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contemporary art

Betty Yu Artist Talk

March 31, 2022 by je2190 Leave a Comment

Multimedia artist and educator Betty Yu shared her incredible work with NYU Art+Education students on Nov. 17th, including her personal work and collective efforts as a co-founder of Chinatown Art Brigade. After beginning with a land acknowledgement, Yu talked about her own family history and relationship to New York City. As an artist, Yu focuses on the use of digital and collective storytelling practices as a way to amplify the voices of those most impacted by housing injustice and gentrification, starting in Sunset Park, Brooklyn where she was raised. Her project, (Dis)Placed in Sunset Park is an interactive multimedia project that allows visitors to take a virtual tour of Sunset Park and experience the stories of Latinx and Chinese (im)migrants, workers and residents through short videos presented through an augmented reality technology (AR) app.

In addition to her own work, Yu is a member and co-founder of Chinatown Art Brigade (a collective of Asian American social justice artists) that centers art and culture as a way to support community-led campaigns around issues of gentrification and displacement. In her talk, Yu described CAB’s collaborations with CAAV and the Chinatown Tenants Union, which included collecting oral histories, story circles, resident-led walks, photography, audio recordings, community counter mapping, and video documentation as well as large scale public projections, augmented reality, 3-D storytelling, geo-located audio walks, and interactive mapping. In all her projects, Yu describes her commitment to engaging community members in ‘placekeeping’ (rather than place making) and the power of technologies that support collective participation and amplification of voices impacted by the predatory practices of corporate investment and mass displacement in New York City.

Click here for a list of New Media Resources that include online resources, tools, and software to use in your practice. 

Filed Under: Events, Explore Posts Tagged With: artistic activism, contemporary art

Howardena Pindell exhibition at The Shed, 2020

November 2, 2020 by je2190 Leave a Comment

Folks from the Art+Education shared an impromptu visit to the Howardena Pindell exhibition, Rope/Fire/Water at The Shed. 
The works included in the show provide an unsparing look at the history and current realities of violence and oppression against Black bodies in the United States. At the same time, Pindell balances her uncompromising and insistent look at this brutality with other images that speak to Black joy, celebration and beauty. Connected to our investigation of Race, Education and the Politics of Visual Representation (link to Initial Cert class), this artist and exhibition gave us not only the opportunity to see an artist wrestling with the most pressing issues of our time through video, paint, text, and collage… but a chance to connect with each other in the real world – through our masks and 6 feet of distance! 

Installation with a mural and found objectscollage artwork Made of photos and textStudent looking at Paper and textile collage artworkStudent looking at Paper and textile collage artwork

Paper and textile collage artwork

Filed Under: Events, Race, Education, and Politics of Visual Representation Tagged With: anti-racism, contemporary art

Assembly with Shaun Leonardo and peer leaders from The Brooklyn Justice Initiative

October 27, 2020 by je2190 Leave a Comment

On April 19, 2018 artist and Assembly lead educator Shaun Leonardo, along with members of the program’s peer leadership group led a participatory presentation informed by the Assembly curriculum and co-curated by our collaborators.  Assembly is at once a public storefront gallery and an artist-led diversion program for court-involved youth in partnership with Brooklyn Justice Initiatives. Assembly seeks to dismantle the dominant narratives of the “criminal” through a series of workshops designed by artists Melanie Crean, Sable Smith and Shaun Leonardo, in collaboration with individuals who are court-involved, formerly incarcerated, or otherwise affected by the criminal justice system. Through a curriculum based on visual storytelling, participants translate personal narratives into performance in order to replace a culturally embedded conception of criminality with new language so that the mind and body may think, feel, and move in a way not defined by their previous experience with arrest and incarceration. For more information, see the Assembly website: Recess – Assembly

AssemblyArtEdColloquium2018Flyer

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Filed Under: Events Tagged With: artistic activism, contemporary art, critical pedagogy, performance

Visual Autohistorias

October 13, 2020 by je2190 Leave a Comment

“Autohistoria is a term I use to describe the genre of writing about one’s personal and collective history using fictive elements, a sort of fictionalized autobiography or memoir; and autohistoria‐teoría is a personal essay that theorizes” (Gloria Anzaldúa, 2009)

