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Gathering: Stone Soup

  • Generator Space 1804 Vinton Street Omaha, NE, 68108 United States (map)
 
 

Gathering, a collaborative exhibition organized by Valerie St. Pierre Smith, considers the act of gathering–gathering kin, gathering medicine, gathering songs–as an embodied practice that uplifts indigenous lifeways and ancestral healing practices.

Join us Friday, September 13th from 6pm - 9pm to celebrate the exhibition opening with Stone Soup. Registration is appreciated but not necessary to participate!

Stone Soup

A hungry person alone against the world eats only stones, but a community that gathers around a single pot in a spirit of generosity enjoys a feast all can share. Gather with us on Friday, September 13th, for a special delicacy: Stone Soup. It's almost ready, it just needs one more ingredient: whatever you have. Please bring one vegan soup ingredient to Generator Space from 6pm - 9pm, where Chef Casey will prepare it and add it to the soup, served free of charge. Let's feast together.

Suggested ingredients:

Onion

Carrot

Celery

Cabbage

Potato

Tomato

Corn

Peas

Kale

Broccoli

Beets

Cauliflower

Rice

Beans (prepared)

Barley

Spices

Please bring your own mug for soup! Utensils will be provided.

Generator Space is wheelchair accessible and located on a fairly busy street with a decent amount of traffic. Please use crosswalks for safety. Unmetered street parking is available on Vinton Street, 18th Street, and neighborhood streets to the north and west of the space.

Generator Series programming is presented with support from the Nebraska Arts Council and the Nebraska Cultural Endowment.

 

About Gathering Artists: 

Alex Jacobsen explores the interconnectedness of space, memory, and body primarily through psychoacoustics and somatic vibrations. Visually, they often use found electronics, liquids, and naked loudspeakers to create ceaselessly changing environments. In live performances, Alex often incorporates feedback, processed recordings, and amplified objects, creating a collectively remembered soundscape. In recent years, Alex has contributed music for a number of film and dance projects, and their work has been featured across the United States, Mexico, and Europe, including Radiophrenia Art Festival, ESS’s Quarantine Concert Series, and Konvent Puntzero.

Valerie St. Pierre Smith A two-spirit mischief maker, multi-disciplinary designer/artisan, scholar, writer, and healer, Valerie has an eclectic creative background including fiber arts, costume, textile, and fashion design. Her costume work has been seen across the country with highlights that include McCarter Theater, Berkeley Rerpertory Theatre, The Kennedy Center, Woolly Mammoth Theatre, Mixed Blood Theatre, Sea World: San Diego, the National Museum of the American Indian, and Pilobolus Dance Theatre. A bit of a unicorn, Valerie’s creative research and scholarly work focuses on appropriation, inspiration, representation, and decolonization in western design practices. Her creative practice explores, and is deeply influenced by, her lived experiences as a mixed-blood Annishnaabe kwe, focusing on the confluence of healing, social justice, traditional Anishinaabe teachings, and the power of identity. St. Pierre Smith holds a B.F.A from Stephens College, and an M.F.A from San Diego State University.

Noah Smith is a photographer based in Omaha, NE currently attending Central High School. His foray into photography started when he got a camera before he went on a family trip to Africa.  He has reignited his interest in photography over the past year. Combined with his interest in meteorology, his type of photography is focused mainly on capturing dynamic weather and natural phenomenon, but he ventures into different genres as well. 

Mi’oux Stabler is a member of the Umoⁿhoⁿ Nation whose tribal lands are located in northeast Nebraska along the banks of the Missouri River. She is a proud mother, artist, land tender, and a dedicated cultural advocate. For the past decade, her endeavors have been geared towards the revitalization of traditional languages and land stewardship practices. She has traveled extensively, but currently focuses her work in the ancestral homelands of the Umoⁿhoⁿ people.

Casey Welsch is a working class writer, cook, journalist, and organizer. Born and raised on a dryland Nebraska farm, he now lives and works in central Omaha. As a multimedia journalist in southeast Nebraska, Casey started a community news service at KZUM radio in Lincoln, was a founding member of the Dandelion Network mutual aid group, and was a regular contributor to Hear Nebraska and Perfect Pour magazine. These days he is focusing on his other life's work as a cook, working at Methodist Hospital, feeding the sick and those who care for them.

 
 

 
Earlier Event: August 9
Sequin/ce Perfomance Night
Later Event: September 27
Gathering: Word Salad