Every year, around September, a group of artists present their work at the Contemporary Art Museum. This year, several "Casco Addicts" are competing: film directors Abner Benhaim and Enrique Castro Ríos. Other years have had photographer Rachelle Mozman, who is also a Casco resident.
So check it out: http://www.bienalpanama.org/index1_I.html
Here is the program of activities announced in their web:
PROGRAM OF ACTIVITIES
2008
Art exhibition of the 8th Biennial
From September 9th to October 21st, the Panama Art
Biennial will present works by 13 local and international artists chosen by
Mexican curator Magali Arriola. The participating artists are: Abner Benaim,
Enrique Castro Ríos, Donna Conlon, Jonathan Harker, Rich Potter, and Ramón
Zafrani, all based in Panama, and Humberto Vélez, Panamanian artist resident in
London; the U.S. artists Sam Durant and Richard Prince (who was born in the
Canal Zone); Francis Alÿs (Belgian based in Mexico) and three artists who reside
in Berlin, Germany: Sean Snyder (from the U.S.), Román Ondak (from Slovakia) y
Michael Stevenson (from New Zealand).
For the first time, the Biennial will have a specific
theme: the former Panama Canal Zone.
The Zone, Revisited: a conversation with the
artists and the organizers of the Panama Art Biennial
The Biennial’s participating artists and the event’s
organizers will exchange ideas with each other and with the audience about their
works, analyzing the way in which the exhibition as a whole develops the
proposed curatorial theme.
Exhibition Garden City: Progressive Planning and
the Panama Canal
An exhibition produced by Kurt Dillon, Roger Trancik,
and Sam Sweezy for the College of Architecture, Art and Planning at Cornell
University (New York). The exhibition presents a view of the urban system in the
Canal Zone, situating its development within a particular tradition of urban and
regional planning, and focusing on the work of North American professionals and
intellectuals such as Clarence Stein, Frederick Law Olmsted, and others, whose
ideas influenced urban development in the Canal Zone. The exhibition consists of
30 photographs, as well as bilingual text panels (Spanish and English). The
exhibition’s creators will present a lecture about the exhibition as part of the
Biennial’s conference program
Academic Conferences
The Panama Canal Area:
A Cultural Heritage Site of Worldwide Importance
As part of its eighth edition, the Panama Art
Biennial is organizing Academic Conferences focused on analyzing the patrimonial
values of the urban and regional design in the Panama Canal area, currently
considered an endangered cultural heritage site of worldwide importance.
The conference is being organized in collaboration
with the World Monuments Fund and three Panamanian universities, and will
include a large number of students, professors, and professionals from the
fields of architecture, history, and fine arts.
Garden City: Progressive Planning and the
Panama Canal
Kurt Dillon, Roger Trancik y Sam
Sweezy will present a view of the urban system in the Canal Zone, situating its
development within a particular tradition of urban and regional planning, and
focusing on the work of North American professionals and intellectuals such as
Clarence Stein, Frederick Law Olmsted, and others, whose work had an influence
on the urban form of the Canal Zone.
The Panama Canal Area as an Endangered
Cultural Heritage Site of Worldwide Importance
Architect Eduardo Tejeira will present a conference about the
dossier presented to the World Monuments Fund in 2003 regarding including the
area around the Panama Canal in the World Monuments Watch List of the 100 Most
Endangered Cultural Sites.
Initiatives in Conservation and Evaluation of
the Panama Canal Area sponsored by the World Monuments Fund
Architects Almyr Alba and Kurt Dillon will present information
about the projects in Panama that have been developed with the support of the
World Monuments Fund: Planning for Gamboa, and the conservation of the
monumental sites of Forts San Lorenzo and Portobelo.
The Role of Summit Gardens in Canal Zone
Landscaping
Charlotte Elton, an economist and
specialist in matters related to sustainable development, will present a lecture
about how Summit Gardens (in a manner similar to other colonial botanical
gardens in the 19th Century and early 20th Century) introduced to Panama a
collection of plants with economic, military, and ornamental uses, from all over
the world.
Conference by Panamanian architect Eduardo
Tejeira about El Marañón
Eduardo Tejeira, a
specialist in Architectural History, will present a lecture about the now
defunct neighborhood of El Marañón, which was planned and built during the
construction of the Panama Canal for Afro-Antillean immigrant workers.
Cara a Cara - Face to Face: Panama City and
the Canal Zone, 1904-1999
Carol McMichael Reese, a
Professor at the Tulane University School of Architecture (New Orleans, USA) and
Thomas Reese, Director of Tulane University’s Latin American Studies Center,
will hold a conference and discussion with the public
The Canal Zone: A Fractured City, an Imagined
Nation, and Transnational Culture in Panama
(1913-1977)
Luis Pulido Ritter, a
Panamanian sociologist and writer who resides in Berlin, Germany, will lecture
about themes related to the collective imaginary of Panamanians, in a conference
that considers historical, literary and cultural points of
view.
Presentation of Canal Zone (1976), a documentary by
Frederic Wiseman
This documentary about U.S. citizens who lived and
worked in the Canal Zone sheds light on their lifestyle and different aspects of
their civilian government, as well as on the work of the military forces,
thereby portraying the social structure of the so-called Zonians. Wiseman has
been acknowledged over the past three decades as one of the most important
filmmakers in the United States.
Brooke Alfaro: Recent Paintings
Within the framework of the Biennial, Panama’s well
known artist Brooke Alfaro will present, for the first time in several years, an
exhibition of his paintings.
Brooke Alfaro (Panama 1949) graduated in 1976 as an
architect from the University of Panama. He studied painting at the Art Students
League in New York from 1980 to 1983. Since the early 1990s, his painting
evolved from a technique close to the classical masters towards a radical
transformation in form with the aim not only of manipulating pictorial space,
but of expressing specific spiritual and psychological states. Both in his
paintings and his videos (a medium he has worked in since 1999), a major part
has been played by Alfaro’s humble neighbors from the historic area of San
Felipe, where the artist used to live and continues to visit. In both genres, he
employs a caustic sense of humor and deceptive jokes that subvert the possible
interpretations of his artwork. (A.Samos)
ACTIVITIES IN
2007
Educational Workshops about Contemporary Art
Practices
The 8th Biennial will develop, during 2007 and 2008,
a program of educational activities directed at compensating, at least in part,
for the lack of opportunities available for learning about contemporary art in
Panama. A total of 35 participants took part in the two workshops carried out in
2007, including artists, art professors, and others interested in improving
their artistic education. The workshops were:
• Art Photography Appreciation
Workshop. A one-week course on the theory and history of photography,
with the participation of fifteen artists, taught by well-known Panamanian
artist and photographer Rachelle Mozman.
• Seminar: “Reflections on
contemporary Art”. A one-week course on the theory and history of
contemporary art, with the participation of twenty artists and art professors,
taught by Saidel Brito, Academic Coordinator of the prestigious Instituto
Superior Tecnológico de Artes del Ecuador (ITAE), located in Guayaquil.
Premiere presentation of the documentary Curundú by
Ana Endara
Produced between 2006 and 2007, with the sponsorship
of the Fondo de Fomento al Audiovisual de Centroamérica y el Caribe, Curundú is
the opera prima of young Panamanian filmmaker Ana Endara. Its premiere and a
round table discussion about the film were held on the 4th of December 2007 at
the historic Ancon Theater Guild. Kenneth, the main character, is a charismatic
figure who earns his living by taking pictures of his neighbors in Curundú, an
overpopulated and precarious community, located not too far from the historic
center of Panama City, on the edge of the former Canal Zone. The documentary
speaks to us about Curundú through Kenneth and his photos.