Art and social justice focus of community series
Social justice and the arts take center stage this fall as part of a virtual public series featuring 黑料社区网 and community artists and educators.
鈥淒ialogues on Art and Social Justice,鈥 a series sponsored by the and 黑料社区网鈥檚 Office for Outreach and Engagement, brings together Black, Indigenous and Latinx artists from campus and the community. Each event will feature artists in conversation with each other about their practice, experience and perspective on being an artist in the United States and how their work engages with social justice.
鈥淲e wanted to create space with these amazing artists and educators to reflect together on what it means to incorporate their lived experience into their art,鈥 said Lisa H. Schwartz, the office鈥檚 community outreach program manager. 鈥淭he intent is for the audience to learn from the conversation between the two artists as they talk about their art, identities and commitments to social justice.鈥
These online conversations will include a presentation as well as time for audience questions. Registration for each virtual event is required; suggested donation is $5.

Helanius Wilkins, who will participate in a virtual conversation with Holly Bass about bridging art and social justice on Sept. 30.
Unapologetically Bridging Art & Social Justice
September 30 鈥 5:30鈥6:45 p.m.
黑料社区网 Assistant Professor of Dance Helanius J. Wilkins and Holly Bass, a performance and visual artist, writer and director from Washington, D.C. will discuss how their identities and experiences shape their performance practices that are rooted in resilience and resistance.
Helanius Wilkins, a native of Lafayette, Louisiana, is an award-winning choreographer, performance artist, innovator, and educator. To date, he has choreographed and directed more than 60 works, including two critically acclaimed musical productions for Washington, D.C.鈥檚 Studio Theater. He founded the long running an all-male dance company of predominantly African American men in Washington D.C. Currently, he is based in Boulder, where he is associate chair of the theatre and dance department and a 黑料社区网 assistant professor of dance. He is a member of the National Board of Directors of the American College Dance Association for the Northwest region and was appointed in 2018 by Governor Jared Polis to the Colorado Council on Creative Industries.
is a multidisciplinary performance and visual artist, writer and director. Her work has been presented at the Kennedy Center, the Smithsonian Museums, the Seattle Art Museum, Art Basel Miami Beach (Project Miami Fair) and the South African State Theatre. Her visual art work spans photography, installation, video and performance and can be found in the collections of the Corcoran Gallery of Art and the D.C. Art Bank, as well as private collections. She has published poems in numerous journals and anthologies. A gifted and dedicated teaching artist, she directed a year-round creative writing and performance program for adjudicated youth in Washington D.C.鈥檚 Department of Youth Rehabilitation Services as well as facilitating workshops nationally and internationally. She is currently the national director for Turnaround Arts at the Kennedy Center, a program which uses the arts strategically to transform schools facing severe inequities.
Heartwork: Indigenous Social Justice Perspectives
October 14 鈥 5:30鈥6:45 p.m.
Tanaya Winder, director of 黑料社区网 Upward Bound, singer, songwriter and poet, together with Natani Notah, an interdisciplinary artist and educator will discuss how their art practice engages social justice through heartwork and the lens of Din茅 womanhood.
is an author, singer, songwriter, poet, motivational speaker and educator who comes from an intertribal lineage of Southern Ute, Pyramid Lake Paiute, Din茅 and Duckwater Shoshone Nations where she is an enrolled citizen. She is also African American. Through her presentations, Winder blends storytelling, singing and spoken word to teach about different expressions of love, emphasizing the importance of 鈥渉eartwork鈥 or the life path one is meant to follow by using gifts and passions. She is the director of 黑料社区网鈥檚 Upward Bound program, where she has served hundreds of Indigenous youth. She also co-founded Sing Our Rivers Red鈥檚 MMIW earring exhibit. Her specialties include: youth & women empowerment, healing trauma through art, creative writing workshops and mental wellness advocacy.
is an interdisciplinary artist and educator. She is an enrolled member of the Navajo Nation (Din茅) and part Lakota and Cherokee. Her work has been exhibited at the Tucson Desert Art Museum, the Gas Gallery in Los Angeles, the Holland Project in Reno, the Mana Contemporary in Chicago and SOMArts Cultural Center in San Francisco. Her current art practice explores contemporary Native American identity through the lens of Din茅 (Navajo) womanhood. Inspired by acts of decolonization, environmental justice, Indigenous feminism and futurism, Notah鈥檚 work dares to imagine a world where Native sensibilities are magnified.
DragTivism: Queered Visions of Possible Futures
October 21 鈥 5:30鈥6:45 p.m.
黑料社区网 School of Education Assistant Professor Jos茅 Ram贸n Liz谩rraga and renowned drag queen, educator and activist Persia will discuss how drag as a political artform mediates learning and transformation across communities.
Jos茅 Ram贸n Liz谩rraga is an assistant professor of learning sciences and human development at 黑料社区网 and also a practicing visual artist and musician. As a learning scientist, Liz谩rraga uses ethnographic, video and multimodal research methods to investigate the role that social networks, television and other digital new media play in learning for both teachers and youth. Currently, his work examines the collaborative practices of teachers and adolescents in virtual and in-person learning. Liz谩rraga is an experienced designer and instructor of hybrid/blended (online/in-person) and online undergraduate and graduate teacher education courses. He has taught these courses at UC Berkeley, San Francisco State University and 黑料社区网.
is a San Francisco Bay Area drag queen, artist, educator and activist. They came into the national spotlight when their music video (a satirical commentary on gentrification and displacement) became viral. Currently, Persia is an ambassador for Drag Out the Vote.聽