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DANCE • THEATER • ROCK & ROLL! A live remix and deconstruction of the music of David Bowie. Following two critically acclaimed runs of The Bowie Project in 2014 & 2015, Andrea Ariel Dance Theatre once again collaborated for a third production in 2017 with Austin’s premiere David Bowie tribute band “Super Creeps” and New York’s “Strike Anywhere Performance Ensemble” for this one-of-a-kind performance that takes the audience on a dance, theater and rock n’ roll journey through Bowie’s life and music. The performance will spark the curiosity of Bowie, dance, theater and music fans alike through its innovative use of a unique improvisational sign language used to spontaneously guide, shape and remix material in real time. Photos by Steve Rogers Photography.
It is more likely an aid for pilots, but when workers removed the old roof, they thought they found a long-forgotten helipad. Photo by Kirk Ross
Gentrification gives us the power to convert formerly gang infested neighborhoods into blocks of condos.
This is a close up of the garment, showing the detail. Embellishments and colours. Same filter was used.
UAL Level 4 Foundation Diploma Art and Design
"If anything is destroyed in a deconstructive reading, it is not the text, but the claim to unequivocal domination of one mode of signifying over another." - Barbara Johnson, The Critical Difference
Johnson is contrasting deconstruction with "destruction". She is saying that deconstruction should analyze the critical things that make the structure of a text conflict with its meaning and vice versa.
This photo of James Meredith, the first black man to graduate from and participate in the ceremonies at the University of Mississippi in 1962. Apart from this great milestone in black history, the image is iconic of the deconstuctionist concept that W.E.B. DuBois called a double consciousness for African Americans. Basically, it conceptualizes the dichotomy of the black mind in dealing with his Africanness and his Americanness. The photo shows a black man trying to get an education at a predominately white institution, to a degree, aiming for inclusion in a white America. However, in doing so, he still faces the reality of being a black man and must subsequently deal with that as well. African Americans are special in that they defy the meaning of the socialized concept of race as they must in a sense occupy being both African and American.