Deaf Artist-led BSL Tour: Crip Arte Spazio: The Disability Arts Movement in Venice

2pm - 3pm

  • Venue Gallery 1
  • Price Free or Pay What You Can, £5 - £20
  • Event type Exhibitions
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Dates and times

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Description

Rubbena Aurangzeb-Tariq is a London based painter and installation artist. She has exhibited internationally in New York, South Korea, Canada, Paris, Sweden and the UK. Over the past few years she has led BSL tours for galleries such as the Hayward, Tate, Wallace Collections and the Science Gallery.

Rubbena will be leading the tour in British Sign Language (BSL) capturing the curator’s insight into the exhibitions for the participants. A BSL Interpreter will also attend.

 

 

Crip Arte Spazio: The Disability Arts Movement in Venice

Shape Arts brings its landmark Crip Arte Spazio: The Disability Arts Movement in Venice exhibition to Leicester, fresh from its presentation at the world-renowned Venice Biennale 2024.

The Disability Arts Movement [DAM] aligned art with the fight for rights, broke barriers, and ultimately affected changes in UK law, while making great art about doing so.

Previously on show at the 60th Venice Biennale, the exhibition is a joyous and exuberant celebration of the Disability Arts Movement, showcasing its dynamism, wit, and grandeur. The exhibition reclaims historical slurs ‘Crip Arte Spazio’ in an unflinching explosion of huge protest banners, cartoon panels, large-scale projected artist films, photography, graphic novels, and campaign merchandise featuring artists Keith Armstrong (supported by the National Disability Movement Archive and Collection), Terence Birch, Tony Heaton OBE, Jameisha Prescod, Abi Palmer, Ker Wallwork, Tanya Raabe-Webber and Jason Wilsher-Mills.

The title Crip Arte Spazio, translated as Crip Art Space, plays on Italian words while reclaiming slurs disabled people have historically and continue to face. We fully support the curators, artists and disabled people in the reclamation of these words.

The exhibition’s presentation at the Venice Biennale 2024 was the first time that a major exhibition about the UK’s Disability Arts Movement had been presented internationally. Attenborough Arts Centre is proud to be the first UK touring venue for this historically important show.

The project is supported by Arts Council England, British Council, The National Lottery Heritage Fund, Creative Scotland and CREA, Venice.

A women is dark hair and a scarf smiling at a camera.
A women is dark hair and a scarf smiling at a camera.
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