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FREE Experimental Art and Music Festival in BUSHWICK

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When you picture your ideal Saturday afternoon, do you dream of a kaleidoscopic music, art, poetry, and philosophy festival?

If so, you’re in luck. If not, start dreaming, ‘cause this festival is going be the bees.

It’s called Eleven Hands Clapping. And it’s happening at Vaudeville Park (Bushwick – totally rad) from 3pm to 7pm, this Saturday.

Curated by David Smith, the festival is the result of a rather serious collision between good vibes and a doctoral thesis. Smith has lined up eleven solo acts, ranging from political video artists to electronic rockers and folk singers. His intention? To probe the nature of “the individual and society through four lenses.” These are: “alienation,” “color,” “autonomy and resistance,” and “colliding hands making sounds.”

I’ll be honest; I have no clue what the heck this guy is talking about. Frankly, if I took the time to really delve into the curatorial statement, I would probably come out as a smarter man. But I won’t. These United States have a strong tradition of anti-intellectualism and I mean to milk that for all it’s worth… mainly because I can’t pay for grad school. However, if you do want to engage in the intellectual exercise, you are free to do so. You can find Smith’s statement right here.

The rest of us will just enjoy the sounds and the sights on a warm Saturday afternoon, sipping a cool beverage, and bearing witness to a daring artistic and philosophical enterprise.

Artists include: J.G. Zimmerman, Doom Trumpet (come on! that’s awesome!), Royal Native, The Sparrow, Glass Anchors, and more…

What more do you even want? Oh right, it’s FREE.

See you there.

Eleven Hands Clapping
Saturday, June 30th
3pm to 7pm
FREE
Vaudeville Park (26 Bushwick Ave)
[Bushwick]

Photo Credit: David Smith

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Jules Owen - Wandering Wastrel

Jules Owen - Wandering Wastrel

Going to a rich kid school when you aren't even given an allowance certainly trains you to live large on the cheap. Armed with such expertise, Jules travelled the globe, surviving off of 50 cent beers and 2 dollar meals everywhere from Buenos Aires to Mumbai. Three years ago he returned to the United States, living first in Baltimore while he settled a debt with the IRS, then in Brooklyn where he plays music and writes. He aspires to one day live in a van on N.15th and Kent.