2006.11.30: November 30, 2006: Headlines: COS - Jordan: Art: Painting: Sepia Mutiny: Maryum Saifee exhibits “Postcards from the Middle East” which she bills as self-portraits stemming from her experience as a Peace Corps volunteer in Jordan
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2006.11.30: November 30, 2006: Headlines: COS - Jordan: Art: Painting: Sepia Mutiny: Maryum Saifee exhibits “Postcards from the Middle East” which she bills as self-portraits stemming from her experience as a Peace Corps volunteer in Jordan
Maryum Saifee exhibits “Postcards from the Middle East” which she bills as self-portraits stemming from her experience as a Peace Corps volunteer in Jordan
The most thought-provoking to me was Saifee’s series of “Postcards from the Middle East,” which she bills as self-portraits stemming from her experience as a Peace Corps volunteer in Jordan: as she explains in the catalog, “my skin color made my authenticity as an American up for debate.
Maryum Saifee exhibits “Postcards from the Middle East” which she bills as self-portraits stemming from her experience as a Peace Corps volunteer in Jordan
InstaReview: SAWCC's "In a State of Emergency?" ExhibitionArt
Earlier this evening I checked out the opening of “In a State of Emergency? Women, War & the Politics of Urban Survival,” an exhibition presented by the South Asian Women’s Creative Collaborative here in New York. The show is up at the Alwan Center for the Arts in Lower Manhattan through December 9th. It features photography, video, multimedia and installation pieces by nine desi sisters: Salma Arastu, Meherunnisa Asad, Kiran Chandra, Mona Kamal, Bindu Mehra, Carol Pereira, Maryum Saifee, Tahera Seher Shah, and Vandana Sood.
[Excerpt]
The most thought-provoking to me was Saifee’s series of “Postcards from the Middle East,” which she bills as self-portraits stemming from her experience as a Peace Corps volunteer in Jordan: as she explains in the catalog, “my skin color made my authenticity as an American up for debate.
The show is a project of SAWCC, the estimable organization that is now in its tenth year and that sponsors, among other events, the annual literary conference that a number of Mutineering types attended last year. SAWCC (pronounced, delightfully, “saucy”) continues to do the Lord’s work for culturally minded macacas, and they deserve all our support.
A show like this one, however, also suffers from self-imposed boundaries. It is imbued with a very 1990s, hyper-theoretical approach to the politics of representation that makes the inherent whimsy and improvisation of artistic creation — and, importantly, artistic consumption — feel secondary.
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Headlines: November, 2006; Peace Corps Jordan; Directory of Jordan RPCVs; Messages and Announcements for Jordan RPCVs; Art; Painting
When this story was posted in February 2007, this was on the front page of PCOL:
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Story Source: Sepia Mutiny
This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; COS - Jordan; Art; Painting
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