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DESCRIPTION:Artists in Conversation about Climate Change w/ Institute of Contemporary 
 Art San José\n\nDate and time: Thu, June 23, 2022 @ 4:00 PM – 5:00 PM 
 PDT\n\nRSVP (Free): 
 https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_QA2Q6IoMQ3qtOE8TzdHdHA\n\nArt Exhibit 
 Location: Institute of Contemporary Art San José, 560 South 1st Street, 
 \nSan José, CA 95113\n\n\nIn conjunction with the exhibition "Facing West 
 Shadows: The Endless End" at the Institute of Contemporary Art San José, 
 Artists in Conversation about Climate Change will bring together a panel of 
 artists, organizers, and activists from various backgrounds to discuss the 
 current Anthropocene epoch during which human intervention has been the 
 dominant influence on our climate and the environment.\n\nWe must ask 
 ourselves: How do we face the present and all of the challenges of climate 
 change? Every culture has shared a vision for past and future apocalypses, 
 but the impact of climate change and the potential of the sixth extinction 
 feels like far more than a spiritual or existential crisis. We need 
 practical solutions, ways that we can inspire change and provide solace, 
 especially as we move through the collective trauma of fire seasons and 
 summers well above a hundred degrees. Join the discussion and delve further 
 into these topics and their representation through the arts. Be a part of 
 what we do together!\n\nICA Executive Director James G. Leventhal is joined 
 in conversation by Facing West Shadows artists Lydia Greer, Caryl Kientz, 
 and Yawen Chien. Panelists also include Jodi Roberts of \nArt + Climate 
 Action; Dilshanie Perera at The Climate Museum; and artist Ellen Sebastian 
 Chang.\n\n\n\nABOUT: "Facing West Shadows: The Endless End"\n\nArt exhibit 
 dates: April 1 - Aug 14, 2022\n\nFor exhibit info, go here: 
 https://www.icasanjose.org/current-exhibitions/facing-west-shadows-the-endless-end/\n\nFacing 
 West Shadows (principal members: Lydia Greer (artistic director) and Caryl 
 Kientz (theatrical director) in collaboration with artist Ya Wen Chien is a 
 collective of artists, puppeteers, filmmakers, and musicians hybridizing 
 art forms to create magical acts of rebellion as experimental art that is 
 sustainable in the current gold rush climate of the Bay Area. Facing West 
 Shadows combines analog shadow theatre with original animation, video 
 projection of found footage, and sometimes Opera performed live. Expanding 
 into film, theatre, and installation, Facing West Shadows depicts stories 
 re-imagined with unique visual storytelling to create surprising 
 experiences for the audience by seamlessly combining old and new 
 technologies and art forms.\n\nAbout Jodi Roberts:\n\nJodi Roberts is an 
 independent curator, writer, and researcher based in San Francisco. She is 
 Co-Founder and Managing Director at Art + Climate Action. Roberts was 
 Director of Exhibition at Adrian Rosenfeld Gallery, San Francisco, and she 
 has held curatorial positions at Stanford University’s Cantor Arts Center 
 and The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Roberts has published widely in 
 numerous peer-reviewed books and journals on topics ranging from Richard 
 Diebenkorn’s drawings to Jacob Lawrence’s Migration Series, but her 
 primary area of research is modern and contemporary art from Central and 
 South America. In 2019, together with Natalia Brizuela, she co-curated the 
 exhibition The Matter of Photography in the Americas at the Cantor and 
 edited the accompanying publication. Roberts holds a PhD, MA, and BA in the 
 History of Art and Architecture from New York University.\n\nAbout 
 Dilshanie Perera:\n\nDilshanie Perera (she/they) is a cultural 
 anthropologist and writer whose work examines the intersection of emergent 
 forms of risk with longstanding structural inequalities. Their doctoral 
 dissertation in anthropology, titled “Barometer Falling: Weather, Risk, 
 and the Meteorological Imagination,” focused on the politics of 
 atmospheric risk in the context of climate change in Bangladesh. Dilshanie 
 is currently the Mellon Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow in Climate and 
 Inequality at the Climate Museum, the first museum in the U.S. dedicated to 
 inspiring action on the climate crisis.\n\nAbout Ellen Sebastian 
 Chang:\n\nEllen Sebastian Chang’s (she/her/rascal) theater work spans 45 
 years as a lighting designer, director, arts educator, and producer. She 
 began her professional career at age 19 with the Berkeley Stage Company as 
 a light technician; developed her craft as technical director/lighting 
 designer with The Blake Street Hawkeyes; developed her writing/directorial 
 style in the early ’80s with devised site-specific works, the seminal 
 debut work “Your Place Is No Longer With Us.” Sebastian Chang has 
 collaborated with and directed for: KITKA, Gamelan Sekar Jaya, Eisa Davis, 
 Youth Speaks, Holly Hughes, Word for Word, Center for Digital Story 
 Telling, Fauxnique, Magic Theater, Lorraine Hansberry Theater, The Kitchen 
 Sisters, Bill Talen, Anne Galjour, Felonious with One Ring Zero, Robert 
 Karimi, and has a 12-year collaboration with Conjure Artist Amara Tabor 
 Smith/ Deep Waters Dance Theater. She is currently serving as Resident 
 Owner Board Member for East Bay Permanent Real Estate Cooperative/Advisor 
 for Esther’s Orbit Room Project/Artist Housing\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2022/06/15/18850493.php
SUMMARY:Artists in Conversation about Climate Change w/ ICA SJ
LOCATION:Panel discussion online via Zoom\n\nArt Exhibit Location: Institute of 
 Contemporary Art SJ, 560 South 1st Street, San José, CA 95113 
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2022/06/15/18850493.php
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