Make Music Day: Maria Gaspar with James Gordon Williams, and Guillermo Galindo

Man in a colorful shirt uses drum sticks to hit percussion instruments, including a snare drum and jail bars that are placed on a keyboard stand.A side profile of a man with medium length curly hair blowing into a plastic bottle.

Images (left to right): Dr. James Gordon Williams performs "The Principle of Alloys" on salvaged jail bars at the Institute of the Arts and Sciences, Santa Cruz, CA. Still from video by Amotion.video. Courtesy of the artist; Guillermo Galindo performing at the 50th Anniversary Celebration Gala and Auction, San José Museum of Art, September 21, 2019. Photo by Susana Bates for Drew Altizer Photography.

7–8pm
Free

To celebrate Make Music San José, join us for live musical performances that will activate the artworks in SJMA's exhibition Seeing through Stone. The acclaimed composer and theorist James Gordon Williams, assistant professor of music at UC Santa Cruz, will perform an improvisational piece using a sculpture by interdisciplinary artist Maria Gaspar made of iron bars from the Cook County Department of Corrections, the largest single-site jail in the US. Experimental composer and visual artist Guillermo Galindo will be performing a piece on his own artwork, Llantambores, an instrument made of materials found at the US-Mexico border. 

This program is presented in conjunction with Seeing through Stone, a multi-sited exhibition that is part of Visualizing Abolition.