Montez Press Radio

Last updated
Montez Press Radio
MPR
Location 46 Canal Street
Manhattan, New York City
Opened2019
Website
radio.montezpress.com

Montez Press Radio (also known as MPR) is a New York-based internet radio station, performance space, and non-profit arts organization. The platform was founded in 2018 by Montez Press founder Anna Clark, Stacy Skolnik, and Thomas Laprade. Montez Press Radio is directly inspired by pirate radio, public-access television, and DIY culture more broadly. In a profile for The New York Times, writer Ezra Marcus wrote that that station has "penetrating reach into the underground dimensions of the city’s art, literature, nightlife and music scenes." [1] It is located in (and is occasionally associated with) Lower Manhattan's Dimes Square "microneighborhood."

Contents

Past contributors to Montez Press Radio programming include Hua Hsu, John Early and Theda Hammel, Jon Wilson, Screen Slate, Mykki Blanco, Dean Kissick, Frost Children, Miho Hatori, Laraaji, Shayne Oliver, Legacy Russell, Alphonse Pierre, Shannon Briggs, Isaac Julien, Julianna Huxtable, Gary Indiana, Jon Caramanica, Gary Wilson, bar Italia, Moor Mother, Seth Price, Evilgiane, Joanne Robertson, Cities Aviv, Ebony Haynes, Nina Protocol, Honor Levy and Walter Pearce, Josh Citarella, and The Drunken Canal.

History

Montez Press Radio began in 2018 as a temporary performance experiment organized by the team behind the London, Hamburg, and New York-based independent book publisher Montez Press, "a vital contributor to artist-led publishing over the last decade, foregrounding and queering experimental auto, fan and speculative fiction." [2]

MPR's initial broadcast took place in the space of David Lieske's Mathew Gallery on Canal Street, [3] while the space was closed for the summer. Their inaugural August 2018 broadcast was solely transmitted via a pirate radio antenna, whose signal only spanned a few surrounding blocks. The broadcast was 12 hours long (lasting from 11am to 11pm). While the project was only intended to last for 30 days, but programming continued beyond the initial timeframe, eventually becoming a permanent project in January 2019. In 2019, Montez Press Radio took over Mathew Gallery space at 46 Canal St, where Montez Press Radio is headquartered today.

As of October 2024, they have broadcast nearly 3000 unique radio programs, which are all available on their website. They have a strong international presence. In addition to monthly programming from their NYC office, they broadcast regularly from London and Mexico City, and have broadcast offsite from Berlin, Brussels, Seoul, Hamburg, Sheffield, and Pasadena. [4] Montez Press Radio has collaborated with arts institutions in New York and abroad, including The Queens Museum, MoMA PS1, The Kitchen, and The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA. Montez Press Radio is currently producing podcasts with Storefront for Arts and Architecture in a series called On the Ground: Broadcasts. [5] In 2024, Montez Press Radio received a $90,000 grant from The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts. [6]

Notable Segments

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References

  1. Marcus, Ezra (Mar 15, 2024). "Making a Scene on the Radio". nytimes.com. The New York Times. Retrieved 12 October 2024.
  2. Marcus, Donna. "The Indie Presses Leading London's Thriving Underground Literary Scene". anothermag.com. AnOther Magazine. Retrieved 12 October 2024.
  3. K. Bradley, Paige. "On Montez Press Radio, Failing is Having Nothing to Say". Frieze.com. Frieze. Retrieved 12 October 2024.
  4. "Montez Press Radio Archive". Montez Press Radio.
  5. Roche, Daniel Jonas. "Mellon Foundation awards Storefront for Art and Architecture $1.5 million in grant support". archpaper.com. The Architect's Newspaper. Retrieved 12 October 2024.
  6. News Desk, News Desk. "WARHOL FOUNDATION ANNOUNCES SPRING 2024 GRANTEES". Artforum.com. Artforum. Retrieved 12 October 2024.
  7. Reagan, Caroline. "Montez Press Radio brings us the best (and weirdest) of the downtown arts and culture scene". Document Journal. Document Journal. Retrieved 12 October 2024.
  8. Weltchek, Guy. "Dion "Tygapaw" McKenzie Wants to Decolonize the Rave". InterviewMagazine.com. Interview Magazine. Retrieved 12 October 2024.