Voices Across Time: Sharing Women’s Experiences of Re-entry: Block Museum - Northwestern University
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Voices Across Time: Sharing Women’s Experiences of Re-entry

Image from "What We Leave Behind" (2001) Beyondmedia Education
Image from "What We Leave Behind" (2001) Beyondmedia Education
Cinema
March
3-7
6 PM

Event Details

Date & Time:

Wed March 3, 2021 - Sun March 7, 2021
6 PM

Location:

The Block Museum of Art
40 Arts Circle Drive
Evanston, IL 60208

Audience:

Open to the public

Details:

“Voices Across Time'' features a live screening and conversation with members of Grace House and Beyondmedia Education with moderation by Professor Sally Nuamah from the School of Education and Social Policy at Northwestern. In addition to the live event, two supplemental films from the Beyondmedia collection will be available to watch on the Block's Vimeo from March 3 through March 7. 

RSVP

 

About the event:

“Voices Across Time: Sharing Women’s Experiences of Re-entry” brings together organizers from Beyondmedia with current and former members of Grace House, a residential program for women exiting the Illinois prison system. This screening and discussion center women’s experiences of re-entry, exploring the possibilities of art and storytelling in reclaiming citizenship. 

In the early 2000s, activist media organizations Beyondmedia and Visible Voices offered critical, collaborative media-making workshops to formerly incarcerated women at Grace House as part of the re-entry process. These pedagogical encounters, spearheaded by artist Salome Chasnoff and activist Joanne Archibald, created space for women to challenge mainstream media’s representations while learning to use the tools of video production. In videos like What We Leave Behind (2001, 21 min), the women of Grace House told their own stories on both sides of the camera; this screening and conversation asks what these initiatives mean today.

Additional information:

Grace House

Since its opening in 1994, the Grace House residential program has provided interim housing, emotional and spiritual support, and professional counseling to women who are exiting the Illinois prison system. Services are provided in a warm setting located on the Near West Side of Chicago. Residents are encouraged to set goals for the future and are taught how to make informed choices that will empower them to lead lives with dignity in their communities and their families. Program participants come to Grace House voluntarily, seeking to take steps that will lead them to a new beginning.

The Grace House program works: in Illinois, 35% of women released from prison recidivate (return) to prison within three years. For women completing the Grace House program, only 5% return to prison.

Beyondmedia Education

Beyondmedia Education's mission is to collaborate with under-served and under-represented women, youth and communities to tell their stories, connect their stories to the world around us, and organize for social justice through the creation and distribution of media arts.

Sally Nuamah

Sally A. Nuamah is an assistant professor of Urban Politics in Human Development, Social Policy and Political Science (by courtesy) at Northwestern University. Professor Nuamah’s research sits at the intersections of race, gender, education policy, and political behavior. In addition to her work as a scholar, Professor Nuamah works as a workshop mentor at the Grace House for incarcerated women and girls in the United States. 

Co-presented by the Block Museum of Art with The Graduate School, Graduate Women Across Northwestern (GWAN), Women Initiating New Directions (WIND), and Gender & Sexuality Studies Program. With support from the Center for Civic Engagement, the School of Education and Social Policy, and The Alumnae of Northwestern University.

https://sites.northwestern.edu/gwan/Contact The Block Museum of Art for more information: (847) 491-4000 or email us at block-museum@northwestern.edu