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Mixed-blood issues : aka Mixing it up 7
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Mixed-blood issues : aka Mixing it up 7

Author: Lucy R LippardCorissa Jordan Schweitz-GoldWendi-Starr BrownKip FulbeckYolanda LópezAll authors
Publisher: Chicago, Ill. : Video Data Bank, [200-?]
Series: Visiting artist lecture series.
Edition/Format:   DVD video : EnglishView all editions and formats
Summary:
A panel that includes painters, sculptors, and filmmakers speaks about art as an educational tool representing identity in terms of ethnicity and cultural characteristics. Media representation versus how people choose to represent themselves is a theme. Panelists' personal backgrounds include African American and Caucasian, Japanese, and Iranian, Hapa (Hawaiian Asian-American), Native American and Chicana.
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Material Type: Videorecording
Document Type: Visual material
All Authors / Contributors: Lucy R Lippard; Corissa Jordan Schweitz-Gold; Wendi-Starr Brown; Kip Fulbeck; Yolanda López; Dorothy Imagire; University of Colorado, Boulder. Dept. of Fine Arts.; Art Institute of Chicago. Video Data Bank.
OCLC Number: 430813409
Notes: Produced at the University of Colorado Academic Media Services, Boulder, CO, 1994.
Panel discussion is part of a cross-cultural symposium on the issue of mixed blood, directed by Lucy Lippard and Corissa Gold.
Credits: Music, Geoffrey Landers.
Performer(s): Moderator: Corissa Schweitz Gold ; panelists: Wendi Starr Brown, Kip Fulbeck, Dorothy Imagire, Yolanda López.
Description: 1 videodisc (46 min.) : sd., col. ; 4 3/4 in.
Details: DVD.
Series Title: Visiting artist lecture series.
Other Titles: Mixing it up 7
Responsibility: University of Colorado at Boulder, Department of Fine Arts ; producer, Lucy Lippard.

Abstract:

A panel that includes painters, sculptors, and filmmakers speaks about art as an educational tool representing identity in terms of ethnicity and cultural characteristics. Media representation versus how people choose to represent themselves is a theme. Panelists' personal backgrounds include African American and Caucasian, Japanese, and Iranian, Hapa (Hawaiian Asian-American), Native American and Chicana.

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