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write with us: taylor crumpton

join us on saturday, 19 november for write with us: taylor crumpton from 10.00 am - 12.00 pm.

write with us is a workshop for writers of all levels, designed to encourage + strengthen art looking + writing skills. this workshop aims to educate + inspire both new + experienced writers, as well as address the present need for more engaging critical responses to contemporary art in dallas/fort worth. each workshop will look closely at one of the museum’s exhibiting artists.

all levels of experience are welcome + all materials are provided. this workshop is alway free! — limited capacity available.

resources for write with us: taylor crumpton workshop

trigger warning: sexual assault, violence, death

we encourage guests to read the following articles about 'chorus,' the exhibition on view by south african artist gabrielle goliath. the selected materials will allow participants to explore the cultural and societal factors in south africa that led to the work’s creation and draw parallels with the fight to end gender-based violence in texas.

articles

background on the exhibit:

gabrielle goliath’s inquiry into loss, memory and mourning

entangled within a world of others: an interview with gabrielle goliath

gabrielle goliath’s ‘chorus’ honours the memory of uyinene mrwetyana

governor greg abbott and beto o’rourke’s perspectives on sexual assault:

immigration, guns and abortion dominate abbott, o’rourke debate in the rio grande valley

attorney general ken paxton and rochelle garza’s views on abortions:

abortion, immigration impacting race for texas attorney general

artist statement

how the exhibit connects to texas:

“i am both honored and challenged to be presenting this work in texas, at a time in which many are still grieving the loss of nineteen students and two teachers shot and killed at robb elementary school in uvalde. the normativity of precarious life - of children and people of color – sustained by the racial and patriarchal norms of gun-culture in the us, resonates to a degree – across geographic, historical and sociopolitical lines of difference – with the violence enacted daily against women, children and lgbtq people in south africa. chorus is a work of mourning to be sure, but also of survival, and importantly hope – for we cannot imagine and seek to realize a world otherwise, if we fail to bear with us those lost to or still surviving an order of violence we hope to – and must – transform. and this is a work for all of us. i am, of course, also acutely aware of the complex relation of this emphatically black decolonial feminist work to the political and ethical crisis attending the recent overturning of roe vs. wade, and its devastating implications for so many women. within this context of difficulty, chorus offers an important opportunity to relate across difference, and i believe, for those who open themselves to it, a space in which to grieve, heal, imagine and yes, hope,” said gabrielle goliath, artist.

click here to read the full statement

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museum store sunday