SSB Creative Partner Howl! Arts in the Economist
Yael Friedman of the Economist captures the spirit of Howl! and the East Village as SSB creative partners celebrate the opening of Howl Arts/Howl Archive.
Yael Friedman of the Economist captures the spirit of Howl! and the East Village as SSB creative partners celebrate the opening of Howl Arts/Howl Archive.
Street Heroines: The First Documentary to Capture the Collective Voices of Female Street Artists screens Friday, Oct 15 and Sat, October 16
Grand Opening of Howl! Arts/Howl! Achive Sunday, September 19th / 11 AM–6 PM. Some Serious business congratulates our partners at Howl! Arts on the launch of their new space at 250 Bowery with an exhibition that presents works by artists, writers, musicians, scenesters, performers, icons, iconoclasts, and outsiders from the permanent collection.
DREAMERS: An Outdoor Video Installation Featuring Works by 40 International Artists Projected on the Urban Landscape of New York. On the night of September 10th at 9 PM, DREAMERS, video projections by artists from around the world will light up the City. Simultaneously screened on dozens of buildings and outdoor spaces around the city they will create a dazzling moment of shared experience and community.
Cultivating The Next Generation of Storytellers & Audiences for Their Stories: Elijah McKinnon at Beastly Books
Tony De los Reyes’ work focuses on stretches of borderlands in the high and low desert between Jacumba, California and Mexicali, Mexico—relying heavily upon photographic documentation—with its flora, fauna, and geologic intensity that seems to defy the border wall which cuts through it.
Way back in the day when SSB was just starting, David Ross, who lived in front of my little house in Venice, asked if I could put up a friend who was coming to LA.
SSB is proud to support the Premiere of Alexandra Henry’s Street Heroines in celebration of the Museum of Graffiti’s exhibition of NYC artist and icon Lady Pink.
November 16 and 17, SSB and WE CAN LISTEN present TIPPING POINT, a documentary about the largest civil rights protest in U.S. history and how Portland, Oregon emerged as its epicenter. TIPPING POINT humanizes the struggle while allowing Portland’s story to serve as a mirror for all of America — the past that brought us here and the future we choose.
In a series of six interrelated short videos, Kenny Fries reads excerpts from his forthcoming book Stumbling over History: Disability and the Holocaust.