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Nicole Bearden

Curatorial Work, Writing Portfolio, and home site of Critical Bounds Podcast
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Writing Portfolio

Collage of images of (from top left, clockwise: Maile Arvin, The British Museum, Eve Tuck, Patricia Hill Collins, Okwui Enwezor, Tate Modern Museum, and Angie Morrill

(2019) An excerpt from Expanding Enlightenment-Era Value Systems in Western Museums with Indigenous Decolonial Feminisms and Afrocentric Epistemologies (A Critical Ethics Review), Nicole Bearden

June 18, 2025

In January 2019, I undertook a research project in London, inspired by curator and art historian Okwui Enwezor’s (1963-2019) 2003 essay “The Postcolonial Constellation: Contemporary Art In a State of Permanent Transition”. In this essay, Enwezor discusses the opening of the Tate Modern in London in 2000, and states that "...globalization and cultural assimilation are operative in the art world…”. 

Though Enwezor dealt directly with art and the Tate Modern in his essay, my research encompasses the British Museum for its influence as a lauded historical institution which displays art, natural, and cultural objects, and its problematic history in cultural display. My research consisted of examining the current presentations of non-Western art and cultural objects in the Tate Modern and British Museum in an attempt to understand what colonial roots  are still visible and operative in these influential museums nearly twenty years after Enwezor’s essay was written.

The goal of this piece is to look to epistemologies and philosophies such as Afrocentric and Indigenous Feminisms in order to build a frame of possibility for more decolonized (which may lead to what I believe are more ethical) methods of display within art and encyclopedic museum institutions.

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Tags Academic Writing, Research, Writing, Okwui Enwezor, British Museum, Tate Modern, Postcolonial Constellations, Enlightenment, Contemporary Art, Arts Writing, Art Criticism, Ethics, Ethical Criticism, Indigenous Feminism, Patricia Hill Collins, Art History, Critical Art Issues, Western Art, Museums, Museology, Art

Jennifer Leigh Harrison is Trying to Tell You Something About Femicide at CoCA [Part 1] →

June 18, 2025

On the surface, the works in Jennifer Leigh Harrison’s show I’m Trying to Tell You Something: Breaking the Silence of Femicide Through Visual Art at Center on Contemporary Art (CoCA), belie the show’s heavy subject matter. In contrast, the work is light, largely abstract, not portraiture, with no obvious violence exhibited.

In fact, the only works featuring human subjects are a performance by Harrison and two videos, where she partners with performers from Seattle Pole Dance. A closer look, however, reveals that Harrison’s work utilizes a unique data visualization, in addition to educational wall labels, to tell the stories of intimate partner violence (IPV) against women.

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Tags Seattle Arts, Seattle, Art, Feminist Art, femicide, CoCA, Center on Contemporary Art, Jennifer Leigh Harrison, Arts Writing, Feature

Seattle’s Meghan Thréinfhir Puts the “A” in STEAM with STEM-Infused Art. November 14, 2024, Evergreen Echo

June 18, 2025

During a recent conversation about her upcoming show Wormhole Animism at Capitol Hill’s Steve Gilbert Studio, Meghan Thréinfhir (née Meghan Elizabeth Trainor) takes us on a brief journey from her nascent influences in spiritual tradition to her current work that takes inspiration from the poetic nature of physics in the universe.

Thréinfhir’s work has always had spiritual connections. With a practice firmly rooted in her own ancestral Irish Catholic imagery and iconography in her early art-making days, she found new inspiration via Mexican folk art when she was exposed to the work of Frida Kahlo and later from a nearby shop when she worked at Pike Place Market in the 1990s. Importantly, a 1980s show at Seattle Art Museum about African spiritual objects left a significant impression.

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Tags Megan Trainor, Meghan Threinfhir, Art, Science, Stem, STEAM, Seattle Arts, Wormhole Animism, Steve Gilbert Gallery, Capitol Hill, Art and Science, Cyborgs, Witchtech

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