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Gina Cunningham

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Gina Cunningham
Born (1955-11-26) November 26, 1955 (age 68)
Springfield, Massachusetts, U.S.
🏳️ NationalityAmerican
💼 Occupation
🥚 TwitterTwitter=
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Gina Cunningham (born 1955) is an American multidisciplinary artist who has been producing work about immigrants for more than 25 years.

Early life and education[edit]

Cunningham was born November 26, 1955, in Springfield, Massachusetts. She attended Classical High School in Springfield.[1]

Fleeing the Genovese family's oppressive treatment of women, she moved to New York City in 1973, where she attended Hunter College. The following year, she performed in “Emily Likes the TV” with Christopher Knowles and Cindy Lubar at The Kitchen in Manhattan.[2] She holds a master's degree in communication from Barry University in Miami and is certified as an art, video and film production instructor.[citation needed]

Career[edit]

The plight of immigrants has always been a deep concern of Cunningham's. Starting in 1991, Cunningham's family used money she received as compensation for her cement-truck injuries to support refugees fleeing Haiti after the ouster of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.[3]  She and Eves purchased Tap Tap Restaurant the following year and hired Haitian artists to decorate the interior; after extensive renovations, it opened in 1994.[4]

Cunningham and Eves raised their two daughters above Tap Tap, which quickly became an award-winning restaurant featuring Haitian cuisine and Caribbean cocktails,[5] Haitian bands and karaoke nights.[6]

Cunningham continued to support the refugee community in other ways, as well. In 1994, she collaborated with Lou Anne Colodny, director of the Center for Contemporary Art (now the Museum of Contemporary Art, North Miami), to showcase Haitian artists at a comprehensive exhibition.[7]

Shortly after Cunningham left Tap Tap in 2000, she helped found the Academy of Communication and Digital Media at Miami Beach Senior High, started an innovative film club and worked with the Romance in a Can Film Festival to hold showcases of award-winning student-made short films[8] created under her direction.[9]

In 2007, she produced an award-winning television commercial for Discovery Espanol with her student filmmakers.[10]

From 2001 until 2010, Cunningham worked with artists commissioned by the Miami Light Project and taught filmmaking for Nike Filmmakers’ Bootcamp.[11]

After leaving teaching in 2011, Cunningham became fascinated with boats and water during an artist residency in 2014 in Varanasi,[7] a Holy City in India. There, she watched residents and tourists bathe and pour the ashes of cremated bodies into the sacred Ganges River, a ritual Hindus believe releases the soul from the cycle of rebirth, a concept known as moksha. Since that time, as a tribute to this sacred tradition, she has floated and installed paper boats in Russia, Haiti and Mexico, all of which can be seen in her videos on her website.

In 2011, 2013 and 2015, Cunningham created installations for the ghetto Biennale in Port-au-Prince, Haiti,[12][13] and was interviewed by Clocktower Radio Brooklyn.[14] She was awarded artistic residencies in Korea 2014 and Iceland in 2015.

In 2016, Cunningham was selected to screen her paper boat and other video art as part of The Athens International Film Festival, as well as Art Naked at the Valletta Film Festival Malta.[15] Also in 2016, she took part of an art exhibition titled “The Root of the New,” organized by Moscow curator Anya Dorofeeva. Cunningham created a large installation across a pond at Moscow State University's Apothecary Gardens, founded by Peter the Great in 1706.[16] She also was part of a video exhibition Moscow's State Darwin Museum.[17]

In November 2016, she created a short film documenting the Water Protectors at Standing Rock, North Dakota where Cunningham's boats hung from barren trees as she held space with her husband, son-in-law actor Rhys Coiro and their family doctor, who provided medical care for the community.[citation needed]

In 2017, Cunningham won the First Place prize in the Hollywood Art and Culture Juried Biennial.[18][better source needed]

Some of Cunningham's art falls into the realm of social activism include pieces addressing climate change,[19] and her 2017 piece For All Boat People that was a protest against the anti-immigration ban presented by President Donald's Trump.[20][21]

Personal life[edit]

In 1978, Cunningham met U.K.-born Peter Eves at the Spring Street Bar in New York City. She gave birth to their first daughter, Katherine, the following year in a small Little Italy apartment. Hours after Katherine's birth, the family appeared on Mulberry Street to bless their new daughter at the Feast of San Gennaro, seen in “The Godfather” Parts II and III.