The brilliant Chicana feminist writer, theorist, and activist Gloria Anzaldúa used the term Autohistoria to describe a form of writing/theorizing that combined personal narrative to help shape social and relational understandings of the world. In the class, Race, Education and the Politics of Visual Representation, students used Anzaldúa’s notion of Autohistoria to reflect on different aspects of identity and represent memories and relationships to experiences of race, class, and gender/sexuality using visual and written forms. Students synthesized multiple memories/identities into a single representation using strategies of layering, juxtaposition, and connection.

Image of student work created by weaving yarn and text into abstract image.
Molly Rutledge, Autohistoria Weaving, 2020. Cotton thread, fabric, pantyhose, paper.

My Autohistoria began as three separate pieces, each reflecting on a different part of my identity, which I destroyed before I finally wove them all together. I wrote about my gender/sexuality identity in a journal, reflecting more specifically on the reproductive privileges I hold as a white cis woman. I tore up the pages and twisted them into strands to be woven. The second piece is a reflection on the predominantly white space I occupy and its repercussions on others. I re-drew real estate signs posted around the neighborhood I’m currently living in with my dad and stepmom. The language on the signs use racist language like “colonial living” in order to keep the space as white as possible. I cut these up in order to weave into the piece. The last element is simply recycled old clothes and pantyhose I cut up to weave with as a symbol of my childhood experience growing up in a working class family that saved and reused everything.The creation of each piece, the act of destroying them, and the weaving process served as a kind of questioning, meditation, and reflection about where I currently sit with my identities and the privilege I hold within each. 

Image of student work. Digital collage using photographs, graphics, and texts
Heather Larson, I only see where I don’t measure up, 2020. Digital Media. 

This piece is about ways in which I’ve failed to meet expectations (racially, gender expectations, socio-economic status). I am exploring the extreme pressure felt from childhood in a society to fit or you are a failure, through the eyes of both men in my life and phrases I’ve had lobbed at me repeatedly. Every number, phrase, picture, is a measure of me and personal – but also quantified through a system or person separate from myself.  To create this piece I started by drawing out several measuring tapes and a frame, I wanted those items to act as constraints. I collected photographs of personal meaning and edited them to reflect the end truth that was unknowable when the picture was originally taken.   

Image of student work of collage of an eye surrounded by words using fabrics and paint
Claudia Maturell, To See and Be Seen, 2020.

This piece speaks to the juxtaposition of how I’ve seen myself throughout my life and how others see me. The identities that society imposes on me have always felt restrictive. Anywhere from gender norms to racial expectations. In this piece I used different textures and mediums to depict the fluidity, vastness, and beauty of my identity; something I continue to discover, something that can’t be contained in any label and goes beyond what the eye can perceive.

Image of student work. Digital image of distorted portrait surrounded by text
Derek Koffi-Ziter, Beyond the Binary, 2020. Digital image.

For this piece I thought about how my perception of self has been greatly influenced as well as distorted by the binary system that society uses when categorizing identities.

Image of student work. Digital illustration of multiple scenes with captions
Mary Anderson, Autohistoria, 2020. Digital Media

When making this piece to reflect on my personal background (race, class, gender/sexuality) I found that my class (working class) was always at the forefront of my mind. It showed itself in where I lived, what I ate, how much time my mom had, what brands we could afford. It was a lack that I was always trying to cover up. Conversely,  growing up in a mostly white suburban setting, I rarely thought about my racial background (white) as a kid. I think this speaks to the dominance and power of whiteness. That white supremacy is so all encompassing that it becomes almost invisible (to those who benefit from it), and even more poisonous because of its invisibility. In this white supremacist capitalist society, everyone outside of this “norm” (whether it’s race, class, gender, sexuality, etc) is forced to reckon with an entire system built to reinforce the “norm” and punish everyone outside of it in order to protect it’s power.

Image of student work of digital collage using a map, photographs, and text
Erin Reid, mapping identities, 2020. Digital collage.

