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This Side of Salina

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison Street, Syracuse 
October 10 – December 21, 2024

Urban Video Project (UVP), a program of Light Work in partnership with the Everson Museum of Art and Onondaga County, is an outdoor architectural projection venue dedicated to the public presentation of film, video and moving image arts. UVP is one of few projects in the United States dedicated to ongoing public projections and adds a new chapter to Central New York’s legacy as one of the birthplaces of video art using cutting-edge technology to bring art of the highest caliber to Syracuse, New York.

Light Work UVP centers on a large-scale architectural projection onto the famous Everson Museum building designed by I.M. Pei. The projection can be viewed from the adjacent plaza. The Everson Museum is located in downtown Syracuse at 401 Harrison Street at the corner of Harrison and South State Streets, across from the War Memorial and OnCenter.

The Urban Video Project projection runs from dusk to 11pm, Thursday through Saturday during exhibition dates.


This Side of Salina

HD video and stereo sound
Duration: 12 min
2024

Four Black women from the city of Syracuse, New York, reflect on sexuality, youthful regret, emotional vulnerability, raising a daughter, and working in reproductive health services. In a series of their own choreographed vignettes, each woman thoughtfully engages with the neighborhoods she’s known all of her life. Two performers flip through classic 1960s titles by Black authors in a bookstore. Others sit in a hat store finding time to pour into each other, as mentors and confidantes. These are businesses that are owned by local Black women, and they know it. In Brady Market, a community grocery, they playfully shop and chat with ease and confidence. They dance to their own rhythms in the outdoor plaza of the Everson Museum of Art. Together they look down at the city from its highest point and ponder how to battle the inequities of the place that they call home.

Commissioned by Light Work as part of the UVP Residential Media Commission program

CREDITS 

Featuring: J’Viona Baker, Vernahia Davis, Ja’Rhea Dixon, Angela Stroman
Director: Lynne Sachs
Cinematographers: Anneka Herre, Lynne Sachs, Zelikha Zohra Shoja, Monae Kyhara Sims
Editor: G. Anthony Svatek 
Production support: Minnie S. McMillian, Devon Narine Singh, Hilary Warner
Additional recording: Saptarshi Lahiri
Sound Design: Kevin T. Allen

In consultation with Anneka Herre, Program Director of Light Work | Urban Video Project, Tiffany Lloyd, Director of Women’s Health and Empowerment, Allyn Foundation Campaign Manager, Layla’s Got You

Shot on location in Syracuse, New York at Black Citizens BrigadeBrady MarketThe Classic Bop Hat BoutiqueEverson Museum of Art Community Plaza, and Upper Onondaga Park

Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhibition of This Side of Salina exploring reproductive justice from October 10 – December 21 at the architectural projection venue on the Everson Museum facade in downtown Syracuse.

Previous UVP exhibitions include:

Crystal Z Campbell: Makahiya

Theo Cuthand: Extractions

Sofía Gallisá Muriente: Lluvia con Nieve (Rain with Snow)

Colectivo Los Ingrávidos: The Battle Trilogy

Suneil Sanzgiri: Golden Jubilee

Hito Steyerl: Strike

Ephraim Asili: Fluid Frontiers

Lawrence Abu Hamdan: Walled Unwalled

HOLD/RELEASE: Jennifer Reeder | Kelly Sears | Lauren Wolkstein

YOKO ONO: REMEMBERING THE FUTURE

Christopher Harris: Extended Forecast

Ben Russell: Good Luck (Portraits)

Kevin Jerome Everson: Grand Finale

Deborah Stratman: Xenoi

Apichatpong Weerasethakul: Fireworks (Archives)

Between Species: Sam Easterson | Leslie Thornton | Robert Todd | Maria Whiteman

Lucien Castaing-Taylor & Véréna Paravel: Leviathan

The Otolith Group: Anathema

Cauleen Smith:Crow Requiem

Isaac Julien: Western Union: Small Boats (The Leopard)

Ann Hamilton: table

Phil Solomon: Still Raining, Still Dreaming

Dani (Leventhal) ReStack: Platonic

Psychic Geographies: Basma Alsharif | Jacqueline Goss | Mariam Ghani | Michael Robinson | Sayler/Morris

Bill Viola: Quintet of the Astonished

This Side of Salina

This Side of Salina

HD video and stereo sound
Duration: 12 min
2024

Four Black women from the city of Syracuse, New York, reflect on sexuality, youthful regret, emotional vulnerability, raising a daughter, and working in reproductive health services. In a series of their own choreographed vignettes, each woman thoughtfully engages with the neighborhoods she’s known all of her life. Two performers flip through classic 1960s titles by Black authors in a bookstore. Others sit in a hat store finding time to pour into each other, as mentors and confidantes. These are businesses that are owned by local Black women, and they know it. In Brady Market, a community grocery, they playfully shop and chat with ease and confidence. They dance to their own rhythms in the outdoor plaza of the Everson Museum of Art. Together they look down at the city from its highest point and ponder how to battle the inequities of the place that they call home.

