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X-WR-CALNAME:ART WORKS Projects | 16 Years Advocating for Human Rights
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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for ART WORKS Projects | 16 Years Advocating for Human Rights
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DTSTART:20170101T000000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20170622T182500
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20170622T203000
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20170606T021356Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170606T021356Z
UID:697-1498155900-1498163400@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:The Confined Family: Exploring the Impact of Incarcerating Children
DESCRIPTION:Please join ART WORKS Projects for The Confined Family: Exploring the Impact of Incarcerating Children\, an evening of conversation with Restore Justice Illinois (RJI) and Communities and Relatives of Illinois Incarcerated Children (CRIIC). This program will address the realities of incarcerating children through the experiences of those both inside and outside of the criminal justice system with a policy and impact lens provided by RJI. \n  \nModerator\nJobi Cates\, Director of RJI \n  \nSpeakers\nJulie Anderson\, CRIIC\nMore speakers TBA \n  \nFree and open to the public. Click here to register. \nRefreshments will be served. \n  \nAbout CRIIC: \n​​Based in Chicago’s Back of the Yards neighborhood\, Communities and Relatives of Illinois Incarcerated Children (CRIIC) is a community group dedicated to providing support to those with loved ones incarcerated in Illinois prisons for crimes committed in their youth. Members meet regularly to provide encouragement\, share information\, and promote healing through restorative justice practices. CRIIC also actively advocates for criminal justice reform\, with a focus on eliminating juvenile life without parole (JLWOP) and other extreme sentences for youth and young adults. \n  \nAbout Restore Justice Illinois:\nRestore Justice Illinois (RJI) is a new civic organization founded to mitigate the human and fiscal impact of the extreme sentencing laws of the 1980s and 1990s\, particularly where they have impacted children. RJI believes in the possibility of rehabilitation\, redemption\, and reunification with the community for all prisoners\, even those who have committed the most serious crimes. \n \n  \nThis program complements the current AWP exhibition Vinny and David: Life and Incarceration of a Family. Vinny and David began in 2012 when photographer Isadora Kosofsky met Vinny\, then age 13\, as he was booked into a juvenile detention center for stabbing his mother’s assailant. Through Kosofsky’s close relationship with Vinny and eventually\, his older brother David\, she has captured an intimate look at a family struggling to remain connected throughout recurring periods of incarceration. Vinny and David is open at 625 N. Kingsbury from June 8 to August 10\, 2017. \n\n  \nAbout the photographer:\nFeatured in global publications like Time\, Slate\, the Washington Post\, Le Monde\, the New Yorker and in the permanent collection of the Philadelphia Museum of Art\, Isadora Kosofsky’s long-term immersion into her subjects’ lives produces an intimate perspective on social justice issues. \n  \n  \nPhoto: Vinny eats his first meal in the detention center cafeteria. Albuquerque\, 2012.
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/the-confined-family-exploring-the-impact-of-incarcerating-children/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20170625T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20170625T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20170614T233836Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170614T233836Z
UID:1986-1498392000-1498406400@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:Family Day at Jane Addams Hull-House Museum
DESCRIPTION:Join ART WORKS Projects and Jane Addams Hull-House Museum for a Family Day of celebrating collective action and art making. AWP will display images from Vinny and David: Life and Incarceration of a Family to complement Hull-House Museum’s current exhibition States of Incarceration. Families can participate in kid-friendly activities including sewing\, letter writing\, dance\, games\, photography viewing\, and tours. \nRachel Wallis\, the artist behind Gone But Not Forgotten quilts currently on display at Hull-House Museum\, will lead quilting activities and letter writing. \nDesign Dance will lead a workshop for the whole family\, using movement to provide families with the opportunity to enjoy physical movement together and decompress. \nJoin in historic Hull-House games and Spanish and English language tours. \n \nAll families are welcome!\nSpanish translation will be available to guests.\nLimited space available. Please click here to register.  \n  \n  \nThis program complements the current AWP exhibition Vinny and David: Life and Incarceration of a Family. Vinny and David began in 2012 when photographer Isadora Kosofsky met Vinny\, then age 13\, as he was booked into a juvenile detention center for stabbing his mother’s assailant. Through Kosofsky’s close relationship with Vinny and eventually\, his older brother David\, she has captured an intimate look at a family struggling to remain connected throughout recurring periods of incarceration. Vinny and David is open at 625 N. Kingsbury from June 8 to August 10\, 2017. \n  \nPhoto: Isadora Kosofsky\, 2015. Vinny tickles his younger brother Michael as his girlfriend Krystle rests her head on his back during a visit at the motel where Michael and Elycia live with their father Eddie. Eve and Elycia (right) lean against each other as they watch a cartoon program.
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/family-day-at-jane-addams-hull-house-museum/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20170706T210000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20170706T230000
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20170629T221118Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170629T221118Z
UID:790-1499374800-1499382000@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:Sanctuary/Sustenance film screening in Malmö\, Sweden
DESCRIPTION:Please join ART WORKS Projects and the Center for Refugee Solidarity for an outdoor screening of Sanctuary/Sustenance: The Story of Many Journeys. \nThe film will also be screened at the Södra Community Theatre in cooperation with The Tess Theatre. \nSanctuary/Sustenance is a multimedia film that traces the journey of a family during the catastrophic events of displacement\, on a path to sanctuary\, and through the long process of rebuilding life in a new community. \nCollaborators\nPhotographers: Lynsey Addario\, Marcus Bleasdale\, Paula Bronstein\, Helene Caux\, Jean Chung\, Ron Haviv\, David Hogsholt\, Giulio di Sturco\, and James Whitlow Delano. Filmmakers & Directors: Maren Wickwire and Leslie Thomas. Composer: Osvaldo Noé Golijov. Additional music by Lee Maddeford\, Jonathan Wiest\, and Ventanas.
