Not exact matches
Ground Floor Gallery's «Women at Work»
features three Brooklyn - based woman artists — Natalie Baxter, Paola Citterio, and Leslie Tucker — whose work questions traditionally masculine or feminine
labor roles and materials by reinterpreting family
histories, consumer culture and politics.
On view September 7 — October 21, 2017, the exhibition
features three new bodies of work that explore themes related to the body and
labor within the
history of photography and American textile manufacturing.
In Search of the Missing Mule (1993), part of a series of works that consider African American
labor within the
history of American expansion,
features a tall figure wearing a blindfold made of a torn and bleached American flag.
Their 2012 exhibition at Lever House on Park Avenue, Art
History with
Labor,
featured a large bronze replica of the inflatable rat in the courtyard of the complex, «The New Colossus» (2012).
(1993), part of a series of works that consider African American
labor within the
history of American expansion,
features a tall figure wearing a blindfold made of a torn and bleached American flag.
The exhibition will also
feature a selection of documents from NYU's Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner
Labor Archives, an internationally renowned center for the study of the history of labor and the
Labor Archives, an internationally renowned center for the study of the
history of
labor and the
labor and the Left.
Cruelty as entertainment, human sacrifice to indulge superstition, slavery as a
labor - saving device, conquest as the mission statement of government, genocide as a means of acquiring real estate, torture and mutilation as routine punishment, the death penalty for misdemeanors and differences of opinion, assassination as the mechanism of political succession, rape as the spoils of war, pogroms as outlets for frustration, homicide as the major form of conflict resolution — all were unexceptionable
features of life for most of human
history.