Across Burning Glass, Reading Stone, a Reader-in-Residence program brings readers into dialogue with each image set. In this episode, the Blackwood is pleased to welcome artist Jessica Karuhanga into dialogue with American Artist in the context of Artist's exhibition Dignity Images.
In this interview, the two artists discuss critiques of computing and social media technologies, the forms of refusal seen in Dignity Images and throughout Artist's practice, and Karuhanga considers her own dignity images in relation to modes of visibility on social media.
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American Artist (b. 1989 Altadena, CA, lives and works in Brooklyn, NY) is an artist whose work considers black labor and visibility within networked life. Their practice makes use of video, installation, new media, and writing. Artist is a resident at Red Bull Arts Detroit and a 2018–2019 recipient of the Queens Museum Jerome Foundation Fellowship. They are a former resident of EYEBEAM and completed the Whitney Independent Study program as an artist in 2017. They have exhibited at the Museum of African Diaspora, San Francisco; the Studio Museum in Harlem; Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, and Koenig & Clinton, New York. Their work has been featured in The New York Times, Artforum, and Huffington Post. They have published writing in The New Inquiry and Art21. Artist is part-time faculty at The New School (Parsons) and teaches at the School for Poetic Computation.
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Introduced by Laura Tibi, Educator-in-Residence.
Download an episode transcript below.