Commissioned as a large-scale architectural projection by Light Work as part of the UVP Residential Media Commission program, supported by New York State Council for the Arts. The installation runs from October 10 – December 21, 2024.

CREDITS 

Featuring: J’Viona Baker, Vernahia Davis, Ja’Rhea Dixon, Angela Stroman
Director: Lynne Sachs
Cinematographers: Anneka Herre, Lynne Sachs, Zelikha Zohra Shoja, Monae Kyhara Sims
Editor: G. Anthony Svatek 
Production support: Minnie S. McMillian, Devon Narine Singh, Hilary Warner
Additional recording: Saptarshi Lahiri
Sound Design: Kevin T. Allen

In consultation with Anneka Herre, Program Director of Light Work | Urban Video Project, Tiffany Lloyd, Director of Women’s Health and Empowerment, Allyn Foundation Campaign Manager, Layla’s Got You

Shot on location in Syracuse, New York at Black Citizens BrigadeBrady MarketThe Classic Bop Hat BoutiqueEverson Museum of Art Community Plaza, and Upper Onondaga Park

Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhibition of This Side of Salina exploring reproductive justice from October 10 – December 21 at the architectural projection venue on the Everson Museum facade in downtown Syracuse.

Light Work | Lynne Sachs: This Side of Salina

https://www.lightwork.org/archive/lynne-sachs-new-work/

October 10 – December 21, 2024
Thursday – Saturday, dusk – 11pm
Everson Museum Plaza
401 Harrison Street, Syracuse NY

Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhibition of This Side of Salina by filmmaker Lynne Sachs exploring reproductive justice from October 12 – December 21 at our architectural projection venue on the Everson Museum facade in downtown Syracuse.

In conjunction with the exhibition, Sachs will be present for the special event Communities of Care: Documenting Reproductive Justice in a Post-Roe Country in Watson Theater at Light Work (on the SU campus) on Thursday, October 17 at 5:30pm.


This Side of Salina
HD video and stereo sound
Duration: 11:50
2024

Four Black women from the gritty and tenacious city of Syracuse, New York, reflect on sexuality, youthful regret, emotional vulnerability, raising a daughter, and working in reproductive health services. In a series of their own choreographed vignettes, each woman thoughtfully engages with the neighborhoods she’s known all of her life. Two performers flip through classic 1960s titles by Black authors in a bookstore. Others sit in a hat store finding time to pour into each other, as mentors and confidantes. These are businesses that are owned by local Black women, and they know it. In Brady Market, a community grocery, they playfully shop and chat with ease and confidence. They dance to their own rhythms in the outdoor plaza of the Everson Museum of Art. Together they look down at the city from its highest point and ponder how to battle the inequities of the place that they call home.

Commissioned by Light Work as part of the UVP Residential Media Commission program

CREDITS 

Featuring: J’Viona Baker, Vernahia Davis, Ja’Rhea Dixon, Angela Stroman

Director: Lynne Sachs

Cinematographers: Anneka Herre, Lynne Sachs, Zelikha Zohra Shoja, Monae Kyhara Sims

Editor: G. Anthony Svatek 

Production support: Minnie S. McMillian, Devon Narine Singh, Hilary Warner

Additional recording: Saptarshi Lahiri

Sound Design: Kevin T. Allen

In consultation with Tiffany Lloyd, Director of Women’s Health and Empowerment, Allyn Foundation Campaign Manager, Layla’s Got You

Shot on location in Syracuse, New York at Black Citizens BrigadeBrady MarketThe Classic Bop Hat BoutiqueEverson Museum of Art Community Plaza, and Upper Onondaga Park

This Side of Salina / Light Work Urban Video Project Residential Commission

Contractions Still, Lynne Sachs

https://www.lightwork.org/archive/lynne-sachs/

Light Work UVP is delighted to host filmmaker Lynne Sachs for a the UVP Residential Commission in April 2024. Sachs will be working on a project with the working title This Side of Salina. To create this piece, Sachs plans to work with local artists, reproductive care providers, and activists to explore issues of reproductive justice and bodily autonomy following the overturning of Roe v. Wade through the lens of our region’s important history in women’s rights.

