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Event
Black and Disabled: A Long Table Conversation and Installation
This event is an artistic interrogation of the intersection of race, gender, and disability. It is presented by 21st Century Arts in collaboration with Luticha Doucette, innovation researcher for the city of Rochester, NY , disability rights activist, and the author of this profound New York Times essay titled, "If You're in a Wheelchair, Segregation Lives" - https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/17/opinion/if-youre-in-a-wheelchair-segregation-lives.html
We explore the impact of structural ableism, racism, and sexism.
The image in this post is a tribute to Black Panther Party member Brad Lomax. The complete text says - "Brad Lomax. Member of the Black Panther Party. Instrumental in the participating and supporting the protestors of the 504 Disability Rights Act of 1973. Without his aid and food from BPP, the sit in would have failed."
About the LONG TABLE: Conceived by artist Lois Weaver and inspired by Marleen Gorris film Antonia's Line, the Long Table is an experimental open public forum that is a hybrid performance-installation-roundtable-discussion-dinner-party designed to facilitate dialogue through the gathering together of people with common interests.
With no predetermined outcome save conversation, this Long Table could be an opportunity to both introduce and reflect on some recent initiatives, to discuss what and who are missing from historical accounts, and to explore what kinds of actions and strategies could be undertaken The Long Table is a dinner party structured by etiquette, where conversation is the only course. The project ingeniously combines theatricality and models for public engagement. It is at once a stylized appropriation and an open-ended, non-hierarchical format for participation. Both elements theatrical craft and political commitment are mutually supporting in this widely and internationally toured work. The (often-feminized) domestic realm here becomes a stage for public thought.
The components are simple: the long table; chairs; a paper tablecloth; pens with which to make comments, to draw, or to scribble ideas. The final, and necessary, component is an etiquette sheet. This list of rules for engagement lays the groundwork for talk that is structured in its participatory aspect without being limited in content or access. The rules, or perhaps helpful hints, include items like There can be silence, There might be awkwardness and There can always be laughter. The Long Table acknowledges the sometimes-uncomfortable side of both private exchange and public engagement, while celebrating the potential for new forms of knowledge-making and -sharing.
LONG TABLE ETIQUETTE
-There is no beginning -Those seated at the table are performers -The menu is up to you -Talk is the only course -Step up, step back (no filibustering) -There is no hostess -It is a democracy -To participate, take a seat at the table -If the table is full, you can request a seat (tap someones shoulder) -Once you leave the table, you can come back -There can be silence -You can break the silence with a question -You can write your questions on the table -There can be laughter -There is an end, but no conclusion
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LocationGallery Seventy Four (View)
215 Tremont Street (Door 3/3rd Floor)
Rochester, NY 14608
United States
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Kid Friendly: Yes! |
Dog Friendly: No |
Non-Smoking: Yes! |
Wheelchair Accessible: Yes! |
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