Black Reconstructions: Prosperity and Innovation
Black Reconstructions: Prosperity and Innovation
Join a conversation bringing together architects, artists, and audience members to take histories of Black invention and affluence as starting points to imagine new conditions for the present and future.
FREE
MoMA online
May 24, 2021 | 6:30 pm
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Speaker details

See below for a list of speakers.

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Presented by

The Museum of Modern Art
New York, NY

About The Speakers

Tracie Hall is the tenth Executive Director of the nearly 150 year-old, 56,000 member American Library Association. Deeply invested in the intersection of arts, literacy, and economic access, Hall is the recipient of numerous awards for her creative and community work, and is Founding Curator of the experimental arts space Rootwork Gallery in Chicago.

Walter Hood is the creative director and founder of Hood Design Studio and is Professor of Landscape Architecture and Environmental Planning and Urban Design in the College of Environmental Design at the University of California, Berkeley. As a landscape and public artist he creates urban spaces that resonate with and enrich the lives of current residents while also honoring communal histories.

Rick Lowe is an artist who champions people and communities through social practice-based art projects. In 1993 Lowe co-founded Project Row Houses, an arts and cultural community located in Houston’s significant, historical Third Ward – one of the city’s oldest African American neighborhoods. He uses creativity as a catalyst for change and for empowering people across economic, social and political realms.

Amanda Williams is a visual artist who trained as an architect. Her creative practice employs color as a way to draw attention to the complexities of race, place and value in cities. The landscapes in which she operates are the visual residue of the invisible policies and forces that have misshapen most inner cities. Williams’ installations, paintings and works on paper seek to inspire new ways of looking at the familiar and in the process, raise questions about the state of urban space and citizenship in America.

Image: Amanda Williams, Patent Study from We’re Not Down There, We’re Over Here (2019) / courtesy of the artist and MoMA