Projects

Collaboration: A Potential History of Photography is a research project and a pedagogical tool that explores the event of photography.

“The Geneva Project,” a dance and multimedia performance inspired by Professor Laura Wexler’s Photogrammar project, was one of the highlights of the first annual conference hosted by Public Humanities at Yale, part of the American Studies Program.

This group exhibition recognizes the 50th anniversary, local histories and lasting legacies of the trial of Black Panther Party chairman, Bobby Seale, New Haven chapter founder, Ericka Huggins, and seven other party members. While Seale and Huggins were acquitted of the murder of Panther member Alex Rackley, the 1970 case shook the city and exposed deep inequities in the legal system and wider social structures.

Poet Robert Viscusi reads from “Ellis Island” and “An Oration upon the Most Recent Death of Christopher Columbus” at the New Haven Free Public Library on Columbus Day, 2008. In two parts.

Poet Robert Viscusi reads from “Ellis Island” and “An Oration upon the Most Recent Death of Christopher Columbus” at the New Haven Free Public Library on Columbus Day, 2008. In two parts.

An inter-disciplinary dance work exploring history, blood memory, and the traces of an ancestral past, The Geneva Project examines what is hidden and what is revealed, by bringing light to that which was once buried.