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/sanctuarysustenance-film-screening-in-malmo-sweden/
LOCATION:kristianstadsgatan 16\, Kristianstadsgatan 16\, Malmo \, SE-214 23\, Sweden
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20170731T180000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20170731T193000
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20170712T030132Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170712T030132Z
UID:799-1501524000-1501529400@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:Know your Rights Workshop: Juvenile Justice
DESCRIPTION:Please join ART WORKS Projects (AWP) and First Defense Legal Aid (FDLA) at West Englewood Branch Library for a Know your Rights Workshop focused on juvenile justice. The FDLA Street Corp team will provide strategies for parents whose children are arrested or detained by police in Chicago and Cook County. AWP will show a mobile version of its current exhibition Vinny and David: Life and Incarceration of a Family.\nFree and open to the public.\nRefreshments will be provided. \n  \nThis program complements the current AWP exhibition Vinny and David: Life and Incarceration of a Family. Vinny and David began in 2012 when photographer Isadora Kosofsky met Vinny\, then age 13\, as he was booked into a juvenile detention center for stabbing his mother‘s assailant. Through Kosofsky’s close relationship with Vinny and eventually\, his older brother David\, she has captured an intimate look at a family struggling to remain connected throughout recurring periods of incarceration. Vinny and David is open at 625 N. Kingsbury from June 8 to August 10\, 2017. \n  \n  \nPhoto: Isadora Kosofsky\, Albuquerque\, 2012. Vinny prays on his cell bunk at the juvenile detention center. “I want to go home. I’m not with my mom or my family. I love my older brother more than anybody in the world. I want to spend the night on the moon\,” says Vinny. \n  \n  \nThis program is supported by an Illinois Speaks micro-grant through Illinois Humanities.
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/know-your-rights-workshop-juvenile-justice/
LOCATION:West Englewood Branch Library\, 1745 W 63rd Street\, Chicago\, IL\, 60636\, United States
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20170810T180000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20170810T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20170713T024731Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170713T024731Z
UID:806-1502388000-1502395200@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:Closing of Vinny and David: Life and Incarceration of a Family
DESCRIPTION:Join ART WORKS Projects for the closing of Vinny and David: Life and Incarceration of a Family\, a five-year photo essay by 2017 Emerging Lens winner Isadora Kosofsky. This essay documents one family’s experiences with recurring periods of juvenile and adult incarceration. Beverages and food from Wow Bao provided. Presented by AWP’s NextGen Committee. \n  \n  \nFor the past five years\, I have documented the relationship between families and incarceration\, focusing on lost intimacy and love as a locus to investigate humanistic elements of the criminal justice system. In the midst of understanding shattered and mended familial bonds in my present life\, Vinny and David comments on private questions about the nature of brotherly bonds and alienation. – Isadora Kosofsky \n  \n  \nVinny and David began when Isadora Kosofsky encountered Vinny\, then age 13\, as he was being booked into a juvenile detention center for stabbing his mother’s assailant in 2012. Since that time\, Kosofsky has forged an ongoing relationship with Vinny\, his older brother David\, and the rest of their family as she documents their navigation of life both inside and outside of New Mexico’s juvenile and adult prison systems. \n  \n  \nPhoto: Isadora Kosofsky\, Albuquerque\, 2012. Vinny eats his first meal in the detention center cafeteria.
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/juvenile-literacy-workshop-with-free-write/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20170902
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20170904
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20170726T215055Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170726T215055Z
UID:824-1504310400-1504483199@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:Sanctuary/Sustenance film screening in Leicester
DESCRIPTION:Please join ART WORKS Projects at the Journeys Festival International (JFI) for an installation of AWP’s film Sanctuary/Sustenance. The film traces the journey of a family during the catastrophic events of displacement\, on a path to sanctuary\, and through the long process of rebuilding life in a new community. \nSanctuary/Sustenance aims to raise the public consciousness of these issues to a wide variety of people\, and facilitate conversations about our collective responsibility to welcome refugees and encourage policy makers to act in favor of fundamental human rights for refugees and asylum seekers. \nJourneys Festival International\nNew Walk Museum Takeover\nSeptember 2\, 2017 – 10am to 5pm\nSeptember 3\, 2017 – 11am to 5pm \nThe projection of Sanctuary/Sustenance will loop throughout the open hours of the JFI at the New Walk Museum September 2 and 3. \nThe Journeys Festival International celebrates the creative talent of exceptional refugee and asylum seeker artists and shares the refugee experience through great art and culture. The festival works across a wide range of creative media and disciplines including live music\, hands-on artist-led workshops\, theatre\, performance\, film\, discussion\, exhibitions and pop-up events. The Journeys Festival International aims to bring the talent of local\, national and international refugee artists to the general public – creating a positive interface with the community. \n  \nSanctuary/Sustenance Collaborators\nPhotographers: Lynsey Addario\, Marcus Bleasdale\, Paula Bronstein\, Helene Caux\, Jean Chung\, Don Doll\, Ron Haviv\, David Hogsholt\, Giulio di Sturco\, and James Whitlow Delano. Filmmakers & Directors: Maren Wickwire and Leslie Thomas. Composer: Osvaldo Noé Golijov. Additional music by Lee Maddeford\, Jonathan Wiest\, and Ventanas.
