Saturday, Mar 20, 2021 at 11:00am
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Anastacia-Reneé’s poetry and performances are an assertion of presence that counteract the erasure of those who have been marginalized by American society. With an unflinching focus on collective liberation, her work is rooted in the Black feminist and womanist traditions, and their intersectional approach to addressing racism, sexism, homophobia, ageism, and class. In her writing, she plumbs the depths of the day-to-day experiences, emotions, and injustices that too often go unexpressed in order to transform silence into language and action. In this exhibition, Anastacia-Reneé offers a rageful meditation on gentrification and its insidious effects on the body and home, as seen through the eyes of her multilayered character Alice Metropolis.
Alice has appeared in Anastacia-Reneé’s literary and interdisciplinary work for the past seven years. (Don’t be Absurd) Alice in Parts centers on Alice’s struggles against various forms of gentrification, some of them literal, as in her displacement from her home and neighborhood, and some figurative, such as the colonization of her body by cancer cells and of her mind by the anxiety and terror of navigating white supremacy every day. Presented as an immersive installation that invites visitors to walk through Alice’s home, the exhibition charts the ways in which she strives for wholeness and transcendence against interlocking forms of oppression that relentlessly fracture her sense of self.
Alice’s home is a place of both solace and nightmares, comic relief and deep frustration. Inside, she has built a spiritual sanctuary dedicated to "The Lorde"—a reference to Black lesbian feminist writer, mother, warrior, poet, and activist Audre Lorde (1934–1992)—as a source of strength and inspiration. Alice’s lived experience opens a window into the world of an individual attempting to stay one step ahead of the forces that seek to erase her essence and existence. As she writes, “in what life is a black woman allowed to be her own spin & her own chair? in what life is she allowed to sit as long as she likes & still be moving forward without being a moving target?”
Exhibition Dates: January 30 - April 25, 2021.
Additional Dates:
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