This month’s Fonseca-Du Bois Gallery exhibit, “Art for peace, land, and bread,” connects us to the longer history, broader terrain, and different shades of struggles via artistic products and processes.
The Indianapolis Liberation Center’s next entry in their “First Fridays: Unleashing the creativity of the masses” series is a curated exhibition of recent artworks that emerge from, speak to, and advance a variety of movements for liberation across the globe—from Ireland and Korea to Haiti and China—connecting them to the struggles here in the U.S. while linking them to the history on which we build.
This month’s Fonseca-Du Bois Gallery exhibit, “Art for peace, land, and bread,” ... view more »
The Indianapolis Liberation Center’s next entry in their “First Fridays: Unleashing the creativity of the masses” series is a curated exhibition of recent artworks that emerge from, speak to, and advance a variety of movements for liberation across the globe—from Ireland and Korea to Haiti and China—connecting them to the struggles here in the U.S. while linking them to the history on which we build.
This month’s Fonseca-Du Bois Gallery exhibit, “Art for peace, land, and bread,” connects us to the longer history, broader terrain, and different shades of struggles via artistic products and processes.
While our cultural institutions are run by the elite who limit our conceptions of art and artistry, Liberation Center’s First Fridays do the opposite: Exhibit the immense creativity that lies latent in the world’s oppressed, exploited, dispossessed, and marginalized. Collectively, we can harness art and culture as a powerful force for social, cultural, and political change.
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