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Erin Christovale is a Los Angeles–based curator and programmer who currently works as a curator at the Hammer Museum at the University of California, Los Angeles.[1] Together with Hammer Museum senior curator Anne Ellegood, Christovale curated the museum's fourth Made in L.A. biennial in June 2018.[2] She also leads Black Radical Imagination, an experimental film program she co-founded with Amir George. Black Radical Imagination tours internationally and has screened at MoMA PS1; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; and the Museo Taller Jose Clemente Orozco, among other spaces.[1] Christovale is best known for her work on identity, race and historical legacy.[3] Prior to her appointment at the Hammer Museum, Christovale worked as a curator at the Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery. She has a bachelor's degree from the University of Southern California School of Cinematic Arts.
Erin Christovale | |
---|---|
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | USC School of Cinematic Arts |
Known for | Film curation |
Notable work | Black Radical Imagination; S/Election: Democracy, Citizenship, Freedom; Made in L.A. 2018 |
S/Election: Democracy, Citizenship, Freedom was a mixed-media show Christovale curated at the Los Angeles Municipal Gallery in 2016. The show featured works by 32 contemporary artists engaging with the concept of American citizenship, particularly in the context of the political climate surrounding the 2016 presidential election. Notable works in the exhibition included:
The exhibition was accompanied by several public events at the gallery, including a panel on anti-gentrification efforts in Los Angeles, a writing seminar on the philosophical construct of citizenship, and a workshop on community organizing.[5]
These two exhibitions accompanied each other at the ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives at the University of Southern California Libraries from September through December 2016.
A Subtle Likeness featured work from four contemporary artists, Ayanah Moor, Paul Mpagi Sepuya, Anna Martine Whitehead and Kandis Williams to create a space for queer, black radical tradition.[6] The exhibition used performance, photography, collage, video and sound installation to explore biomythography and non-traditional archiving.[6]
Memoirs of a Watermelon Woman featured a production archive from queer filmmaker Cheryl Dunye's making of the film The Watermelon Woman in 1996. The exhibition included a full script, original audition tapes, published interviews and a photo series from the film's premiere at the 1996 Berlin International Film Festival.[7]
"a/wake in the water: Meditations on Disaster" was an exhibition at the Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Art in Brooklyn, New York from August through November 2014.[8] The video exhibition highlighted the intersection between traumatized diaspora bodies and modern environmental disasters through the work of 12 video artists.[8] The work was displayed in formats ranging from wall-to-wall projection to a small TV set, to "echo the sentiments of people in the midst of catastrophe," Christovale said.[8]
Black Radical Imagination is an international film program founded by Erin Christovale and Amir George. The artists in the group tell stories of the state of contemporary black culture by exploring afrofuturism, afrosurrealism and the magnificent.[9]
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