Prison Nation: Aperture 230
Aperture
Aperture
12th June 2018
United States
General
Non Fiction
Paperback
140
Width 232mm, Height 305mm
830g
How photographs portray the crisis of incarceration in the US.
Most prisons and jails across the United States do not allow prisoners to have access to cameras. At a moment when 2.2 million people are incarcerated in the US, 3.8 million people are on probation, and 870,000 former prisoners are on parole, how can images tell the story of mass incarceration when the imprisoned dont have control over their own representation Organized with the scholar Nicole R. Fleetwood, an expert on arts relation to incarceration, the Spring issue of Aperture magazine addresses the unique role photography plays in creating a visual record of a national crisis.
Prison Nation will be accompanied by a related exhibition from February 7 through March 7, 2018, as well as a series of six public programsfeaturing speakers such as Nigel Poor, Jamel Shabazz, Deborah Luster, Bruce Jackson, Jesse Krimes, Sable Elyse Smith, Joseph Rodriguez, and moreall to take place at Aperture Foundations gallery.
Nicole R. Fleetwood is the professor of American studies and art history at Rutgers University. Her work on art and mass incarceration has been featured at the Aperture Foundation, the Zimmerli Museum of Art, the Eastern State Penitentiary Historic Site, and the Cleveland Public Library, and her exhibitions have been praised by the Nation, the New York Times, the New Yorker, and the Village Voice. She is the author of On Racial Icons and of Troubling Vision, which won the Lora Romero Prize from the American Studies Association. Her book Marking Time: Art in the Age of Mass Incarceration was published in April 2020.