Known as "Brooklyn's leading avant-garde venue," (Wall Street Journal) ISSUE Project Room presents a spectacular music- and star-filled evening on Friday, March 4th, honoring the 60th birthday of the prolific composer, innovator, and guitar virtuoso Elliott Sharp. Bookended by a cocktail reception and after-party, the concert premieres two new works by Sharp including: Trinity for Golden Globe® Award-Winning actor Steve Buscemi (ISSUE board member) and film/dance/light artist Jo Andres; and Occam's Razor for double quartet performed by post-classical music avatars JACK Quartet and Sirius Quartet. (Detailed schedule of events is below.)
"Elliott Sharp has played such an integral role not only in the avant-garde music scene but also in the entire New York arts community," exclaims Steve Wax, ISSUE Board Chair. "We're humbled to be hosting such a special event in his honor." "Having this celebration at ISSUE Project Room is both an exciting honor and significant in that my history with this great venue extends back to its 'beginnings'," explains Sharp, supporter of ISSUE since its start in the East Village in 2003. "I look forward to being one of the first to premiere works in its new home."About ISSUE Project Room
ISSUE Project Room, a registered 501(c)(3) organization, was established in 2003 by visionary artist Suzanne Fiol, and is a vibrant nexus for cutting-edge, multi-disciplinary arts in Brooklyn. ISSUE supports emerging and established experimental artists through more than 200 programs each year including music concerts, literary readings, films, videos, dance, visual and sound art, new media, critical theory lectures and discussions, site-specific work, commissions, educational workshops, master classes, and genre-defying interdisciplinary performances that challenge and expand conventional practices in art. www.issueprojectroom.org
Support for ISSUE has been provided by CHORA, a project of the Metabolic Studio, a direct charitable activity of the Annenberg Foundation led by Artist and Foundation Director Lauren Bon. CHORA aims to support the intangibles that precede creativity.
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