January 31, 2007

3rd Annual Ray Warren Multicultural Symposium (2006)

“I, Too, Sing America”: Different Roots, Shared Future
Queen Nappy, digital printmaking, 2005
Queen Nappy, digital printmaking, 2005
Credit:

“I, TOO, SING AMERICA”:
DIFFERENT ROOTS, SHARED FUTURE

January 31-February 2, 2007

 

“DIFFERENT ROOTS, SHARED FUTURE”
Multicultural Symposium Art Show

 

Wednesday, January 31

Featured Speaker

Françoise Duréssé
Artist
Wednesday, January 31, 3:30 pm
Stamm, Located in Templeton Student Center

Françoise Duréssé presents herself as queen nappy, transforming the complexity of her personal experiences into a poetic dialog. Queen Nappy juxtaposes collages of racist dialogues, printed text, images from history,popular culture, and contemporary events into a visual context. Through this lens, we may examine the discourse of racism.

Françoise Duréssé is a tenure-track assistant professor at Drexel University in Philadelphia. She has exhibited her work in The United States, Europe and the Middle East. Recently she accepted an invitation to exhibit in the 2007 Florence Biennale. Her artwork combines self-portraiture with media images of people of colour to explore the ways in which assigned media roles serve to reinforce negative cultural expectations and stereotypes.

 

Featured Performance

Intox Lounge: An Evening of Critical Culture & X-treme Performance
A La Pocha Nostra Production
Conceived and directed by Guillermo Gomez-Peña in collaboration with Violeta Luna and Rakini Devi

Wednesday, January 31, 7:00 pm
Agnes Flanagan Chapel

 

Guillermo Gómez-Peña is performance artist and writer based in San Francisco, who directs the interdisciplinary arts troupe La Pocha Nostra. His works centers on the borders, physical and otherwise, between his two countries and between the mainstream U.S. and Latino cultures in general. His latest book, Ethno-techno: Writings in Performance, Pedagogy and Activism, was published in 2005.

 

Thursday, February 1

Special Events

Race Monologues: Beyond Checking The Box
Lewis & Clark Students of Color
Thursday, February 1, 7:00 pm
Stamm, Located in Templeton Student Center

Students of color rage against racism, tokenism and silence. They struggle with notions of self-righteousness, labels, and the boxed identity through stories, dialog, and spoken word.

Friday, February 2

Keynote Address

Journey From The Land Of No
Roya Hakakian, Iranian Writer and Film Producer
Friday, February 2, 7:00 pm
Agnes Flanagan Chapel

A founding member of the Iran Human Rights Documentation Center, Roya Hakakian serves on the board of Refugees International and is a fellow at Yale University’s Whitney Humanities Center. She has appeared on CSPAN-Book TV, CNN International, CBS Early Show, and Now with Bill Moyers, speaking about the Middle East and human rights. A writer and poet, her memoir of growing up Jewish in post-revolutionary Iran, Journey from the Land of No, has received much acclaim including the Persian Heritage Foundation’s Latifeh Yarshater Literary Award.

 

Click Here For More Information on Roya Hakakian

“I, TOO, SING AMERICA,” is the first line of Langston Hughes’ 1932 poem “I,Too.”