In partnership with VOLTA NY, artnet is curating a series of conversations that bring together movers and shakers from all areas of the art world—including artists, writers, performers, and tech industry insiders—to engage in a lively salon-style discussion program. Topics range from the importance of comedy in art within an increasingly hostile political landscape, controversial changes in art education, the role of photography in documenting New York’s underground dance culture, and the evolving symbiotic relationship between Silicon Valley and the art world.
Each panel is free with admission to VOLTA: Click here to purchase tickets and enter code ARTNET25 for an exclusive 25% discount. Mark your calendars now—amid all the hubbub of art fair week, you won’t want to miss these.
Friday March 3:
4:30–6 p.m.
LEARNING TO LOVE THE STUDIO ART PHD
Higher education in the visual arts comes in for debate as artists and education activists hash out the pros and cons of not only the MFA, but the steadily growing phenomenon of the studio art PhD in an age of ballooning student debt and dropping enrollments at MFA programs nationwide.
Moderator: Brian Boucher, senior writer at artnet News
Guests: Andrew Atkinson, artist, Victoria Sobel, artist
Saturday March 4:
2–3:30 p.m.
IMPROV FOR ARTISTS
Comedy is never more important than during uncertain times. Actor, artist, and improv teacher Hollis Witherspoon opens a dialogue about the role of risk, play, and laughter in art, and learning to “follow the fear, follow the fun.”
Moderator: Hollis Witherspoon, actor, artist, and improvisor
Guests: Jill Pangallo, artist and performer; Guy Richards Smit, artist and performer; Morgan Bassichis, writer and performer
4:30–6 p.m.
SHOOT TO THRILL: PICTURING IDENTITY IN NEW YORK, 1977–NOW
Discover photographic reflections on the rare subcultures of disco, hip hop, and early house music and how they served as crucial safe spaces for LGBT-defined people and people of color. Adrian Loving and Vikki Tobak frame the conversation around these images within our urgent contemporary context.
The panel will be followed by a book signing with guest Adrian “DJ Stretch Armstrong” Bartos, author of “No Sleep: NYC Nightlife Flyers 1988–1999.”
Moderators: Adrian Loving, professor, artist, and DJ; Vikki Tobak, writer and culture critic
Guests: Bill Bernstein, artist; Janette Beckman, artist; Krista Schlueter, artist; Joe Conzo, artist
Sunday March 5:
2–3:30 p.m.
ART MEETS TECH
As collecting moves online and tech companies host more residencies for artists in an effort to tap into their creative potential, what can these two industries learn from each other? Ariel Adkins from Twitter and the person behind @artfullyawear, discusses with people working on both sides of the equation.
Moderator: Ariel Adkins, Twitter
Guests: Ashley Zelinskie, artist; Valentine Uhovski, Fashion + Art at Tumblr; Alicia Carbone, vice president of artnet Auctions