyers and stickers to protest social injustice. This boost of political ephemera hasn’t been created in a vacuum—since the advent of the printing press and movable type, political slogans and graphics have been part of our daily existence. Politicized communication is the constant accompaniment to people organizing to improve the lives of their families, communities, and co-workers.

Because so much attention is focused on organizing and activism, now is the perfect time to unearth and unpack the history of agitprop. Where does it come from? Who have been its major practitioners? How have the aesthetics and content evolved over time? And, how can we use it to change the world?

Interference Archive exists because people like you believe in what we do. The backbone of this community are sustainers who make a regular contribution to the archive, generally of $10 to $50 each month.

Visit our website to learn how you can become a monthly sustainer of Interference Archive!

 
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