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The New York Public Library



presents

* *

An Art Book Series
Event<http://www.nypl.org/events/programs/2012/11/14/art-book-negar-ahkami-kelly-baum-judith-k-brodsky-ferris-olin-gilane-tawa>

* *

*The Fertile Crescent*

* *

*Judith Brodsky and Ferris Olin*

* in conversation with *

*Negar Ahkami, Kelly Baum, *

*Gilane Tawadros and Nil Yalter*

* *

Wednesday November 14, 2012

6:00 p.m.

* *

Margaret Liebman Berger Forum

Room 227 (2nd Floor)



The New York Public Library

Stephen A. Schwarzman Building

5thAvenue at 42nd Street

New York, NY 10018

917-275-6975

 www.nypl.org

(directions) <http://www.nypl.org/locations/tid/36/directions>



*Room 227 opens to the public at 5:30 p.m.*

All events are FREE and subject to last minute change or cancellation.

*Judith K. Brodsky *and *Ferris Olin*, co-directors, Rutgers University
Institute of Women and Art <http://iwa.rutgers.edu/home/>, curators and
authors of *The Fertile Crescent: Gender, Art and Society*, along with two
of the contributors of essays to the book, *Gilane Tawadros*, founding
director of the London-based Institute for International Visual Arts,
and *Kelly
Baum*, Haskell Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, Princeton University
Art Museum; and two of the artists featured in the book, *Nil Yalter*, a
Paris-based artist of Turkish heritage and *Negar Ahkami*, an artist of
Iranian descent born and living in the United States *discuss the complex
social, political, theological and historic issues that shape the status of
Middle East women in Middle East countries and the diaspora as expressed
through their art*.

*The Fertile Crescent: Gender, Art and
Society<http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/02/nyregion/from-the-middle-east-a-rarely-heard-chorus.html?_r=2>
*(Rutgers University Institute for Women and Art) presents the work of 24
contemporary women artists of Middle East heritage who examine matters of
gender, homeland, geopolitics, theology, and the environment through
painting, video, photography, sculpture, film, performance art, and
multi-media. These artists challenge Western stereotypes of Middle East
women, while acknowledging existing social and theological restrictions
that have caused many of them to leave their homelands. The book is edited
and with text by Judith K. Brodsky and Ferris Olin, with additional essays
by Margot Badran, Kelly Baum and Gilane Tawadros. *The authors in this
volume address transnationalism, the artists’ sense of unease about the
world today, and their responses to the political uprisings and events in
their countries of origin. The book also addresses the historic and
contemporary impact of Middle East culture on black Africa and South
Asia.*The book is published in conjunction with a fall 2012
multi-venue
exhibition at Rutgers and Princeton Universities and the Princeton Arts
Council/Paul Robeson Center for the Arts, among other locations.

*Copies of the book are available for purchase and signing at the event.*

*Negar Ahkami* <http://www.negarahkami.com/> received a BA in Middle
Eastern Languages and Cultures from Columbia University, 1992, and an MFA
in Fine Arts from School of Visual Arts, 2006. New York-based, she is
represented by Leila Heller Gallery (formerly LTMH), New York. She has had
solo shows in New York with LTMH and LMAK Projects in Brooklyn, and a
two-person show at Miki Wick Kim Gallery in Zurich. She has participated in
numerous group exhibitions in New York, i.e., *Iran Inside Out* (Chelsea
Museum of Art), *The Seen and the Hidden: (Dis)Covering the Veil* (Austrian
Cultural Forum), and *Firewalkers* (Stefan Stux Gallery). Her work has been
featured in *The New York Times*, *ARTnews* and other publications.
Residencies and fellowships include a Lower Manhattan Cultural Council
Workspace Residency, Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, Artist in
the Marketplace, and the Jentel Artist Residency in Wyoming.



*Kelly Baum*<http://catalog.nypl.org/search~S97/?searchtype=a&searcharg=baum%2C+kelly&searchscope=1&SORT=D&extended=0&SUBMIT=Search&searchlimits=&searchorigarg=abaum%2C+kelly>,
BA, Art History, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and MA and
PhD, University of Delaware, 2005, is the Haskell Curator of Modern and
Contemporary Art, Princeton University Art Museum. From 2002 to 2007, she
was Assistant Curator of Contemporary Art, Blanton Museum of Art,
University of Texas at Austin; and from 2008 to 2010, she was the Locks
Curatorial Fellow for Contemporary Art (Princeton University Art Museum).
Her exhibitions include *Carol Bove, *2006; *Jedediah Caesar*, 2007; *The
Sirens’ Song*, 2007; *Transactions*, 2007, all at the Blanton Museum; *Nobody’s
Property: Art, Land, Space*, 2000–2010 and *Doug Aitken:
Migration*(empire), both at Princeton University Art Museum, 2010. Her
essays have
appeared in *October*, *Art Journal*, *The Drama Review*, and *PUAM’s Record
*. Baum received an Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts Curatorial
Research Fellowship in support of the 2013 exhibit New Jersey as Non-site.



