Coded Language: Bookmaking with artist Diane Pieri
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Coded Language: Bookmaking with artist Diane Pieri

Par Historic Germantown
StentonPhiladelphia, PA
nov. 12 , 2016 at 10:00 EST
Aperçu

Secret messages are best hidden in plain sight.

Coded Language: Bookmaking with Artist Diane Pieri examines the history of coded language used among travelers of the Underground Railroad as well as the white allies of Historic Germantown who harbored them.

From work songs to bed quilts of the enslaved, participants will explore coded language found in objects of daily use and cultural tradition. Participants will also discuss personal experiences with inventing and/or using coded language for the safe keeping of valuable knowledge and their own family history.

Attendees will be guided to connect personal memories and coded language to issues of race relations—past and present. All of these memories and experiences will be recorded on a 24”x36” piece of paper with an excerpt from the 1688 Germantown Quaker Petition Against Slavery printed on it. This highly decorated and manipulated document will then be folded into a multi-page book of each participant’s own design to be taken home as a reminder of histories forgotten and truths that remain unseen. Coded Language will be hosted at Stenton. Diane Pieri’s collaborating historian is Dr. Abigail Perkiss.

DIANE PIERI’S work deals with meaning and beauty in everyday life. She has had 30 solo exhibitions and been included in 200 national and international group exhibitions since 1969. She has been the recipient of two Pollock-Krasner Grants (1999/1992), two Independence Foundation Fellowships in the Arts (2001/2011), and a Pennsylvania Council on the Arts Grant (1992). Diane was included in the 2005 Philadelphia Invitational Portfolio, Philagrafika. She has also been a fellow at Yaddo (1991) and The MacDowell Colony (1990). Since 2001 Diane has completed 10 murals working with Philadelphia’s Mural Arts Program and 7 murals in an elementary school in College Station, Texas since 2008. In 2005 she founded the Cooke Museum of Art, modeled after the Philadelphia Museum of Art, at the Jay Cooke Elementary School in North Philadelphia. Diane has been a Teaching Artist at the Philadelphia Museum of Art for 18 years. She is also a Teaching Artist for The Barnes Foundation. 

DR. ABIGAIL PERKISS, Assistant Professor of History at Kean University, is broadly trained in U.S. history, twentieth-century urban culture, African American history, oral history, and legal history. Her research centers on the history of race, ethnicity, and urban identity in post-WWII American cities, and has been guided by questions of identity creation, community cohesion, and historical memory.

Secret messages are best hidden in plain sight.

Coded Language: Bookmaking with Artist Diane Pieri examines the history of coded language used among travelers of the Underground Railroad as well as the white allies of Historic Germantown who harbored them.

From work songs to bed quilts of the enslaved, participants will explore coded language found in objects of daily use and cultural tradition. Participants will also discuss personal experiences with inventing and/or using coded language for the safe keeping of valuable knowledge and their own family history.

Attendees will be guided to connect personal memories and coded language to issues of race relations—past and present. All of these memories and experiences will be recorded on a 24”x36” piece of paper with an excerpt from the 1688 Germantown Quaker Petition Against Slavery printed on it. This highly decorated and manipulated document will then be folded into a multi-page book of each participant’s own design to be taken home as a reminder of histories forgotten and truths that remain unseen. Coded Language will be hosted at Stenton. Diane Pieri’s collaborating historian is Dr. Abigail Perkiss.

DIANE PIERI’S work deals with meaning and beauty in everyday life. She has had 30 solo exhibitions and been included in 200 national and international group exhibitions since 1969. She has been the recipient of two Pollock-Krasner Grants (1999/1992), two Independence Foundation Fellowships in the Arts (2001/2011), and a Pennsylvania Council on the Arts Grant (1992). Diane was included in the 2005 Philadelphia Invitational Portfolio, Philagrafika. She has also been a fellow at Yaddo (1991) and The MacDowell Colony (1990). Since 2001 Diane has completed 10 murals working with Philadelphia’s Mural Arts Program and 7 murals in an elementary school in College Station, Texas since 2008. In 2005 she founded the Cooke Museum of Art, modeled after the Philadelphia Museum of Art, at the Jay Cooke Elementary School in North Philadelphia. Diane has been a Teaching Artist at the Philadelphia Museum of Art for 18 years. She is also a Teaching Artist for The Barnes Foundation. 

DR. ABIGAIL PERKISS, Assistant Professor of History at Kean University, is broadly trained in U.S. history, twentieth-century urban culture, African American history, oral history, and legal history. Her research centers on the history of race, ethnicity, and urban identity in post-WWII American cities, and has been guided by questions of identity creation, community cohesion, and historical memory.

Organisé par
Historic Germantown
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nov. 12 · 10:00 EST