
"The performer Dynasty Handbag (aka Jibz Cameron) arrived in San Francisco from LA with a disclaimer - "I thought about canceling this show" - and proceeded to shapeshift her way through a night of exceedingly silly and subversive comedy numbers, the sold-out crowd cackling appreciatively. The darker realities of our climate crisis were never far away (in " Vat Do You Vahnt For Bwekfas? " a seemingly endless list of breakfast options are turned down until all choices disappear),"
"At SF State, local artist Liz Hernández launched The Office for the Studio of the Ordinary, a residency-turned-research institution. The artist and over 150 students joined in what she called an "artistic conspiracy," celebrating everyday moments and hidden narratives across campus. The culminating exhibition included (among many other creative exercises) black-and-white photographs of the team in action, a tower of ceramic trophies, an illustrated myth of campus resistance and animal liberation, and an archive of dreams."
Dynasty Handbag (Jibz Cameron) arrived from Los Angeles and performed shapeshifting, subversive comedy to a sold-out San Francisco crowd, blending absurdity with darker climate anxieties. A sketch titled "Vat Do You Vahnt For Bwekfas?" used a shrinking list of breakfast options to gesture toward disappearance and loss. Liz Hernández created The Office for the Studio of the Ordinary at SF State as a residency-turned-research institution involving over 150 students in a collaborative practice labeled an "artistic conspiracy." The culminating exhibition presented photographs, ceramic trophies, an illustrated myth of campus resistance and animal liberation, and an archive of dreams. Al Wong's 1977 film Twin Peaks screens as a 50-minute loop filmed through a Volkswagen windshield over the course of a year above SFMOMA's Third Street lobby.
Read at Kqed
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]