• Corky Lee’s Asian America: 50 years of Photographic Justice

    Flushing Library 41-17 Main Street, Flushing, NY, United States

    Join us for a dynamic community gathering to explore the concept of photographic justice through the late Corky Lee’s work, co-sponsored by SPCUNY alongside other community organizations.

  • What Else? A Comedy Show about the Solidarity Economy

    Maker's Ensemble 13 Grattan St. #408, Brooklyn, NY, United States

    What Else? is a series of co-created solidarity economy themed comedy shows. the shows will hold a practice of shared laughter as we answer the questions: what can the solidarity economy offer us, after and instead of capitalism, humorously, breathfully? how can humor make the solidarity economy compelling, inviting, appealing? what's funny and beautiful about it?

  • Now and Then (and Now): An Intergenerational Playlist

    The Tank 312 W 36th St, New York, NY, United States

    Faculty Fellow Ash Marinaccio and Docbloc’s Intergenerational Theatre Lab presents a lively, interactive cabaret where voices, stories, and songs across generations collide! Join us as we explore the bonds and […]

    $33.00
  • Give Light Labor Drawings, Posters, Art and Graphics from Movements Celebrating Labor History, People’s Art, and Popular Liberation

    CUNY School of Labor and Urban Studies 25 W 43rd St, New York, NY, United States

    Give Light: Labor Drawings, Posters, Art and Graphics from Movements Celebrating Labor History, People’s Art, and Popular Liberation, a 2-day event organized by SPCUNY current and former fellows Alicia Grullon (CUNY Queens College, PSC-CUNY), Ingrid Romero (Mi Casa Resiste, CUNY - Hunter, UFT), Jaclyn Reyes (CUNY Graduate Center, Little Manila Queens Bayanihan Arts), and Annabelle Heckler (CUNY Graduate Center), with several other CUNY collaborators.

  • Give Light Labor Drawings, Posters, Art and Graphics from Movements Celebrating Labor History, People’s Art, and Popular Liberation

    CUNY School of Labor and Urban Studies 25 W 43rd St, New York, NY, United States

    Give Light: Labor Drawings, Posters, Art and Graphics from Movements Celebrating Labor History, People’s Art, and Popular Liberation, a 2-day event organized by SPCUNY current and former fellows Alicia Grullon (CUNY Queens College, PSC-CUNY), Ingrid Romero (Mi Casa Resiste, CUNY - Hunter, UFT), Jaclyn Reyes (CUNY Graduate Center, Little Manila Queens Bayanihan Arts), and Annabelle Heckler (CUNY Graduate Center), with several other CUNY collaborators.

  • Blue Lightning Ghost Train: Inpatient Program 1

    Center for Performance Research

    Blue Lightning Ghost Train: Inpatient Program 1 by Kerosene Jones is the first phase of an experimental song, video, and performance cycle using archival materials to explore queer responses to harm reduction, particularly in regards to the ongoing opioid crisis.

    Free – $25
  • *77*

    *77* is a community open-mic based in the Prospect Lefferts Gardens neighborhood, in varying locations. It takes place on the 7th, 17th, and 27th of every month, and features 7 presenters on the mic for 7 minutes each. An ongoing event organized by Miles McAfee and Louis Miller, it is also being supported by Mudiwa Pettus and Greylin Jones during their SPCUNY Fellowship.

  • *77*

    *77* is a community open-mic based in the Prospect Lefferts Gardens neighborhood, in varying locations. It takes place on the 7th, 17th, and 27th of every month, and features 7 presenters on the mic for 7 minutes each. An ongoing event organized by Miles McAfee and Louis Miller, it is also being supported by Mudiwa Pettus and Greylin Jones during their SPCUNY Fellowship.

  • Elevating Black Queer Ancestors: Embodying Black Queer Pasts, Envisioning Black Queer Futures

    Lefferts Historic House 452 Flatbush Ave., Brooklyn, NY, United States

    Part of the larger Reclaiming Lyceums project (coordinated by SPCUNY Fellow Mudiwa Pettus with collaborator Greylin Jones), Elevating Black Queer Ancestors: Embodying Black Queer Pasts, Envisioning Black Queer Futures is a workshop series that explores the role of embodied experience in recovering, interpreting, and reimagining the uses of Black queer histories.