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/sanctuarysustenance-film-screening-in-leicester/
LOCATION:New Walk Museum\, 53 New Walk\, Leicester\, LE1 7EA\, United Kingdom
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20170903T140000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20170903T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20170727T023835Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170727T023835Z
UID:831-1504447200-1504454400@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:Opening of Still My Mother\, Still My Father at Art on 51st
DESCRIPTION:Please join ART WORKS Projects and Communities and Relatives of Illinois Incarcerated Children (CRIIC) for the second Chicago opening of Still My Mother\, Still My Father by photographer Isadora Kosofsky\, winner of the 2017 Emerging Lens Mentorship Program. Still My Mother was originally presented alongside Vinny and David: Life and Incarceration of a Family at the AWP studio. \nKosofsky’s work will be installed at the Precious Blood Ministry of Reconciliation gallery Art on 51st. Art on 51st offers a place where incarcerated women\, men and children can share their art and poetry. \n\nOpening of Still My Mother\, Still My Father\nSeptember 3\, 2017 | 2 to 4pm\nArt on 51st | 1238 W. 51st Street\nFree and open to the public. \n  \nStill My Mother\, Still My Father documents bonding meetings between children and their incarcerated parents at 12 women’s and men’s prisons in the state of Florida from 2012 to 2017. More than 2.7 million children in the U.S. have a parent in prison\, and approximately 10 million children have experienced parental incarceration at some point in their lives. \n  \n  \nThe exhibition also includes a selection of images from Kosofsky’s photo essay Vinny and David began in 2012 when Kososky met Vinny\, then age 13\, as he was booked into a juvenile detention center for stabbing his mother’s assailant. Through Kosofsky’s close relationship with Vinny and eventually\, his older brother David\, she has captured an intimate look at a family struggling to remain connected throughout recurring periods of incarceration. \n  \n  \nAbout the photographer:\nFeatured in global publications like Time\, Slate\, the Washington Post\, Le Monde\, the New Yorker and in the permanent collection of the Philadelphia Museum of Art\, Kosofsky’s long-term immersion into her subjects’ lives produces an intimate perspective on social justice issues. Please visit www.isadorakosofsky.com for more information. \n  \nPhoto: Isadora Kosofsky\, Okeechobee\, Florida\, 2017. Dexter Jr.\, age 3\, puts stickers on his father Dexter’s face during a visit at the Okeechobee Correctional Institution in Okeechobee\, Florida.
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/opening-of-still-my-mother-still-my-father-at-art-on-51st/
LOCATION:Art on 51st\, 1238 W. 51st Street\, Chicago\, 60609\, United States
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20170914T180000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20170914T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20170828T213807Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170828T213807Z
UID:840-1505412000-1505419200@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:Opening of "Women's Rights are Human Rights" Poster Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Women’s Rights Are Human Rights:\nInternational Posters on Gender-based Inequality\, Violence and Discrimination\nPresented By National Public Housing Museum and ART WORKS Projects \n\nFeaturing reflections on feminism and the urgency of this moment by Beth Richie\, Nadine Naber\, Lynette Jackson and Bernardine Dohrn \n\n\nOPENING RECEPTION:  September 14th 6:00 PM-8:00 PM\n625 N. Kingsbury Street\nChicago\, IL 60654\nExhibition Dates:  September 14th\, 2017– October 8th \n  \nWomen’s Rights Are Human Rights: International Posters on Gender-based Inequality\, Violence and Discrimination is an exhibition that features posters created by both women and men to celebrate and acknowledge the vital role that all citizens play in protecting and promoting human rights while challenging gender inequality and stereotypes\, advancing reproductive and sexual rights\, protecting women and girls against brutality\, and promoting women’s empowerment\, education and participation in society. \n  \nThe exhibition is organized and curated by Elizabeth Resnick\, Professor Emerita\, Graphic Design\, Massachusetts College of Art and Design. \n  \nExhibition is co-sponsored by Pozen Center for Human Rights at the University of Chicago and the Chicago Foundation for Women \n\n 
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/opening-of-womens-rights-are-human-rights-poster-exhibition/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20171010T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20171010T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20170925T221013Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170925T221013Z
UID:851-1507662000-1507669200@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:Sanctuary/Sustenance: Welcoming Refugees to Seattle
DESCRIPTION:Please join International Rescue Committee Seattle\, St. Joseph’s Parish\, and ART WORKS Projects for an evening of conversation about welcoming refugees to Seattle and a screening of the short film Sanctuary/Sustenance: The Story of Many Journeys. We will be joined by the Biswa Family who resettled in Tukwila from a refugee camp in Nepal in August 2016. \n7:00-7:30\nArrival and welcome \n7:30-8:00\nScreening of AWP film Sanctuary/Sustenance: The Story of Many Journeys \n8:00-8:30\nDiscussion between IRC and the Biswa Family \n8:30-9\nAudience Q&A \n \nFree and open to the public.\nLight refreshments will be served. \n \nSanctuary/Sustenance is a multimedia film produced by ART WORKS Projects and Manifest Media that traces the journey of a family during the catastrophic events of displacement\, on a path to sanctuary\, and through the long process of rebuilding life in a new community. \n \nCollaborators\nPhotographers: Lynsey Addario\, Marcus Bleasdale\, Paula Bronstein\, Helene Caux\, Jean Chung\, Don Doll\, Ron Haviv\, David Hogsholt\, Giulio di Sturco\, and James Whitlow Delano. Filmmakers & Directors: Maren Wickwire and Leslie Thomas. Composer: Osvaldo Noé Golijov. Additional music by Lee Maddeford\, Jonathan Wiest\, and Ventanas. \n  \nPhoto: Erika Schultz\, The Seattle Times
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/sanctuarysustenance-welcoming-refugees-to-seattle/
LOCATION:St. Joseph’s Parish\, 732 18th Street East\, Seattle\, WA\, 98112\, United States
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20171128
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20171129
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20171118T005630Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20171118T005630Z
UID:904-1511827200-1511913599@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:Support AWP this Giving Tuesday!
DESCRIPTION:Double your impact this Giving Tuesday. \n  \nRight now\, The Henry Nias Foundation has challenged us to match their generous grant\, up to $15\,000! \n  \nCLICK HERE TO DONATE NOW \n  \nWith your help over the past decade\, our innovative arts advocacy programs have reached hundreds of thousands of people across five continents. Your contribution to the GiveX2 campaign translates to impact by ensuring that we can expand our reach even further. \n  \nIn 2018\, ART WORKS Projects is focusing its spotlight on the specific human rights challenges faced by women and girls. With your support\, even more audience members will learn how to stand with global advocates to make change. 
