Contingent Intimacies: Queer Criticalities + Photographic Portraiture
With Horace Ballard
In conversation with Justin Underhill
Thursday, February 27 | 5:00-7:00pm
Visual Resource Center, Room 308A | Doe Library, UC Berkeley
Co-sponsored by Arts Research Center, the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, and the Berkeley Center for New Media
A photograph is many things. It is a relationship, an index, a text, a betrayal. It is a contract. It is a sustainable fragility. It is a political act of community-making. It is a matrix of entangled signs and gestures. It is us. Reflecting on his New York Times noted exhibition of 2019, “possible selves: queer foto vernaculars,” Ballard related how the show came into being and shape new thinking on the origins of the white hegemonic gaze in US art photography.
Horace D. Ballard, Ph.D. is the Curator of American Art and Research Curator of Photography at the Williams College Museum of Art and Lecturer in the joint Graduate Program in the History of Art at the Clark Art Institute. He is a specialist in the portraiture of the United States and Europe during the eighteenth-, nineteenth-, and twentieth centuries.