ANTHROPOLOGY OF MOTHERHOOD

CULTURE OF CARE SERIES

All events are free and open to the public.

Anthropology of Motherhood's Culture of Care series features artists who engage in the complex visual, material, emotional, corporeal, and lived experiences of motherhood, caregiving, parenting, nurturing, and maternal labor. Through video, sculpture, painting, and photography, they address maternal identities with birth as a metaphor for regeneration, creation and renewal. Taking maternal subjectivity as a starting point, the series seeks to expand upon the idea of a broader culture of care and its potentialities within visual art practices as it intersects with feminisms, social justice issues, and activism.

 
 
 

Writing and Literature as Forms of Care with Author Susan Muaddi Darraj

APRIL 14, 2024 · 3:30 - 4:30 pm EDT

CITY OF ASYLUM | 40 W NORTH AVE, PITTSBURGH, PA 15212

FREE IN-PERSON and LIVESTREAM TICKETS

Award-winning author and professor Susan Muaddi Darraj will discuss how a culture of care features into her career as a writer, mother, and activist. She will discuss how writing is her form of caregiving and self care. Muaddi-Darraj has published several books from the perspective of Palestinian-American mothers living in the US, such as A Curious Land, The Inheritance of Exile and a chapter book series Farah Rocks for 2nd-5th graders. Her new book, BEHIND YOU IS THE SEA, was named Book of the Month by Apple, and will be released on Jan 16 by HarperVia. ASL interpretation will be provided.

 
 

PAST EVENTS

 

Freedom to Care: Dialogues on Incarceration and Motherhood

  • How does one cultivate a culture of care within the incarceration system?

    Mothers are the fastest growing demographic in the US prison system, and kids of imprisoned parents make up the fourth largest “school district” in the country. Hearing from those with personal experience attempting to mother in and after incarceration is a vital component of ending the violence that comes with incarcerating increasing numbers of mothers. In this conversation of care, panelists will share their personal experiences and consider the constraints, complexities and ingenuities they encountered with carceral motherhood. ASL interpretation is provided.

  • Dmitra Gideon (they/she/he) is a writer, educator, and a founding member of Pittsburgh Family Liberation, a collective focused on mutual aid, advocacy, and community care for youth and families targeted by carceral systems. They are the Director of Youth-Centered Programming and Community Collaboration with Write Pittsburgh. In addition to frolicking around behind the scenes at Write Pittsburgh, Dmitra facilitates workshops at Passages to Recovery and the Allegheny County Jail, and assists the Teen Council. Their writing has appeared in PANK Magazine, SFWP Quarterly, Trace Fossils Review, and new {words} press, among others.

  • Shanda Harris is a woman of color with 4 children that she raised in a low-to-moderate income community. Shanda is a concerned parent who has dealt with - and still deals with - being a mother of an incarcerated/formerly incarcerated child. She now advocates for all -- especially our youth/young adults that face mental health issues, gun violence, drug addiction and abandonment on a day to day basis -- which has led her to a journey in entrepreneurship. Shanda has started several businesses over twenty plus years. She's now a proud owner of Shirl The Pearls’ bar, restaurant, and hotel establishment. After much time spent running her operation, she decided to focus on new ideas, and became the Founder/President of a non-profit organization called Team G.R.O.W (Great Resources of Wisdom) 6 years ago, operating in the Hill District Community. Shanda has devoted herself to connecting with families in the community through an outreach of love, education, togetherness, and trust. Being a mother and seeing other mothers go through some, if not all, of the struggles she went through and still faces today, makes her work hard to reach families through Team G.R.O.W’s programming opportunities, which show others how to gain and keep skills that will help build self-esteem and self-sufficiency that will benefit them for a lifetime.