While putting together my autohistoria, I thought a lot about geography and how the places I’ve lived deeply inform my sense of self, especially in relation to race and class. Layered in the background is a redlining map of Chicago from the 1930s, and a bird’s eye view photograph of my private elementary and middle school in Marin County, CA–the two places where I grew up and experienced very conflicting realities defined by structural racism and classism. I also included photographs from my great-grandmother Carrie’s photo albums, which I remember looking through as a child and trying to understand myself. On the top layers of the collage, I added some of the words that came up from a free-write I did exploring my class, gender, and sexual identities. 

Image of student work. Photograph of artist standing in front of wall mural
Jaime Perez, La Historia, 2020. Digital Sketchbook.

In this work, I stand in front of a boarded store-front on Broadway Lafayette. The Original work is replaced with an image of the Puerto Rican flag adorned by roses, leaves, and graffiti. It was created based on my racial identity, gender, and sexual identity. I also hint towards economic identity very briefly.

Image of student work of portrait overlain with text
Ku-Ling, Other, 2020. Photography.

As a child I was the only multicultural kid in my school, as a teenager I was a late bloomer who never felt feminine enough, and as an adult I continue to experience the wide disparities of social/economic class in this world.  These indelible memories define and challenge me.  More often than not when I meet people there’s a pause, a quiet gap between us because I don’t fit into one category of race or ethnicity.  My mother is Chinese/Korean, born in Shanghai and my father is of Russian Jewish descent, born in Brooklyn. She is the radical, he the hippie. The gender roles in society never reflected my home life and the political left leaning consciousness my parents raised me on was always difficult to find amongst my peers. As an adult I’ve found my way, my companions, and my place as I continually consider my past with my present state of mind.

Image of student work. Illustration of portrait and objects
Sara Poleman, Presenting, 2020. Mixed media: Ink, watercolor, pastel  

This self portrait reflects the balance between my inner self and my outer self, as they relate to outside societal influences and ideologies. In this piece I am trying to explore the idea of performative presentation of gender, race, and socioeconomic identities. 

Image of student work of collage using text, a paper bag and a painted background
Jocelyn Lewis, House Negro, 2020. Acrylic/Paper/Paper Bag

House Negro pulls from all three areas of my first or most recent experiences involving my identity. Growing up in Detroit, I always knew I was black since Detroit is nearly 80% African American. Detroit is one of the most poverty stricken cities in Michigan even though we are categorized as one of the most talented and hard working cities in Michigan. Being in Detroit, I didn’t understand my privilege of having lighter skin until conversations I had while playing with other black children. It was pressed upon me that I would have been a “House Negro” because my skin was lighter than a paper bag. This same narrative is spread over into the Bible verse Ephesians 22-24, a scripture that never settled with me as a woman. As my husband would be my master and I would have to submit and obey him like Christ. Like my duties would be to serve him at all times. All three themes reflect on my way of growing up and finding myself in these constant states of oppression. 

Image of student work. Painting of a portrait, snake, and conversation
Janice Quiles-Reyes, Letter to Dad/ You Speak Really Good English, 2020. 11.5” x 14” Acrylic Ink illustration, paper cut outs; created with stop motion app and digital IG filter, layered spoken haiku “Letter to Dad” voice over with captions.

 My first exposure in realizing gender came from my father’s repeated guidelines on what being a girl/ young woman meant to him: long hair, not as receptive to new or technical information as a boy, clean and neat nails /hands, …  These details Are voices-over in haiku form while the illustrated portrait shifts from images of my younger self with long hair, young adult self with my  hoop earrings and my older self with earrings and glasses. I use this moving image as I recall my very first and recent memory of racial identity.  Since I was a kid strangers have commented on and have been surprised by me speaking English.  ”Where are you from?” And I’d reply✨ “Brooklyn”. And that would infuriate them and they’d demand a “correct answer”: 👾”You KNOW what I mean! Where are you from-from?!” **** I’ve been on busses, trains, in supermarkets, at Target, waiting for the walk sign at an intersection, at school, at work, on my block, on my own stoop: when someone commented on my English and asked me: 👾”what’s your nationality?”  ✨”I’m American.” I respond to quickly shut them up. I know what they want from me- I refuse to make it easy. This backfires sometimes ‘cause MANY times they reply:  👾”Are you sure?” ✨“Am I sure I was born here? Yes.” 👾”Where is your family from?” I include the voice over with the imagery to invite the viewer into the layered moments of which I’ve experienced daily.  ✨✨✨✨

