Bethany Collins and Sampada Aranke: About Looking
@ Gallery 400
Online
Opening Thursday, October 7th, from 5PM - 6PM
Looking, always reading and touching intentionally. Artist Bethany Collins discusses her text-based practice with scholar Sampada Aranke.
This program is free and closed captioning will be available. Reserve tickets on our website.
Bethany Collins (b. 1984 Montgomery, AL) lives and works in Chicago, IL. Collins received an MFA from Georgia State University in Atlanta, GA and a BA from the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa. Upcoming and recent solo museum exhibitions include presentations at the Frist Art Museum, Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts, CAM St. Louis, The University of Kentucky Art Museum and the Art Institute of Chicago. Upcoming and recent group exhibitions include presentations at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Speed Art Museum, Zimmerli Art Museum, Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, The Renaissance Society, Peabody Essex Museum, Seattle Art Museum, The Phillips Collection and the Smart Museum, among many others. Her work is included in the public collections of the Birmingham Museum of Art, Block Museum of Art, Morgan Library & Museum, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts Museum, Art Institute of Chicago, Peabody Essex Museum, The Smart Museum of Art, The Studio Museum in Harlem, Davidson College, University of Chicago, University of Virginia Special Collections Library and Yale University Library. Collins has received numerous awards including: Artadia Award: Chicago; Public Humanities Practitioner-in-Residence at Davidson College; Artist Fellowship Award, Illinois Arts Council Agency; The Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant, and the Hudgens Prize. Collins was also an artist residence at The MacDowell Colony and the Studio Museum in Harlem.
Sampada Aranke (PhD, Performance Studies) is an Assistant Professor in the Art History, Theory, Criticism Department at the School of the Art Institute, Chicago. Her research interests include performance theories of embodiment, visual culture, and black cultural and aesthetic theory. Her work has been published in e-flux, Artforum, Art Journal, ASAP/J, October, and Trans-Scripts: An Interdisciplinary Online Journal in the Humanities and Social Sciences at UC Irvine. She has written catalogue essays for Sadie Barnette, Rashid Johnson, Faith Ringgold, Kambui Olujimi, Sable Elyse Smith, and Zachary Fabri. She is the recipient of the 2021 Art Journal award for her article Blackouts and Other Visual Escapes. Sheâs currently working on her book manuscript entitled Deathâs Futurity: The Visual Life of Black Power.
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