Panel
Confounding Expectations: Photography and the Arts – Seeing Double: Exile Artists Interpret Their Homelands
Dec 8, 2004
7:00–9:00pm ET
The New School, Tishman Auditorium
The late Edward Said described the inner state of the émigré as beset with a nagging awareness of two homes. This contrapuntal awareness has provoked remarkable bodies of works, particularly among artists who return home, however briefly, to measure their new American-bred sensibilities against the realities of their histories.
Panelists
Shirin Neshat, American film installation artist (originally from Iran)
Sylvia Plachy, American photographer and author of Self Portrait With Cows Going Home about exile from Hungary (Aperture Foundation, fall 2004)
Walid Raad, (The Atlas Group), American multimedia artist (originally from Lebanon); Vera List Center 2004-2005 Fellow
Moderator
Amei Wallach, critic and writer
The lecture is part of the Aperture Foundation Lectures: “Confounding Expectations: Photography and the Arts,” and presented by the Photography Departments of The New School and Parsons School of Design and the Vera List Center for Art and Politics, in collaboration with the Aperture Foundation. This event is presented as part of the Vera List Center’s program cycle on “Homeland.”