Events & exhibitions

ArtsThursdays: The place where the creek goes underground

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Registration open

Join us to celebrate the launch of the publication accompanying the exhibition The place where the creek goes underground. Artist Anthony Romero and his collaborators, the scholar Deanna Ledezma and the artist Josh Rios, will discuss their long collaboration and the history they share, including the region between South-Central Texas and Northern Mexico where their families have lived for generations. The exhibition and publication center on these lands, and they invite audiences to share histories of knowing, strategies of solidarity, and new horizons for the formation of common groundon issues of labor, immigration, marginalization, and changes to our climate and natural resourcesthrough creative collaboration. In-person attendees will receive a copy of the publication and the opportunity to visit the exhibition during special viewing hours.

For more about the exhibition, visit the exhibition webpage. Extended gallery hours, open from noon to 7 PM.

This event is part of ArtsThursdays, a university-wide initiative for free, public art events every Thursday evening. It is supported by the Harvard University Committee on the Arts (HUCA).

www.harvard.edu/artsthursdays

Social media: #ArtsThursdays

Register

Free and open to the public.

We are planning "ArtsThursdays: The place where the creek goes underground" as a hybrid program.

Join Us in Person

To attend in person, each individual will need to register.

Light refreshments will be provided.

Join Us Online

To view this event online, individuals will need to register via Zoom.

For instructions on how to join online, see the How to Attend a Radcliffe Event on Zoom webpage.

After registering, you will receive a confirmation e-mail containing a link and password for this meeting.

Live closed captioning will be available for the webinar.

Speakers

Anthony Romero is an artist, writer, and organizer committed to documenting and supporting Black, brown, and Indigenous communities. He is a founding member of the artistic research collective, Sonic Insurgency Research Group. Romero was the 2019–2020 David and Roberta Logie Fellow at Harvard Radcliffe Institute and is currently an associate professor of studio art at Dartmouth College.

Deanna Ledezma is the postdoctoral research associate of the Inter-University Program for Latino Research/University of Illinois Chicago Mellon Program. Her current book project “Unsettled Archives: Kinships and Diasporas in Latinx Photography” examines how Latines use photography to negotiate their cultural and diasporic identities, assert their presence amid the ongoing effects of settler colonialism, and commemorate kinship formations, including those disregarded or censured for exceeding conventional ideas of family.

Josh Rios is a founding member of Sonic Insurgency Research Group and a faculty member at the School of the Art Insti­tute of Chicago, where he teaches courses in social theory and research-based practice. As a media artist, writer, and educator his projects deal with the histories, presents, and futurities of Latine and Chicanx subjects and hemispheric resistance to globalization and neoliberalism, highlighting intercultural contact and co-belonging.

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