The young family led a gypsy-like existence, staying at an American millionaire's villa in Italy, crossing the heavily armed border to Yugoslavia at midnight, lodging with farmers in Cypress and hunting oysters on the Eastern seaboard.[22]

In 1984, Cunningham was hit by a cement truck. Her right leg was severed in the accident, but surgeons were able to reattach it, and after rehabilitation, she was able to walk again with a barely perceptible limp.[23] She gave birth to her second daughter in New York City and moved to Florida in 1989, where she and Eves were married.

References[edit]

  1. Kelly, Ray (July 28, 2015). "Vintage photos: Classical High School". Mass Live.
  2. Mangolte, Babette. "Christopher Knowles: Emily Likes the TV". The Kitchen.
  3. Lamb, Camille (April 12, 2012). "L!fe Happens director Kat Coiro grew up at South Beach's Tap Tap". Miami New Times.
  4. Kohen, Helen L. (1995-02-13). "Haiti's mini-mecca on South Beach". The Miami Herald. pp. [1], [2]. Retrieved 2022-07-05.
  5. "Best Mojito: Tap Tap". Miami New Times. 2012.
  6. "Best Karaoke: Tap Tap". Miami New Times. 1999.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Uszerowicz, Monica (February 17, 2017). "Emergency Protest-Performance Honors Standing Rock's Water Protectors and Miami's Displaced "Boat People"". Creators.
  8. McCorquoidale, Amanda (January 24, 2011). "Miami Beach Senior High's Horror Short Wins Film Competition".
  9. New Times Staff (May 7, 2010). "Miami Beach Students Compete in Short Film Contest". Miami New Times.
  10. "Miami-area Students Take to National Airwaves to Save the Environment In Educational Competition Sponsored by Atlantic Broadband and Discovery Kids en Español". Hispanic PR Wire. April 19, 2007.
  11. "Miami Light Project 3rd Annual Summer Filmmakers Screening". Miami Art Guide. July 10, 2009.
  12. "Archived work of participating artists and scholars". 2nd Ghetto Biennale 2011. 2011.
  13. Mohné, Achim (2015). "Remotewords". Ghetto Biennale.
  14. "Gina Cunningham, Boat Tree". Clocktower.
  15. "Art Naked "Art Shorts" at the Valletta Film Festival: Final lineup announced". ISSUU. June 6, 2016.
  16. "Root of the New: Gina Cunningham". ART: Y3EA. September 26, 2016.
  17. "Now & After '18". Now & After International Video Art Festival. February 7, 2018.
  18. "8th All-Media Juried Biennial". Art and Culture Center/Hollywood. January 21, 2017.
  19. "Best Bet". South Florida Sun - Sentinel; Fort Lauderdale, Fla. [Fort Lauderdale, Fla]. 24 November 2017. pp. A.12 – via ProQuest.
  20. Roth, Minhae Shim (February 10, 2017). "Miami Artist Takes a Stand for Immigrants in For All Boat People". Miami New Times. Retrieved 2022-07-05.
  21. Uszerowicz, Monica (February 17, 2017). "Emergency Protest-Performance Honors Standing Rock's Water Protectors and Miami's Displaced "Boat People"". www.vice.com. Retrieved 2022-07-05.
  22. "Meet the 2012 Tribeca Filmmakers #11: 'While We Were Here' Director Kat Coiro". Indiewire. April 7, 2012.
  23. Ackerman, Elise (June 6, 1996). "Insult to Injury". Miami New Times.


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