Jen Marlowe
Art as Activism: Impacting Our World
Does art merely reflect a deeply damaged world, or can it inspire change? Jen Marlowe, director, author, and human rights activist, explores this question with audiences or classes made up of playwrights, filmmakers, visual artists, activists, students and others.
She first discovered the power of art as a tool of activism while doing peace and justice work in Palestine and Israel. Crossing the border with a video camera, she taped messages from Palestinian youth in the West Bank and Gaza and showed them to youth in Israel, who would record messages in response. As time went on, the video dialogue project evolved from the participants using the camera to "talk" to each other, to using the camera to document their realities and to challenge their counterparts on the "other side" to work to change it.
As part of a three-person team, she traveled to Northern Darfur and Eastern Chad to make the documentary film "Darfur Diaries: Message from Home" and wrote the accompanying book, Darfur Diaries: Stories of Survival, which is included in the 2007 volume of Best American Non Required Reading, edited by Dave Eggers. Since then, she traveled to South Sudan to film another documentary, "Rebuilding Hope".
Jen's background in theatre finds its way in her current work as well. She is writing a play and a book about Palestine and Israel and is on the board of directors of "Friends of the Jenin Freedom Theatre", a theatre project in the Jenin Refugee Camp in the northern West Bank that grew out of the documentary film "Arna's Children". Her lecture/workshop includes voices of other activist-artists whose work has inspired her, from Suheir Hammad to Rachel Corrie. Throughout the talk, Jen will explore the role of the media in determining what messages we receive and whose voices we have access to—as well as how art can challenge that, forcing all of us to challenge our pre-conceived assumptions.
Jen Marlowe will inspire her audiences to create or seek out creativity that fuses artistry, activism and solidarity into beautiful, troubling and ultimately inspiring works that challenge us to change our world.
About Jen Marlowe:
"Jen Marlowe captivated an audience of over 1,200 faculty and students with her talk on 'art as activism.' Her message inspired students to think about ways that they could make a difference in the lives of others both within their own communities and the world at large. Jen is an engaging speaker with a powerful and irresistible message."
Laura Rossi-Le
Dean of the Undergraduate College
Endicott College
To book this speaker, call (206) 529-4711 or email info@samaralectures.com