*Judith K. Brodsky*
<http://www.brodskycenter.org/_pages/ABOUT/about.html>is Distinguished
Professor Emerita, Department of Visual Arts, Rutgers
University; Founding Director of the Rutgers Center for Innovative Print
and Paper renamed the Brodsky Center in her honor; Co-founder and
Co-director with Ferris Olin of the Rutgers University Institute for Women
and Art; and The Feminist Art Project, a national and international program
to promote recognition of the esthetic and intellectual contributions of
women artists. Herself one of the founders of the feminist art movement in
the United States, she was a contributor to the first comprehensive history
of that movement, called *The Power of Feminist Art*. An artist in her own
right, her work is in permanent collections worldwide including the Library
of Congress, the Victoria & Albert Museum, and the Stadtsmuseum, Berlin.
Brodsky presently serves on the boards of the New York Foundation for the
Arts, and the International Print Center New York.



*Ferris Olin*<http://www.ywcaprinceton.org/TributeToWomen/pdf/2012/Bios/Ferris%20Olin.pdf>is
a Professor Emerita at Rutgers University and the Co-founder and
Co-director of the Rutgers University Institute for Women and Art and The
Feminist Art Project <http://feministartproject.rutgers.edu/about/>. She is
curator with Judith K. Brodsky of the *Mary H. Dana Women Artists
Series*at Rutgers founded in 1971 by Joan Snyder. Recent publications
with
co-author Brodsky include: *Stepping out of the beaten path: Feminism and
the Visual Arts*; *SIGNS*, *A Journal of Women in Culture and Society 2008*;
and *Eccentric Bodies: The Body as Site for the Imprint of Age, Race, and
Identity*. With Brodsky, Olin created the Women Artists Archive National
Directory (WAAND), a digital directory to archives of the papers of women
artists in the US since 1945.  Among the exhibitions she and Brodsky have
curated are a 50-year retrospective of Faith Ringgold’s work, 2009 and *How
American Women Artists Invented Postmodernism, 1970-1975* in 2005.



*Gilane Tawadros*<http://catalog.nypl.org/search~S1/?searchtype=a&searcharg=Tawadros%2C+Gilane+&searchscope=97&sortdropdown=-&SORT=DZ&extended=0&SUBMIT=Search&searchlimits=&searchorigarg=aTawadros%2C+Gilane+>,
internationally-recognized curator and writer, was founding director of
London’s Institute of International Visual Arts (InIVA), setting its
distinctive artistic and intellectual agenda through an innovative program
of exhibitions, publishing, education, multimedia and research.
Anticipating new trends and developing new models of working, she
established InIVA as a ground-breaking visual arts organization which
redefined the parameters of internationalism, cultural diversity and
research; InIVA is acknowledged as a pioneer in its field, “changing the
landscape of contemporary art.” nationally and internationally. She has
curated numerous exhibitions, including at the Venice Bienniale and the
Brighton Photo Biennial and as a contributing curator to the Guangzhou
Triennial. Among her books are *Changing States: Contemporary Art and Ideas
in an Era of Globalisation* (2004) and *Life is More Important Than
Art*(2007). Tawadros is currently preparing an anthology of her own
writings
with the working title, *The Sphinx Contemplating Napoleon*.



*Nil Yalter* <http://www.nilyalter.com/> of Turkish descent has lived in
Paris since 1965. She participated in the French counterculture and
revolutionary movements of the late 1960s, immersing herself in debates on
gender, the status of Turkish migrant workers, and other sociopolitical
issues. A pioneer in the French feminist art movement of the 1970s, Yalter
experimented with drawing, photography, video, and performance art. In
1974, she created the early feminist art classic *The Headless Woman (Belly
Dance)*. In this video, only the abdomen of the eponymous belly dancer can
be seen on which a statement urging sexual rights for women is inscribed.
Recent solo exhibitions include *Nil Yalter: Fragments of Memory*, Galerie
Hubert Winter, Vienna, 2011; *20th Century / 21st Century*, Galerist,
Istanbul, 2011; and *Nil Yalter: 1970–1980*, Galería Visor, Valencia, 2012.
Her work is in the permanent collections of the Tate Modern, Istanbul
Modern, and Centre Pompidou among others.



In its fourth year the program series *An Art Book*, initiated and
organized by Arezoo Moseni, is a celebration of the essential importance
and beauty of art books. The events showcase book presentations and
discussions by world renowned artists, critics, curators, historians and
writers.


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