“Personal experiences – revised and in other ways redrawn – become a lens with which to reread and rewrite the cultural stories into which we are born.” – Gloria Anzaldúa, now let us shift….  

Filed Under: Class Projects, Race, Education, and Politics of Visual Representation Tagged With: anti-racism, contemporary art, Identity

Research in Art + Education Guest: Tomie Arai

April 16, 2020 by Eric Sihao Lin Leave a Comment

Zoom class with Tomie Arai

Our Spring 2020 Research in Art + Education class welcomed artist and activist Tomie Arai. Tomie shared her experiences using oral history and interviewing for her series, Portraits from Chinatown, and as a co-founder of Chinatown Art Brigade with artists Betty Yu and ManSee Kong. In our discussion, Tomie shared examples of working within communities, the importance of sharing stories in native voice and language, and collecting stories that connect the personal and the political such as experiences of gentrification in New York’s Chinatown and the history of immigration in San Francisco. These topics are helpful to consider as students developing strategies to connect with communities for the final capstone project. Given the realities of social distancing as a result of the coronavirus we have had to dramatically alter the way we think about working in and with communities and connecting with people through the research process. One student appreciated how open and honest she was with us as a class, “I enjoyed how transparent Tomie was in regards to navigating the challenges of working with communities. It was really generous of her to share her time, insight, and even images of her upcoming project.” 

Filed Under: Events, Research and Final Project in Art Education Tagged With: artistic activism, community, contemporary art, public art

Guggenheim Symposium: Teaching Modern and Contemporary Asian Art

January 13, 2020 by Eric Sihao Lin Leave a Comment

Students and teachers presenting on a stage during a symposium.
Image courtesy of the Guggenheim.

On January 11th, 2020, the Guggenheim hosted a symposium titled Teaching Modern and Contemporary Asian Art. The symposium launched a digital teaching resource that features 27 artists from the Guggenheim’s collection of modern and contemporary Asian art, and provides discussion questions, activity prompts, and historical context for educators in the classroom.

In 2019, Art + Education alum Nick Kozak was invited to be part of the Guggenheim’s Teacher Advisory Council (along with 10 other educators in the city), and helped the museum tailor their resources to better suit the needs of classroom teachers. During the 2020 symposium, Nick was invited to share a unit of study that he crafted using the Guggenheim’s teaching resources. 

During the symposium,  Nick had three students— Nate, Natalia, and Eric— join him on stage to talk about the work they created in response to learning about some of those resources. Nick shared how important it was that his students were involved in the symposium,”I think it is imperative that students get invited to education events like this, since they’re the ones who will be encountering all of this content in the classroom.” 

The Guggenheim’s digital teaching resource includes 27 artists, images and videos of artists and artworks, discussion questions, activity prompts, key terms, and maps. Subjects and themes include community, history, identity, materials and process, narrative, nature, place, and symbols. 

Watch Nick, Nate, Natalia, and Eric’s full symposium presentation here.

Screenshot from the Guggenheim's website, displaying a sample of the featured artists.

Map of Asia, courtesy of the Guggenheim

Filed Under: Alumni, Events Tagged With: contemporary art, teaching resources

Hans Haacke Exhibition tour at New Museum, 2019

November 23, 2019 by Eric Sihao Lin 3 Comments

A tour group gathers in the lobby of the New Museum.

NYU Art + Education alumni Peter Tresnan led a tour of the Hans Haacke: All Connected exhibition at the New Museum for Art + Ed alumni and current students. 

