Events

Oct
19
Thu
2017
De la nourriture @ The Window
Oct 19 @ 6:00 PM – 8:30 PM
De la nourriture @ The Window | Paris | Île-de-France | France

The Window invite l’artiste et activiste Monica Jahan Bose à faire une action artistique autour du changement climatique et son impact sur l’agriculture de l’Asie du Sud. L’action se terminera par un repas collectif.

Née en Angleterre du parents bengalis, citoyenne du Bangladesh et des États-Unis, Monica Jahan Bose est une artiste, avocate et activiste. Les moyens d’expression utilisés dans son oeuvre sont nombreux: peinture, film, photo, gravure, performance, et son approche est pluridisciplinaire. Dans cet esprit, elle tente de marier l’art et la politique. Elle a eu des expositions ou a fait des installations au Brooklyn Museum, Art Asia Miami, le Twelve Gates Gallery, la Musée nationale du Bangladesh, the DUMBO Arts Festival, (e)merge art fair, SELECT Art Fair Miami, Smithsonian Asia Pacific American Center, entre autres. Actuellement, Bose vit et travaille entre Washington, D.C. et le Bangladesh. Elle a fait ses études à l’Université de Wesleyan (USA) ainsi qu’au centre artistique renommé du Santiniketan (Inde) et a reçu son diplôme en droit à l’Université de Columbia (USA). Elle a vécu à Paris de 2006–2010 et, pendant cette période, a fait des expositions personelles à la Galerie Deborah Zafman ainsi qu’à l’UNESCO, et elle fut sélectionnée pour l’exposition du Prix Marin en 2010. L’oeuvre de Bose a été reconnu par de nombreuses entités. Elle a reçu quatre bourses de la part de la DC Commission on the arts and humanities (par le biais du U.S. National endowment for the arts) et elle a crée une performance pour la Nuit blanche DC (2015). Elle est la créatrice de Storytelling with Saris, un projet artistique collaboratif mené avec son village ancestral de Kathakali au Bangladesh, mariant ensemble son histoire avec l’art contemporain pour attirer l’attention sur le fait que son héritage et son village est en danger de se noyer sous l’Océan Indien.

Dec
2
Sat
2017
Paris Salon
Dec 2 @ 5:00 PM – 7:30 PM
Paris Salon @ Washington | District of Columbia | United States

I finally unpacked my suitcases from Paris and went through the amazing images and video taken by Leena Jayaswal! I would love to share with you the wonderful experience there, which included making collaborative art with master printmaker Anju Chaudhuri as well as two installations/performances, an exhibition, a talk/book signing, and street interventions. Next month, I am off to Bangladesh to continue my work on climate change with the people of Katakhali Village on Barobaishdia Island. The community there has suffered a lot of damage from recent torrential rains. What a year we’ve had of climate disaster after disaster around the world…. But we must be resilient and work in solidarity to address this urgent problem.

Please join me on December 2, 2017 from 5 to 7:30 pm for a holiday party and salon showcasing Deux Degres, a Paris Sister Cities project funded in part by the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities, which is supported in part by the NEA. I will share photos and video and the gorgeous collaborative works made with Anju Chaudhuri, which are for sale. Other artwork is available (many at bargain prices) to raise money for the Storytelling with Saris climate advocacy project. I need to raise $10,000 to fund the next phase of the project, which includes a climate adaptation and advocacy workshop in Bangladesh, as well as filming and editing of the Rising Up to Climate Change film, which looks at climate change from the voices of ordinary people in Bangladesh and the US.
– Monica

Image: Disruption, Monica Jahan Bose and Anju Chaudhuri, woodblock and watercolor, copyright 2017.

Dec
28
Thu
2017
Rising Up Film Screening and Fundraiser @ BBF Center (next to former German Embassy)
Dec 28 @ 5:30 PM – 7:00 PM
Rising Up Film Screening and Fundraiser @ BBF Center (next to former German Embassy)  | Dhaka | Dhaka Division | Bangladesh

Women in Leadership is pleased to invite you to a sample film screening and the launch of a fundraising drive for the future film Rising Up to Climate Change: Storytelling with Saris. The film looks at the impact of climate change on women from Katakhali Village on the island of Barobaishdia in Patuakhali District through the lens of the Storytelling with Saris climate art advocacy project. It also follows the stories of Americans and Europeans who are making climate pledges on saris to reduce their carbon footprint. Unless the world takes immediate action, Bangladesh could lose 20% of its land, displacing 30 million people. Women disproportionately suffer the impacts of climate change because of cultural norms and the inequitable distribution of resources and power, especially in developing countries. Women’s leadership is also critical to addressing climate.
The all-woman film team includes Monica Jahan Bose, Leena Jayaswal, Nandita Ahmed, Shefali Akhter Shetu, and Executive Producer Preema Nazia Andaleeb, as well as the women of the Katakhali Cooperative.

