Talks: Black Portraitures Keynote with M. Nourbese Philip

Wednesday October 13 at 1pm, via ZOOM

Image courtesy of the Artist

Join us for a very special keynote address by M. NourbeSe Philip to open Black Portraiture[s]: Toronto, Absente/d Presence, a three-day conference exploring Blackness as absent/ed presence in art, art history,  performance, archives, museums, cultural production and technology. Following the keynote, M. NourbeSe Philip will be in conversation with DJ and curator Mark Campbell.

Black Portraiture[s]: Toronto, Absente/d Presencewill take place virtually in partnership with Agnes Etherington Art Centre at Queen’s University and is presented by Wedge Curatorial Projects. All are welcome, from wherever you are in the world! 

Born in Tobago, M. NourbeSe Philip is an unembedded poet, essayist, novelist, playwright and independent scholar who lives in the space-time of the City of Toronto, where she practised law for seven years before becoming a poet and writer. M. NourbeSe Philip is the 2020 recipient of the PEN/Nabokov Award for Achievement in International Literature. She is also the 2021 recipient of the Canada Council for the Arts’ lifetime achievement award, the Molson Prize,for her “invaluable contributions to literature”.

Mark V. Campbell is the founder of Northside Hip Hop Archive and has spent two decades embedded within the Toronto hip hop scene operating from community engaged praxis as both a DJ and Curator. His forthcoming exhibition, Still Tho: Aesthetic Survival of Hip-Hop’s Visual Art is set to launch at Âjagemô Gallery in Ottawa, January 2022. Mark is Assistant Professor of Music and Culture at the University of Toronto Scarborough.

This is a Free Event, that requires advanced registration via Zoom, linked HERE.