This project is part of a larger effort in which Sachs is involved called The Abortion Clinic Film Collective, a diverse group of artists from around the country who came together in the wake of the Dobbs decision. Each has a relationship with a place where laws governing reproductive care have changed significantly since the overturning of Roe.

Lynne Sachs is an American experimental filmmaker and poet based in Brooklyn, New York. Working from a feminist perspective, she has created cinematic works that defy genre through the use of hybrid forms, incorporating elements of documentary, performance, and collage into self-reflexive explorations of broader historical experience. Her films have screened at the Museum of Modern Art, Tate Modern, Wexner Center for the Arts, and festivals such as New York Film Festival, Oberhausen Int’l Short Film Festival, Punto de Vista, Sundance, Viennale and Doclisboa. Retrospectives of her work have been presented at Museum of the Moving Image, Sheffield Doc/Fest, Cork Film Festival, Havana Film Festival, among others.  In 2021, both Edison Film Festival and Prismatic Ground Film Festival at the Maysles Documentary Center gave her awards for her lifetime achievements in the experimental and documentary fields. In 2014, she received a Guggenheim Fellowship in the Creative Arts. In 2019, Tender Buttons Press published her first book of poetry, “Year by Year Poems”. Her film catalogue is represented in North America by Canyon Cinema and the Filmmaker’s Cooperative with selected features at Cinema Guild and Icarus Films.

Produced with guidance from:

Anneka Herre

Program Director
Light Work | Urban Video Project

Lecturer
Department of Film and Media Arts
College of Visual and Performing Arts
Syracuse University

Lynne Sachs’ This Side of Salina awarded NYSCA Support for Artists grant / Light Work – Urban Video Project

Lynne Sachs Awarded a New York State Council on the Arts Support for Artists Grant.

Brooklyn, NY – Lynne Sachs received a Support for Artists grant
from the New York State Council on the Arts (NYSCA) to support her creative
work. Sponsored by Urban Video Project, this award will fund This Side of Salina.
Through New York State’s continued investment in arts and culture, NYSCA has
awarded over $80 million since Spring 2023 to over 1,500 artists and organizations
across the state.

Governor Kathy Hochul said, “Research confirms what we’ve always known here in
New York: arts and culture are a powerhouse, with a staggering return on investment
for our economy and our communities. Nonprofit arts and culture organizations and their
audiences generated $151.7 billion in economic activity nationwide in 2022 and New
York’s unparalleled arts and culture sector is leading the way to benefit our residents,
our students and our visitors every day. I commend these grantees on their
achievements and look forward to their contributions in the coming year.”
NYSCA Chair Katherine Nicholls added, “Thanks to the unwavering support of
Governor Hochul and our Legislature, NYSCA is so proud to support the work of
organizations and artists from all across New York. Spanning the entire breadth of the
arts and culture sector – from world-renowned performers to after-school programs,
from long established museums to community arts collectives – these organizations and
artists together are a powerful driver of health, tourism, economy and education for our
residents and visitors. On behalf of Council and staff, congratulations to Lynne Sachs and thank you for your perseverance, your creativity and your tireless service to
New York State.”

About the New York State Council on the Arts
The mission of the New York State Council on the Arts is to foster and advance the full
breadth of New York State’s arts, culture, and creativity for all. To support the ongoing
recovery of the arts across New York State, the Council on the Arts will award $127
million in FY 2024. The Council on the Arts further advances New York’s creative
culture by convening leaders in the field and providing organizational and professional
development opportunities and informational resources. Created by Governor Nelson
Rockefeller in 1960 and continued with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the
New York State Legislature, the Council is an agency that is part of the Executive
Branch.


Lynne’s Project: This Side of Salina

Almost 200 years ago,  a group of Central New York women gathered together to voice their opposition to the fact that women in the United States had no legal identity separate from their husbands, were unable to sign contracts, vote, own property, obtain access to education, or gain custody of their children after divorce.  Ever since those pivotal conversations were held at the first women’s rights convention in Seneca Falls, New York in 1848, women have been slowly but surely claiming their place in society in terms of their ability to make their own decisions about their own lives.  This sense of progress came to an abrupt ending on June 24, 2022, when the U.S. Supreme Court made a landmark decision which held that the Constitution does not confer a right to abortion.  Throughout the country, women were told that they no longer had control of their own bodies.

I come to the topic of abortion fully aware of its volatile place in our country’s story. Tensions between the role of the state and bodily freedom go back to the very earliest days of our nation’s history.  Just as the 1619 Project  reignited the conversation around race and the pivotal place of slavery in this country’s narrative in 2020, newly charged debates around the legality of abortion force us to recognize the precarious relationship that women in this country have to their own bodies.

