Weekly Do-Gooder Jobs and Events

RESOURCES

I will never get sick of Pop Culture Pirate. I still watch Queer Carrie on the regular.

 

JOBS

South Africa – Executive Director at Amnesty International (Johannesburg)

Country Director – Kenya at Grameen Foundation USA (Nairobi)

Program Officer – Bertha UK Ltd (London)

Director, HERproject – Global Women Empowerment Initiative at Business for Social Responsibility (NYC/Paris)

Gender Writer at Colorlines (US) Someone awesome please get this job!

Sr. Campaign Manager at ColorOfChange.org (Oakland or NYC)

Director, Center for Community Action and Prevention at Dartmouth College (NH)

Assistant Director – Civil Liberties and Public Policy Program at Hampshire College (Amherst)

Executive Director – SkillWorks at The Boston Foundation (Boston)

National Organizer at Coalition for Abortion Access and Reproductive Equity (Boston)

Manager, Advisory Services at The Center for Effective Philanthropy (Cambridge)

Sales Associate at The Muse (NYC)

Development Officer, Annual Giving at Clinton Foundation (NYC)

Relationship Manager at Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors (NYC)

Latino Media Relations Manager at Freedom to Marry (NYC)

Program Coordinator, Men’s Prevention at Gay Men’s Health Crisis (NYC)

Program Officer-Public Health Program at Open Society Foundations (NYC)

Manager of Visitor Services at Lower East Side Tenement Museum (NYC)

Customer Service Associate and Media Relations Manager at Planned Parenthood of New York City (NYC)

Senior Campaign Manager at Breakthrough (NYC)

Program Officer at WonderWork (NYC)

Program Assistant – Readings & Workshops (East) at Poets & Writers, Inc. (NYC)

Membership Director at National Domestic Workers Alliance (NYC)

Program Administrator at Lalela Project (NYC)

Staff Attorney, Strategic Litigation at Innocence Project (NYC)

Development Manager at National Organization for Women (NYC)

Educator at Dyckman Farmhouse Museum & Park (NYC)

Exhibitions Specialist at Museum of the City of New York (NYC)

Development Associate (Institutional Giving) at Cooper-Hewitt (NYC)

Donation Development Coordinator (Fashion) at Housing Works Inc (Brooklyn)

Retail, Barista, and Fundraising positions at the Museum of Morbid Anatomy (Brooklyn)

Director of Development and Operations at MinKwon Center for Community Action (Flushing)

Senior Associate Editor, The Atlantic Cities (DC)

Senior Advisor at Center for Community Change (DC)

Writer, Family Planning 2020 Task Team and Global Health Officer at United Nations Foundation (DC)

Style Reporters for the Washington Post (DC)

Program Coordinator, LGBTQ Health and Rights at Advocates for Youth (DC)

Manager of Political Research at Planned Parenthood Federation of America (DC)

Southern Regional Director at Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund (Atlanta)

 

Program Officer, Latin America Regional Office at Planned Parenthood Federation of America (Miami)

Deputy Director for Development at Lowell Observatory (Flagstaff)

Associate Director of Corporate Partnerships at Year Up (Seattle)

Voter Engagement Specialist at Planned Parenthood Votes Northwest (Bellevue)

Media and Community Relations Manager at The Evergreen State College (Olympia)

Community Organizing Coordinator at NARAL Pro-Choice Oregon (Portland)

Birthday Party Coordinator at Children’s Creativity Museum (SF) I don’t know what to do about these titles. On the one hand, I love them, on the other, YOU NEED NEGOTIATE A REAL TITLE.

Development Manager at Firelight Foundation (Santa Cruz)

Program Officer, Creative and Content at Kaiser Family Foundation (Menlo Park)

Administrative Assistant/Bookkeeper at Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy (LA)

 

OPPORTUNITIES

Chicago Healing Justice Teaching Collective’s 2014 Learning Circle

Lady Parts Justice is looking for volunteers

Latina Feminist Class at at La Casa Azul Bookstore (NYC)

Write for Feminspire

The Guardian: Diversity Writers’ Workshop – New York July 2014: apply now

Join SparkTeam for girls aged 13-22

 

EVENTS

May 14: Soapbox, fundraiser for the Laundromat Project (NYC)

May 14: Innovative Approaches to Improving Immigrant Access to Justice (NYC)

May 14: Women and Economic Security Conference: Changing Policy and Practice (Ann Arbor)

May 15: Cibo Matto / Javelin / JD Samson (Brooklyn)

