The exhibition also includes interpretive paintings by multi-media artist Louis Navas, who fittingly shares his time between Long Island and Massachusetts.
Now, I look back at these with a sense of nostalgia, and I have an entirely new perspective on it.” Two cameras, actually - one with black and white film and one with color film. I was able to always have my camera there. Julie's never really been convinced that anyone would be interested in a bunch of her “old photos.” However, she’s created some of the most iconic images in Rock and Roll, and each has a story that illustrates the culture of the time. Julie’s pieces lay dormant in storage for many years before her debut solo show “Basement Archives: The Ghosts of FNX” in October 2018, bringing in over 450 viewers on opening night. She has championed many local and national charity events and brings her good karma ethos to the public. Julie’s listener-dubbed name “Karma Queen,” thanks to her intense love of recycling and the environment, has followed her. She was FNX Music Director and midday DJ, hosting the infamous “Leftover Lunch” until the station closed in 2012, when she moved to RadioBDC and now as Music Director at Indie617. The bulk of her broadcasting career was with 107.1 WFNX, a small station located north of Boston and credited as one of the first to discover the new sound and bring it to the mainstream. During her college years, she worked the radio circuit including 94 WHJY in Providence, RI and loved it. It’s a circle."Ī North Shore Massachusetts native, Julie received her BFA in Photography and Visual Design from UMASS Dartmouth. There’s been such dichotomy between the photographer and the artist. And the artists themselves have always let me be up close and personal. “My work shows them as larger than life, but also as part of life…it three-dimensionalized a lot of these people. Thousands of his pieces are now part of Cornell University’s famed Hip Hop Collection. Ernie, himself Native American, is known for his special eye for capturing people and communities ignored or misunderstood by mainstream America and received the Zulu Nation Human Soul Award.Įrnie's work has been shown in Rolling Stone, Vibe, New York Times, Newsweek, Life, Spin, and Ebony, among other publications, album covers, MTV, VH1, and several gallery and museum exhibitions. Armed with a 35-millimeter camera, ‘Brother’ Ernie has recorded the entire evolution of Hip Hop, becoming the best selling author of “Hip Hop at the End of the World” and “Who Shot Ya?,” documentarian of 2007’s “Another Side of Hip Hop,” and a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee in 2014. Virtual Artist Talk, brought to you by Mark MK:Ĭlosing Party, featuring live music by EEA Rocks student band & EEA Rap Stars student group!īorn and raised in Brooklyn, Ernie first made his foray into the hip hop street culture in 1973 when he began capturing the ever present graffiti art dominating New York City. Opening reception, hosted by Julie Kramer & Mark MK: Main Street, Riverheadġ1 West Gallery - 11 W. Complementing art and music, including in-gallery mixed-genre performances by the EEA Rocks band, round out the exhibition for the ultimate nostalgic experience.ĮEA Main Gallery - 133 E. MIX TAPE showcases musicians of this generation to evince their influence on the lives and culture of this diverse, disruptive decade through their individualism and style both on and off the stage. That’s why we createdPridecast.your weekly dose of inspiration hosted by Jonathan Bennett who’s guaranteed to deliver the fun, energy and laughs.MIX TAPE is an art exhibition showcasing captured moments of 90's hip hop, R&B, post-punk, alternative, and grunge using the photography of Rock & Roll Hall of Fame music historian Ernie Paniccioli and veteran WFNX radio disc jockey Julie Kramer. It’s a celebration too big for just once a year. The celebration, which takes place over one weekend each year, champions equality, diversity and inclusion in the LGBTQ community and beyond. Pridecast was created in collaboration with LA Pride which, for over 50 years has been one of the largest LGBTQ events in the world. Crying Girl That Didn’t Go to North Shore High
"Pridecast is like a cake filled with rainbows and smiles that everyone can listen to and feel happy." Here’s what the cast of Mean Girls is saying about Pridecast: Pridecast encompasses the inspiration of LGBTQIA+ community as it shares impactful stories to inform, educate and inspire through personal storytelling, based on real life experiences from trailblazer Jonathan and his remarkable guests. to his name, as host of your new favorite podcast, Pridecast. Aaron Samuels from Mean Girls has added another a.k.a.