Sentences with phrase «conversations around identity»

Join us for a three - day seminar that will equip you with interactive literacy strategies you can use to engage your students in conversations around identity, history, and choices.
Following in this tradition, «Trigger» extends the conversation around identity, considering how even a fluid conception of gender is marked by ongoing negotiations of power and can not be understood outside its complex intersections with race, class, sexuality, and disability.
«Trigger» extends the conversation around identity, considering how even a fluid conception of gender is nonetheless marked by ongoing negotiations of power and can not be understood outside its complex intersections with race, class, sexuality, and disability.

Not exact matches

Part of the reason conversation around immigration becomes so heated is because nationality is an issue of identity: who I am and how I see myself is deeply entwined with my country.
Facilitating conversations around art and identity became a vital aspect of Ekwelum's time at HGSE.
One is an amazingly positive conversation around the value of representation and allowing players of all different identities to find themselves in creative media.
It beats that awkward conversation about how you can take cash but you probably shouldn't take a check because of all the fraud that's been going around, and then you lose the sale because you basically called your potential buyer an identity thief.
These quiet narratives point beyond personal life and memories, addressing a larger conversation built around culture, class and identity.
The artist has made a point of highlighting the way her identity as a black woman has unavoidably become central to the conversations around her work.
In this exhibition curated by Modou Dieng, these artists come into conversation with one another, providing a space in which to explore complex systems articulated around design and execution that have been employed in the cultural realization of identities as they continue to emerge in new transcultural and hybrid forms.
2.05 pm An in - conversation between artist Erica Scourti and writer Paul Clinton focussed around ideas of the self, identities, fiction, and stupidity in a fully mediated world, including works introduced by Erica Scourti.
«Marianna's work is very much a part of the current conversations around the body and identity,» says Anita Zabludowicz, co-founder of London's Zabludowicz Collection, which is currently hosting a solo exhibition of Simnett's work.
While painters like Louise Fishman — whose 1973 series «Angry Women» was among the first to bring gender and sexual identity to the forefront of abstraction — have long been interested «expressing» something beyond formalist discourse, it's certainly the case that even today much of the conversation around Abstract Expressionism surrounds a few select, machismo artists, like Jackson Pollock and Mark Rothko.
In Beneath Her, Frances Goodman continues her ongoing conversation around female identity and autonomy, this time considering the notion of «the surface», and what lies beneath.
Using this loss of innocence and the awakening of the desirable and desiring body as a springboard, Goodman seamlessly traverses a number of media in her ongoing conversation around female identity and autonomy.
Select group exhibitions featuring her work include Third Space / Shifting Conversations About Contemporary Art, Birmingham Museum of Art, AL (2017); Constructing Identity: Petrucci Family Foundation Collection of African - American Art, Portland Art Museum, ME (2017); The Color Line: African American Artists and the Civil Rights in the United States, Musée du quai Branly, Paris (2016); SHE: International Women Artists, Long Museum, Shanghai (2016); No Man's Land: Women Artists from the Rubell Family Collection, Rubell Family Collection, Miami, traveled to the National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, DC (2015); 30 Americans, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, DC (2011), which has traveled extensively around the United States (2011 - 2017, ongoing); and Americans Now, National Portrait Gallery, Washington, DC (2010).
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