May 15: Give Out Day Happy Hour! (Brooklyn)

May 16: The Art of the Profile (NYC)

May 17: (Re)Creating , (Re)Constructing, and Representing Space (NYC)

May 19: Conversations On Art: Dawoud Bey (NYC)

May 20: The Adventure Project Spring Gala (NYC)

May 21: Music Bridges Cultures: A Celebration of World Day for Cultural Diversity (NYC) This event title is a lot to deal with, but it’s just a karaoke fundraiser

May 22: Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars / Okayafrica Electrafrique w/ Chief Boima and DJ Underdog (Brooklyn)

May 22: Diversifying Tomorrow’s Newsrooms: A Conversation (NYC)

May 27: HOLLA::Revolution (NYC)

May 27-June 1: Southern Jam (Marshall, NC)

June 2014: Summer School of Women’s Activism 2014 (NYC), every Saturday

June 2-5: HIV is Not a Crime Conference (IA)

Until June 6: Witness: Art and Civil Rights in the Sixties at Brooklyn Museum of Art (Brooklyn)

June 7: 2014 WAM!NYC Conference (NYC)

June 14: Abolishing the PIC & Transforming Justice: A Workshop (Chicago)

June 18: Say It to My Face: Confronting the Comments Section with Tyler Coates, Jolie Kerr, and More (NYC)

June 24: Summer, Sex, & Spirits (NYC) benefits Planned Parenthood in NYC; BROAD CITY will be there for part of the night!

Until June 29: Carrie Mae Weems: The Museum Series at the Studio Museum of Harlem (NYC)

Until October 26: Free movies at Habana Outpost (Brooklyn)

June 19-22: Queer Women Who Tech (NYC)

July 9-August 13: SummerScreen at McCarren Park (Brooklyn)

August 14-17: Woodhull’s Sexual Freedom Summit 2014 (Alexandria)

November 13-15: Facing Race Conference 2014 (Dallas)

 

Artist Ramiro Gomez Paints Invisible Workers into Wealthy Homes

Artist Ramiro Gomez Paints Invisible Workers into Wealthy Homes

I wrote this thing at Bitch! Which has meant that I have been obsessing over every Facebook comment, thanking everyone on Twitter, and befriending everyone on Facebook who “liked” my piece. I’m also on a mission to interview Gomez for Bitch‘s podcast, so any social media pressure you want to put on him would be much appreciated!

Seriously, it is such a thrill to have my work featured on Bitch. I have every issue of their print magazine going back to 1998 and I’m really honored to be part of them. *squee*

The scene is familiar to any fancy home design magazine reader: the perfectly appointed living space full of gleaming surfaces, fluffed up pillows, artfully arranged flowers next to tasteful objets d’art. But painted in to this pristine domestic landscape is the woman who is actually responsible for the polishing and dusting and cleaning of the space—Edith, a brown-skinned woman waiting for her check.

For the past 5 years, Ramiro Gomez has been interrupting magazine spreads and advertisements, tearing out pages and painting in the workers on whom the wealthy homeowners depend. Gomez is an LA-based artist and nanny who started painting workers onto cast-off magazine spreads while his charges were napping. About his subjects, he recently told South California Public Radio, “I’m trying to ask you look into them a little more.”

The figures are simple, without facial features. The tools of their trade—mops, rags, laundry baskets, and lawnmowers—are painted into the scene with them. They are frequently in the act of work, although some scenes show them taking a break, or waiting to be paid. They are all brown or black. They do not blend in. The figures are blocky, dressed in casual clothes that clash with their uber-fashionable surroundings.

Their faces are hidden or impersonal because they are generally not seen, or not seen as individuals—they are “the help,” “undocumented.” Gomez doesn’t assign personality to the individuals, but the portrayal forces the viewer to consider the workers’ humanity. The altered pages ask make us wonder why we didn’t notice that they were missing before.

Although the addition of one figure is simple, the person is jarring as we realize how infrequently “the help” appears in other, real-life glamorous scenes where their labor is essential. Domestic workers aren’t only missing in art or home décor magazines. They are also excluded from many labor protections. It was only last year, in fact, in which a loophole that excluded two million domestic and care workers from basic employment laws, such as the minimum wage and overtime, was finally closed. Domestic workers are largely women of color, and many are undocumented. According to the National Domestic Workers Alliance, domestic workers earn substandard wages; do not have employment contracts; and many face abuse and mistreatment on the job.