Bangladeshi-American artist Monica Jahan Bose and Dhaka-based cinematographer Shefali Akhter Shetu are going back to Katakhali Village, Barobaishdia Island, Bangladesh on December 31 for eight days of advocacy, training, art, and photography and filming. We are purchasing several small cameras and training a number of women to self-document with film their lives and climate events such as extreme storms, cyclones, untimely rains, drought, and resulting damage and effects. We will be doing climate advocacy writing workshops with the women of the Katakhali Cooperative so that they can write to their local and central government representatives to seek help in adapting to climate change, such as affordable access to salt-resistant varieties of rice, and maintenance and repairs of the cyclone shelter and the levy (to reduce storm surge). There will also be climate knowledge sharing and resilience workshops to assess whether climate adaptive farming techniques are working, and to test the drinking water supply for salt, a common public health problem in coastal areas. All of this will be documented in film to tell the story of Bangladesh’s brave fight against climate change. The goal is to empower individuals and communities around the world to take action to save our planet from climate change.

Please join us for a screening of a 15 minute sample of the film followed by discussion. We are looking for partners to finish this important project highlighting women’s stories and their leadership in addressing climate change. Thank you so much for your support and time.

For confirming your participation, please fill up this form – https://goo.gl/forms/SgGA21aWwMhj94xY2

__________
The event will be hosted by Women in Leadership and its President, Preema Nazia Andaleeb. Based in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Andaleeb is one of Bangladesh’s most recognized contemporary artists. She works in painting, video, and performance and has exhibited widely in Bangladesh and internationally. She is the Director and Creative Editor of Bangladesh Brand Forum. She is the President of Women in Leadership, which seeks to inspire women’s leadership in the business and creative sectors of Bangladesh. In 2014, she received the prestigious Ananya Award for outstanding woman artist in Bangladesh. She is an Executive Producer of the Rising Up to Climate Change film.

Monica Jahan Bose is a Bangladeshi-American artist, lawyer, and activist whose work spans performance, painting, film, photography, printmaking, and interdisciplinary projects. As an artist originating from Katakhali, Bangladesh, Monica brings her history into contemporary art, translating these experiences into immersive work. She is the creator of STORYTELLING WITH SARIS, a long-term collaborative art and advocacy project, which has been featured around the world, including recent exhibitions and art actions in Paris, Hawaii, and Washington DC. In 2015, Bose partnered with the International Centre on Climate Change and Development to create a climate awareness workshop in Katakhali, Bangladesh. Alongside her art practice, she practiced and taught environmental and human rights law for many years. Monica has received numerous commissions and awards for her interdisciplinary art work.

For more information and bios of the full team see http://storytellingwithsaris.com/bios/

Dec
31
Sun
2017
Katakhali Village art actions
Dec 31 2017 @ 3:37 AM – Jan 11 2018 @ 4:37 AM
Katakhali Village art actions

We will be in Bangladesh working on the RISING UP TO CLIMATE CHANGE: STORYTELLING WITH SARIS film and doing more arts advocacy work with the coastal women of Bangladesh in Katakhali Village, Patuakhali District.

Photo exhibition and film screening: December 31, 2017
Photo self-documentation workshop: January 2, 4, and 5, 2018
Performance: January 6, 2018

Jan
19
Fri
2018
Directed Actions Discussion & Projections @ Trinidad Theatre
Jan 19 @ 7:30 PM – 9:00 PM
Directed Actions Discussion & Projections @ Trinidad Theatre | Washington | District of Columbia | United States

Please join us at DIRECTED ACTIONS on Friday, January 19 @ 7:30 pm at the Logan Fringe Arts Space, Trinidad Theatre, 1358 Florida Ave, NE, Washington DC 20002. Monica Jahan Bose will be in conversation with two exceptional artists/activists, Robin Bell and Holly Bass. Robin will be doing some cool projections and there will be live music by Ted Zook. Tickets are $10. Robin Bell has been doing amazing work projecting on buildings since the elections — check out this link to his brilliant projections on the EPA.

Feb
15
Thu
2018
Fundraiser for Rising Up Film @ EMK Center
Feb 15 @ 6:30 PM – 8:00 PM
Fundraiser for Rising Up Film @ EMK Center | Dhaka | Dhaka Division | Bangladesh

The EMK Center is pleased to invite you to a fundraiser and screening for the future film Rising Up to Climate Change: Storytelling with Saris. The film looks at the impact of climate change on women from Katakhali Village on the island of Barobaishdia in Patuakhali District through the lens of the Storytelling with Saris climate art advocacy project. It also follows the stories of Americans and Europeans who are making climate pledges on saris to reduce their carbon footprint. Unless the world takes immediate action, Bangladesh could lose 20% of its land, displacing 30 million people. Women disproportionately suffer the impacts of climate change because of cultural norms and the inequitable distribution of resources and power, especially in developing countries. Women’s leadership is also critical to addressing climate.

