The Summer Share with Barron Northrup & Tracy Warren

 

The Summer Share with Barron Northrup & Tracy Warren

Join us via Zoom Wednesday, Sept. 4th, 7 pm EDT

Join us for our final summer peer review featuring work by Barron Northrup & Tracy Warren.

Barron Northrup will be sharing work from his current project, "Buddy you're dying and I hate that for you," which focuses on the past and present impacts of the covid pandemic. The title comes from a text he received in 2022, from a friend who observed that his physical, social, and emotional isolation didn't improve following the end of lockdown. Through this work he is exploring his own ongoing grief, forgiveness for himself for not meeting his own pre-pandemic expectations, and acceptance of the possibility that a "post-covid world" might never truly arrive.

Tracy Warren will be sharing work from her newest project, which blends work from two projects that explore similar themes. The first project explores the landscape near her home in Richmond, VA. where she photographs a section of the James River park system that is in walking distance of her home. Here she focused on slowing down and noticing parts of the park that she often missed. The second project focuses on self-portraiture and themes of being seen. As she noticed the similar themes in the two projects, she begun placing her self portraits into the landscapes she photographs.

Kinship peer reviews are not critiques but a chance to share work within a highly supportive environment where you can ask thoughtful questions and receive equally thoughtful responses. We hope you will join us.

If you are new to Kinship, please read our Culture of Kinship guidelines before offering feedback.

 
 
Susan Patrice

As the founder and director of Makers Circle, Susan Patrice designs and implements arts-informed community initiatives in partnership with non-arts organizations who want to expand their reach and impact through innovative cross-sector collaboration. Makers Circle has a deep passion for the power of the creative process to encourage adaptive change, expand awareness, and open up new ways of seeing and relating. We believe that the arts and artists should play a major role in community regeneration and non-profit advancement. Web design and digital storytelling are foundational to the work we do with non-profits.

https://kinship.photography/
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