  • Terri Minor-Spencer is the Founder and President of West End P.O.W.E.R., a nonprofit organization committed to strengthening communities through activism, advocacy, education, equity, and promoting unity. Terri is a tireless advocate for her community, working closely with returning citizens to reform the Criminal Justice System, participating in job readiness programs, serving as a G.E.D. Instructor, and being an advocate for entrepreneurs. As a respected servant of the community Terri and her service to others have been prominently featured in Public Source, 90.5 WESA, NOBLE Magazine—the National Magazine of the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Officers—and numerous other publications. In 2019 she was awarded the Pittsburgh Courier Women of Excellence Award and was a finalist for the Jefferson Awards, and in 2014 received a proclamation from the City of Pittsburgh declaring October 7th Terri Minor-Spencer Day for her Advocacy and Community Outreach Volunteerism. She is a graduate of the Emerge America Cohort and board member of the Abolitionist Law Center, among many other boards and committees that address gun violence, youth empowerment, and community advancement.

  • Sarah Shotland co-founded Words Without Walls, which brought creative writing programs to jails, prisons, and drug treatment facilities from 2009-2022. As program director, she facilitated writing groups with thousands of incarcerated artists and mentored over fifty teaching artists working with the program. She is the author of the novel Junkette (WG Press, 2014), and the participatory nonfiction publication Abolition is Everything (Antenna Press, 2021). Sarah’s work has been funded by the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Humanities, and has been published in Ploughshares, Creative Nonfiction, The Iowa Review, and elsewhere. She is Assistant Professor of English at Carlow University, where she also serves as Program Director of Madwomen in the Attic.

 
 
 

Care as a #CripRitual

  • This installment features the fierce team from the Critical Design Lab,  Jarah Moesch (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute ), Cassandra Hartblay (University of Toronto), Aimi Hamraie (Vanderbilt University).

    About the Guests:

    Dr. Cassandra Hartblay is Assistant Professor in the Interdisciplinary Centre for Health & Society at the University of Toronto Scarborough and graduate faculty in the Department of Anthropology. They are an award-winning scholar of critical disability studies, with a global research focus on contemporary Russia. Their original documentary stage play, I WAS NEVER ALONE, was most recently performed in 2017 at Yale University, and in 2016 at UC San Diego’s Theatre District at La Jolla Playhouse (watch a short video about the project here). They have served as a member of the steering committee of the Disability Research Interest Group of the American Anthropological Association.

    Aimi Hamraie (they/them) is Associate Professor of Medicine, Health, & Society and American Studies at Vanderbilt University, and director of the Critical Design Lab. Hamraie is the author of Building Access: Universal Design and the Politics of Disability (University of Minnesota Press, 2017) and host of the Contra* podcast on disability and design. Hamraie’s research is funded by the Social Science Research Council, the Smithsonian Institution, the Mellon Foundation, the Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Arts, and the National Humanities Alliance. 

    Jarah Moesch (MFA, PhD) is an artist-scholar whose work explores issues of justice through the design, production, and acquisition of embodied knowledges. Jarah’s research incorporates queer crip theory, cultural studies, art, and design practices to develop new models for justice and to imagine new worlds.Moesch’s artwork has been shown across the United States as well as internationally in festivals and exhibitions. Jarah holds an MFA in Integrated Media Arts from Hunter College, and a PhD in American Studies from University of Maryland.

 
 
 

Turning the Recorder Off

  • Dr. Harrison Apple is an oral historian and archivist who began the Pittsburgh Queer History Project after graduating from Carnegie Mellon University. They received their PhD in Gender & Women’s Studies from the University of Arizona. Their work examines local histories of voluntary associations and ‘drinking clubs’ as the context for the Pittsburgh Queer History Project’s archives. Their work asks why these materials come together as a community archives, beyond their relationship to sexual identity, working with the overlapping meanings of “membership” that circulate in the PQHP’s records.

 
 
 

Compassion for Earth, Animals, Humans, Self

  • Suzy González is an artist, curator, writer, and zinester based in Yanaguana, aka San Antonio, TX. She has had solo exhibits at Spellerberg Projects, Presa House Gallery, Hello Studio, Palo Alto College, and two-person exhibits at Texas A&M University Corpus Christi and the University of Connecticut. She recently completed murals with the City of Pasadena, San Antonio Museum of Art and Centro San Antonio. She has attended residencies at Vermont Studio Center (VT), the Trelex Residency (Peru), The Wassaic Residency (NY), Starry Night Residency (NM), the Studios at MASS MoCA (MA), and Hello Studio (TX). Suzy publishes Xicana Vegan zine, co-organizes the San Anto Zine Fest, and is a part of Dos Mestizx and Breathe Collective. She is currently a Writer on the Creative Team of Veggie Mijas and an Art Consultant and Editor for Ofrenda Magazine. She is a 2018 alum of the NALAC Leadership Institute, a 2019 alum of the Intercultural Leadership Institute and NYFA Immigrant Artist Mentoring Program, and attended a 2021 training with The Center for Artistic Activism. Suzy holds an MFA from the Rhode Island School of Design and a BFA from Texas State University.