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/giving-tuesday/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20171205T180000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20171205T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20171107T013521Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20171107T013521Z
UID:869-1512496800-1512504000@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:Winter Friendraiser + The Prosecutors Preview
DESCRIPTION:Please join ART WORKS Projects for its Winter Friendraiser featuring a preview of its upcoming documentary The Prosecutors on Tuesday\, December 5 from 6 to 8pm. \nART WORKS Projects Winter Friendraiser + The Prosecutors Preview\nTuesday\, December 5\, 2017\n625 N. Kingsbury Street\, Chicago\n6 to 8pm\n6:30pm – Selection from The Prosecutors screening + Q&A with director and AWP founder Leslie Thomas\nDrinks and snacks will be served. \n  \nClick here to buy tickets – starting at $10!\n \n  \nSet in Bosnia and Herzegovina\, Colombia\, and the Democratic Republic of Congo\, The Prosecutors follows three lawyers as they work to end impunity for perpetrators of sexual violence in war. For more information about The Prosecutors\, please visit www.theprosecutorsmovie.com.  \n 
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/winter-friendraiser-the-prosecutors-preview/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180508T180000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180508T193000
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20180419T222453Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180419T222453Z
UID:948-1525802400-1525807800@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:On the Table: Arts + Advocacy Community Conversation
DESCRIPTION:Join ART WORKS Projects for a conversation about the role of art in creating a more equitable society. Together we will take a look at some of AWP’s work throughout the years and consider how art can make an impact on human rights around the world. \nSome questions we’ll discuss together: Are images effective in creating lasting change? How can they be more effective? What was an image that affected you emotionally / sparked your interest in a human rights issue / led to you taking action? \nPlease click here to register for this free event. \nThis conversation is part of Chicago Community Trust’s 2018 On the Table\, an annual forum designed to create opportunities for conversations centered on community improvement throughout Chicago. \nThis program is free and open to the public.\nSnacks and beverages will be provided.
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/on-the-table-arts-advocacy-community-conversation/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180622T140000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180622T150000
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20180525T011037Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180525T011037Z
UID:953-1529676000-1529679600@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:Sanctuary/Sustenance film screening in New York
DESCRIPTION:Please join ART WORKS Projects at the Design for Humanity Summit in New York City for an installation of AWP’s film Sanctuary/Sustenance. The film traces the journey of a family during the catastrophic events of displacement\, on a path to sanctuary\, and through the long process of rebuilding life in a new community. \n  \nSanctuary/Sustenance aims to raise the public consciousness of these issues to a wide variety of people\, and facilitate conversations about our collective responsibility to welcome refugees and encourage policy makers to act in favor of fundamental human rights for refugees and asylum seekers. \n  \nDesign for Humanity Summit | June 22\, 2018\nFordham University at Lincoln Center\nConstantino Hall at the Fordham Law School\n150 W. 62nd Street\nScreening at 2 p.m. \n  \nThe Design for Humanity Summit\, hosted by the Institute of International Humanitarian Affairs and the UN Migration Agency\, will explore the intersection of design and humanitarian action for dignified crisis response. Prominent humanitarian and design professionals will discuss current best practices and generate human-centered design strategies that address contemporary humanitarian challenges. Through cross-collaboration of both sectors\, this initiative aims to drive humanitarian response in a more dignified\, inclusive\, and sustainable direction. \n  \nSanctuary/Sustenance Collaborators\nPhotographers: Lynsey Addario\, Marcus Bleasdale\, Paula Bronstein\, Helene Caux\, Jean Chung\, Don Doll\, Ron Haviv\, David Hogsholt\, Giulio di Sturco\, and James Whitlow Delano. Filmmakers & Directors: Maren Wickwire and Leslie Thomas. Composer: Osvaldo Noé Golijov. Additional music by Lee Maddeford\, Jonathan Wiest\, and Ventanas.
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/sanctuary-sustenance-film-screening-in-new-york/
LOCATION:Constantino Hall\, 150 W. 62nd Street \, New York\, NY\, 10023\, United States
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180628T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180628T130000
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20180525T003450Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180525T003450Z
UID:958-1530187200-1530190800@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:AWP at World Refugee Day Chicago
DESCRIPTION:Join ART WORKS Projects at Chicago’s World Refugee Day celebration at Daley Plaza! This event recognizes Chicago’s rich multicultural history through music\, dance\, food\, art\, and more. \nAWP will show photographer Maren Wickwire‘s 2016 project I miss you all. that explores the nuance of the resettlement process for refugees (both recently and previously settled in Chicago) from Syria\, the Republic of Congo\, Iraq\, Laos\, and Cambodia. \nPhoto: Maren Wickwire\, Chicago\, 2016. Omer Boussoukou proudly shows his new American passport in the shadows of the American flag. Omer sits in his office space\, awarded to him by the Ethiopian Community Association of Chicago (ECAC)\, a mutual aid society supporting immigrants\, refugees\, and asylum seekers in Chicago. Boussoukou and his wife fled the fighting in the Republic of the Congo in 1998 and walked 30 days to Gabon\, where they lived as refugees for the next 10 years and grew their family to include two daughters. The family of four was resettled in Chicago in 2008.
