Live Stage: Crafting Protest [
NYC]
Crafting Protest - Panel Discussion & Craft Reception :: Panelists: Liz Collins, artist/designer; Sabrina Gschwandtner, artist; Cat Mazza, artist/activist; Allison Smith, artist :: Moderator: Julia Bryan-Wilson, art historian and critic, University of California at Irvine :: January 26, 2008; 3 - 5 pm :: The Vera List Center for Art and Politics, The New School, Theresa Lang Community and Student Center, 55 West 13th Street, 2nd floor, New York City.
Many contemporary artists are using craft as a largely unregulated place of protest where diverse and timely political statements are being made. Presented as part of a series of talks on agency, the panel proposes that crafting, because it is often social and communal, plays a vital role in the public sphere. The speakers examine the role of craft in forming national identities, especially in times of political turmoil or war; notions of patriotism; feminism and the domestic sphere; and economic models that circumvent conventional market models. By linking the act of production and handmaking in the public realm to political expression, participants will ask: how can art foster political agency?
This program is presented concurrently with the release of the February issue of Modern Painters that features a roundtable discussion by the panelists. Participants of this program have also collaborated on a large-scale knit banner to be unveiled at the event. Following the panel discussion, audience members are invited to an informal craft reception in which panelists will present tactile examples of the materials, machinery, and processes they use in their work.
This event is presented on occasion of the Vera List Center’s program cycle on “Agency,” and is co-sponsored by Modern Painters. Allison Smith is a 2007 Artists’ Fellowship recipient of the New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA). This presentation is co-sponsored by Artists & Audiences Exchange, a public program of NYFA.


Now Playing




















![[meme.garden] (2006)](http://turbulence.org/index_files/meme.jpg)
One Response
This would be a great protest to share and bring awareness to online. There is a great place to do that at a site called iProtest
http://www.iprotest.us