Ciarrocchi House

Quienes somos: Tour a pie por los valores - abril

Norman E de la Y. Alexander Center for Jewish Life se enorgullece de presentar Quiénes somos: Recorrido a pie por los valores, mostrando artistas locales que representan un valor humanitario diferente cada mes.

Es nuestro objetivo, en medio de una realidad COVID-19, promover a los artistas locales y ofrecer a la comunidad del norte de Manhattan acceso al arte. Aunque normalmente nos gustaría que este arte se mostrara en las paredes de la Y, con las limitaciones actuales relacionadas con COVID, Nuestro objetivo es llevar a nuestros artistas locales a las calles de nuestra comunidad..

abril: Remembranza

Still Image from Workshop performance of Site: Yizkor Sichow, Poland

Still Image from the Video Installation Site: Yizkor, Incubated by LABA: A Laboratory for Jewish Culture, the Millay Colony and the MacDowell Colony

By Maya Ciarrocchi
mayaciarrocchi.com | instagram.com/mayaciarrocchi

Maya Ciarrocchi is a New York-based interdisciplinary artist working across media in drawing, printmaking, performance, video, installation, and social practice. Her work has been exhibited nationally and internationally, and she has received residencies and fellowships from the Bronx Museum of the Arts (AIM), LABA: a Laboratory for Jewish Culture, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council (Swing Space), MacDowell, Millay Colony, New York Artists Equity, UCross, and Wave Hill (Winter Workspace). She received a Foundation for Contemporary Arts Emergency Grant, a Film/Video Grant from The Jerome Foundation, and funding from The Puffin Foundation. In addition to her studio practice, Ciarrocchi has created award winning projection design for dance and theater including the TONY award winning Broadway musicalThe Band’s Visit. Ciarrocchi is the recipient of a 2021 grant from the Trust for Mutual Understanding and a Bronx Council on the Arts 2020 BRIO Award winner.

Curator’s Note By Gal Cohen
galcohenart.com  |  instagram.com/galshugon 

Maya Ciarrocchi’s art practice speaks strongly to the value of Remembrance. Through personal narrative, research-based storytelling, and embodied mapmaking, Ciarrocchi’s works recreate access to the stories of perished communities and demolished places, thus exploring the physical and emotional manifestation of loss. This still image was captured from an in-process interdisciplinary performance work: Site: Yizkor, commemorating the Jewish communities who perished during the Holocaust. Among the source material included, there are architectural renderings of demolished buildings, memory maps of vanished places and figures, and prose remembrances obtained from historical Yizkor books. This month, when Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day is observed, Maya’s work resonates and invites us to dive into the remembrance of these lost communities.

Remembranza

Por el rabino Ari Perten, Norman E. Director del Centro Alexander para la Vida Judía

Renee Descartes famously opined, I think, therefore I am. Without taking too many liberties, we might reconstruct this statement to I remember, therefore I am, for who are we if not individuals built by our experiences. Indeed memory is so prized that we often utilize a multiplicity of tools to help us remember that which we deem important. These tools range from family stories passed down from generation to generation to the appointments booked on a google calendar to a social media reminder of a friend’s birthday. Memory is important and we regularly hold ourselves accountable towards remembering our past and the future events to which we’ve made obligations. Memory can be multi-sensory. The taste of a food, notes of music, and whiffs of scent can transport us to a distant past that suddenly becomes very alive in the moment.

Yet memory can also be false as well. How accurately is the past rememberedWhose truth is represented in this memory? Might there be other truths that distort or even change the event once remembered with such clarity. Such thinking opens up the possibility that the reality of the past might not be so rigid. We craft memories about what is important. Perhaps these memories speak more towards the person we aspire to become more so than the our recollected experiences.

Sobre la Y
Establecido en 1917, el YM&YWHA de Washington Heights & En madera (ellos) es el principal centro comunitario judío del norte de Manhattan, que atiende a un grupo étnico y socioeconómico diverso, mejorando la calidad de vida de personas de todas las edades a través de servicios sociales críticos y programas innovadores en salud., bienestar, educación, y justicia social, mientras promueve la diversidad y la inclusión, y cuidando a los necesitados.

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