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/awp-at-world-refugee-day-chicago/
LOCATION:Daley Plaza\, 50 W. Washington Street\, Chicago\, 60602\, United States
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20180707
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20180716
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20180706T202039Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180706T202039Z
UID:992-1530921600-1531699199@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:Transitions at the Congo International Film Festival
DESCRIPTION:ART WORKS Projects is pleased announce the exhibition of Transitions at the Congo International Film Festival in Goma\, Democratic Republic of the Congo from July 7 – 15\, 2018. \n  \nCONGO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL PRESS RELEASE \n  \nTransitions is a four-part international exhibition and cultural exchange between creative teams from Bogotá\, Colombia; Chicago\, Illinois; Goma\, the Democratic Republic of the Congo; and Sarajevo\, Bosnia and Herzegovina to co-curate a photography exhibition highlighting national journeys of transitional justice in post-conflict environments. \nThrough collaboration\, community conversations\, and workshops\, the four teams of curators and photographers reflect upon the experiences of each country’s evolution from war to peace\, alongside the lessons learned by their colleagues and audiences. This project considers multiple aspects of post-conflict society and challenges and successes at varying stages of transitional justice\, from across the centuries to recently established zones of fragile peace. \nPartners: \nBosnia and Herzegovina:\nThe Post-Conflict Research Center (PCRC)\nWARM Foundation\nPhotography by Midhat Poturovic \nColombia:\nCentro De Memoria Histórica\nPhotography by Juan Arredondo \nDemocratic Republic of the Congo:\nYolé!Africa\nPhotography by Martin Lukongo \nUnited States:\nArt Works Projects\nPhotography by Sophia Nahli Allison \nMajor funding for Transitions is provided through the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation International Connections Fund. \n  \nPhoto: Martin Lukongo\, Goma\, 2016.  A young female student listens to instruction at the Complexe Scolaire Benevolence\, a private school founded with the goal of strengthening Congolese development through increasing general and administrative education. After decades of underinvestment in education\, the government announced plans in 2010 to make all primary education free. Despite this commitment\, and support from a coalition of international development organizations\, school fees are still a barrier for many families and a large percentage of children do not attend school\, especially in conflict-impacted zones.  \n 
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/transitions-at-the-congo-international-film-festival/
LOCATION:Goma\, DRC\, Goma\, Congo\, The Democratic Republic Of The
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DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180802T180000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180802T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20180525T010027Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180525T010027Z
UID:963-1533232800-1533240000@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:Exhibition Opening of Deported: An American Division
DESCRIPTION:Please join ART WORKS Projects for the opening of our fourth annual Emerging Lens exhibition Deported: An American Division by photographer Rachel Woolf. We will be joined by Woolf who will give a short artist talk about her work. To learn more about the Emerging Lens Mentorship Program\, click here. \n  \nRemarks to start at 6:30pm.\nRefreshments will be served.\nFree and open to the public.  \n  \nWoolf’s project began in late July 2017 when she met Lourdes Salazar Bautista days before her deportation hearing in Detroit. Bautista had been living in Ann Arbor\, Michigan for the past 20 years along with her children Pamela (19)\, Bryan (14)\, and Lourdes (16) who were all born in the United States. Though the family was hopeful that Bautista would be granted permission to stay in the U.S.\, it was determined at her hearing that she would be deported. Bautista\, along with her two younger children\, left for Mexico soon after the hearing in August 2017.\n \n\nThrough Woolf’s focus on Bautista and her children\, we can better understand the nuance of deportation and the impact it has on families and their communities. Woolf returned to Mexico in May 2018 to update her story on the Bautista family and provide an intimate glimpse into what life after deportation is like for families who are forcibly removed from the United States and sent to countries that are at once strange and familiar. \n  \n  \nPhoto: Lourdes Salazar Bautista\, formerly of Ann Arbor\, put her hands to her heart as she expressed concern for her children\, moments after leaving the meeting confirming her deportation order on Monday\, July 31\, 2017\, outside the ICE Enforcement Camp; Removal Operations Office in Detroit\, Mich. Bautista had been granted continued temporary stays in the country after her husband was deported\, so that she could care for her children. \n  \nSUPPORT FOR THIS PROJECT\nMany thanks to our generous Community Sponsors: \n  \nThe Henry Nias Foundation\n \n  \nFriedman Law Group\, Ltd.\n \n  \nTo learn how to become a sponsor of the Emerging Lens Mentorship Program or Deported: An American Division\, please contact Annalise Flynn-Taylor at ataylor@artworksprojects.org.
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/exhibition-opening-of-deported-an-american-division/
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DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180823T180000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180823T193000
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20180807T231330Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180807T231330Z
UID:1003-1535047200-1535052600@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:Panel: The State of Deportation
DESCRIPTION:ART WORKS Projects is pleased to invite you to a panel discussion featuring Chicago-based leaders who advocate for immigrants at the local and national level. The panelists will address the complexities of immigration policy in the U.S. while considering the impact of deportation on families and their communities.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nPanel: The State of Deportation\nAugust 23\, 2018 | 6 – 7:30pm\nRemarks to begin at 6:30pm.\n625 N. Kingsbury Street\n\n\n\n\n\n \n\n\n\nPanelists: \n\n\nRoyal Berg – Immigration Attorney \n\n\nOscar Chacón – Executive Director\, Alianza Americas \n\n\nSeemi Choudry – Director\, Mayor’s Office of New Americans \n\n\nEvelyn Venegas – Family Support Network Coordinator\, ICIRR\n\n\n\n\n\n\nThis event is free and open to the public. \n\n\nPlease click here to register to attend.\n\n\n\n\n\n \n\n\nThis ART WORKS Projects event is presented in tandem with the exhibition Deported: An American Division by Emerging Lens photographer Rachel Woolf. This project began in late July 2017 when Woolf met Lourdes Salazar Bautista days before her deportation hearing in Detroit. Bautista had been living in Ann Arbor\, Michigan for the past 20 years along with her children Pamela (19)\, Bryan (14)\, and Lourdes (16) who were all born in the United States. Though the family was hopeful that Bautista would be granted permission to stay in the U.S.\, it was determined at her hearing that she would be deported. Bautista\, along with her two younger children\, left for Mexico soon after the hearing in August 2017.\n\n\n\n \n\n\n\nPhoto: Rachel Woolf\, Michigan\, 2017. \n\n\nBryan cries as his former teacher\, Jennifer Walsh\, of Ann Arbor\, wipes tears from his face before he enters the security line with his family to travel to Mexico at the Detroit Metropolitan Airport in Romulus. Lourdes (not pictured)\, took her children with her to Mexico when she was deported. Now\, to stay with their mother\, Bryan and his older sister Lourdes “Lulys” Quintana-Salazar\, 15\, (not pictured) attend a school in Toluca\, Mexico.\n\n\n\n\n\nDeported: An American Division is presented with generous support from The Henry Nias Foundation and Friedman Law Group\, Ltd.
