Join us on the Weingart patio for music, tea, and rose flavored treats with Amitis Motevalli. 

4 Apr
7:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Add to Calendar 2018-04-04 19:00:00 2018-04-04 21:00:00 See/Hear/Taste/Smell Gol Join us on the Weingart patio for music, tea, and rose flavored treats with Amitis Motevalli.  Weingart Patio Occidental College info@kwallcompany.com America/Los_Angeles public
Location: Weingart Patio
Event Date: Apr. 4, 2018
Price:
FREE
A night of rose obsession starting with a walk to visit the rose plaques placed by Amitis Motevalli changing the names of the Roses on campus. Followed by rose seduction with musical selections inspired by “Gol” from throughout the SWANA region by Arshia Haq while tasting tea and dessert of rose flavors. 

Space is limited| RSVP: oxyarts@oxy.edu 

About the artists:
Amitis Motevalli is an artist born in Iran and moved to the US in 1977 pre-revolution. She explores the cultural resistance and survival of people living in poverty, conflict and war. Her experience as a working-class trans-national migrant, is foundational to her drive for creating art that contests popular beliefs about immigrants and diaspora. Through many mediums including, sculpture, video, performance and collaborative public art, her work juxtaposes iconography, to reveal differences in cross-cultural understandings, critical of the violence of dominance and occupation, while invoking the significance of a secular grassroots struggle. She is equally known for her work in Educational Justice, working with youth and communities to gain equal access to civil rights, privacy and pedagogy without profiling. Motevalli is invested in research, collaboration, and the potential of art to expand thought. In the fall of 2014, she was the visionary and oversaw a city wide initiative called LA/Islam Arts Initiative, which brought together multiple institutions, including the Department of Cultural Affairs, the Doris Duke Foundation for Islamic Art, CalArts, California Community Foundation with local organizations as well as artists, curators and thinkers.  

For her current project, Motevalli is working internationally with a broad spectrum of transnational Muslims in order to research the home, life and labor, to survive in everyday lives, across boundaries of class. She is particularly concerned with conducting workshops with Muslims who come from places of political and religious conflict and collaborating on public art projects. She currently lives and works in Los Angeles, exhibiting art internationally as well as organizing to create an active and resistant cultural discourse through information exchange, either in art, pedagogy or organizing artist and educators.

Arshia Fatima Haq is a filmmaker, visual and sound artist originally from India and currently based in Los Angeles. Her work has been featured at the Broad Museum, Toronto International Film Festival, MOMA New York, and Hammer Museum, amongst others. She is the founder of Discostan and hosts and produces monthly radio shows on Dublab and NTS featuring contemporary, traditional, and nostalgic music from Beirut to Bangkok via Bombay, and she recently released an album of Sufi field recordings from Pakistan on the Sublime Frequencies label. 
This event is made possible with the generous support of The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
 

 

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