Enjoy this popular Mexican game of chance. Lotería will be called in Spanish and English. Winners will receive a prize and refreshments will be served.
Cosponsored by the Princeton University Art Museum, the Latin American Legal Defense and Education Fund, Princeton Human Services, and the Center for Modern Aging.
On view at Art on Hulfish is a survey of work by Christina Fernandez, a Los Angeles–based artist who has spent more than thirty years conducting a rich exploration of migration, labor, gender, and her Mexican American identity through photography. The exhibition’s title, Multiple Exposures, refers not only to a photographic technique but also to the artist’s revealing of that which is often hidden away, including fraught racial histories and the mistreatment of vulnerable communities. Whether staged or candid, Fernandez’s photographs record touch and mark making, engaging the medium’s distinct ability to convey surfaces—the surfaces of bodies, architecture, and the images themselves. Multiple Exposures traces the development of the artist’s work from the late 1980s to the present.
Juega a la lotería con el Museo de Arte
Sábado, 16 de marzo, 3–5 p.m.
Arte en la calle Hulfish, 11 Hulfish Street
Disfruta de este popular juego de azar mexicano. La lotería se anunciará en español e inglés. Los ganadores recibirán un premio y se servirán refrescos. También puedes ver la exhibición Christina Fernandez: Multiple Exposures [Christina Fernández: Exposiciones multiples], que repasa la obra de una artista residente de Los Ángeles que ha dedicado más de treinta años a explorar de manera profunda la migración, las relaciones laborales, el género y su identidad mexicoestadounidense a través de la fotografía.
Esta es una colaboración entre Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton Human Services, Latin American Legal Defense and Education Fund y Center for Modern Aging.
Art on Hulfish is made possible by the leadership support of Annette Merle-Smith and Princeton University. Generous support is also provided by William S. Fisher, Class of 1979, and Sakurako Fisher; J. Bryan King, Class of 1993; the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, a partner agency of the National Endowment for the Arts; John Diekman, Class of 1965, and Susan Diekman; Julie and Kevin Callaghan, Class of 1983; Annie Robinson Woods, Class of 1988; Barbara and Gerald Essig; Rachelle Belfer Malkin, Class of 1986, and Anthony E. Malkin; the Curtis W. McGraw Foundation; Tom Tuttle, Class of 1988, and Mila Tuttle; Nancy A. Nasher, Class of 1976, and David J. Haemisegger, Class of 1976; the Len & Laura Berlik Foundation; Gene Locks, Class of 1959, and Sueyun Locks; and Palmer Square Management.
Additional support for this exhibition is provided by the Humanities Council, the Lewis Center for the Arts, and the Program in Latin American Studies.