Blaffer Art Museum will host an in-person talk with visiting artist Molly Zuckerman-Hartung. This event is presented on the occasion of her mid-career survey exhibition "Comic Relief," currently on view at the museum.
In her formative years, Zuckerman-Hartung participated in Riot Grrrl - the 1990s underground punk scene that originated in the Pacific Northwest and exhorted radical female empowerment through collaborative community-building and the rejection of male-dominated power structures. This involvement had a lasting effect on the artist, instilling within her a permanent inclination toward inquiry and critique, as well as a deep-rooted sense of creative resistance to societal boundaries, cultural norms, and conventional aesthetics.
Blaffer Art Museum will host an in-person talk with visiting artist Molly Zuckerman-Hartung. This event is presented on the occasion of her mid-career survey exhibition "Comic Relief," currently on view at the museum.
In her formative years, Zuckerman-Hartung participated in Riot Grrrl - the 1990s underground punk scene that originated in the Pacific Northwest and exhorted radical female empowerment through collaborative community-building and the rejection of male-dominated power structures. This involvement had a lasting effect on the artist, instilling within her a permanent inclination toward inquiry and critique, as well as a deep-rooted sense of creative resistance to societal boundaries, cultural norms, and conventional aesthetics.
Blaffer Art Museum will host an in-person talk with visiting artist Molly Zuckerman-Hartung. This event is presented on the occasion of her mid-career survey exhibition "Comic Relief," currently on view at the museum.
In her formative years, Zuckerman-Hartung participated in Riot Grrrl - the 1990s underground punk scene that originated in the Pacific Northwest and exhorted radical female empowerment through collaborative community-building and the rejection of male-dominated power structures. This involvement had a lasting effect on the artist, instilling within her a permanent inclination toward inquiry and critique, as well as a deep-rooted sense of creative resistance to societal boundaries, cultural norms, and conventional aesthetics.