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/panel-the-state-of-deportation/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20180924
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20181027
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20180912T222717Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180912T222717Z
UID:1024-1537747200-1540598399@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:Deported: An American Division at Stony Brook University
DESCRIPTION:ART WORKS Projects is pleased to announce Deported: An American Division will be on view at Stony Brook University from September 24 to October 26\, 2018. The opening will be celebrated with a public panel discussion on September 26th from 1 to 2:30pm at the Central Reading Room in the Melville Library. \nModerator:\nChristopher Sellers: Professor of History and Director of the Center for the Study of Inequalities\, Social Justice\, and Policy \nSpeakers:\nRachel Woolf: Deported photographer\nNancy Hiemstra: Geographer; Assistant Professor\, Women’s\, Gender\, and Sexuality Studies; Author of Deportation and Detention (forthcoming\, 2019)\nIrma Solis: New York Civil Liberties Union (Suffolk County)\nRichard Koubek: Long Island Jobs with Justice \nThe panel discussion will be followed by a Q&A with the audience. Free and open to the public. \nThis installation is sponsored by the Center for the Study of Inequalities\, Social Justice\, and Policy and the Stony Book Libraries. \n  \nPhoto: Rachel Woolf\, Detroit\, 2017.\nFrom left\, Lourdes Salazar Bautista and her family friend Leonor Kromis\, both of Ann Arbor\, look for the city Bautista’s husband lived in while they were separated on a map of Mexico on Monday\, July 31\, 2017 at the Consulate General of Mexico in Detroit\, Michigan\, USA. Bautista’s husband\, Luis Quintana Chaparro\, lived in San Nicols\, Mexico\, a small village where Bautista does not think she can find work for herself or schooling for her children.
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/stony-brook-opening-of-deported-an-american-division-copy/
LOCATION:Stony Brook University\, Melville Library\, 100 Nicolls Road\, Stony Brook\, NY\, 11794\, United States
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DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180926T130000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180926T143000
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20180912T222544Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180912T222544Z
UID:1021-1537966800-1537972200@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:Stony Brook opening of Deported: An American Division
DESCRIPTION:ART WORKS Projects is pleased to announce Deported: An American Division will be on view at Stony Brook University from September 24 to October 26\, 2018. The opening will be celebrated with a public panel discussion on September 26th from 1 to 2:30pm at the Central Reading Room in the Melville Library. \nModerator:\nChristopher Sellers: Professor of History and Director of the Center for the Study of Inequalities\, Social Justice\, and Policy \nSpeakers:\nRachel Woolf: Deported photographer\nNancy Hiemstra: Geographer; Assistant Professor\, Women’s\, Gender\, and Sexuality Studies; Author of Deportation and Detention (forthcoming\, 2019)\nIrma Solis: New York Civil Liberties Union (Suffolk County)\nRichard Koubek: Long Island Jobs with Justice \nThe panel discussion will be followed by a Q&A with the audience. Free and open to the public. \nThis installation is sponsored by the Center for the Study of Inequalities\, Social Justice\, and Policy and the Stony Book Libraries. \n  \nPhoto: Rachel Woolf\, San Nicolás\, Mexico\, October 2017\nCarlota Bertha Salazar puts her hand on her husband’s grave as her daughter Lourdes hugs her at the cemetery in San Nicolás. Lourdes missed her father’s funeral when she was living in the U.S. as she was unable to travel between the two countries.
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/stony-brook-opening-of-deported-an-american-division/
LOCATION:Stony Brook University\, Melville Library\, 100 Nicolls Road\, Stony Brook\, NY\, 11794\, United States
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DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180926T180000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180926T193000
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20180813T203915Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180813T203915Z
UID:1005-1537984800-1537990200@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:Panel: Photography & the Refugee Crisis
DESCRIPTION:ART WORKS Projects & CASE Art Fund invite you to a discussion about how photography is addressing the refugee crisis and the role of art as activism. \nFree and open to the public.\nPlease click here to register to attend.\nLight refreshments will be served. \nCatherine Edelman & Anette Skuggedal (founders of CASE Art Fund) will moderate a lively discussion with Lina Sergie Attar (CEO /Co-Founder Karam Foundation)\, Rachel Schrock (Human Rights Watch)\, and Kristin Taylor (Curator of Academic Programs and Collections\, Museum of Contemporary Photography\, Chicago). \nPhoto: Omar Imam
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/panel-photography-the-refugee-crisis/
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DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20181002T173000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20181002T193000
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20180830T000056Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180830T000056Z
UID:1011-1538501400-1538508600@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:Interfaith Immigrant Justice Vigil
DESCRIPTION:Please join ART WORKS Projects and Fourth Presbyterian Church on the evening of October 2nd for the Interfaith Immigrant Justice Vigil\, an evening of prayer\, song\, art\, and protest\, as we call for justice for our immigrant sisters and brothers. \n  \nOctober 2\, 2018 | 5:30 – 7:30pm\nFourth Presbyterian Church | 126 E. Chestnut Street\nSpeakers to begin at 5:45pm.\nThis event is free and open to the public.  \n  \nAWP will project images from Deported: An American Division onto the facade of the church while speakers from organizations like the Chicago Religious Leadership Network on Latin America and the Interfaith Coalition Against Racism advocate for immigrants coming to the U.S. and welcome New Americans to Chicago. \nMedia Partner: WBEZ’s Worldview \n  \nDeported: An American Division was created with generous support from The Henry Nias Foundation and Friedman Law Group\, Ltd. To learn how to contribute to this project\, please contact Annalise Flynn-Taylor at ataylor@artworksprojects.org.