“For six decades, Haacke has been a pioneer in kinetic art, environmental art, Conceptual art, and institutional critique. This retrospective brings together more than thirty works from across the artist’s career, focusing in particular on the way he expanded the parameters of his practice to encompass the social, political, and economic structures in which art is produced, circulated, and displayed.”

Exhibition title for Hans Haacke: All Connected exhibition.

This fun and community-centered event was an opportunity for alumni and current students to meet, look at art together, and engage in conversation. 

Alumni Peter Tresnan leading a tour group at the New Museum. Alumni Peter Tresnan leading a tour group at the New Museum. Tour group looking at a Hans Haacke installation at the New Museum.  Three alumni looking at a Hans Haacke installation at the New Museum.

Filed Under: Events Tagged With: contemporary art, Exhibition, sculpture

Alumni Project: Ariana Mygatt, Womanly Magazine

October 24, 2019 by Eric Sihao Lin Leave a Comment

Art + Ed alum Ariana Mygatt is the Managing Editor of Womanly Magazine, a print and digital publication that provides accessible health information to women and non-binary people through visual and literary art. 

Cover of Womanly Magazine Issue No. 4: Black Maternal Health

Through this print and digital content, Womanly Magazine lifts up narratives that are often neglected by the typical women’s magazine. Just like us, our content is diverse. The magazine’s subjects include discrimination in the health care system, intergenerational concerns, and physical and sexual health and expression.

Articles from Womanly Magazine Issue No. 4: Black Maternal Health

Womanly Magazine is fiscally sponsored by the Brooklyn Arts Council. They are working to expand their reach and offer publication in more clinics, health centers, and community centers. Womanly is currently available at select locations in New York City, Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Oakland including:

Planned Parenthood NYC
Bridgepoint Health
My Sister’s Place Women’s Center
Marion House

Filed Under: Alumni Tagged With: alumni, artistic activism, contemporary art

Activist Estates: A Radical History of Property in Loisaida

October 17, 2019 by Eric Sihao Lin Leave a Comment

Exhibition postcard for Activist Estates.

During one of their first classes of the semester, students from Critical Pedagogy, Artists, and the Public Sphere took a class took to the Loisaida Center to see the exhibition Activist Estates: a Radical History of Property in Loisaida.

Two students looking at a map of the Lower East Side.

“Activist Estates: A Radical History of Property in Loisaida is an exploration of buildings and properties in the Lower East Side that are celebrated sites of resistance. This exhibition curated and designed by the Architect Nandini Bagchee in partnership with Loisaida Center visualizes the narratives of a historic space-based activism via drawings, maps, models, photographs, manuals and posters.”

“An examination of participatory practices in New York City reveals the critical relationship between real estate, architecture and activism. In cities across the country, in the 1970’s, the devaluation of property created a vacuum of ownership. Vacant lots, storefronts, schoolhouses, factories and abandoned tenements in New York City became havens for experimental, communal practices. Amid current debates about urban justice and access to the city, Activist Estates critically re-evaluates the place of counter-institutional practices that shape the landscape of New York City.” –loisaida.org

An ongoing video series featuring activists of color, ‘Living Archive of Activism in the LES,’ produced by Dipti Desai and Priyanka Dasgupta,  is included in the exhibition.

Priyanka Dasgupta at the Loisaida exhibition.

Image of artist with his mural Lower East Side: Portal to America, located in the main lobby of El Bohio, 1981. Map of downtown alternative art spaces. Image of Loisaida in 1979.   Exhibition at Loisaida.

Student reading label text at the exhibition.  

Students reading label text at the exhibition.

Filed Under: Critical Pedagogy, Artists, and the Public Sphere, Events Tagged With: contemporary art, Exhibition, housing justice, LES

Artist Talk: Shaun Leonardo

October 10, 2019 by Eric Sihao Lin Leave a Comment

Shaun Leonardo and students.

Shaun Leonardo leading a workshop. Shaun Leonardo leading workshop. Group participating in a workshop led by Shaun Leonardo. Group participating in a workshop led by Shaun Leonardo.

Filed Under: Events Tagged With: artistic activism, contemporary art, performance

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