My new video and installation work "Screen Recording 2020-11-20 at 1.59.44 PM," about the changing landscapes of memory in displacement, is on view through June 14th @NYUGallatin Gallatin Galleries @nyuniversity as part of the group show DIASPORIC TREMORS
#art#exhibition#nyc
Argyro Nicolaou is a Cypriot writer and filmmaker based in NYC. Her short films have screened at festivals in Europe and the US, while she has also curated and participated in film and visual arts programming in New York, Athens and Cyprus.
#onlyatgallatin#diasporictremors
Diasporic Tremors examines the ways trauma is embedded in those who have left their home countries. It offers viewers a means of seeing places through the lens of present and past experience. RSVP here: https://t.co/bqZ2WVSnaB
Diasporic Tremors features the works of artists Suneil Sanzgiri, Tara Homasi, Argyro Nicolaou, Ibi Ibrahim, Margaux Fitoussi, Myriam Amri, Anooj Bhandari, Chan Lin (BA ‘13), and Val Ramirez. They hail from China, Cyprus, India, Iran, Kashmir, Mexico, Tunisia, and Yemen.
Join us Wed, May 31 at 6:30pm for DIASPORIC TREMORS: A HYBRID FISHBOWL DISCUSSION! This will be led by curators Ellada Evangelou (21-22 Gallatin Global Faculty in Residence) and Keith Miller (Curator, The Gallatin Galleries), along with artists. RSVP here: https://t.co/bqZ2WVSnaB
PEOPLE OF BOSTON who also ENJOY PIZZA my new short doc made with @elshatrab is SCREENING TONITE at @IFFBoston and I’ll SEE YOU THERE https://t.co/0nkAxOtj7R
NYU’s non-tenure faculty rallied near Manhattan's Washington Square Park today, March 1, demanding union recognition, living wages, and academic freedom. https://t.co/2OIdoVS9FQ
Good to see some accountability for this finally, nearly 3 years later, though more should follow.
See our @hrw report & video by @situ_nyc documenting this police assault on peaceful protesters in the Bronx, here for background: https://t.co/OeUkQyCuTy
https://t.co/bqP3tTCiXW
BFCer Ash Goh Hua's profound and personal doc THE FEELING OF BEING CLOSE TO YOU is up now on the @NewYorker! https://t.co/iUH5DyyRTQ
with a lovely essay by Sonali Durham