JJJJJerome Ellis: Impediment Is Information

Sat 19 Jun, 2021, 8pm
Streaming on this webpage and Vimeo


ISSUE's 2021 season programs are FREE to stream. In lieu of purchasing tickets, please consider making a $25 suggested donation (or an amount that you feel is meaningful) in support of ISSUE's Artist-In-Residence programs and Artist Fund. Enabling the fullscreen function is recommended. The length of this piece is approximately 33 minutes.



Saturday, June 19th at 8pm EST, composer, poet, and performer JJJJJerome Ellis presents Impediment is Information, his second commissioned work as a 2021 ISSUE Artist-In-Residence.

In his second presentation, Impediment is Information, JJJJJerome Ellis continues to use music, poetry, and video to contemplate intersections between blackness and disability. This video work centers on an 18th century newspaper advertisement for the recapture of a fugitive slave with "an impediment in his speech." A handheld camera captures blurry conifers; a saxophone prays to a mountain. By rearranging the words of the advertisement to create lines of poetry, Ellis seeks new meanings and sites of resistance in the archive. The work will premiere on Juneteenth, a day that recognizes the emancipation of those who had been enslaved in the United States. Ellis notes: "In creating this work for the occasion of Juneteenth, I want to celebrate blk freedom practices. I think these practices divinely exceed official proclamations, emancipatory and otherwise." Captions will be provided.

JJJJJerome Ellis is a composer, poet, and performer. His current practice explores blackness, music, and disabled speech as forces of refusal and healing. JJJJJerome’s work has been heard at Lincoln Center, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Poetry Project, Sotheby’s, Soho Rep, and on This American Life. He’s a 2019 MacDowell Fellow, a writer in residence at Lincoln Center Theater, and a 2015 Fulbright Fellow. JJJJJerome collaborates with James Harrison Monaco as James & Jerome (or Jerome & James). Their recent work explores themes of border crossing and translation through music-driven narratives. They have received commissions from the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Ars Nova.

ISSUE Project Room's annual Artist-in-Residence program provides New York-based emerging artists with a year of support, offering artists access to facilities, equipment, documentation, pr/marketing, curatorial and technical expertise to develop and present significant new works, reach the next stage in their artistic development, and gain exposure to a broad public audience.

ISSUE Project Room programs are supported, in part, by public funds from the New York State Council on the Arts and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council. ISSUE gratefully acknowledges additional 2021 Spring/Summer Season support from The Howard Gilman Foundation, TD Charitable Foundation and Metabolic Studio (a direct charitable activity of the Annenberg Foundation).