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/interfaith-immigrant-justice-vigil/
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20181115T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20181115T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20180706T224151Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180706T224151Z
UID:989-1542304800-1542312000@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:Exhibition Opening of Women of Togo
DESCRIPTION:Please join ART WORKS Projects for the opening of our exhibition Women of Togo by photographer Zoe Rain in partnership with Integrate Health. We will be joined by Rain who will give a short artist talk about her work. \n  \nRemarks to start at 6:30pm.\nRefreshments will be served.\nFree and open to the public.  \n  \nTogo\, a country of eight million people\, has been forgotten by much of the world. UNICEF named Togo the 15th Most Dangerous Place to be born in the world in 2018. Nearly one in ten children will not live to see his or her fifth birthday—a rate fifteen times higher than that of developed countries. The five major killers of children in Togo—malaria\, diarrhea\, pneumonia\, HIV\, and malnutrition—are all easily treatable conditions. \nIn February 2018\, photographer Zoe Rain joined Integrate Health/Santé Intégrée\, a community-led international health organization working to create a world where everyone\, everywhere has access to high-quality healthcare in Togo\, West Africa. Rain toured four clinics in the rural communities of Djamdè\, Kpindi\, Sarakawa\, and Adabewere where\, historically\, a lack of resources\, including no running water or electricity costs lives. The artist was on hand to document the impact that clinic renovations had to these distinct\, isolated communities. \nIn Women of Togo\, Rain uses a skill set and aesthetic cultivated capturing celebrity portraits—a look that we have come to associate with red carpets and award shows—to document the integrity\, autonomy\, self-reliance\, and pride of Togolese women. For many Togolese\, the frustration of having no opportunities\, options\, or resources can leave people feeling that they have no control. Integrate Health works to empower families to regain ownership over their health\, something Rain beautifully illustrates through her photography. \n  \nTo learn how to support Women of Togo as it is exhibited in Chicago and around the world\, please contact Annalise Flynn-Taylor at ataylor@artworksprojects.org.
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/exhibition-opening-of-women-of-togo/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20181124
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20181125
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20190312T161832Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190312T161832Z
UID:1168-1543017600-1543103999@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:The Prosecutors: World Premiere\, London
DESCRIPTION:We are honored to present the world premiere of The Prosecutors at the UK Foreign & Commonwealth Office’s Preventing Sexual Violence Film Festival.
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/the-prosecutors-international-womens-day-the-hague-copy/
LOCATION:British Film Institute\, Belvedere Rd\, Lambeth\,\, London\, SE1 8XT\, United Kingdom
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20181127
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20181128
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20181120T221148Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181120T221148Z
UID:1074-1543276800-1543363199@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:Support AWP this Giving Tuesday!
DESCRIPTION:Since ART WORKS Projects (AWP) launched its work as a human rights arts advocacy organization in Chicago over a dozen years ago\, it has established a significant global footprint. Using public art to reach hundreds of thousands of viewers\, AWP has inspired audience members on five continents to support an end to grave human rights abuses. While proud of our impact\, we know more essential work needs to be done. And so\, as we prepare for the decade to come\, AWP is proud to announce the Next Steps Campaign 2020. \n  \nSince 2006 we have exhibited in over 60 cities in 30 countries on five continents. We’ve supported more than 100 artists and launched over 25 individual multi-media projects. As an organization\, we’ve relied primarily on heavily invested volunteers and friends like you. We’ll always be an entrepreneurial team – but now is the time to support this bold success with the staff and infrastructure that can leverage the global network we’ve built together. \n  \nOver the coming months\, the staff\, board\, and friends of AWP will build up the financial support necessary to ensure that on January 1\, 2020\, this unique organization is ready to make an even bigger impact on the human rights challenges we face today and the ones we must guard against tomorrow. \n  \nClick here to join the campaign by making your 2018 Giving Tuesday donation! \n  \n 
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/support-awp-this-giving-tuesday/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20181207
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20181208
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20190312T162817Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190312T162817Z
UID:1172-1544140800-1544227199@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:The Prosecutors: Assembly of States Parties\, The Hague
DESCRIPTION:An excerpt of The Prosecutors along with an expert panel discussion was presented at the 2018 Assembly of States Parties to the International Criminal Court. Moderated by Alejandra Vicente\, Daniela Kravetz\, Eric Witte\, and film director Leslie Thomas discussed the challenge and opportunities presented by national prosecution of conflict related sexual violence. The event was presented by the embassies of Chile\, Costa Rica\, and Norway.
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/the-prosecutors-international-womens-day-the-hague-copy-2/
LOCATION:World Forum\, Churchillplein 10\, 2517 JW\, The Hague\, Netherlands
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20181212T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20181212T193000
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20181120T214958Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181120T214958Z
UID:1072-1544637600-1544643000@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:From Togo to Chicago: A Universal Health Coverage Day Panel
DESCRIPTION:Please join ART WORKS Projects for a panel discussion on December 12\, 2018 – Universal Health Coverage Day. Presented in tandem with AWP’s current exhibition Women of Togo by photographer Zoe Rain\, this discussion will consider the current state of universal health coverage and methods to creating more equity and accessibility when it comes to attaining healthcare in Chicago and around the world. \n\n\n\n\nPanelists:\nJennifer Schechter\, Executive Director of Integrate Health\nDr. Judith Cothran\, Founder and CEO of Women’s Health of Chicago\nDr. Nataka Moore\, Director of Population Mental Health at Chicago Global Health Alliance  \nModerated by Dr. Julie Darnell\, Dept. of Public Health Sciences at Loyola University Chicago \n\n\n \n\n\n\nThis event is free and open to the public. \n\n\nPlease click here to register to attend. \n\n\n \n\n\n\nThrough the presentation of Rain’s portraits of Togolese women\, their children\, and the local practitioners providing their care\, AWP hopes to create conversation about the importance of universal health coverage and what the United States—the country with the worst rate of maternal deaths in the developed world—can learn from community-based healthcare practices in place around the world.\n\n\n\n \n\n\nWomen of Togo is made possible with the generous support of The Patricia Crown Family.
