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Artist Talk with Riva Lehrer

Sunday, Oct 21, 2018 | 11am–12pm

ADMISSION: Free with museum admission, or Superfest Disability Film Festival Ticket. Limited space available, please buy tickets in advance. For more information email access@thecjm.org or 415.655.7856 (Relay calls welcome).

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2018-10-21 11:00:00 UTC2018-10-21 12:00:00 UTC America/Los_AngelesThe CJM - 736 Mission St, San Francisco, CAArtist Talk with Riva LehrerJoin artist Riva Lehrer for a reading from her upcoming memoir, Golem Girl. Based on her identification with the creature of Jewish legend, Golem Girl traces Lehrer's story as a product of surgical innovation, to a childhood as a student at a "Special School," leading to her career as a portrait artist who collaborates with people who experience social stigma. The performance includes rare photographs from a lost piece of disability history. 

Join artist Riva Lehrer for a reading from her upcoming memoir, Golem Girl. Based on her identification with the creature of Jewish legend, Golem Girl traces Lehrer's story as a product of surgical innovation, to a childhood as a student at a "Special School," leading to her career as a portrait artist who collaborates with people who experience social stigma. The performance includes rare photographs from a lost piece of disability history. 

Image description: Riva Lehrer, 66 Degrees, 2016. “Self portrait in response to my changing relationship to my body.” Painting that is 24" x 36" in dimension, acrylic on wood panel. Riva appears to be floating in a body of water from the waist up. The water has a rich green and aqua color with ripples creating circles on the surface. Riva has her back turned and her arms outstretched to the sides, with her head turned revealing her profile with her eyes looking off into the distance, contemplative. Her hair is red with a white streak framing her face. Her body is painted a peach flesh tone revealing the details of her muscular skeletal frame including her spine, ribs, nerves, muscles and veins. A gold sequined scarf hangs loosely around her arm and hips, and floats around her in the body of water.

Image Credit: Riva Lehrer, 66 Degrees, “Self portrait in response to my changing relationship to my body”, 2016. Acrylic on wood panel, 24 x 36 in. Courtesy the artist.

 

 

ABOUT THE ARTIST
Riva Lehrer

Riva Lehrer is an artist, writer and curator whose work focuses on issues of physical identity and the socially challenged body. She is best known for representations of people with impairments, and those whose sexuality or gender identity have long been stigmatized.  Ms. Lehrer’s work has been seen in venues including the National Portrait Gallery of the Smithsonian, the United Nations, the National Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington, DC, the Arnot Museum, the DeCordova Museum, the Frye Museum, the Chicago Cultural Center, and the State of Illinois Museum.  Awards include the 2017 3Arts MacDowell Fellowship for writing, 2015 3Arts Residency Fellowship at the University of Illinois; the 2014 Carnegie Mellon Fellowship at Haverford and Bryn Mawr Colleges; the 2009 Prairie Fellowship at the Ragdale Foundation. Grants include the 2009 Critical Fierceness Grant, the 2008 3Arts Foundation Grant, and the 2006 Wynn Newhouse Award for Excellence, (NYC), as well as grants from the Illinois Arts Council, the University of Illinois, and the National Endowment for the Arts.

Her memoir, entitled “Golem Girl,” will be published by the One World imprint of Penguin/Random House, in early 2020. Ms. Lehrer is represented by Regal Hoffman & Associates literary agency, NYC. Ms. Lehrer is on faculty at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and instructor in the Medical Humanities Departments of Northwestern University and University of Illinois at Chicago.

To learn more, please visit her website.

Image description: A 60-year-old Jewish white woman with silver-and-red hair. She is wearing a white cotton shirt and holding the bony hand of a skeleton.

accessibility

Accessibility: American Sign Language interpretation will be available for this program. The CJM is wheelchair accessible and offers a friendly environment for service animals. Please note that we would like to maintain this as a scent-free environment in respect of those of us with chemical sensitivities.

Disability Arts and Culture Programs: Through strategic partnerships, The CJM aims to create more accessible pathways to lift up the artistic expression of artists with disabilities through programming and exhibitions.  We recognize that in order to build a more equitable and representative arts and cultural sector, the voices, expertise, and lived experiences of people with disabilities need to be at the center of the conversation.

supporters

Access Programs are made possible by major support from Wells Fargo Foundation. Additional generous support is provided by The Morse Family Foundation.