Histories of Now: Space for Dialogue, Art and Activism

Histories of Now: Space for Dialogue, Art and Activism

School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts University

Installation view of Ahmed Basiony’s 30 Days of Running in the Place, 2011. Three-channel video installation at SMFA. Photo: George Bouret.
January 30, 2013
Histories of Now: Space for Dialogue, Art and Activism

January 30–March 12, 2013

School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Barbara and Steven Grossman Gallery
230 The Fenway, Boston, MA

www.smfa.edu/egypt-dialogue

Since the very first mass uprisings of Arab Spring in late 2010, Egypt has been a hotbed of cultural and political change. Even today, the country continues to progressively redefine itself amid actual protests in Cairo’s Tahrir Square and through social media campaigns on Facebook and Twitter. In recognition of this cultural shift the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (SMFA) will host a multimedia, international exchange examining social movements during Histories of Now: Space for Dialogue, Art and Activism. From January 30–March 12, the School’s Barbara and Steven Grossman Gallery will be transformed into a site of international and local discussion focused on current events in Egypt, as well as other contemporary movements and their shared struggle for social transformation.

SMFA’s 2012 exhibition Histories of Now: Six Artists from Cairo was an intimate investigation of the complex social framework and formal engagements being explored by Egyptian artists, and now serves as the basis for Histories of Now: Space for Dialogue, Art and Activism. Building on the concerns and artistic approaches displayed in Six Artists from Cairo, this new undertaking pushes the conversation even further.

The Grossman Gallery will be arranged with spaces for large gatherings, areas for internet research, and a media library for readings, creative thinking and questioning. Participants, collaborators and speakers include artists who exhibited in Six Artists from Cairo, Egyptian scholars, artists and cultural representatives, international and local activists, cultural thinkers, journalists, members of the public, SMFA faculty and students.

“Space for Dialogue, Art and Activism is an open-ended project shaped by all participants—be they invited speakers, SMFA students or gallery visitors,” says SMFA Curator Joanna Soltan. “This event is both a study of activism and social movements, as well as a direct experience of a socially-engaged creativity.”

Engaging students in ideas and discussions that shape contemporary culture is an essential part of the SMFA education and faculty involvement is critical to facilitating these opportunities. Full-time faculty Jeannie Simms, whose students will use video components to explore issues of writing histories drawn from dialogue transpiring over new media, will be joining Space for Dialogue, Art and Activism. Full-time visiting faculty Seth Kim-Cohen’s Rock and Roll Aesthetics class will create a band and use the transformed gallery as a rehearsal space. Working in the tradition of collectives such as the Paris Commune and the Occupy Movement, all members will have equal voices in the band’s development, point of view and launch. 

“SMFA’s long history and engagement with interdisciplinary thought and practices makes student involvement within this exhibition-as-workshop a natural fit,” says full-time visiting faculty Sam Gould, whose class will also participate. “By asking questions about culture and its efficacy—in the context of global social movements—we set the stage for important discussions around the value of art as more than just a commodity.”

Details of the exhibition will develop over the course of the project to include public talks, Skype conversations, interviews, lectures, film and video screenings, performances and other contributions.

Visit www.smfa.edu/egypt-dialogue for the most up-to-date weekly schedule.
About the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston:
Founded in 1876 and accredited by the National Association of Schools of Art and Design, the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (SMFA), is one of only three art schools in the country affiliated with a major museum—the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Our mission is to provide an education in the fine arts that is interdisciplinary and self-directed. www.smfa.edu

 

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January 30, 2013

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