Sentences with phrase «african women photographers»

Her other projects include Roma - Sinti - Kale - Manush (May - July 2012) at Rivington Place, London, as co-curator with Mark Sealy, Director of Autograph ABP and Gabi Scardi, Independent Curator; Reflections on the Self — Five African Women Photographers London and touring the UK (2011 - 2014), as part of Hayward Touring; and [Kaddu Jigeen]-- Women Speak Out (2011 - 2013), Galerie Le Manège, Dakar and touring Africa.

Not exact matches

Then there are the superb images by South African photographer Zanele Muholi, a gay woman in a country that's still worryingly hostile to the LGBTQ community: as recently as 2009 the country's then Minister of Arts and Culture Lulu Xingwana described Muholi's portraits of nude lesbian couples as «immoral» and «against nation - building.»
Photographer Sally Mann reflects on the life of Virginia Franklin Carter (1894 — 1994), the African American woman who helped raise the artist and her two brothers.
Recognized for her large - scale, rhinestone - embellished paintings of powerful black women and pattern - rich interiors, this volume, produced conjunction with the exhibition «Muse: Mickalene Thomas: Photographs,» gathers the photography of Mickalene Thomas for the first time — portraits, prints and Polaroids — and features a nod to fellow contemporary African American photographers who inspire her.
Though she began as a documentary photographer, Simpson is best known for her conceptual pairings of text fragments and studio photographs of anonymous African - American women draped in white shifts dresses.
Mixed - media paintings and photographs, her portraits of African American women are inspired in part by the practice of Malian photographer Seydou Keita (1921 - 2001), whose work is shown above.
2003 Fragments of the City, 6 women photographers defining the city and popular culture in SA, Bensusan Museum of Photography, Johannesburg, South Africa MTN New Contemporaries 2003, Museum Africa, Johannesburg, South Africa African Day Celebration, Shivava Cafe, Johannesburg, South Africa Playtime Festival, Bensusan Museum of Photography, Johannesburg, South Africa
South African photographer Zanele Muholi creates a mobile exhibition space and engages with 10 Philadelphia women in telling their own stories through self - portraits and portraits of women in the participants» lives.
Yet in his own way, which is at times crowded and quite clumsy (like placing Baziotes» «Mariner,» 1960 — 61, as the final painting in the show), Anfam continues to press the presence of women and outliers Mark Tobey (West Coast), Norman Lewis (African - American), Bradley Tomlin (homosexual), and photographers Barbara Morgan, Aaron Siskind, and Minor White.
After the legendary street fashion photographer Bill Cunningham died, writing in the New Yorker, Hilton Als distilled his interest in women and African American culture, particularly gay black men, noting that he «saw us all.»
In a break during the installation of a new display of her work at The Photographers» Gallery, South African photographer Zanele Muholi is holding forth ardently about the lives of the black lesbian women and trans men she portrays, showing me their portraits alongside their harrowing testimonies of homophobic violence, «curative» rape and extreme prejudice from the medical, religious, legal and political worlds.
In 2017, PPAC received Center support for an 18 - month residency for South African photographer Zanele Muholi, creating a mobile exhibition space, and engaging with 10 Philadelphia women in telling their own stories through self - portraits and portraits of women in the participants» lives.
South African photographer and LGBTQ + activist Zanele Muholi makes achingly beautiful portraits of black transgender women.
Subjects include women at the Bauhaus, design collaborations, photographers between the wars, the legacy of Maya Deren, Latin American artists, performance art, architecture, land art, «Riot Grrrls,» African American artists, collage and assemblage in contemporary portraiture as well as essays on individual artists such as Lillian Gish, Sybil Andrews, Diane Arbus, Ida Lupino, Hanne Darboven, Bridget Riley, Ana Mendieta, Louise Bourgeois, Adrian Piper, Nan Goldin, Zaha Hadid, Janet Cardiff and Lin Tianmiao.
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