Coco Fusco and Guillermo Gómez-Peña
In March 1992, writer/artist Coco Fusco and performance artist Guillermo Gómez-Peña locked themselves in a cage and performed as “Amerindians,” wearing masks and converse sneakers, typing on laptops and making Vodou dolls. As the exhibit travelled from Irvine, CA to the Smithsonian in DC and London and Madrid, the artists blurred boundaries between subject and …
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Student & Worker (Pop Up) Museum of Resistance & Joy
The Student & Worker (Pop Up) Museum of Resistance & Joy is an instalation and protest co-created by Duke Students and Workers in Solidarity. The pop-up museum is envisioned as an ever-blooming testament to the connectivity of students and workers on campus and their vision for a university where all are treated with dignity. This …
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Information Circulation and the News Museum
References to alternate or mainstream forms of communication led me to research the News Museum, recently mentioned by a friend. The museum was opened in 2008 in Washington DC, and states that it is dedicated “to free expression and the five freedoms of the First Amendment: religion, speech, press, assembly and petition.” Highlights of the …
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Repatriation of Blackfoot Sacred Items at Glenbow Museum
Living mostly in the province of Alberta, the Blackfoot people are part of the four First Nations of Canada. The Glenbow museum, located in Calgary, like many ethnographic museums, holds many sacred objects, including medicine bundles from the Blackfoot people, holy items used in worship. Glenbow began receiving large-scale protest from First Nation people for …
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