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Neurodivergent Pickling

  • The Invisible Dog Art Center 51 Bergen Street Brooklyn, NY, 11201 United States (map)

IN-PERSON EVENT at Invisible Dog Art Center

Neurodivergent Pickling is an ephemeral installation, a ritual, and an endurance performance. Over the span of several hours, two neurodivergent performers obsessively wash, cut, and line up vegetables until the floor is filled with them, before turning them into pickles.

The piece proposes to invite neurodivergent gestures into the realm of food. The process of making Persian pickles [Shoori شوری] turns into a framed fractal motion, offering a reflection on culture and rituals. It points to cooking as a way to remain connected to one’s cultural roots and to the culture minoritarian individuals co-create - through the reinvention of pickle making as a neurodivergent ritual.

At the end of the performance audience members are invited to take home a jar of neurodivergent pickles, and can discover the taste of obsession a few weeks later.

Neurodivergent Pickles is an ongoing performance from 11am to 7pm. Audience members are free to enter, leave and come back at any moment.

Tickets are free but registration is recommended. Folks of all ages are welcome.

Neurodivergent Pickles is a part of Nafas, a group exhibition celebrating the union between food and art.

 
 

NIYOOSHA AHMADIKHOO

Niyoosha Ahmadikhoo (she/they) is a transdisciplinary artist and scholar with a focus on identity and displacement. Her work examines how constructed and politicized forms of identity simultaneously create entanglements, barriers, and liberations in individuals. Niyoosha obtained her Master of Arts in Performance Studies from NYU Tisch in 2017. www.niyooshaahmadikhoo.com


JULIE DIND

Julie Dind is an autistic butoh performer, academic and multimedia artist. Her work autistically explores Autistic modes of performance. She is currently a PhD candidate in Theatre Arts and Performance Studies at Brown University. Since 2012, she collaborates with multimedia artist Rolf Gerstlauer on an autistic-artistic project titled “Drawing NN inside butoh", engaging in transdisciplinary research-creation works. @drawing_ennen



The Invisible Dog is dedicated to the integration of innovation in the arts with profound respect for the past. The rawness of the space is vital to our identity.

Here, art and architecture feed off each other organically. The artists who walk through our doors infuse our space with their creative energy and make The Invisible Dog Art Center a unique home for the arts.

 
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September 22

New York’s Historical Foodways

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September 25

Odd Apples: A Botanical and Cultural History + Rare Fruit & Tasting