Thank you for attending the 2024 PN Symposium!

Location

All events will take place at the Center for Creative Photography unless otherwise noted in the schedule below.

Center for Creative Photography
1030 North Olive Road
Tucson, AZ 85721

Questions?

For any questions about the symposium, please email us.

Traveling to Tucson

Thank You to our Sponsors

Major support for this program is generously provided by the Terra Foundation for American Art.

Additional support is provided by the Center for Creative Photography; the School of Art, University of Arizona; and PN members.

Symposium Schedule

All events marked with an asterisk* will be live streamed for online symposium registrants.

Friday, October 25, 2024

Optional Opening Tours (simultaneous)

In Phoenix:

1:00–2:00 pm MST

Laura Aguilar: Nudes in Nature Exhibition Tour,
Norton Photography Gallery, Phoenix Art Museum
Emilia Mickevicius, Norton Family Assistant Curator of Photography,
Center for Creative Photography and Phoenix Art Museum

Sign Up

2:00–4:00 pm MST

Group shuttle from Phoenix Art Museum to University of Arizona campus

In Tucson:

2:00–4:00 pm MST

Print Viewing and Conservation Tour, CCP
Dana Hemmenway, Arthur J. Bell Head of Conservation; Bryanna Knotts, Assistant Conservator; and Kappy Mintie, Head of Collections, CCP

Featuring archival items and prints by Lola Alvarez Bravo, Flor Garduño, Anthony Hernandez, Graciela Iturbide, and Ricardo Valverde.

Sign Up

Convocation:

4:00–5:00 pm MST

Registration, CCP Lobby

5:00–5:30 pm MST

Welcome, CCP Auditorium*
Todd Tubutis, Director, Center for Creative Photography
Katherine Bussard and Anne Strachan Cross, PN Co-Chairs

Introduction, CCP Auditorium*
Josie Johnson and Emilia Mickevicius, Symposium Co-Organizers

Announcement of Book Awards & Project Grants,
CCP Auditorium*
Candice Jansen, PN Awards Coordinator

5:30–7:00 pm MST

Keynote: Cecilia Fajardo-Hill in conversation with Ken Gonzales-Day,
CCP Auditorium* 

Cecilia Fajardo-Hill is a Latina/British/Venezuelan art historian, curator, and writer in modern and contemporary art, focusing on Latin American and Latinx art. She has a PhD in Art History from the University of Essex, England, and is Associate Professor of Museum Studies and Art History and Director of the Northlight Gallery, Arizona State University.

Ken Gonzales-Day's interdisciplinary and conceptually grounded projects consider the history of photography, the construction of race, and the limits of representational systems from lynching photography to museum displays. Gonzales-Day’s work has been widely exhibited and is in the collections of the Getty, LACMA, MOCA LA, MoMA, The Smithsonian NPG & SAAM, in D.C. Monographs include Lynching in the West: 1850-1935 and Profiled. Gonzales-Day was awarded a Guggenheim in 2017.

7:00–8:30 pm MST

Reception, CCP Lobby
Refreshments provided

Saturday, October 26, 2024

Morning Welcome: 8:30–9:00 am MST

Registration, CCP Lobby
Light Breakfast provided

Panel 1: 9:00-10:45 am MST

Seeing, Feeling, Community, CCP Auditorium*
Moderator: Christian Ramírez, Assistant Curator of Contemporary and Community Art Initiatives, PhxArt

Hinda Seif, “Diana Solís, Chicago/Mexico City: Latina/Mexicana Lesbian Feminist/LGBTQ Life & Activism through a Transnational Lens (1979–2000)”

Hinda Seif is Professor of Sociology/Anthropology at UI Springfield and University of Illinois Press faculty board member. Publications: Exhibit (with Diana Solís) and article.

Shana Lopes, “Alejandro Cartagena and the US-Mexico Border: Representing Communities, Artificial Barriers, and the American Dream”

Shana Lopes, PhD, is an Assistant Curator of Photography at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

Jaime Acosta Gonzalez, “Concrete Lives, Abstract Communities: Migration and Social Reproduction in Christina Fernandez's Lavanderia (2002–2003)”

Jaime Acosta Gonzalez teaches in the Department of Ethnic Studies at UC Riverside. His research focuses on the politics of aesthetics, thinking through how art and literature make visible processes of racialization and accumulation central to the historical development of capitalism.

China Medel, “Brown Time: Veteranas_and_Rucas and Latinx Image Archiving in the Face of Gentrification”

China Medel is a queer, Chicana, scholar-mama, and an Assistant Professor of Ethnic Studies at Northern Arizona University. She specializes in visual culture, Latinx Studies, and border studies.

Panel 2: 11:00 am-12:15 pm MST

Archival Homecomings, CCP Auditorium*
Moderator: Verónica Reyes-EscuderoHead of Special Collections, University of Arizona Libraries

Emily Voelker, “Photograph and / as Relation: Lakȟóta Kinship, Archives & History Keeping across Generations”

Emily Voelker is Assistant Professor of Art History at UNC Greensboro, where she teaches across histories of photography and the global nineteenth century.

Deanna Ledezma, “Archival Resurgences: Latinx Communities and Photographic Gatherings in Chicago”

Deanna Ledezma, Ph.D. is a Postdoctoral Research Associate at the University of Illinois Chicago. Learn more about her research and writing.