The all-woman film team includes Monica Jahan Bose, Leena Jayaswal, Nandita Ahmed, Shefali Akter Shetu, Dawne Langford, and Executive Producer Preema Nazia Andaleeb, as well as the women of the Katakhali Cooperative.

Bangladeshi-American artist Monica Jahan Bose has been working on the film since 2013, and Dhaka-based cinematographer Shefali Akhter Shetu joined the team in 2015. The women in the Katakhali community are also being provided several small cameras and training to self-document with film their lives and climate events such as extreme storms, cyclones, untimely rains, drought, and resulting damage and effects. The goal of the film is to empower individuals and communities around the world to take action to save Bangladesh and our entire planet from climate change.

Please join us for a screening of a 15 minute sample of the film followed by discussion. We are looking for partners to finish this important project highlighting women’s stories and their leadership in addressing climate change. Shefali Akhter Shetu will be present in person along with writer and activist Noorjahan Bose, Monica’s mother. Monica will join via Skype.

_________
Monica Jahan Bose is a Bangladeshi-American artist, lawyer, and activist whose work spans performance, painting, film, photography, printmaking, and interdisciplinary projects. As an artist originating from Katakhali, Bangladesh, Monica brings her history into contemporary art, translating these experiences into immersive work. She is the creator of STORYTELLING WITH SARIS, a long-term collaborative art and advocacy project, which has been featured around the world, including recent exhibitions and art actions in Paris, Hawaii, and Washington DC. In 2015, Bose partnered with the International Centre on Climate Change and Development to create a climate awareness workshop in Katakhali, Bangladesh. Alongside her art practice, she practiced and taught environmental and human rights law for many years. Monica has received numerous commissions and awards for her interdisciplinary art work.

Shefali Akter Shetu founded and manages Aperture, Ltd. in the roles of Managing Director, Photographer and Documentary Filmmaker. Since 1999, she has edited video and photography for Drik, SARPV, Panos Bangladesh, and World View International Foundation. In 2005, Shetu was given the Meena Media Award for the best documentary from UNICEF. She was also nominated for the best children’s film at Oberhausen Film Festival in 2004 for “One Lokman”, a documentary about a child street singer. In 2007-2008, she worked in India for DrikIndia through a professional skill sharing exchange program by Fredkorpset. Born in Comilla, Bangladesh, she now lives and works in Dhaka, Bangladesh. In December 2015, she joined the Storytelling with Saris team as cinematographer and editor.

For more information and bios of the full team see http://storytellingwithsaris.com/bios/

Feb
28
Wed
2018
Empowerment Workshops in Anacostia @ Anacostia River
Feb 28 @ 9:30 AM – 11:30 AM
Empowerment Workshops in Anacostia @ Anacostia River | Washington | District of Columbia | United States

Monica Jahan Bose will be leading a series of empowerment workshops with women at a shelter in Anacostia. The women are learning about climate change and making a collaborative sari with woodblock, writing, and painting.

This project is funded by the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities, which is supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts.

Photo: Jaclyn Merica.

Mar
31
Sat
2018
Weather the Storm @ Civilian Art Projects
Mar 31 @ 7:00 PM – Apr 21 @ 5:22 PM
Weather the Storm @ Civilian Art Projects | Washington | District of Columbia | United States

Weather the Storm

Civilian Art Projects
March 31- April 21, 2018
Opening reception: Saturday, March 31 @ 7-9 pm
Sari workshop and sing-a-long: Saturday, April 14 @ 3 pm
Closing and artist’s talk: Saturday, April 21 @ 3 pm

“Weather the Storm” centers on a series of performances and climate art actions that Monica Jahan Bose has led since November 2016. The title of the show derives from a Bengali song that the artist has been singing in her performances, lines from which appear in her paintings. She has taken Tagore’s Kharobayu Boye Bege (A Strong Wind Is Blowing) and replaced “O boatman” with “O Woman” to create a feminist song about working together to row a boat to shore during a storm. Over several years, she has collaborated with homeless women from Calvary Women’s Services in Anacostia as well as women from One Billion Rising, a global platform to end violence against women, and the women of her ancestral village, Katakhali Village, Barobaishdia Island, Bangladesh. Bose’s performances, paintings, videos, works on paper, and saris explore themes of empowerment, environment, mythology, and community.

