Sentences with phrase «radical imagination»

She is the curator of Black Radical Imagination with Amir George, which has screened both nationally and internationally in spaces such as MoMA PS1, MOCA Los Angeles, and the Museo Taller Jose Clemente Orozco.
Split Ends, I Feel Wonderful Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Arts Black Radical Imagination Showcase April 26th, 2013, 8 pm Brooklyn, NY
She is the curator of Black Radical Imagination with Amir George, which has screened both nationally and internationally in spaces such as MoMA PS1, MOCA Los Angeles, and the Museo Taller José Clemente Orozco.
Split Ends, I Feel Wonderful Black Radical Imagination at AstroBlackness Conference February 13, 2014, 6 - 7:30 pm
The Los Angeles institution «dwells in the terrain of ideas and practices fueled by radical imagination» in order to transform how people engage with art.
Additional work by Jeannette Ehlers is featured in the «Black Radical Imagination II» screening and panel talk on February 10, 2015 at the Community Folk Art Center.
The latter notion provides the essential public or social counterweight to radical imagination since, as Castoriadis points out, the proper contrast to society is not the individual — every individual is a product of social forces — but rather the singular psyche.23 Thus the contrast of psyche - soma in the mindings of a singular individual evokes a parallel contrast of society - psyches.
Indeed, Castoriadis claims that radical imagination operates «before the distinction between «real» and «fictitious»....
So for us, you can't have conversations about radical imagination without including artists, as they are the ones who articulate that vision both visually and sonically.
Conceived as a radical think tank in the shape of an artist community, 18th Street supports artists from around the globe to imagine, research, and develop significant, meaningful new artworks and share them with the public to foster radical imagination, empathy, and positive social change.
Split Ends, I Feel Wonderful Calarts REDCAT Black Radical Imagination October 7th, 2013, 8:30 pm Los Angeles, CA
Me Broni Ba Papillion Institute of Art Black Radical Imagination curated by Erin Cristovale & Amir George February 16th, 2013, 7PM Los Angeles, CA
Black Radical Imagination focuses on the aesthetics of Afro - futurism, Afro - surrealism, and the magnificent through the context of cinema.
An artistic movement as well as a school of thought, Black Radical Imagination uses cinema to explore the aesthetics of afrofuturism and afrosurrealism.
Split Ends, I Feel Wonderful Artists Television Access Black Radical Imagination Showcase August 31st, 2013, 8PM San Francisco, CA
Split Ends, I Feel Wonderful Black Radical Imagination at LA Art Book Fair January 29th, 2015, 7:00 pm - 8:30 pm Los Angeles, CA
She is also the curator of Black Radical Imagination with Amir George, which has screened both nationally and internationally in spaces such as MoMA PS1, MOCA Los Angeles, and the Museo Taller José Clemente Orozco.
Additional work by Jeannette Ehlers will be featured as part of the «Black Radical Imagination II» screening and panel talk on Tuesday, February 10 at 6:30 pm at Community Folk Art Center (CFAC).
For example, a very interesting common theoretical standpoint that was shared and jointly built during this week, was the understanding of black radical imagination as a Marxist approach that could engage utopia and a post-capitalist future from the perspectives of class, race and gender politics.
This line of thought suggests that the products of minds are best conceived as issuing from constructive acts performed by «embodied psyches,» in which psyche and soma resolve their tensions and oppositions with the help of «radical imagination
All acts of «naturing» (or «raw» sensing) and «culturing» involve an amalgam of (to use Castoriadis's terms) «radical imagination» and «a social instituting imaginary.»
Ahead of the 2018 Made in L.A. biennial, which she is co-curating with Anne Ellegood, Erin Christovale has been named an assistant curator at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles.Christovale is known for running, with Amir George, Black Radical Imagination,... Read More
A Los Angeles - based independent curator and film programmer, she is co-curator of Black Radical Imagination, a series of film shorts, screened at venues including MCA Chicago, ICA Boston, and the Brooklyn Museum, that focuses on «the aesthetics of Afro - futurism, Afro - surrealism, and the magnificent through the context of cinema.»
Split Ends, I Feel Wonderful Art Basel Better Days showing with work by Cauleen Smith Black Radical Imagination Showcase June 14th, 2013 Miami, FL
Split Ends, I Feel Wonderful Black Radical Imagination with works by Cauleen Smith, Jacolby Satterwhite, Cristina de Middel, Adebukola Bodunrin & Ezra Claytan Daniels Syracuse University curated by Erin Christovale and Amir George Syracuse, NY February 10th, 2015, 2 - 4 pm
Split Ends, I Feel Wonderful Black Cinema House Black Radical Imagination Showcase May 19th, 2013, 6 pm Chicago, Illinois
Split Ends, I Feel Wonderful Black Radical Imagination at Trinidad & Tobago Film Festival curated by Erin Christovale & Amir George September 20th, 2014 Trinidad & Tobago
Split Ends, I Feel Wonderful Art League Houston Black Radical Imagination Showcase August 9th, 2013, 7PM August 10th, 2013, 12 - 5PM Houston, TX
On November 20th, Black Radical Imagination will bring a series of shorts to New York's MoMA PS1.
She fundamentally believes in the power of art to effect societal change through empathy and radical imagination.
The shop traces related works from Lauren Anderson, Black Radical Imagination, E. Jane, Gene's Liquor, Nicky Benedek, Marco Braunschweiler, Kayla Guthrie, David Hartt, Kahlil Joseph, Chloe Maratta, Hassan Rahim, Diamond Stingily and Wilmer Wilson IV.
Black Radical Imagination is a touring program of visual shorts that delve into the worlds of new media, video art, and experimental narrative.
T H E U N S E E N F E S T I V A L Black Radical Imagination Join us on Thursday, September 28, 7:30 pm for Program 8 of the Unseen Festival: Black Radical Imagination.
Clockwise from left, Influential young curators Erin Christovale (Black Radical Imagination, LA Municipal Art Gallery), Photo by Jamie Costa; Lanka Tattersall (MoCA LA), Photo by Myles Pettengill; Rujeko Hockley (Brooklyn Museum), Photo by Elena Olivo; Amanda Hunt (Studio Museum in Harlem), Photo by Sharon Suh; and Naomi Beckwith (MCA Chicago), Photo by Maria Ponce.
Just as Artists Space itself is transformed into a self - regulated commons, Decolonize This Place will «strike art» to «liberate art from itself» — in the words of MTL + member Nitasha Dhillon: «not to end art, but to unleash its powers of direct action and radical imagination
In this way, archives — which find home in our public institutions, private residences, and online — have come to embody sites of radical imagination.
Using films Baby Boy (2001) by John Singleton and Moonlight (2016) by Barry Jenkins as cinematic bookends, baby boy is a exhibition curated by Black Radical Imagination that explores the multitudes of Black - American malehood in the 21st century.
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