The inequity and low pay are explicitly addressed in Gomez’s work as well. He paints over a Rolex ad to include a post-it note with one worker’s pay explained—$80 for 8 hours. The craftsmanship of a status symbol is valued, yet the people who care for your children, clean your home, and maintain your yard are offered a pittance. (As a reference, a Rolex can cost more than $40,000 a pop—or two years’ salary for a minimum-wage worker.)

Gomez has branched out from the magazine to also create cardboard cutouts of workers and installs them in wealthy neighborhoods around L.A. Gardeners are propped near the manicured hedges, housecleaners take out the trash. Some workers take pride in the fact that their work is being represented and valued; others have feared that the cutouts bring more attention to them, which could include reprisals from the police.

By placing the cutouts in situ, we are forced to realize how little attention we pay to the workers themselves. Gomez rejects the title of activist, yet the cardboard cutouts are implicitly so. Especially since he placed figures on the lawn of the White House and Capitol during the immigration reform debates in early 2013. (They were quickly removed due to security concerns.)

More recently, Gomez has reimagined David Hockney’s iconic images of southern California. Hockney’s cool, geometric renderings of Californian scenes are a canvas for Gomez’s workers—cleaning the pool of “Last Splash” (now “No Splash”), mowing the lawn, and scrubbing the shower. Like Hockney, Gomez works in acrylic paint, which lends itself to flat, bright colors. Despite the flat paint, Gomez’s inclusion of the workers add depth to the images. Southern California is not cool luxury for many—it is place of hard work, of trying to make ends meet.

Gomez is claiming his space in the art canon and justifying the workers’ worthiness as subjects of high art. As in his interruptions of ads and magazine spreads, he insists that the work and worker matter more than the end-product to be admired by a wealthy individual. Although the American Dream is that if we work hard, we will succeed, Gomez’s work shows that that success is still supported by a workforce that is ignored, underpaid, and underappreciated.

Weekly Do-Gooder Jobs and Events

RESOURCES

Help recently graduated students with paying off their student debt and doing good in their community.

 

JOBS

Economic Justice Campaign Manager at Center for Popular Democracy (DC/NYC)

Senior Grants Officer, Public Sector Development at Partners In Health (Boston)

Program Director GRLZRadio.org at St. Mary’s Center for Women and Children’s Center (Mass)

Development Officer/Producer at All-Stars Project Inc. (Bridgeport)

Director of Education and Outreach at Hudson Valley Shakespeare Festival (Cold Spring, NY)

Writer and Editor at The Center for Reproductive Rights (NYC)

Organizing Director at Caring Across Generations (NYC)

Professional Programs Assistant at Planned Parenthood of New York City (NYC)

Program Associate, Sexual Health and Rights at American Jewish World Service (NYC)

Manager, Program Support (Education, Creativity and Free Expression), Manager, Program Support (Democracy, Rights and Justice), and Director, Democratic Participation and Governance at Ford Foundation (NYC) The idea of the Manager of Program Support is interesting to me…

Director of Communications at Action Without Borders – Idealist.org (NYC)

Art Collective Director at Community Access, Inc. of New York City (NYC)

New Beginnings Program Manager at Mt. Sinai St Luke’s Hospital (NYC) child sexual abuse & exploitation

Program Officer, Early Childhood at Overdeck Family Foundation (NYC)

Director, Communications at Pro Mujer International (NYC)

PT Finance Advisor, HBK Incubates at Hot Bread Kitchen (NYC)

Staff Writer, Politics at the Atlantic Wire (NYC)

Finance Officer/Grants Manager at Girl Rising (NYC)

Food and Nutrition Security Policy Officer at Concern Worldwide (US) Inc. (NYC)

Senior Grant Writer at Latino Commission On AIDS (NYC)

PT Office Manager at The Muse (NYC)

Director of Partnership Development at ioby (Brooklyn)

Curatorial Fellow at Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Arts (Brooklyn)

Policy Director at Center for Popular Democracy (Brooklyn)

Program Officer at Unitarian Universalist Congregation at Shelter Rock (Long Island)

Development Coordinator at Rising Tide Capital, Inc. (Jersey City)

Director For Women’s Political Participation Programs at National Democratic Institute for International Affairs (DC)

Program Associate at The Center for Reproductive Rights (DC)

Country Director-Zambia at Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation (DC)

Program Associate: Reproductive Justice at The Young Women’s Project (DC)

Partnerships Officer at Nothing But Nets (DC)

Program Officer, South Asia at Global Fund For Children (DC)

