Jean Carla Rodea: All Your Sojourns Have Led to This (Continuum)

Thu 15 Jun, 2023, 8pm
Free ($10 suggested donation)

Thursday, June 15th, 8pm ET, ISSUE in partnership with Smack Mellon is pleased to present All Your Sojourns Have Led to This (Continuum), the next commissioned work in interdisciplinary artist and 2023 ISSUE Artist-In-Residence Jean Carla Rodea’s ongoing project. The work will premiere at Smack Mellon’s space in Dumbo, Brooklyn.

The second half of All Your Sojourns Have Led to This (Continuum) is presented in collaboration with Asiya Wadud, Art Jones, and TISSUB. 

Notes from Jean Carla Rodea on All Your Sojourns Have Led to This (Continuum):

After establishing methodologies of invisibility, opacity, and disappearance as ways of not being seen or recognized, All Your Sojourns Have Led to This (continuum) moves toward a framework of hauntology that seeks to bring to light apparitions that continue to exert a powerful influence on our present reality. This involves a deep engagement with the material traces of the past, such as monuments, archives, and personal narratives, as well as an attentiveness to the more intangible aspects of haunting, such as the emotions and affective resonances that can arise when confronting complex legacies. Through the potential of the body, voice, image, and sound, I accept the embodied past as a force that is never entirely gone and can continue to shape our lives unexpectedly.

I am interested in what happens vocally, sonically, and visually when one is present yet unseen. I often consider these concepts as I explore filming and recording natural elements that manifest as sound, video, and performance later in the process. During my year-long residency, All Your Sojourns Have Led to This takes different forms and incorporates diverse media (works for voice and electronics, sound installation, and video/projection mapping) while exploring invisibility as a portal for strategies of resistance.

My work is informed by shifting and adaptable identities, immigration, ritual, performance, ecology, construction work, improvisation, and interaction with and through time-based media in diverse spaces. I’m interested in creating art that questions critical sociopolitical issues such as the politics of the body, gender, and the asymmetry of human relations. I’m invested in understanding how time is insistently constructed through memory and how these memories, whether embodied or recorded in spaces, are documented and re/constructed through the body’s physical and vocal potential. 

Whether it takes place in my (personal) archive or an institution, archival research often leads me to draw from fiction and speculative history around documents, physical traces, and spaces. A particular area of interest is how these robust processes can interrupt and make space for fictional dimensions that can disrupt and subvert the norm. By interacting with the archive, performative roles are present. Often I am a witness, a mere observer, an ethnographer, or a researcher registering and transmitting as much as possible from an event in a temporary space.

Jean Carla Rodea (b. in Mexico City) is a research-based interdisciplinary artist and educator. Her/their work involves a variety of disciplines and mediums such as music, sound, poetry, vocal performance and performance art, photography, video, movement, and sculpture. Her/their artistic practice deals with spaces and instances where problematic socio-political and cultural constructs are rendered visible through multimedia installations and performances. As a musician and improviser, Jean Carla is dedicated to performing and composing various music/sound in diverse settings–from solo to large ensembles. She/they have performed and recorded with William Parker, Darius Jones’ vocal quartet Elizabeth-Caroline Unit, Gerald Cleaver’s Uncle June, Anthony Braxton’s Syntactical Ghost Trance Music Choir, and Cecilia Lopez’s Machinic Fantasies. In addition, she/they lead her/their multi-media projects; Buscando a Marina/Looking for Marina, and Nine Easy Steps Toward Oblivion. Jean Carla has worked with Asiya Wadud, Jo Wood-Brown, Patricia Nicholson, Art Jones, Miriam Parker, rebeca medina, Merche Blasco, Amirtha Kidambi, Rachel Bersen, etc. They/she has performed extensively and shown work at Roulette Intermedium, Carnegie Hall, BRIC, Knockdown Center, Judson Church, Danspace, Center for Performance Research, Panoply Lab, The Clemente, FiveMyles, mh PROJECT nyc, to mention a few.

Smack Mellon is a nonprofit arts organization located in DUMBO, Brooklyn. Smack Mellon’s mission is to nurture and support emerging, under-recognized mid-career and women artists in the creation and exhibition of new work, by providing exhibition opportunities, studio workspace, and access to equipment and technical assistance for the realization of ambitious projects. We see ourselves as a vehicle whereby under-represented artists can create, explore and exhibit their creative ideas outside the concerns of the commercial art world, offering many artists the exposure and recognition they deserve.

Directions to Smack Mellon’s gallery can be found at: smackmellon.org/visit/

Smack Mellon’s gallery and studio space are wheelchair accessible. The entrance is at ground level and a wheelchair lift provides access to the upper gallery and lower studio levels. Service dogs are welcome throughout the building. No ID is required for entry. Toilets are open and available for visitors and a water fountain provides free drinking water. Children are welcome. We provide large print exhibition descriptions. There are many cobblestone streets surrounding Smack Mellon. All the bathroom facilities are all-gender, with ADA compliant bathrooms on the gallery level and studio program lower level. The closest accessible MTA subway stations are the 2/3 (and Manhattan-bound 4/5) at Borough Hall (0.7 mi) and the B/Q/R at Dekalb Av (1.1 mi). More information is available here.

A large-type MTA map is available here. For more information and any questions in regard to accessibility, please contact us by email at info@smackmellon.org or by phone at 718.834.8761

Space for Smack Mellon’s Programs is generously provided by the Walentas family and Two Trees Management.

ISSUE Project Room's Artist-in-Residence program is made possible, in part, with support from the National Endowment for the Arts, TD Charitable Foundation, public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council, and with the support of the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature.