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Nicole Bearden

Curatorial Portfolio and Blog of Nicole Bearden
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Critical Bounds is a podcast which considers contemporary art, global issues, and current events that influence and are in turn manifested in artistic practice, through critical conversations with emerging contemporary artists and curators.

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Trans People Are Sacred - 100 Cities Campaign. (Gofundme).

Trans People Are Sacred - 100 Cities Campaign. (Gofundme).

Trans People Are Sacred National Billboard Campaign

August 19, 2020

Happy midweek everyone! Tori here.

As an Art History major focused on the art of the AIDS crisis, I often explore the social roles of art, especially art that is shown in public spaces.

You may have seen my post on our IG about public art. I talked about how public spaces have long been spaces for marginalized and/or activist artists to display work that would not have traditionally been accepted into museums/galleries because of elitism and prejudices. Public places have also ensured wider reaches, more eyes and more diverse eyes at that, because art is displayed in everyday spaces rather than solely confined to art institutions.

Billboards are a great example of public spaces that guarantee wide reaches. This is one reason why artist Felix Gonzalez-Torres frequently displayed artwork with AIDS/AIDS-related subject matter on billboards. ACT UP’s artist collective, Gran Fury, also displayed artwork on spaces that were traditionally used for advertisements, such as the sides of buses, to widely debunk destructive falsehoods about AIDS.

Continuing this legacy of art in public spaces, traditionally reserved for ads, is non-binary artist and activist Jonah Welch, who launched the Trans People are Sacred National Billboard Campaign last month.

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In art, blog, Global Issues, Multimedia Tags Trans People Are Sacred National Billboard Campaign, Jonah Welch, SaveArtSpace, Dakota Camacho, Ryan Young, public art, queer art, Tori Currier, Critical Bounds Podcast, fundrasier, AIDS crisis, Felix Gonzalez-Torres, ACT UP, Gran Fury, queer legacies, BIPOC artists, artist opportunities
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Castro Street Fair, 1989 by Phyllis Christopher.

Castro Street Fair, 1989 by Phyllis Christopher.

WLW Visibilities

August 12, 2020

Hi All, Tori here.

Before I transferred to Smith, I rarely learned about WLW (womxn who love womxn) in the arts. Certainly, the fact that womxn artists of all sexualities are already underrepresented in the arts is the big reason why. In textbooks for my Introduction to Art History classes, I quickly noticed that womxn artists, when “represented,” usually appeared in tiny blurbs while white male artists took up the huge page space.

Since Art History began as a Eurocentric, male-dominated field that held tight to the gender norms of its day, WLW artists doubly reject[ed] its foundational beliefs through sexuality as well as gender: they were/are womxn who desire womxn.

Today, we are seeing increasing visibility for WLW in the arts. Here is a post to honor this, beginning with some slight time travel.

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In art, blog, Global Issues, Multimedia, Painting, Photography, Writing Tags Tori Currier, WLW in the arts, WLW, queer art, womxn in art, Agnes Martin, Phyllis Christopher, AIDS crisis, Zanele Muholi, Mickalene Thomas, Heather Lynn Johnson, Black Women in Art, artists of color, Critical Bounds, Critical Bounds Podcast
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The Illuminations Grant for Black Trans Women Visual Artists, image from Queer Art on IG.

The Illuminations Grant for Black Trans Women Visual Artists, image from Queer Art on IG.

Facilitating Space for Black Trans Artists

July 29, 2020

Happy midweek, everyone! Summer intern Tori here.

This month, Queer Art introduced the revolutionary “The Illuminations Grant for Black Trans Women Visual Artists.” This $10K grant “sheds light on the under-recognized contributions of Black trans women visual artists and provides critical support to their continuing work.⁣⁣”

This grant is revolutionary not only because it recognizes and supports black trans women and black trans femme artists, but because of the changemakers behind it.

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In art, blog, Curating, Global Issues, Multimedia, Photography, Writing Tags queer art, contemporary art, The Illuminations Grant for Black Trans Women Visual Artists, Aaryn Lang, Jezebel, Tourmaline, Julianna Huxtable, Kiyan Williams, Baxter St at CCNY, Por Los Ojos De Mi Gente, Golden, Felicita Maynard, Felli, wxmen artists, nonbinary artists, trans artists, artists of color, Critical Bounds, critical bounds podcast, Tori Currier, Nicole Bearden
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Tori Currier

Tori Currier

Hello from summer intern, Tori Currier

July 8, 2020

Hi everyone, my name is Tori Currier and I am excited to intern at Critical Bounds this summer. I am a first-generation college student who transferred to Smith College last fall. I am an Art History major with a focus on LGBTQ+ art, but my studies began at Holyoke Community College in Holyoke, Massachusetts.

HCC offers a program called “Learning Communities.” Learning Communities give students from many walks of life the opportunity to take courses at local 4-year universities, like Smith College. During my time at HCC, I was fortunate enough to take a Learning Community that met at Smith. The course was about “the New York School,” a group of experimental visual artists, writers, musicians, and dancers in 1950’s and 1960’s New York. In these courses alongside Smith students, I discovered my capability and passion for art history. I am particularly passionate about the art of artists who have been traditionally marginalized, like those from the LGBTQ+ community, and women artists of the New York School. (One of Elaine de Kooning’s self-portraits is framed on my bedroom wall.)

At Smith, I have become especially focused on the art of the AIDS crisis. I am using my practice to spotlight the influence of AIDS crisis art on art today and challenge the societal assumption that HIV/AIDS is a virus of the past instead of an ongoing epidemic.

Under ‘read more’ you can find some of the artists and works that inform my practice.

As a creative writer working toward a career in higher education, I am also passionate about alternative modes of education, like historical fiction. Presently, I am developing a television screenplay about LGBTQ+ artists during the 1960’s - 1980’s, hoping to educate younger generations about the community’s history and the social roles that art has played.

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In art, blog, Critical Bounds News, podcast, Writing, Global Issues Tags critical bounds, critical bounds podcast, critical bounds news, Tori Currier, nicole bearden, summer intern, AIDS crisis, queer art, queer scholarship, David Wojnarowicz, Frank Moore, Félix González-Torres, Roni Horn, Jim Hodges, Carrie Yamaoka, Gran Fury, ACT UP
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Critical Bounds Borders Guests

Episodes for "Borders" Segment are Up!

May 3, 2019

Finally! Three episodes from our “Borders” segment are up on Soundcloud! Individual blog posts are coming, but for now, go listen to me speaking with Rodrigo Valenzuela, BIBIANA [Medkova], and Vick Quezada about contemporary art, art fairs, language, shared cultural knowledge, and critical global issues!

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In Global Issues, Critical Bounds News Tags art, contemporary art, museums, emerging artists, icole bearden, rodrigo valenzuela, bibiana medkova, vick quezada, queer art, latinx art, indigenous art, borders, podcast, soundcloud, biennale, art fair, ucla, umass amherst, smith college, art history, critical issues, global contemporary art, language, materiality, sculpture, photography, media, installation art
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