Presented by Framingham History Center

Art & the Family Archive | Diana Cheren Nygren: The Persistence of Family

Registration has ended

About This Event

Art & the Family Archive: "The Persistence of Family" with Diana Cheren Nygren

Date: Saturday, December 13th 2pm-3:30pm
Location: Framingham History Center
Registration: https://framinghamhistory.org/

Join Diana Cheren Nygren for a talk about breathing new life into the family archive at a time when photographs are everywhere but the traditional family photo album is disappearing. What can we learn about ourselves from our history? It is a well known cliche that ancestors worked and acted in hopes of building a better future for their descendants. But what does this mean once the possibility of a better future all but disappears? Does that change our relationship to the past as well as the future?

Attendees are encouraged to bring copies of family photos (not originals, and high quality is not necessary) both from their own family archive and their present family members for a hands-on art project. The more photos you bring in each category, the more options you will have when building your own collaged work.

Diana Cheren Nygren's visual practice has centered around using photographic images as a starting point for building and imagining stories that have not actually happened in order to explore contemporary issues.

Generously funded by the Framingham Cultural Council

About This Event

Art & the Family Archive: "The Persistence of Family" with Diana Cheren Nygren

Date: Saturday, December 13th 2pm-3:30pm
Location: Framingham History Center
Registration: https://framinghamhistory.org/

Join Diana Cheren Nygren for a talk about breathing new life into the family archive at a time when photographs are everywhere but the traditional family photo album is disappearing. What can we learn about ourselves from our history? It is a well known cliche that ancestors worked and acted in hopes of building a better future for their descendants. But what does this mean once the possibility of a better future all but disappears? Does that change our relationship to the past as well as the future?

Attendees are encouraged to bring copies of family photos (not originals, and high quality is not necessary) both from their own family archive and their present family members for a hands-on art project. The more photos you bring in each category, the more options you will have when building your own collaged work.

Diana Cheren Nygren's visual practice has centered around using photographic images as a starting point for building and imagining stories that have not actually happened in order to explore contemporary issues.

Generously funded by the Framingham Cultural Council