Dion TYGAPAW McKenzie: Devil Woman (Obeah Woman) Part 3

Sat 12 Nov, 2022, 8pm
Free ($10 suggested donation)

Saturday, November 12th at 8pm ET, at The Queens Museum, Dion TYGAPAW McKenzie presents their third and final work in progress presentation of Devil Woman (Obeah Woman). The piece is an opera in three parts developed as a 2022 ISSUE Artist-In-Residence. Using Techno as their main genre of focus, the work urges us to renegotiate and expand our understanding of the genre. The opera forms a sonic narrative that draws from Jamaica's rich musical heritage-referencing national, patriotic, and traditional songs, and centers the unsung national hero Queen Nanny of the Maroons as it aims to recontextualize her historical narrative.

This performance includes strobe lighting. Viewer discretion is advised.

McKenzie repurposes and deconstructs these sounds deeply rooted in the island's colonial history as an effort to simultaneously decolonize operatic form and expand the potentiality of Techno's own colonized histories. The result exemplifies a profound sense of self-determination that asserts a new identity free from the constraints of external control.

This performance is co-presented with The Chocolate Factory Theater and The Queens Museum, and takes place at The Queens Museum in Flushing Meadows–Corona Park. Queens Museum will host a reception before the performance from 7-8pm in the café. Come early and enjoy a drink with us! Alcohol has been generously provided by Queen's Museum's Beer Sponsor - EBBS.

Notes from Dion TYGAPAW McKenzie on Devil Woman (Obeah Woman) Part 3:

What if our souls were no longer fragmented? What if transmutation happens in our souls?
What if this made us whole? What happens when a black obeah woman leads a successful slave rebellion? What if no one really knows?

Presented in the form of an opera, Devil Woman (Obeah Woman) is a sonic exploration of the history of the relatively unknown and unsung hero Nanny of the Maroons. The story of this leader of the Windward Jamaican Maroons will be presented in the format of an opera in three parts. Techno will be the soundtrack to this vital reimagining. Techno as a colonized genre is the tool chosen to decolonize the opera.

Dion McKenzie known as TYGAPAW, is a Producer, DJ and Artist, originally from Mandeville, Jamaica, and based in Brooklyn, New York. A polymathic artist injecting their Jamaican heritage into techno, TYGAPAW operates at the intersections of their musical and cultural roots. Released via influential Mexico City imprint N.A.A.F.I., debut album ‘GET FREE’, features singles ‘Run 2 U’ and ‘Facety’ with vocal features from Mandy Harris Williams and TYGAPAW. An 11-track collection of hard-hitting, cathartic energy, the project explores black joy, the active dismantling of imagined limitations, and the eradication of self doubt using techno landscapes. Most recent release ‘Diffusus’ (Tresor) was part of Tresor’s 30th Anniversary compilation and featured songs by Jeff Mills, Helena Hauff, LSDXOXO, Robert Hood, Juan Atkins and more. Previous releases ‘Ode To Black Trans Lives’ and ‘Handle With Care’ saw TYGAPAW release via Fake Accent, their own imprint and club night. Live highlights include MoMA PS1, The Hydra (London), Boiler Room (Toronto, LA), RBMA Weekender (Montreal, LA), AFROPUNK, Toronto Pride, Moonshine (Montreal), Institute of Contemporary Art (Boston, Miami), alongside NYC institutions Webster Hall, Knockdown Center, Brooklyn Museum, Bossa Nova Civic Club, Elsewhere, Nowadays and more. TYGAPAW has also embarked on tours in Asia, Australia and Europe, playing shows in London, Paris, Basel, Vienna, Berlin, Oslo, Seoul, Shanghai, Melbourne, Chippendale and Leipzig. Having premiered at TIFF in 2020, TYGAPAW features as a lead alongside the likes of Sherelle and TOKiMONSTA in music documentary UNDERPLAYED. Directed by Stacey Lee, the film explores gender, ethnic and sexual equality issues in dance music and was released worldwide via Amazon. TYGAPAW has future releases slated for NYC imprint Mister Saturday Night. A multidisciplinary artist resolute in reminding the world of dance music’s revolutionary black roots, 2022 is set to further cement TYGAPAW as one of the techno trailblazers to watch.

The Chocolate Factory Theater is an artist-centered organization, built by and for artists. Co-founders Sheila Lewandowski and Brian Rogers began making work together in 1995 and quickly saw the need for a creative home to support their work and the work of fellow experimental performance-based artists. The Chocolate Factory therefore has grown and developed within and through a creative process that centers the development of new work, as guided by makers.

The Queens Museum in Flushing Meadows - Corona Park presents contemporary art, events of hyperlocal and international impact, and educational programs reflecting the diversity of Queens and New York City. Changing exhibitions present the work of emerging and established artists, both local and global, that often explore contemporary social issues, as well as the rich history of its site. The Museum works outside its walls through engagement initiatives ranging from multilingual outreach and educational opportunities for adult immigrants, to a plethora of community led art and activism projects. The Museum’s educational programming connects with school children, teens, families, seniors as well as those individuals with physical and mental disabilities. The Queens Museum is located on property owned in full by the City of New York, and its operation is made possible in part by public funds provided through the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs. Visit www.queensmuseum.org.

Queens Museum directions and accessibility info can be found here: https://queensmuseum.org/visit

ISSUE Project Room programs are supported, in part, by public funds from the New York State Council on the Arts with the New York State Legislature, and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council