With the support of Light Work through their Urban Video Project, I will create “This Side of Salina, a 15-minute film and two associated live performances which will bring people with uteruses and their allies together in an area of New York State that has long been known as a hotbed for feminist outrage and action.  In collaboration with a range of organizations from Syracuse and neighboring towns, I will work with approximately 20 experienced and emerging artists as well as other interested participants.  I will produce, photograph and record movements, gestures and spoken word poetry that emerge from our discussions around this disturbing and far-reaching shift in American society.  Each of us will come to this moment as a witness to a problematic moment in our collective history.

My creative process for “This Side of Salina” will include connecting with organizations such as the Syracuse Community Choir and Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center as well as student, art, religious, and activist groups in the area.  In addition, as part of my research, I plan to reach out to Syracuse-based artists and performers, including poet and chant performance artist Amarachi Attamah, as well as Syracuse performance and conceptual artist Sayward Schoonmaker, whose recent piece “Majority Opinion (Presented from the Majority Perspective)” uses the Supreme Court’s Majority Opinion from the Dobbs case as source material for a verbatim documentary performance.

On June 24, 2023, the one-year anniversary of the Dobbs decision, I returned to my own hometown of Memphis, Tennessee to produce one section of a collaborative film project about abortion clinics across the country closing their doors in the wake of the overturning of Roe v Wade. In “This Side of Salina”, I will further develop the aesthetic experimentation I began in this collaborative project. I am including five images from this project in my proposal. In Syracuse, I will photograph all of the participants either from behind, out-of-focus or in silhouette, which will allow them to express their responses to the issues we are exploring in a more physical, less traditionally “dramatic” form. There will be no faces in this film. In this way, our participants – whether they are new to this kind of improvisational work or veterans from the stage or screen –  will work quasi-anonymously, as  performers articulating a collective yet diverse point-of-view.

During my residency in Syracuse, I will also draw from my experience as a poet and a filmmaker with years of experience working with groups in both of these art forms, most recently at the Flowchart Foundation and the Poetry Society of America (both in New York State). I will ask my performers/ participants to write short texts that we will then shape into song. By working with local choral groups, we will bring these words into the film as a whole, emphasizing the sensation of “a loud whisper” which will allow listeners to hear distinctive articulations as well as a collective, musical breath.  In this context, I would very much like to bring in internationally recognized singers Pamela Z and Josephine Foster (either in person or through video conference) to help us expand our relationship to the musical potential of voice and text. I believe that the vocal nature of this work will result in an aural experience that will be extremely moving for spectators (passers-by or attentive viewers) watching the film outside the Everson Museum.

My own interdisciplinary engagement with film and live performance includes two distinct projects created in New York City. In “Your Day is My Night” (2011 -2013), I blended autobiographical monologues, intimate conversations, and staged performances to explore the lives of Chinese immigrants sharing a “shift-bed” apartment in the heart of Chinatown. Working with seven performers over two years, we presented our piece in theaters and community centers in Manhattan and Brooklyn.  In “Every Fold Matters” (a live performance with film presented from 2015 -2018) and later “The Washing Society” (a 45 min. film, 2018), I explored the charged, intimate space of the neighborhood laundromat by bringing together the people who work there with professional actors. Both of these projects are included as work samples in this proposal.

The final version of “This Side of Salina” will be a film and two live performances. I will direct both the film and the live component of this project. The film itself will be exhibited over three to four months during the 2024-25 program year as part of the Urban Video Project’s on-going architectural projection program.  The two performances will also occur outside the museum in conjunction with the film screening.

A few weeks ago, I shot outside a former abortion clinic in Tennessee, one of the states in the US where abortion is no longer legal for ANY reason. I’ve been making films for three decades.  I do not exaggerate when I say that this was probably the riskiest, most vulnerable film shoot I have ever directed.  We had sixteen participants : 12 young women of child-bearing age, one older woman and two men.    Everyone knew that it was potentially dangerous to make a film about abortion outside a building where these services had once been available but now are not.  I did not tell my participants where we would be shooting until two days before our production date. We had several volunteer marshals to help with security, waiting in their cars or behind windows in nearby buildings in case anything happened. As precarious as we all felt at the time, standing in the scorching summer heat in medical gowns performing before a large camera, we were all excited, nervous and absolutely committed.  While the stakes are not as precarious in New York, the issues resonate just as much. In Syracuse at the Everson Museum, I will work on these same issues, recognizing the long activist history of the region but also finding new ways to address the disturbing expansion of state control on women and their bodies.