 
 
 

Black Madonna to Alpha Shakti: The Great Mother Exalted

  • Katie Cercone Or Nah is an artist, scribe, priextexx and spiritual gangsta hailing from the blessed coast. Cercone has performed or shown work in exhibitions at the Brooklyn Museum, Bronx Museum, Dallas Contemporary, Momenta Art, C24 Gallery, Changjiang Museum China, Dodge Gallery and Aljira Center for Contemporary Art. She has published critical writing in ART PAPERS, White Hot, Posture, Brooklyn Rail, Hysteria, Bitch Magazine, Utne Reader and N.Paradoxa. As co-leader of the radical, queer, transnational feminist collective Go! Push Pops, Cercone spearheaded a 400-women strong takeover of the Whitney Museum in 2014 known as “The Clitney Perennial,” and was awarded the Culture Push Fellowship for Utopian Practice the same year. In 2015 she was a J.U.S.F.C. Fellow for the U.S.-Japan Exchange Program in Tokyo. Her work has been featured in Dazed, MILK, Interview, Japan Times, Huffington Post, ART 21, Hyperallergic, PAPER, Art Fag City, Washington Post, and Art Net TV among others. Cercone has curated shows for Momenta Art, KARST (UK), Cue Art Foundation, Local Project and NurtureArt. Cercone is adjunct faculty at the School of Visual Arts where she teaches GENDER TROUBLE in the Visual & Critical Studies Department. A pioneer of Hip Hop Yoga Katie was awarded the Franklin Furnace Award Fund in 2020.

 
 
 
 
 

OUR SPONSORS

 
 

The Culture of Care series is made possible by a grant from the HEINZ ENDOWMENTS. The Heinz Endowments seeks to help our region thrive as a whole and just community and, through that work, to model solutions to major national and global challenges. We are devoted to advancing our vision of southwestern Pennsylvania as a vibrant center of creativity, learning, and social, economic, and environmental sustainability. Our work is supported by reliable data based on equitable, results-focused goals to cultivate a world where all are treated with fairness and respect and have the opportunity to reach their fullest potential. 

 
 
 

The Culture of Care series is made possible by a grant from the OPPORTUNITY FUND. Opportunity Fund awards grants to small to midsize arts organizations, and organizations and initiatives that advance social and economic justice.

 
 
 

The Culture of Care series is made possible by a grant from the PITTSBURGH FOUNDATION. Established in 1945, The Pittsburgh Foundation is one of the nation’s oldest community foundations and is the 14th largest of more than 750 similar foundations across the United States. It set a new record for grantmaking, $67 million, in 2020. As a community foundation, its resources comprise endowment funds established by individuals, businesses and organizations with a passion for charitable giving and fulfilling the Foundation’s mission of improving quality of life for all in the region.

 
 
 

OUR PARTNERS

 
 

CITY OF ASYLUM builds a just community by protecting and celebrating freedom of creative expression. They provide sanctuary to endangered writers and artists, so that they can continue to create and their voices are not silenced. They offer a broad range of free literary, arts, and humanities programs in a community setting to build social equity through cultural exchange.

 
 
 

A local gallery with a global reach, the CARLOW UNIVERSITY ART GALLERY, is the only gallery in the Pittsburgh region dedicated to art and social justice. Our project is to embody the unique mission of Carlow through professionally curated exhibitions, to bridge campus and community and to extend the teaching space through innovative public programming and experiential learning, and to serve as a center for dialogue and creativity for both the Carlow community and the greater Pittsburgh community.