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REMINDER CFP: “The Graphic Conscience”, APS-Sponsored Session at the 2021 CAA Annual Conference (Virtual Event, February 10-13, 2021)

Dear colleagues,

A friendly reminder that abstracts for the APS-sponsored panel "The Graphic Conscience" at CAA 2021 are due next week: September 16.

Please, submit a completed form (attached, inclusive of abstract), a CV (max. 2 pages), and, if applicable, documentation (max. 5 images) to me at ksenia.nouril@gmail.com by September 16, 2020.

The form, these directives, and additional guidelines are provided by CAA: https://caa.confex.com/caa/2021/webprogrampreliminary/meeting.html

Additional FAQs can be found here: https://www.collegeart.org/programs/conference/FAQ

Stay well and good luck,

Ksenia Nouril, PhD
Jensen Bryan Curator
The Print Center, Philadelphia
ksenia.nouril@gmail.com
@kaysenyah // @theprintcenter

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The Graphic Conscience
Affiliated Society or Committee Name: Association of Print Scholars
Ksenia Nouril, The Print Center
Email Address(s): ksenia.nouril@gmail.com

“The Graphic Conscience” calls for papers addressing transhistorical and transnational case studies of print as a tool for raising public consciousness. This session critically considers the ethics of print, inherent in the medium’s daily use-value beyond its function as a rarified fine-art object in a museum. Democratic in nature, print communicates through text and/or image as well as through its multiplicity. In considering the “graphic conscience” – or the social responsibility – of print, this session will celebrate the medium’s impacts on everyday life. The framework for this session responds to the thesis of the 2011 publication Philagrafika: The Graphic Unconscious, which reflected on the formal characteristics of print and argued for its assimilation within art at large. Papers can address a wide range of art historical as well as visual and material culture examples, including but not limited to Martin Luther’s Ninety-Five Theses of 1517; the seventeenth century etchings of Jacques Callot’s Les Grandes Misères de la guerre; the didactic agitprop of Taller de Gráfica Popular in late 1930s Mexico; and the commercially-produced postcards mailed to Americans by the Centers for Disease Control in response to the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. Prints of all techniques – from Renaissance woodblocks to contemporary risograph zines – are eligible. Papers engaging post-colonial critique and/or topics from outside North America and Europe are strongly encouraged. Practice-based papers by artists, giving us a perspective from inside the studio or printshop, are particularly welcomed.
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