Brooklyn Museum Roundtable: THE BLACK FEMALE BODY

At the Brooklyn Museum looking to the art of Mickalene Thomas for inspiration, noted scholars discuss issues surrounding the black female body in the context of the art-historical canon. Visitors are invited to join the conversation.

BROOKLYN MUSEUM

Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Auditorium, 3rd Floor              Brooklyn Museum                                                                             Saturday,    January 12, 2013  at 2:00 PM

How has the black female body been idealized and misread in visual culture? How might these tendencies affect black women today?

A tour of the exhibition: Mickalene Thomas Origin of the Universe will precede and follow the discussion at 1 and 4 PM.

  • Speakers include:
  • Deborah “Deb” Willis, contemporary African American artist, photographer, curator, historian, and author; Professor and Chair of the Department of Photography and Imaging at Tisch School of the Arts at New York University
  • Isolde Brielmaier, Chief Curator of Exhibitions at Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD); writer and lecturer on contemporary art
  • Carla Williams, writer, speaker, coauthor of The Black Female Body: A Photographic History, and other books, Professor of Photographer at Rochester Institute Technology
  • Tisa Bryant, writer who’s multilayered work often traverses the boundaries of genre, culture, and history; School of Critical Studies faculty member and Interim Faculty Co-director for Equity and Diversity at CalArts

Advance purchase is recommended at www.museumtix.com. Museum Members receive free admission; please call the Membership Hotline at 718-501-6326 for reservations.                                                                                        Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Auditorium,                                                                      3rd Floor,                                                                                                             Brooklyn Museum                                                                                                     200 Eastern Parkway                                                                                         Brooklyn, N.Y. 11238-6052