Josh Rios, “Kinship Research: An Altar Album”

Josh Rios is a founding member of Sonic Insurgency Research Group and associate adjunct faculty at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.

Lunch Break • 12:15-1:15 pm MST

Exhibition Tours: 1:15–2:15 pm MST

Louis Carlos Bernal: Retrospectiva Tour,
Center Galleries, CCP

Chicana Photographers LA! Tour,
Alice Chaiten Baker Interdisciplinary Gallery, CCP

Workshop: 2:30–4:00 pm MST

Curating Community, CCP Auditorium
Moderator: Katherine Bussard, Peter C. Bunnell Curator of Photography, Princeton University Art Museum 

Kaila Schedeen, “The Communal Tides of In Conversation: Will Wilson at the Delaware Art Museum”

Kaila T. Schedeen, (she/her/hers) is the Exhibitions and Collections Manager at Art Galleries at Black Studies, The University of Texas at Austin.

Rebecca Senf and Lizzy Guevara, “The Louis Carlos Bernal: Retrospectiva Community Advisory”

Rebecca Senf is the Chief Curator and Lizzy Guevara is the Photographic Education Research Fellow at the CCP.

Erin Northington, "A Site of StruggleAmerican Art against Anti-Black Violence - Care, Collaboration, and Community"

 Erin Northington (she/her) is the Susan and Stephen Wilson Associate Director of Campus and Community Education and Engagement at the Block Museum of Art at Northwestern University.

Walking Tour: 5:00–7:00 pm MST

Borderlandia Tucson Origins Tour,
La Casa Cordova, 175 N Meyer Ave, Tucson, AZ 85701

Sunday, October 27, 2024

Morning Welcome: 8:30–9:00 am MST

Registration, CCP Lobby
Light Breakfast provided

Panel 3: 9:00-10:15 am MST

Photography as Connection, CCP Auditorium*
Moderator: Julio César Morales, Executive Director & Co-Chief Curator, Museum of Contemporary Art Tucson

Heather Diack, “Being with One Another: Photography, Displacement, and Relationality”

Heather Diack is Associate Professor of History of Art, Photography and Visual Culture at Toronto Metropolitan University.

Christina Hiromi Hobbs, “Light from Above: Vernacular Photographs of the Japanese American Incarceration from the Archive of Shigeko Kumamoto”

Christina Hiromi Hobbs is a curator and writer based in the Bay Area. She is a PhD candidate in Art History at Stanford University.

Tatiana Reinoza, “La sangre llama: Transnational Archival Formations and Central American Families”

Tatiana Reinoza is an Assistant Professor of Art History at the University of Notre Dame.

Roundtable: 10:30 am–12:15 pm MST

Artist Activism: William Camargo, Lisa Elmaleh, and Raul Rodriguez in conversation, CCP Auditorium
Moderator: Gia Del Pino, Marketing Specialist, CCP; PhD Student in Art & Visual Culture Education, University of Arizona

William Camargo is a lens-based artist and educator born and raised in Anaheim, California. His work focuses on gentrification, police violence, Chicanx/Latinx histories and his work comments on the hegemonic history of photography through archival research and performative interventions that live as photographs.

Lisa Elmaleh (Guggenheim Fellow, 2024) is a large format photographer. Her current body of work, Promised Land, interrogates the myth of the American Dream from the perspective of the borderland environs, the people seeking asylum in the United States, and humanitarian aid groups engaged in helping migrants with vital needs.

Raul Rodriguez is an artist and publisher who works with photography and multimedia techniques to share stories about communities, identity and human resilience. His projects explore topics that are closely linked to his personal and cultural experience as a first gen Mexican-American. Raul is an MFA candidate at Texas Christian University and is the editor of the photographic platform, Deep Red Press that focuses on underrepresented and photographic artists in Texas.

Lunch Break: 12:15-1:15 pm MST

Panel 4: 1:15–2:55 pm MST

(Un)Belongings, CCP Auditorium*
Moderator: Jeehey Kim, Assistant Professor, Art History, University of Arizona

Daniel Menzo, “Compañeros in the Studio: Benjamín de la Calle’s Portraits of Homosocial Relations in Early Twentieth-Century Medellín”

Daniel Menzo is the Marcia Brady Tucker Fellow in Photography at Yale University Art Gallery, where his curated rotation of Mexican photography is up through November 2024.

Ina Alice Danila, “Destabilizing the Family Album: The Visual Bricolages of a Romanian Community in New York”

Ina Alice Danila is a PhD candidate at the National University of Arts in Bucharest, Romania (photography) and recipient of a Fulbright Award in 2023.

Hyewon Yoon, “The Unmaking of the Community in the Work of Yoon JeongMee, Kim Oksun, and Lee Sunmin”

Hyewon Yoon is Assistant Professor of Art History and Theory in the Department of Painting at Seoul National University. 

Li Machado, “Ordinary: Queer Belonging in Shizu Saldamando’s Portraits of Friends”

Li Machado is a PhD Candidate at Temple University specializing in Modern and Contemporary Latin American and Latinx Art. 

Conclusion: 2:55–3:00 pm MST

Closing Remarks, CCP Auditorium*

Josie Johnson and Emilia Mickevicius, Symposium Co-Organizers