A Bangladeshi-American artist and lawyer who has lived in seven countries, Bose uses Bengali and English text and women’s writing as integral elements in her work, highlighting multilingualism and women’s agency and literacy. Bose has long used the sari — 18 feet of unstitched handwoven fabric — to represent women’s lives, both in her paintings and her ongoing social practice project Storytelling with Saris.

She has started using the coconut as a symbol of climate resilience. Each of her recent performances about climate change — in Miami, Washington DC, Honolulu, Paris, and Katakhali Village, Bangladesh — involved months of planning to create a woman-centered community, which comes together to collect dozens of coconuts to build a raft, sew saris together to make a massive sari, write carbon reduction pledges on saris, or grow and plant a coconut tree.

The exhibition is accompanied by a new publication, Rising Up to Climate Change: Storytelling with Saris, and is funded in part by a grant from the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities, which is supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts.

Monica Jahan Bose has exhibited her work and performed extensively in the US and internationally. Her ongoing collaborative project Storytelling with Saris has been featured in numerous publications and TV and radio programs. Her work has been featured in the Miami Herald, the Washington Post, Art Asia Pacific, the Milwaukee Sentinel, the Honolulu Star Advertiser, the Japan Times, and all major newspapers in Bangladesh. She recently created a large-scale installation and performance for the Smithsonian Asia Pacific American Center’s Ae Kai Culture Lab in Honolulu. She will travel to Athens in July for a solo exhibition in connection with the UNESCO World Book Capital celebration. She has a B.A. in the practice of art (painting) from Wesleyan University, a post-graduate diploma in art from Santiniketan, India, and a J.D. from Columbia Law School.

Gallery hours: Saturdays from noon to 6 pm and by appointment.

May
18
Fri
2018
Screening of “Change Is Coming” film @ Anacostia Arts Center
May 18 @ 3:30 PM – 6:00 PM

Please join us at the Black Box Theatre of the Anacostia Arts Center for a screening of the performance film from Change Is Coming, a performance on the Anacostia River with the women of Calvary Women’s Services, who have been involved with the Storytelling with Saris project since 2015. The film is 20 minutes in duration and we will be screening it several times from 3:30 to 6:00 pm, so please pop in even if you are late. We will also be making a collaborative climate pledge sari with woodblock and writing. Filmmakers Monica Jahan Bose and Leena Jayaswal will be present.

We will also have a book signing for the new book, Rising Up to Climate Change: Storytelling with Saris, which is available for $20.

The public screening will be preceded by a private screening and discussion with the women of Calvary (2:30 to 3:30 pm).

Many thanks to Camille Kashaka and the Anacostia Arts Center for making this event possible and for hosting the 2015 show “Climate and Actions.” This film, performance and screening are supported by a grant from the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities, funded in part by the National Endowment for the Arts.

Cinematography: Leena Jayaswal.
Editor: Dawne Langford.

Photo credit: Phyllis Kimmel.

Jul
5
Thu
2018
Athens Show “Footprint – Apotipoma” @ Serafio - Sports, Culture and Innovation Center
Jul 5 @ 6:00 PM – Jul 18 @ 9:00 PM
Athens Show "Footprint - Apotipoma" @ Serafio - Sports, Culture and Innovation Center | Athina | Greece

Dates: July 5 – 19, 2018
Opening reception with workshop: July 6, 2018 @ 7 pm
Closing and performance: July 18, 2018 @ 7 pm.
Gallery hours: Weekdays 10-6 pm; Saturdays 10-4 pm.

We have received an invitation from the Mayor’s Office in Athens to present an exhibition titled “Footprint-Apotipoma.” The show will take place in the galleries of the new Serafio Sports, Culture and Innovation Center in the heart of Athens during the important UNESCO World Book Capital 2018 event. The exhibition is curated and organized by Vasia Deliyianni.

“Footprint- Apotipoma” is a large-scale site specific exhibition, workshops, dialogue, and performance
using saris, printmaking and video on the issues of climate change and migration. “Footprint” uses the arts to activate awareness about climate change and trigger people to reduce their carbon footprint and to build global trans-border communities through collaboration and conversation between people in Washington DC and its sister city of Athens. The project collaborates with artists, curators, writers, poets, migrants, and non-artists in Athens. A special workshop with refugee women will take place on July 12 from 6 – 9 pm.

The show is supported in part by a generous grant from the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities, which is funded in part by the National Endowment for the Arts. We are grateful to the Mayor’s Office in Athens for its support as well.

Link to Press Release.
Link to Invitation.
Link to Curatorial essay (Greek) by Vasia Deliyianni