Researcher/Writer for Voting Rights Project at Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law (DC) Insider tip: do NOT refer to this one by its acronym

Enterprise Development Officer at Aga Khan Foundation U.S.A. (DC)

Deputy Director, Special Events at United Nations Foundation (DC) It HAS to be a sign of illness that I finished off an annual event and still found this job intriguing

Staff Attorney — Breaking Barriers to Employment Project at Neighborhood Legal Services Programs (DC)

Leadership Gift Officer at Southern Environmental Law Center (Charlottesville, VA)

Development Manager at Feminist Women’s Health Center (Atlanta)

LBGTQ Community Coordinator at Oberlin College (OH)

PT Latina Outreach Advocate at Women Helping Women Inc. (Cincinnati)

W.K. Kellogg Community Philanthropy Chair at Dorothy A. Johnson Center for Philanthropy (Grand Rapids)

Executive Director at The Southwest Center for HIV/AIDS (formerly Body Positive) (Phoenix)

Deputy Director, Country and Policy Job at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (Seattle) I can’t imagine anyone actually filling this job from an ad, but I suppose anything is possible.

Move to End Violence Associate at NoVo Foundation (Seattle)

Staff Attorney, Racial Justice at Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights of the San Francisco Bay Area (SF)

Program Manager at Genentech Foundation (SF)

Assistant Director, California Programs at NARAL Pro-Choice America (SF)

Program Associate, Grants Operations at Global Fund for Women (SF)

Grant Writer at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts (SF)

Program Associate, Global Development and Population Program at The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation (Silicon Valley)

Executive Director, Foundation Relations at The Salk Institute for Biological Studies (La Jolla)

Coordinator, Hilton Humanitarian Prize at Conrad N. Hilton Foundation (Agoura Hills, CA)

Director of Development at Venice Arts (LA)

 

OPPORTUNITIES

Bushwick Film Festival is looking for submissions

Call for submissions: IMAGINING EQUALITY: Your Voices on Women’s Human Rights, An Online Media Project

2014 Emerging Writer’s Contest at Ploughshares

Urban Economics Reporting Fellowship at Next City

Open Call for Volunteers and Workshop Proposals at Willie Mae Rock Camp for Girls

Maternal and Child Health Reporting Fellowship

Emerging Voices Literary Fellowship at PEN

AAWW Fellowships for Emerging Asian American Writers in New York

 

EVENTS

May 7: Peoples is Peoples: An Anonymous Un-Networking Event (NYC) This sounds like a great idea, but I don’t think I could not talk about work for two hours.

May 7-June 1: Punk Rock Girls film series (Brooklyn)

May 8: “A Night to Say NO”: 5th Annual Fundraiser Benefiting UN Women (NYC)

May 12: “Let the Fire Burn” on PBS

May 12: “Rock, Rage & Self Defense: An Oral History of Seattle’s Home Alive” screening and panel discussion (Brooklyn) The panel will feature a bunch of great people, including MEEEEEEEEE!

May 14: Soapbox, fundraiser for the Laundromat Project (NYC)

May 14: Innovative Approaches to Improving Immigrant Access to Justice (NYC)

May 14: Women and Economic Security Conference: Changing Policy and Practice (Ann Arbor)

May 15: Cibo Matto / Javelin / JD Samson (Brooklyn)

May 20: The Adventure Project Spring Gala (NYC)

May 21: Music Bridges Cultures: A Celebration of World Day for Cultural Diversity (NYC) This event title is a lot to deal with, but it’s just a karaoke fundraiser

May 22: Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars / Okayafrica Electrafrique w/ Chief Boima and DJ Underdog (Brooklyn)

May 27-June 1: Southern Jam (Marshall, NC)

June 2014: Summer School of Women’s Activism 2014 (NYC), every Saturday

June 2-5: HIV is Not a Crime Conference (IA)

Until June 6: Witness: Art and Civil Rights in the Sixties at Brooklyn Museum of Art (Brooklyn)

June 18: Say It to My Face: Confronting the Comments Section with Tyler Coates, Jolie Kerr, and More (NYC)

Until June 29: Carrie Mae Weems: The Museum Series at the Studio Museum of Harlem (NYC)

Until October 26: Free movies at Habana Outpost (Brooklyn)

June 19-22: Queer Women Who Tech (NYC)

July 9-August 13: SummerScreen at McCarren Park (Brooklyn)

August 14-17: Woodhull’s Sexual Freedom Summit 2014 (Alexandria)

November 13-15: Facing Race Conference 2014 (Dallas)