A new performance piece, Past Tense, by the artist Carrie Mae Weems—who, in her socially engaged practice, could very well be described as a “modern-day Antigone”—will open the festival on the evening of Thursday, 13 October. Speaking to The Art Newspaper, Weems says that Rachel Chanoff, one of the curators of the festival’s performing arts programme, reached out to her because she knew that the artist’s performance Grace Notes: Reflections for Now, which examines violence against African Americans and democracy (2016), “is essentially the story of Antigone: the basic plot is a woman who really wants to bury her brother with some kind of dignity, with a large portion of the society saying, ‘Yes but they don’t deserve to be buried at all’”.
Weems says she had not read Sophocles’s tragedy before writing Grace Notes and realised the connection later; she quotes Billie Holiday singing “the same old story but it’s new to me”. Past Tense—a re-telling of Antigone, set in the present, with song, text, projection and video—is an adaptation of Grace Notes, and features the same singers, Alicia Hall Moran, Imana Uzuri and Eisa Davis, and Weems speaking. “Unfortunately—I’m not really a performer,” she jokes, when asked if she is participating again. Weems plans to use excerpts from Sophocles’s Antigone in the performance, and says some of the questions the play raises are: “How do we respect our dead? What are the struggles for power, how do we accept or rebel against that power?”
A tapestry of a Greek landscape by Alexandra Kehayoglou deals with environmental destruction (Image: Joseph Coscia, Jr. Image courtesy of the Onassis Cultural Center New York)
On Saturday, 15 October, Antigone Now will feature a series of talks prefaced by “I Stand for”, including I Stand for Education: Unlocking Potential and I Stand for Gender Equality: Fighting for Fundamentals. Those who are not in New York, but would like to share their social convictions, are invited to join the discussion through the tag #iSTANDfor. As Weems says: “[Antigone’s] moral courage becomes the important thing—how she confronts and stands up to power is the question. It’s the question for all of us. She simply serves as the example of what’s possible.”