poster for “Prison Obscura” Exhibition

This event has ended.

The Sheila C. Johnson Design Center’s (SJDC) Anna-Maria and Stephen Kellen Gallery at Parsons School of Design launches its spring exhibition, Prison Obscura.

Curated by Prison Photography editor Pete Brook, Prison Obscura explores an area of society that, in spite of its explosive growth, continues to exist in the shadows: the country’s prisons and jails. Presenting rarely seen vernacular, surveillance, evidentiary, and prisoner-made photographs, the exhibition sheds light on the prison industrial complex and those it confines.

Brook noted that while most prison photos—hackneyed and clichéd photos of razor wire, anonymous silhouettes and hands through bars—serve the purposes of stock photography agencies, “We mustn’t give up on images.”

“Instead,” he said, “We must look toward more elusive and unexpected types of imagery.”

Such imagery in this exhibition comes from artists Josh Begley, Steve Davis, Alyse Emdur, Robert Gumpert, Paul Rucker, Mark Strandquist, and Kristen S. Wilkins with a mural by members of the Restorative Justice and Mural Arts Programs at the State Correctional Institution in Graterford, PA.

The works in Prison Obscura vary from aerial views of prison complexes to intimate portraits of incarcerated individuals. Artist Josh Begley and musician Paul Rucker used imaging technology to depict the sheer size of the prison industrial complex, which houses 2.3 million Americans in more than 6000 prisons, jails and detention facilities at a cost of $70 billion per year; Steve Davis led workshops for incarcerated juvenile in Washington State to reveal their daily lives; Kristen S. Wilkins collaborated with female prisoners on portraits with the aim to compete against the mugshots used for both news and entertainment in mainstream media; Robert Gumpert created a nine-year project pairing portraits and audio recordings of prisoners from San Francisco jails; Mark Strandquist utilized imagery to provide a window into the histories, realities and desires of some incarcerated Americans; and Alyse Emdur illuminated moments of self-representations with collected portraits of prisoners and their families taken in prison visiting rooms as well as her own photographs of murals in situ on visiting room walls. Also, included are images presented as evidence during the landmark Brown v. Plata case, a class action lawsuit that which went all the way to the Supreme Court of the United States where it was ruled that every prisoner in the California State prison system was suffering cruel and unusual punishment due to overcrowded facilities and the failure by the state to provide adequate physical and mental healthcare.

At The New School, Prison Obscura connects to Humanities Action Lab (HAL) Global Dialogues on Incarceration, an interdisciplinary hub that brings together a range of university-wide, national, and global partnerships to foster public engagement on America’s prison system.

Mass incarceration is rooted in and exacerbates myriad issues: egregious sentencing, gutted rehabilitation and education programs, substandard physical and mental health care, aging prisoners, the expanded use of prisons for youth, amplified hardships for women and families and persistent violence. The work of Prison Obscura gives image and voice both to the causes of, and the individuals affected by, these issues.

“Prison Obscura visually demonstrates how lives are rendered invisible while also showing us how we might see them again,” Radhika Subramaniam, director and chief curator of the SJDC, said.

Media

Schedule

from February 05, 2015 to March 29, 2015

Opening Reception on 2015-02-05 from 18:30 to 20:30
The reception will be preceded by a curator’s tour at 5:45 pm.

  • Facebook

    Reviews

    All content on this site is © their respective owner(s).
    New York Art Beat (2008) - About - Contact - Privacy - Terms of Use