7/12/2019 12:00:00 AM
CINCINNATI— Visual artist and singer/songwriter Solange Knowles presents an extended director’s cut featuring new scenes and musical arrangements of her interdisciplinary performance art film “When I Get Home” at the Cincinnati Art Museum on Thursday, July 18 at 7 p.m. It will be screened at a variety of renowned museums and contemporary arts institutions across the USA and Europe from July 17–October 13.
This 41-minute film presentation will take place in Cincinnati Art Museum’s Fath Auditorium, which can accommodate 300 people. Knowles will not be present at the screening but it will be free, and seating is first come, first served.
The film was directed and edited by Knowles with contributing directors Alan Ferguson, Terence Nance, Jacolby Satterwhite, and Ray Tintori. Additional work courtesy of Houston artist Autumn Knight and Robert Pruitt and features new musical arrangements. The film also features new sculpture work by the artist, “Boundless Body” (2019) an 8 by 100 ft. rodeo arena displayed in the desert of Marfa, which sits alongside many architectural wonders in the film, such as the Rothko Chapel at the Menil Collection and the I. M. Pei designed Dallas City Hall.
“When I Get Home” is an exploration of origin and spiritual expedition. The film confronts how much of us have we taken or left behind in our evolutions, and how much fear determines this? The artist returned to her home state of Texas to answer this through an expedition of a futurist rodeo uplifting the narrative of black cowboys and honoring her Houston lineage through this visual meditation.
The artist shares: “When I was younger I would fear what the people called the Holy Spirit and what it would do to the men and women around me. I never wanted it to catch me, and was terrified on how it might transform me if it did! Much of this film is a surrendering to that fear. After a really tough health year and the loss of the body that I once knew, the film is an invitation for that same spirit to manifest through me and the work I want to continue to create.”
The extended version of the film is screened exclusively across partner institutions in the USA and Europe. For full screenings information see BlackPlanet and download a digital “When I Get Home” Film Poster from WeTransfer (we.tl/whenigethome):
The screenings are made possible through a collaboration with WePresent, the editorial arm of WeTransfer.
For more information:
Sunshine Sachs
Maggie Faircloth / Paula Witt / Bailey Clement
[email protected]
212.691.2800
Columbia Records
Sarah Mary Cunningham
[email protected]
212-833-7178
Purple
Eve-Marie Kuijstermans
212 858 9888
Isabel Pritchard Smith
+44(7)799 114703
About WeTransfer
WeTransfer makes tools to move ideas. Founded in 2009 in Amsterdam as a simple, well-designed file sharing service for the creative community, WeTransfer has grown to include tools that scale across the creative spectrum, including editorial platform WePresent, mobile app ’Collect by WeTransfer’, quick slide-making tool Paste™, immersive sketching app Paper®, and the original web platform with 50 million monthly users and over a billion files sent each month.
About the Cincinnati Art Museum
The Cincinnati Art Museum is supported by the generosity of individuals and businesses that give annually to ArtsWave. The Ohio Arts Council helps fund the Cincinnati Art Museum with state tax dollars to encourage economic growth, educational excellence and cultural enrichment for all Ohioans. The Cincinnati Art Museum gratefully acknowledges operating support from the City of Cincinnati, as well as our members.
Free general admission to the Cincinnati Art Museum is made possible by a gift from the Rosenthal Family Foundation. Special exhibition pricing may vary. Parking at the Cincinnati Art Museum is free. The museum is open Tuesday–Sunday, 11 a.m.–5 p.m. and Thursday, 11 a.m.–8 p.m. cincinnatiartmusem.org
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The Cincinnati Art Museum is supported by the generosity of tens of thousands of contributors to the ArtsWave Community Campaign, the region's primary source for arts funding.
Free general admission to the Cincinnati Art Museum is made possible by a gift from the Rosenthal Family Foundation. Exhibition pricing may vary. Parking at the Cincinnati Art Museum is free.
Generous support for our extended Thursday hours is provided by Art Bridges Foundation’s Access for All program.
General operating support provided by: