Brooklyn, NY | Curator’s Tour of “1-800 Happy Birthday” with Klaudia Ofwona Draber
WORTHLESS STUDIOS 7 KNickerbocker Avenue, Brooklyn, New York, United States1-800 Happy Birthday is an exhibition honoring Black and Brown lives killed by police.
All virtual programs are listed in Eastern Time (ET). Start times for all other continental US time zones are listed in the program description below the main image. For in-person programs, the program start time is listed in the location’s time zone.
1-800 Happy Birthday is an exhibition honoring Black and Brown lives killed by police.
The Museum of Contemporary Art Arlington (formerly Arlington Arts Center) enriches community life by connecting the public with contemporary art and artists through exhibitions, education programs, and an artists-in-residence program.
Fatima Al-Dosari is an ArtTable member and the Executive Director of the Qatar America Institute for Culture in Washington, DC.
Jessica Elaine Blinkhorn is an Atlanta-based Interdisciplinary Artist. Blinkhorn’s work advocates for the LGBTQ+, disabled, and aging communities. Blinkhorn, who uses a powerchair, focuses her work on acceptance through acknowledgement of difference, body positivity, disability education through experience and exposure, human sexuality, and story-telling.
Data about pay and gender equity when it comes to arts professionals is woefully inaccessible and incomplete. Over the past several months, in an effort to remedy some of these problems and contribute valuable knowledge to our community, ArtTable has collected new data via a survey about the changing contours of the artistic labor market in order to better understand trends and advocate for arts professionals, artists, and arts workers of all types. Based on the feedback we have received so far, and continue to receive, we are pleased to present this discussion on gender, compensation, and inequality among arts professionals.
Celebrate the new year with ArtTable members in New York!
Adriana Ospina is the Director of the Art Museum of the Americas of the Organization of American States.
Join ArtTable's Executive Director for a day at Intersect Palm Springs! Enjoy a private tour led by Liza Shapiro and Georgia Powell of CURA Art, followed by a meet-and-greet reception.
Printmaking has served as a stepping stone for many women artists, enabling their work to reach the masses thanks to its accessible form. Matrix: Prints by Women Artists, 1960–1990 explores a period of experimentation in printmaking among women artists, who used the art form as a means of creative expression and also a way to enter the male-dominated art market. Historically, women artists had encountered institutional barriers to success in the fine arts, including a lack of access to formal training, exhibitions, and sales. The 1960s ushered in an era of massive social change, including the feminist movement, which sought equal rights and opportunities and greater personal freedom for women. It became a period of great artistic experimentation and collaboration.
This new biography - featuring over 150 archival images and full-color photographs printed throughout - introduces Julia Morgan as both a pioneering architect and a captivating individual.
ArtTable is a 501.c.3 organization and all programs are non-refundable. Should a program be postponed by ArtTable for any reason, the purchaser’s ticket will be honored for the rescheduled program. Should a program be canceled and not rescheduled, the purchaser will receive credit to be used toward a future program. Please email programs@arttable.org with any questions.
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