Black Hole

Cornell University VISUALIZING BLACKNESS October 12-15, 2000 A Conference to be held in Conjunction with The Exhibition BLACKNESS IN COLOR: Visual Expressions of the Black Arts Movement (1960-Present) At The Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art Celebrating Thirty Years of Africana Studies at Cornell University Funded by a generous grant from the Ford Foundation, this conference is scheduled to coincide with the 30th Anniversary of the Africana Studies and Research Center at Cornell University. The conference will be attended by scholars, artists, curators and other experts in the field of African American, African Diaspora art and visual cultures. The conference will focus on the visual expressions of the Black Arts Movement in the United States from the 1960s to the present. However, this topic will serve as a springboard for an intellectual exchange on current issues related to African American, African Diaspora art and visual cultures. The conference will take a critical look at the role of art in activism and the community as spearheaded by the Black Arts Movement in the aftermath of the Black Power and civil rights movements. The conference will also deal with emerging discourses in the field of Black art and visual culture and their intersections with issues of race, class, gender, and sexuality. The proceedings of the conference will be published as a book in collaboration with a major publisher. THE CONFERENCE IS FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC To register to attend please contact: Diane Butler at (607) 255-6464 or e-mail at: dsb16@cornell.edu For Hotels in Ithaca please visit the website: http://www.visitithaca.com/ RELIMINARY PROGRAM THURSDAY OCTOBER 12, 2000 Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art 5:00 – 8:00 PM: Welcoming Remarks and Reception Professor James Turner, Director, Africana Studies and Research Center President Hunter and Elizabeth Rawlings Professor Frank Robinson, Richard J Schwartz Director, Herbert F. Johnson Museum Tribute (Memory to be honored): Toni Cade Bambara, Carolyn Fowler Hoyt Fuller, Addison Gayle, Larry Neal, Dudley Randall, and Margaret Walker. Poetry Reading by: Amiri Baraka, Mari Evans, Angela Jackson, Haki Madhubuti, Sonia Sanchez, and Askia Toure Music by Amiri Baraka and the Blue Ark Band (Tentative, Place to be announced) FRIDAY OCTOBER 13, 2000 RPCC 8:30-10:30 AM: The Black Arts Movement in Theory and Practice Moderator: James Turner, Professor, Director, Africana Studies, Cornell University Panelists: Amiri Baraka, poet, playwright Haki Madhubuti, Poet, founder and publisher of Third World Press, Chicago Michael Thelwell, professor, University of Massachusetts Eleanor Traylor, professor and English Department Chair, Howard University Discussant: Sonia Sanchez, poet, professor, Temple University 10:45-12:45 AM: Affirmation and Reclamation: Modernism and the Origin of a Black Aesthetic: Moderator: Biodun Jeyifo, professor of English, Cornell University Panelists: Tritobia Hayes Benjamin, Associate Dean, Division of Fine Arts, College of Arts and Sciences, Howard University David Driskell, Emeritus professor, University of Maryland, College Park Lizzetta LeFalle-Collins, independent curator and art critic Discussant: Clyde Taylor, professor, New York University 1:00- 2:30 PM: Lunch 2:30-4:30 PM: Foregrounding Blackness: Art, Activism and the Community Moderator: Howard Dodson, Director, The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture Panelists: Floyd Coleman, professor of Art, Howard University Cora Marshall, professor of Art, Central Connecticut State University Edward S. Spriggs, Executive Director, Hammonds House Galleries and Resource Center of African American Art, Atlanta 4:45-6:45 PM: Foregrounding Blackness: Comparative Perspectives from Africa and the Diaspora Moderator: Daniel Dawson, curator and arts consultant, New York Panelists: Eddie Chambers, independent curator and art critic, UK Richard Long, Atticus Haygood Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies, Emory University Zita Nunes, Professor of English, University of Maryland 7:30-8:30 – Buffet dinner and Cash Bar- RPCC 9:00 – Concert (Place and Performer to be announced) SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14 RPCC 8:30-10:30 AM: Race, Stereotypes and the Politics of Representation Panelists: Camille Billops, artist, filmmaker, and founder of the Hatch-Billops Collection Michael Harris, artist and professor, North Carolina State University Howardena Pindell, artist and professor, State University of New York at Stoney Brook 10:35-12:35 PM: New Discourses: Gender, Feminism and Postmodernism and the Black Subject Moderator: Leslie King-Hammonds, Dean, Graduate Studies, Maryland Institute of Art. Panelists: Kellie Jones, professor, Department of History of Art and African American Studies, Yale University Freida High Tesfagiorgis, Professor of Art and Afro-American Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison Deborah Willis-Kennedy, artist and curator, Smithsonian Institutions 12:35 – 1:30 PM Lunch Uris Hall Uris Hall Auditorium 1:30-3:00 PM: Keynote Speaker: Faith Ringgold, artist “More than 30 Years of Making Art” 3:30-5:30 PM: Artists panel Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art Moderator: Salah Hassan, professor, Cornell University Panelists: Emma Amos, artist, professor Rutgers University Kay Brown, artist and art historian, Washington, DC Jeff Donaldson, artist and Emeritus Dean, School of Fine Arts, Howard University Mel Edwards, artist and professor of Art, Rutgers University Ademola Olugebefola, artist and Co-Director, Grinnell Fine Art Collection, New York 5:30-7:30PM: Public Reception: Herbert F. Johnson Museum 7:30-9:30 PM: Banquet G10 Conference Room, The Biotechnology Building Keynote Speaker: Barry Gaither, Founder and Director, National Museum of Afro-American Artists, and curator, Museum of Fine Art, Boston Music by Mamadou Diabate 11:00 PM: Dance Party (with DJ) RPCC: Sunday, Oct. 15 Hoyt Fuller Room, Africana Studies and Research Center 10:30-12:00 – Farewell brunch and discussion Conference Coordinator: Salah M. Hassan Associate Professor Africana Studies Cornell University 310 Triphammer Rd Ithaca, NY 14850 (607) 255-0528 Tel (607) 255-0784 Fax e-mail: sh40@cornell.edu
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Asia Art Archive
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Schirn Kunsthalle