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Cerebral Women Art Talks Podcast - Dr. Nicole Fleetwood

Dr. Nicole Fleetwood

03/16/22 • 24 min

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Cerebral Women Art Talks Podcast
Ep.98 features Dr. Nicole Fleetwood. She is an art historian and curator exploring how the art of incarcerated people is essential to our understandings of contemporary art, the carceral state, and the humanity it contains. Fleetwood’s earlier work focused on representations of Blackness in art, performance, and popular culture, particularly how assumptions within American culture about Blackness are disrupted or reinforced by Black artists and public figures. In part motivated by her experiences visiting imprisoned family members, Fleetwood turned her keen curatorial vision to artistic production in and around the United States prison system. In the book Marking Time: Art in the Age of Mass Incarceration (2020), and an accompanying museum exhibition of the same name, Fleetwood investigates the cultural, personal, and aesthetic significance of incarcerated people’s art. The book is the most extensive work to apply the interpretive methods of art history to study the art people make within prison. Drawing on interviews with over seventy currently and formerly incarcerated artists and hundreds of paintings, photos, collages, and other forms of art, Fleetwood develops a concept of “carceral aesthetics” to understand both the works of art produced by incarcerated individuals and the constrained conditions under which they were created. She pays particular attention to the ways people build a sense of themselves and community through creative connection despite the circumstances of imprisonment. For example, the artists Gilberto Rivera, Jesse Krimes, and Jared Owens established a conceptual art workshop focused on multiracial collaboration while serving time at the Fairton Federal Correctional Institution in New Jersey. Another artist, Tyra Patterson, created multimedia portraits inspired by other incarcerated women. Fleetwood’s emphasis on both the artworks’ aesthetic value and the artists’ ingenuity in finding ways to convey their creative vision is a powerful testament to the humanity of all those impacted by the criminal justice system. In both the book and exhibition, she takes a deeply collaborative approach and centers the lived experiences of the artists themselves, many of whom participated in conferences, panel discussions, and other opportunities for public engagement that informed and emerged from the years of work that went into Marking Time. Fleetwood is demonstrating that art and imagery produced and used by incarcerated individuals is a critically important form of human expression, and her work sheds new light on the toll the criminal justice system in the United States takes on human lives. Photo credit: Sara Bennett | John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation MacArthur Foundation https://www.macfound.org/fellows/class-of-2021/nicole-fleetwood NYU https://steinhardt.nyu.edu/people/nicole-r-fleetwood National Endowment for the Arts https://www.arts.gov/stories/podcast/dr-nicole-fleetwood NY Times https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/13/books/review/the-fortune-men-nadifa-mohamed.html Rikers Rikers Murals: What Will Happen to Artwork at the Jail? (curbed.com) Harvard University Press https://harvardpress.typepad.com/hup_publicity/2021/10/nicole-fleetwood-and-monica-mu%C3%B1oz-martinez-awarded-macarthur-fellowships.html MoMA Magazine https://www.moma.org/magazine/articles/454 Marking Time https://markingtimeart.com/ Troubling Vision https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/T/bo10184159.html On Racial Icons https://www.rutgersuniversitypress.org/on-racial-icons/9780813565156 Arts Journal https://www.artsjournal.com/measure/2022/01/27/art-historian-and-2021-macarthur-fellow-dr-nicole-fleetwood-discusses-the-profound-significance-of-the-art-created-by-incarcerated-people/ ACLS https://www.acls.org/news/nicole-fleetwood-f16-named-a-2021-macarthur-fellow/ Youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=76Z_hu9wymI
