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Visual Cultures, African Cities/Now A Conference on African Art
April 23, 2005 Ohio University, Athens - Ohio Hosted by the African Studies Program Mitchell Auditorium, Siegfred Hall (North Green, behind Yamada House & Hudson Health Center). Time: 9:30 AM- 6:00 PM. Date: Saturday, April 23, 2005.
Conference Convener: Joanna Grabski, Denison University, Granville OH Cities in Africa , like their counterparts elsewhere in the world, are intensely -- perhaps even unrelentingly -- visual environments. In Dakar as in Nairobi, in Johannesburg as in Lagos, the urban terrain's unparalleled resources enable myriad visual phenomena including paintings and sculptures, modernist architecture and public monuments, sartorial expression, as well as printed and electronic media such as cartoons, advertisements, video, television, and the internet. This conference focuses on the visual propositions constituting the urban environment and seeks to consider how visual culture is produced, interpreted, and consumed in contemporary urban Africa. To this end, this conference will explore the following questions: How does the city offer unique opportunities for the production and consumption of visual propositions? How do individuals create and engage these visual forms to construct, evaluate, contest or subvert contemporary social realities? How do these forms operate as both individual expressions and collective resources? How does the influx of visual phenomena from one city shape visual expression in another? And, if we understand expressive forms as operating in a world of intertextuality, we must ask how urban visual projects entangle and interface with other creative expressions? Invited speakers include: Allen Roberts, UCLA Mouride Visual Culture in Dakar
Mary Jo Arnoldi. NMNH, Smithsonian Institution Monuments in Mali
Onookome Okome, University of Alberta Nigerian Videos
Modou Dieng, San Francisco Art Institute Representations of the City
Evan Mwangi, Ohio University Oral Literature in Urban Movies in East Africa
Olatunji Ojo, Ohio University The Politics of Art Representation
Conference Format: Invited speakers will give 40-50 minute papers followed by graduate student presentations and discussion by conference participants.
Additional information: Nana K. Owusu-Kwarteng Assistant Director Institute for the African Child Center for International Studies Yamada International House Athens OH 45701 T: 740. 597. 1368 F: 740. 593. 1837 Past Conferences and Workshops
Children@Work: From Farm to Street in Africa. 6th Annual Institute for the African Child Conference. A conference on African Child labor. This conference is dedicated to those children on the streets of Africa, working to change their societies or simply put food on their families’ tables or pay their school fees. Children do participate in African life and we seek ways to make their participation healthier, happier, and leading to more productive lives. The conference involved paper presentations and exhibitions that engage the challenges of African children on the continent and her Diaspora. >> more
Visual Cultures, African Cities/Now A Conference on African Art Cities in Africa , like their counterparts elsewhere in the world, are intensely -- perhaps even unrelentingly -- visual environments. In Dakar as in Nairobi, in Johannesburg as in Lagos, the urban terrain's unparalleled resources enable myriad visual phenomena including paintings and sculptures, modernist architecture and public monuments, sartorial expression, as well as printed and electronic media such as cartoons, advertisements, video, television, and the internet. This conference focuses on the visual propositions constituting the urban environment and seeks to consider how visual culture is produced, interpreted, and consumed in contemporary urban Africa. >> more Malaria and the Future of Africa’s Children: Health, Environment and Community The Institute for the African Child marks its sixth year at Ohio University. Each year ithosts an event to explore issues of concern to the children of Africa. 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She established an African women’s health practice that provides appropriate health and outreach programs to the African community in Boston. Her focus on health and policy issues regarding female circumcision/female genital mutilation, both locally and internationally is providing the much needed attention for African women in the area and throughout the United States. She was the primary author of a slide kit created to educate obstetricians-gynecologists on the medical management of circumcised women. Her pioneer health work with African women has won acclaim from the medical and other professions as well as the media. In 1999 Associated Press wired a story about her work and this year The New York Times featured her efforts in a major article. more >> AFRICA: Why are her children at risk? 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The Children of Africa: Resources for Learning, Health and Society The inaugural conference of the Institute for the African Child was a forum to bring together scholars and practitioners. This international and interdisciplinary conference included panel and paper presentations synthesizing theory and practice. Running concurrently was a K-12 teacher strand, focusing on ways to incorporate African children's issues into the K-12 curriculum. The conference was followed by a series of three 1-week classes, which expanded the themes presented during the conference. Emphasis was placed on praxis, the blending of theory and practice in ways that move the issues toward specific action. more>>
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