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/from-togo-to-chicago-a-universal-health-coverage-day-panel/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20190115
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20190201
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20190109T183623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190109T183623Z
UID:1118-1547510400-1548979199@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:University of Michigan exhibition of Deported: An American Division
DESCRIPTION:ART WORKS Projects is pleased to announce Deported: An American Division will be on view at the Ford School of Public Policy at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor from January 15 -31\, 2019. \n  \nRachel Woolf\, 2018 winner of the AWP Emerging Lens competition\, captures moments in the days before Lourdes Salazar Bautista’s deportation hearing in Detroit and the family’s forced return to Toluca\, Mexico\, revealing in intimate detail the impact of deportation on real families. Stamps professor Hannah Smotrich designed the University of Michigan installation and collaborated with Ford School faculty Ann Lin and Fabiana Silva to situate the photographs in a policy\, political\, and historical context. Exhibit will be on display through January 31. \n  \nDeported: An American Division at University of Michigan\nJanuary 15 – 31\, 2019\nWeill Hall Great Hall\n735 S. State Street\nUniversity of Michigan\, Ann Arbor \n  \nFree and open to the public.\nHosted by the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy and co-sponsored by the Penny W. Stamps School of Art & Design.
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/university-of-michigan-opening-of-deported-an-american-division/
LOCATION:Weill Hall\, 735 S. State Street \, Ann Arbor\, IL\, 48109\, United States
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20190121T113000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20190121T132000
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20190109T184827Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190109T184827Z
UID:1121-1548070200-1548076800@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:Panel Discussion: One Family's Story
DESCRIPTION:AWP is pleased to announce the panel discussion “One Family’s Story: People\, Policy\, and the Politics of Deportation\,” presented in tandem with the exhibition of Deported: An American Division at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. \n  \nJoin Rachel Woolf\, Independent visual journalist; Emilio Gutiérrez Soto\, Knight-Wallace Fellow\, Mexican journalist and asylum seeker; Laura Sanders\, co-founder of the Washtenaw Interfaith Coalition for Immigrant Rights; and Ford School faculty Fabiana Silva for an interdisciplinary discussion moderated by professor Ann Lin on the recent history\, impact\, and ramifications of current American immigration policy. A U-M Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Symposium event. \n  \nOne Family’s Story: People\, Policy\, and the Politics of Deportation\nMonday\, January 21 | 11:30 to 1:20pm EST\nWeill Hall\, Annenberg Auditorium (1120)\n735 S. State Street\, Ann Arbor \n  \n11:30 – 12:00: Strolling lunch and viewing of Deported: An American Division\n12:15 – 1:30: Panel discussion \n  \nFree and open to the public.\nCLICK HERE TO RSVP. \n  \nHosted by the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy and co-sponsored by the Penny W. Stamps School of Art & Design. \n 
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/panel-discussion-one-familys-story/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20190124
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20190312
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20190122T225741Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190122T225741Z
UID:1135-1548288000-1552348799@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:Open Call for the 2019 Emerging Lens Mentorship Program
DESCRIPTION:ART WORKS Projects (AWP) is pleased to announce its Open Call for the 2019 Annual Emerging Lens Mentorship Program. The 2019 competition is open to young photographers currently working on a human rights\, social justice or humanitarian issue. Although the entrant must be a resident of the United States\, the project may focus on international issues. The winning entrant will have an opportunity to receive a stipend to expand and/or finish their project and to exhibit the final project summer 2019 at the ART WORKS Projects Studio Gallery in Chicago.* \n  \nOpen Call for the Emerging Lens Mentorship Program\nJanuary 24 to March 11\, 2019\nClick here to learn more about the competition.\nClick here to submit your project.  \n  \n*See the Official Rules for complete contest rules\, including information on eligibility\, entries\, judging\, prizes and the opportunity for mentoring\, a stipend and an exhibition. \n  \nQuestions? Please contact Annalise Taylor at ataylor@artworksprojects.org. \n  \nPhoto by 2017 Emerging Lens winner Isadora Kosofsky.
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/open-call-for-the-2019-emerging-lens-mentorship-program/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20190308
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20190309
DTSTAMP:20260403T140002
CREATED:20190308T140044Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190308T140044Z
UID:1164-1552003200-1552089599@www.artworksprojects.org
SUMMARY:The Prosecutors: International Women's Day\, The Hague
DESCRIPTION:On International Women’s Day 2019 we were honored to present an excerpt of The Prosecutors along with two panel discussions at the UN International Residual Mechanism for International Criminal Tribunals. Sponsored by the Women’s Initiatives for Gender Justice and the Office of the Gender Focal Point at the UN IRMCT\, the event included conversations with legal experts and lawyers from the film. Support for this event was generously provided by the embassies of Canada\, Switzerland\, and the United Kingdom.
URL:https://www.artworksprojects.org/event/the-prosecutors-international-womens-day-the-hague/
LOCATION:UN International Residual Mechanism for International Criminal Tribunals\, Churchillplein 1\, 2517 JW Den Haag\, Netherlands\, The Hague\, Netherlands
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