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Art is powerful; art heals, catalyzes and transforms. I have witnessed
art that brings communities together, speaks truth to power, and
expresses the unspeakable realities of human existence.
In 2007, I produced an exhibition of my own multimedia artwork as part
of my master’s thesis project. I had the opportunity to share my
intimate life stories, from my experience with abortion ten years ago
to my ever-changing relationship with religion and spirituality, in a
way that words alone simply could not convey. The ripple effect of my
creative disclosure was profound; my vulnerability and willingness to
visually express my truth gave women who experienced my exhibit
permission to share their own stories - with me, with each other, with
their families, in community.
My own exhibit showed me how powerful art could be, for both its
creators and its witnesses. I began to wonder what it might look like
to harness this power on a larger scale. The Global Fund for Women’s
grantee partner, Art Works for Change (AWFC), a nonprofit project of
the Tides Center, is harnessing this power and using the universal
language of art as a catalyst for positive social change.
AWFC’s “Off the Beaten Path: Violence, Women and Art,” is a new,
international exhibition that brings together artworks by 17 artists
from 14 countries to explore gender-based violence from a global
perspective. The exhibit “utilizes artworks to promote awareness and
behavioral choices; inspire the belief that communities can change a
culture of violence; empower girls and women with respect to domestic
violence, exploitation and discrimination; and address systems for
social change.”
I recently had the privilege of meeting the Executive Director of
Art Works for Change, Randy Jayne Rosenberg. I was inspired by her
obvious passion and dedication to her work, which shines through in the
way she thoughtfully curates and narrates AWFC’s exhibitions for social
change.
“Off the Beaten Path” opens on June 20 at the Stenersen Museum in Oslo,
Norway. However, with the goal of reaching millions of individuals
with the important message to eliminate violence against women and
girls globally, Art Works for Change has also opened a virtual
exhibit. Click here to bear witness, be transformed, and learn what
you can do about gender-based violence.
Click to view virtual exhibition on line, the exhibition page on AWFC website, and the press release.
Talia Walsmith is the Administrative Associate to the Chief
Operations Officer at the Global Fund for Women and a
multimedia artist/activist.
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