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Ep.98 features Dr. Nicole Fleetwood. She is an art historian and curator exploring how the art of incarcerated people is essential to our understandings of contemporary art, the carceral state, and the humanity it contains. Fleetwood’s earlier work focused on representations of Blackness in art, performance, and popular culture, particularly how assumptions within American culture about Blackness are disrupted or reinforced by Black artists and public figures. In part motivated by her experiences visiting imprisoned family members, Fleetwood turned her keen curatorial vision to artistic production in and around the United States prison system. In the book Marking Time: Art in the Age of Mass Incarceration (2020), and an accompanying museum exhibition of the same name, Fleetwood investigates the cultural, personal, and aesthetic significance of incarcerated people’s art. The book is the most extensive work to apply the interpretive methods of art history to study the art people make within prison. Drawing on interviews with over seventy currently and formerly incarcerated artists and hundreds of paintings, photos, collages, and other forms of art, Fleetwood develops a concept of “carceral aesthetics” to understand both the works of art produced by incarcerated individuals and the constrained conditions under which they were created. She pays particular attention to the ways people build a sense of themselves and community through creative connection despite the circumstances of imprisonment. For example, the artists Gilberto Rivera, Jesse Krimes, and Jared Owens established a conceptual art workshop focused on multiracial collaboration while serving time at the Fairton Federal Correctional Institution in New Jersey. Another artist, Tyra Patterson, created multimedia portraits inspired by other incarcerated women. Fleetwood’s emphasis on both the artworks’ aesthetic value and the artists’ ingenuity in finding ways to convey their creative vision is a powerful testament to the humanity of all those impacted by the criminal justice system. In both the book and exhibition, she takes a deeply collaborative approach and centers the lived experiences of the artists themselves, many of whom participated in conferences, panel discussions, and other opportunities for public engagement that informed and emerged from the years of work that went into Marking Time. Fleetwood is demonstrating that art and imagery produced and used by incarcerated individuals is a critically important form of human expression, and her work sheds new light on the toll the criminal justice system in the United States takes on human lives. Photo credit: Sara Bennett | John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation MacArthur Foundation https://www.macfound.org/fellows/class-of-2021/nicole-fleetwood NYU https://steinhardt.nyu.edu/people/nicole-r-fleetwood National Endowment for the Arts https://www.arts.gov/stories/podcast/dr-nicole-fleetwood NY Times https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/13/books/review/the-fortune-men-nadifa-mohamed.html Rikers Rikers Murals: What Will Happen to Artwork at the Jail? (curbed.com) Harvard University Press https://harvardpress.typepad.com/hup_publicity/2021/10/nicole-fleetwood-and-monica-mu%C3%B1oz-martinez-awarded-macarthur-fellowships.html MoMA Magazine https://www.moma.org/magazine/articles/454 Marking Time https://markingtimeart.com/ Troubling Vision https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/T/bo10184159.html On Racial Icons https://www.rutgersuniversitypress.org/on-racial-icons/9780813565156 Arts Journal https://www.artsjournal.com/measure/2022/01/27/art-historian-and-2021-macarthur-fellow-dr-nicole-fleetwood-discusses-the-profound-significance-of-the-art-created-by-incarcerated-people/ ACLS https://www.acls.org/news/nicole-fleetwood-f16-named-a-2021-macarthur-fellow/ Youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=76Z_hu9wymI

