Electric Bohemian: Flamenco and the Arts in Greenwich Village (1950s-1970s) Electric Bohemian: Flamenco and the Arts in Greenwich Village (1950s-1970s) Meira Goldberg and Elijah Wald in Conversation Wednesday, February 25, 5 p.m.Skylight Room CUNY Graduate Center 365 Fifth Avenue (at 34th Street), NYC Free; reservations suggested gc.cuny.edu/public-programs Flamenco scholar K. Meira Goldberg and cultural historian Elijah Wald (author of Dylan Goes Electric!) explore how “the Village” became a hub of artistic experimentation — the birthplace of the Beat Generation, the 1960s counterculture, and various avant-garde movements. They discuss its rich tapestry of urban bohemia, where small presses, art galleries, and theater and music venues flourished, giving rise to an alternative culture including the queer movement and a thriving flamenco scene, which developed alongside the more famous folk scene. Goldberg is a flamenco performer, choreographer, teacher, and author of Sonidos Negros: On the Blackness of Flamenco. Wald is a musician and writer whose book about Bob Dylan served as the inspiration for the film A Complete Unknown. Followed by Rocío Márquez in concert at 7 p.m. in Elebash Recital Hall Co-sponsored by the CUNY Graduate Center’s Office of Public Programs and the Foundation for Iberian Music at the Brook Center for Music Research and Documentation. Made possible by the Elebash Global Voices Fund.