El estado de las artes virtual: la ciudad de la imaginación: cómo los escritores y narradores están moldeando Dallas

Members Only
No
Body
Header Text
Virtual State of the Arts: City of the Imagination: How Writers and Storytellers Are Shaping Dallas
Size
Text

Presented in partnership with KERA's Art&Seek

Charles Dickens created a particular vision of London that many of us still have in our heads. Raymond Chandler did the same with Los Angeles. Authors invest cities with meaning. So how do our storytellers portray Dallas? And what other ways does our literary community shape the city?

Join us for our next State of the Arts conversation, City of the Imagination: How Writers and Storytellers Are Shaping Dallas. KERA’s Jerome Weeks hosts this virtual discussion in partnership with the Dallas Museum of Art.

Featured speakers:

Will Evans, Deep Vellum Books. Deep Vellum recently published The Accommodation, journalist Jim Schutze’s history of racial segregation in Dallas. Will Evans is an award-winning publisher, writer, translator, bookstore owner, and literary arts advocate. He is the founder and executive director of Deep Vellum, a nonprofit publishing house and literary arts center founded in 2013, and Deep Vellum Bookstore, opened in 2015, with the mission to bring the world into conversation through literature, making our world a more literary place through creative programming and outspoken advocacy for reading, writing, and storytelling.

Lori Feathers, Interabang Books and founder of the new Republic of Consciousness Prize for Small Presses. Lori Feathers is the founder and Chair of the Republic of Consciousness Prize, US and Canada, which honors the work of small independent publishers of literary fiction. She is a freelance book critic, author of the essay series “In Context” for Literary Hub, and co-host of the books podcast, “Across the Pond.” Feathers is an elected board member of the National Book Critics Circle and a co-founder and co-owner of Dallas’s Interabang Books, where she works as the store’s book buyer.

Akwete Tyehimba, owner of the Pan-African Connection Bookstore and Resource Center in Dallas. She started the bookstore with her late husband in 1989 with its mission to guide African people toward the greatness, beauty, and dignity of African history and culture. The Pan-African Connection is a community space that holds one of the largest collections in the South of authentic African art, books on the Black/African experience, African clothing, jewelry, shea butter, and holistic health care products.

 

Image: George Grosz, Dallas Skyline, 1952–53, oil on canvas, Dallas Museum of Art, gift of A. Harris and Company in memory of Leon A. Harris, Sr., 1960.139, Estate of George Grosz/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY


FREE

dma7_nid
36393
Date
Category