On Sunday, February 7, 2021 at 2pm, join us for a lecture about Abolition Art featuring Rebecca Zorach.
This lecture is a part of the ongoing Evanston Art Center series, “In Focus.” “In Focus” features a variety of talks and presentations by artists, art professionals, historians and more!
As we watch (and perhaps some of us participate in) the long-overdue tearing down of monuments and—who knows?—creation of new ones, what art history has to say to our present moment may offer but thin slivers of insight. Yet what our present moment says to art history is that we must examine our investments, phantasmatic and otherwise. To what extent does our current understanding of “art” require a kind of order that can only come from “police”? What creative energies might the undoing of that tacit bargain liberate?
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Rebecca Zorach teaches and writes on early modern European art (15th-17th century), contemporary activist art, and art of the 1960s and 1970s. Particular interests include print media, feminist and queer theory, theory of representation, African American artists, and the multiple intersections of art and politics.
Her most recent book, Art for People’s Sake: Artists and Community in Black Chicago, 1965–1975, was published by Duke University Press in 2019. She is at work on a new project that will consider the relationship of artistic and political agency to natural and social ecologies. She is a member of Feel Tank Chicago, is on the board of the South Side Community Art Center and South Side Projections, and co-organizes the archive and oral history project Never The Same with Daniel Tucker (never-the-same.org).
ABOUT THE EVENT
Registration is required. Please register online through EventBrite: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/in-focus-lecture-series-rebecca-zorach-abolition-art-tickets-132265925945
This lecture will be virtual, and available via Zoom. After registering on Eventbrite, a day before the event, we will email you more information on how to log into the event via Zoom with the Meeting ID and password.
Please note that in-person tickets may be available at a later date.
This event is free and open to the public.
About the Evanston Art Center:
The Evanston Art Center (EAC) provides inspiring art education, exhibitions, and expression for all. The EAC is a non-profit that has supported the arts for more than 90 years.
For more information, please visit us online at www.evanstonartcenter.org or contact Cara Feeney, Director of Exhibitions, at cfeeney@evanstonartcenter.org.
Visit the Evanston Art Center on Facebook: www.facebook.com/EvanstonArtCenter; follow us on Instagram: @EvanstonArtCenter.
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