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Oct
22
1:00 PM13:00
125

Fault Lines: Photography, Memory, and Fragility

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Dawoud Bey, Fifth Avenue and East 125th Street, 2015, from Harlem Redux. Courtesy, Sean Kelly Gallery

Fault Lines: Photography, Memory, and Fragility

A DAY LONG EVENT: Saturday, October 22, 2022

The recuperation of marginalized and fractured histories through photography prompts us to re-interrogate the image and understand its narrative power. This conversation invites artists, curators, and scholars whose recent projects have demonstrated how photography can contribute to the excavation of forgotten histories and shed light on current issues of global migration and displacement. Our discussion pursues many venues, ranging from the scholarly reappraisal of an important history of Black photography through the Kamoinge Workshop, to contemporary curatorial practices that are investigating artists’ involvement with environmental fragility, to the spatial exploration of histories of migration and mourning in the African diaspora, to artworks that provoke us to make connections between memory and sociopolitical histories. The conversation is prompted by a recent Hunter College publication on Harlem’s 125th Street, which has studied photography as a form of belonging to place. We are aiming to foster a debate over the powerful significance of photography to memorialize histories that are brittle and sustain ongoing narratives that explain our relationship to place.

Organized by Antonella Pelizzari, Professor, Department of Art and Art History, Hunter College, with support from Noa Wesley, Lazarus Graduate Curatorial Fellow.

Schedule of Events

1:00-1:15 – Introduction

1:15-1:45 - Makeda Best, Richard L. Menschel Curator of Photography, Harvard Art Museums

2:00-2:20 - Sarah Eckhardt, Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, Virginia Fine Arts Museum

2:20-3:00 - A conversation with Kamoinge photographers Beuford Smith and Shawn Walker, facilitated by Sarah Eckhardt

3:10-3:40 - Mabel O. Wilson, Nancy and George E. Rupp Professor of Architecture, Planning, and Preservation, Columbia University

3:50-4:20 - Leslie Hewitt, Associate Professor of Art, The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art

4:30-5pm - Panel Discussion

5-7pm - Reception at the Roosevelt House

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125th Street: Photography in Harlem Book Launch
Sep
14
6:00 PM18:00
125

125th Street: Photography in Harlem Book Launch

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Book Launch and Party celebrating our new publication, 125th Street Photography in Harlem

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2022 6:00PM

HUNTER EAST HARLEM GALLERY

125th Street: Photography in Harlem

Edited by Antonella Pelizzari and Arden Sherman, published by Hirmer Verlag

The publication is an unprecedented study of Harlem’s 125th Street photography and cultural identity.

Harlem’s 125th Street is a marker of twentieth-century urban experience, a thoroughfare that encapsulates powerful stories of business and consumption, real estate and gentrification, glamour and entertainment, and political uprising. This book explores the constant mutation of this street life through the works of a large roster of photographers and performance artists.

The photographs in this book represent narratives of resilience and stories of survival against a rapid and sweeping movement of history across 125th Street, where buildings and communities are periodically destroyed and built anew. The works shape a sense of belonging and identity that goes against the stereotyping and mystification of this neighborhood. It contributes to the writing of a new history of photography that is collective and collaborative.

Featuring artists: Berenice Abbott, Alice Attie, Khalik Allah, Dawoud Bey, Kwame Brathwaite, Isaac Diggs & Edward Hillel, Lola Flash, Hiram Maristany, Ozier Muhammad, Katsu Naito, Marilyn Nance, Ruben Natal-San Miguel, Lorraine O’Grady, Gordon Parks, Pope.L, Jamel Shabazz, Coreen Simpson, Beuford Smith, Ming Smith, Morgan and Marvin Smith, Shawn Walker, Hai Zhang and so many more!

The publication is a supported by the Crossway Foundation and the Hunter College Curatorial Certificate Program.

CLICK HERE TO PURCHASE

Photos by Matt Capowski courtesy of Hunter College.

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