Sam Gilliam Lecture Series: Theaster Gates
Overview
Join the Hopkins Bloomberg Center for the second installment of the Sam Gilliam Lecture Series featuring Theaster Gates, an artist and professor at the University of Chicago in the Department of Visual Arts and the College.
Gates' lecture will draw from his decades-long investment in interrogating the imagined precarity of Black institutions and demonstrating the role that artists can play in enlivening archives as living vehicles for the valorization, amplification, and preservation of under-celebrated histories.
The Sam Gilliam Lecture Series welcomes prominent artists and speakers to the Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg Center to reflect on the intersections between contemporary art, academia, and public policy, and the role art plays in advancing society.
WHEN:
Thursday, Nov. 11, 6 p.m.
Note: Check in begins at 5:30 p.m.; reception begins at 7:30 p.m.
WHERE:
Hopkins Bloomberg Center Theater
555 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20001
ABOUT THEASTER GATES
Gates' practice finds roots in conceptual formalism, sculpture, space theory, land art, and performance. Trained in urban planning and ceramics, his practice has modeled the importance of radical custodianship and critical redeployment of culturally significant Black craft, objects, archives, and spaces.
Gates is the founder and executive director of Rebuild, a non-profit artistic project invested in land, archives, and creative practice as tools for building self-determined, spatial futures on Chicago’s South Side.
Through the expansiveness of his approach as a thinker, maker, and builder, Gates resurrects, exalts, and extends the life of disappearing and bygone histories, places, traditions, and personal heroes.
ABOUT THE SAM GILLIAM LECTURE SERIES
In recognition of the mission of the Hopkins Bloomberg Center—to connect research and discovery with policymaking—the Sam Gilliam Lecture Series will provide a platform for speakers to engage in conversation with faculty experts, students, and the community about the role of art in addressing critical social issues.
Made possible by the Sam Gilliam Foundation, series was established to honor the artistic legacy and social justice commitments of the late Washington, D.C.-based artist Sam Gilliam. The series will welcome prominent artists and thinkers to the university’s Washington, D.C. hub to reflect on the intersections between contemporary art, academia, and public policy, and the role art plays in advancing society.
Good to know
Highlights
- 2 hours 30 minutes
- In person
Location
Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg Center
555 Pennsylvania Avenue Northwest
Washington, DC 20001
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