White Plains, N.Y. —ArtsWestchester will host a book launch on July 10 for Ballroom, a celebration of a cultural movement that is the subject of the Legendary Looks exhibition at ArtsWestchester’s gallery.
Written by Legendary Looks co-curator Michael Roberson Maison-Margiela, Ballroom explores the history and celebrates the accomplishments of House Ballroom culture, a working-class Black, Latinx, queer and trans cultural formation that grew out of the Harlem drag ball scene of late-19th century. The community is organized around an alternative kinship system of cross-generational non-biological families called Houses. Balls are the ritual events where Houses compete with one another in performance categories.
“Ballroom has been and continues to be a cultural expression responding to race, class, sexuality, and gender oppression,” said Roberson Maison-Margiela.
The July 10 book launch and exhibition reception runs from 7 p.m. until 9 p.m. at 31 Mamaroneck Ave. in White Plains. The suggested admission is $5.
ArtsWestchester’s Legendary Looks: The Art of Effects Design in House Ballroom celebrates the fashion and drama of costumes in House Ballroom. The multi-media exhibition runs through July 20, and it features over 16 extraordinary looks created by some of Ballroom’s top designers, stylists, and walkers, including Icon Overall Mother DeeDee Lanvin, Icon Founding Mother Miss Shalae Basquiat and Legendary Cameo Cameo.
The exhibition is open Wednesday to Sundays from (12-5pm) at 31 Mamaroneck Ave., White Plains, N.Y. The suggested admission is $5.
Legendary Looks is a three-part exhibition that includes ArtsWestchester, City Lore in Manhattan and Pioneer Works in Brooklyn. Pioneer Works is currently screening Legendary Looks: My Ballroom Story, a multimedia installation by Felix Rodriguez, a filmmaker who has documented the ballroom scene since 1991. On July 25, City Lore will open Legendary Looks: Preserving Our Legacy, a multi-media exhibition that includes ball flyers, archival photos, costuming pieces, as well as audio excerpts from oral history interviews collected by the curators.