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undefined - Claire Oliver

Claire Oliver

Ep. 97 features Claire Oliver. She founded her first gallery thirty years ago in Florida before moving to Philadelphia and then in 2000, moving to the Chelsea district of Manhattan, and finally establishing her flagship in Harlem in 2019. Claire has honed a unique place in the international art ecosystem with a focus on showcasing and celebrating artwork by women and people of color, which transcends and challenges the traditional art historical canon. Claire studied architecture and interior design at the University of Utah where she advanced her love for visual art through her study of design with teachers from the German art school commonly known as the Bauhaus. A Southern California native, Claire is an avid equestrian and cross-country skier. She lives and works in Harlem with her husband and her two chihuahuas. Claire Oliver Gallery's forward-thinking program and exclusive commitment to the primary market allows for an intensive focus that has nurtured and grown the careers of her artists. Many of the gallery’s artists have been included in The Venice Biennale, The Whitney Biennial, and biennales in Sydney, Pittsburgh, and Lyon and have exhibited works in major international museums including the Smithsonian American Art Museum, The Art Institute of Chicago, Center Georges Pompidou, The Philadelphia Museum of Art, and The Los Angeles County Museum of Art amongst others. Claire Oliver Gallery artists are included in the permanent collections of many important museums worldwide including The Smithsonian American Art Museum, The Art Institute of Chicago, The Tate Britain, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The State Hermitage Museum, MoMA, and the Museum of Arts and Design amongst many others. Claire Oliver Gallery held the first American exhibition for the Russian collaborative AES+F, whose work went on to twice represent Russia in the Russian pavilion of the Venice Biennale. Gallery artists have received prestigious fellowships including Fulbright, Guggenheim, USArtist and National Endowment for the Arts. Artist https://www.claireoliver.com/ Whitehot Magazine https://whitehotmagazine.com/articles/at-claire-oliver-gallery-/4899 Avenue Magazine https://avenuemagazine.com/harlem-gallery-miami-art-week-digital-show-claire-oliver/ MutualArt http://www.mutualart.com/ExternalArticle/Claire-Oliver-Gallery-Opens--A-Contempor/D9A421CF84D2711D?source_page=Gallery\Articles Fad Magazine https://fadmagazine.com/2020/06/18/claire-oliver-gallery-launches-an-online-sales-room-limited-edition-poster-series-called-art-is-for-everyone/ NYC Arts https://www.nyc-arts.org/organizations/154181/claire-oliver-gallery-2

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undefined - Nicola Vassell

Nicola Vassell

Episode 99 features NICOLA VASSELL. She is the founder of Nicola Vassell Gallery, a contemporary art gallery committed to discourse that widens the lens of the history and future of art. Its focus is on developing an inter-generational, cross-disciplinary program of international artists and thinkers. Prior to the gallery, Nicola was Principal at Concept NV, an art consultancy, established in 2013, specialized in exhibitions and debate on cultural phenomena. Vassell has organized numerous exhibitions and developed a number of important collections. She is an editor of books, whose past publications include, Jean-Michel Basquiat 1981: The Studio of the Street; Francesco Clemente: Works 1971-1979 and Kehinde Wiley: Black Light. Vassell was a Director at Deitch Projects and Pace Gallery, NY. She is a member of New Museum’s Artemis Council. Image courtesy Nicola Vassell. Photo Luigi Cazzaniga Artist https://nicolavassell.com/ Conceptnv https://conceptnv.com/ Gagosian https://gagosian.com/quarterly/contributors/nicola-vassell/ Surface https://www.surfacemag.com/articles/moses-sumney-blackalachia-screening-nyc/ Jamaica Gleaner https://jamaica-gleaner.com/article/social/20210530/her-way-art-former-jamaican-model-nicola-vassell-opens-gallery-new-york Cultured https://www.culturedmag.com/article/2021/01/26/art-whisperer-nicola-vassell-to-open-a-space-of-her-own The Art Newspaper https://www.theartnewspaper.com/2021/05/19/unity-is-survival-former-pace-director-nicola-vassell-to-open-a-gallery-in-new-york New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2021/05/18/arts/design/nicola-vassell-gallery-chelsea.html Barrons https://www.barrons.com/articles/20-minutes-with-art-dealer-and-curator-nicola-vassell-01635793577 ARTNews https://www.artnews.com/art-news/news/nicola-vassell-donna-de-salvo-conversation-1234609764/ Artnet https://news.artnet.com/art-world/nicola-vassell-gallery-1969733 Grazia https://graziamagazine.com/us/articles/nicola-vassell-gallery-nyc/ Sothebys https://www.sothebysinstitute.com/why-sothebys/our-faculty-and-guest-speakers/nicola-vassell Vogue https://www.vogue.com/slideshow/basel-vassell-dinner-2021

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